Kerr,
J:—This
action
was
tried
together
with
another
action
No
920-71
between
Price
(Nfld)
Pulp
&
Paper
Limited,
as
suppliant
and
Her
Majesty
the
Queen,
as
respondent.*
They
were
commenced
by
petitions
of
right
in
the
Exchequer
Court
claiming
refunds
of
sales
tax
paid
under
the
Excise
Tax
Act,
RSC
1952,
c
100,
as
amended,
on
newsprint
machines
manufactured
by
Dominion
Engineering
Works
Limited.
The
machine
in
this
action
was
for
delivery
at
Alma,
Quebec;
the
machine
in
the
other
action
was
for
delivery
at
Grand
Falls,
Newfoundland.
In
this
action
a
refund
of
$460,899.97
of
sales
tax
paid
is
claimed.
In
the
other
action
a
refund
of
$267,460.22
is
claimed.
An
Agreed
Statement
of
Facts
was
filed
in
each
action,
and
evidence
was
given
by
George
C
Brown
common
to
both
actions.
The
Agreed
Statement
in
this
case
is
Exhibit
P-2,
as
follows:
1.
The
suppliant
is
a
body
corporate
and
politic
having
its
head
office
at
the
City
of
Quebec,
in
the
Province
of
Quebec.
2.
The
name
of
the
suppliant
was
changed
from
Price
Brothers
&
Company,
Limited
to
The
Price
Company
Limited
on
April
21,
1966.
8.
The
suppliant
is
a
manufacturer
or
producer
engaged
in
the
manufacture
or
production
of
newsprint
at
its
Riverbend
Mill
located
in
the
City
of
Alma,
Province
of
Quebec.
4.
By
a
written
proposal
dated
October
8,
1965,
appended
hereto
as
Appendix
“A”,
Dominion
Engineering
Works
Limited
of
the
City
of
Montreal,
in
the
Province
of
Quebec,
offered
to
furnish
to
Rust
Associates
Ltd,
of
the
City
of
Montreal,
in
the
Province
of
Quebec,
for
the
suppliant,
one
Dominion
Newsprint
Machine
having
a
wire
width
of
326
inches
and
a
trim
of
304
inches
off
the
winder
for
use
by
the
suppliant
directly
in
the
manufacture
or
production
of
goods.
5.
The
total
contract
price
for
the
said
goods
was
$4,754,091.00.
6.
In
the
said
proposal
it
was
provided
inter
alia
as
follows:
“TITLE—(a)
The
property
and
right
of
possession
in
the
equipment
shall
not
pass
from
the
Company
until
all
payments
(including
deferred
payments
and
payments
of
notes
and
renewals
thereof,
if
any),
shall
have
been
fully
made
in
cash,
whatever
may
be
the
mode
of
its
attachment
to
the
realty
or
other
property.
(b)
If
default
is
made
in
any
payment
required
to
be
made
by
the
Purchaser
hereunder,
after
the
equipment
has
been
delivered,
the
Company
shall,
in
addition
to
all
other
rights
and
recourses,
have
the
right
to
remove
the
equipment
retaining
as
damages
and
rental
for
its
use
all
payments
previously
received
and
to
dispose
of
the
equipment
in
accordance
with
the
laws
of
the
jurisdiction
where
it
is
situated.”
7.
By
a
written
proposal
dated
September
1,
1965,
revised
on
October
12,
1965,
and
identified
as
Proposal
No.
MEA-10001,
appended
hereto
as
Appendix
"B”,
Rust
Associates
Ltd,
as
engineering
constructor,
proposed
to
perform
for
the
suppliant,
as
purchaser,
the
work
outlined
therein
under
“Scope
of
Work”
on
a
Cost-Plus-a-Fixed-Fee
basis.
8.
The
scope
of
work
proposed
therein
included
inter
alia
the
following:
“A.
Furnish
all
labour,
materials,
equipment,
subcontractor
services,
construction
management,
technical
supervision,
craft
supervision,
construction
tools
and
equipment
necessary
to
construct
a
new
304”
Trim,
3,000
FPM
Newsprint
Paper
Machine
installation
at
Purchaser’s
Riverbend
Mill,
Alma,
P.Q.”
9.
The
proposal
referred
to
In
paragraph
7
herein
was
accepted
In
writing
by
the
suppliant
on
October
18,
1965.
10.
By
Purchase
Order
No.
59897,
dated
January
7,
1966,
appended
hereto
as
Appendix
“C”,
the
suppliant
ordered
from
Rust
Associates
Ltd
the
purchase
and
installation
of
a
new
326
inches
wire
width
newsprint
paper
machine,
in
accordance
with
Proposal
MEA-10001,
dated
September
1,
1965
and
revised
October
12,
1965,
prices
and
terms
as
per
contract.
11.
The
Purchase
Order
referred
to
in
paragraph
10
herein
provided
that
the
goods
were
to
be
delivered
to
the
suppliant
at
its
Riverbend
Mill,
Alma,
Province
of
Quebec.
12.
By
Order
No.
AR.
100-1
dated
June
13,
1966,
appended
hereto
as
Appendix
D
,
Rust
Associates
Ltd
placed
an
order
with
Dominion
Engineering
Works
Limited
for
shipment
to
the
suppliant
at
its
Riverbend
Mill,
Alma,
Province
of
Quebec,
one
Dominion
Newsprint
Machine
having
a
wire
width
of
326
inches
and
a
trim
of
304
inches
off
the
winder
at
a
net
contract
price
of
$4,945,840.00
as
of
June
1,
1966,
all
to
be
as
described
in
Dominion
Engineering
Works
proposal
of
October
8,
1965
and
as
further
described
in
Dominion
Engineering
Works
specification
C
101-36000
dated
October
8,
1965,
except
as
amended.
13.
The
total
cost
of
the
said
Dominion
Newsprint
Machine
was
$5,721,229.05
such
sum
representing
the
original
contract
price
plus
all
additions
and
changes
agreed
upon.
14.
The
contract
price
for
the
Dominion
Newsprint
Machine
was
to
be
paid
to
Dominion
Engineering
Works
Limited
by
Rust
Associates
Limited
In
ten
instalments,
as
follows:
|
Date
|
Amount
Amount
|
|
December
31,
1965
|
$500,000.00
|
|
February
28,
1966
|
500,000.00
|
|
April
30,
1966
|
500,000.00
|
|
June
30,
1966
|
400,000.00
|
|
August
31,
1966
|
700,000.00
|
|
October
31,
1966
|
650,000.00
|
|
December
31,
1966
|
700,000.00
|
|
January
31,
1967
|
350,000.00
|
|
March
31,
1967
|
200,000.00
|
|
June
30,
1967
|
445,840.00
|
|
or
final
payment.
|
15.
The
said
Dominion
Newsprint
Machine
was
shipped
In
sections
to
the
suppliant
over
a
period
commencing
May
6,
1966,
and
ending
November
22,
1967.
16.
The
said
Dominion
Newsprint
Machine
was
erected
on
site
on
September
26,
1967,
and
started
up
on
October
4,
1967.
17.
The
final
payment
on
the
contract
price
was
made
on
June
26,
1968.
Instalment
payments
on
account
of
the
contract
price
were
made
by
Rust
Associates
Limited
to
Dominion
Engineering
Works
Limited
as
follows:
|
Date
|
Amount
Amount
|
|
December
29,
1965
|
$500,000.00
|
|
February
17,
1966
|
500,000.00
|
|
April
27,
1966
|
500,000.00
|
|
June
21,
1966
|
400,000.00
|
|
August
22,
1966
|
700,000.00
|
|
October
27,
1966
|
650,000.00
|
|
December
28,
1966
|
700,000.00
|
|
January
20,
1967
|
350,000.00
|
|
March
20,
1967
|
200,000.00
|
|
July
17,
1967
|
327,914.00
|
|
October
25,
1967
|
200,000.00
|
|
April
24,
1968
|
1,838.00
|
|
April
24,
1968
|
170,463.08
|
|
June
26,
1968
|
42,000.00
|
18.
Dominion
Engineering
Works
Ltd
made
each
month
a
return
to
the
Department
of
National
Revenue
during
the
period
1965
to
1968
and
paid
instalments
on
account
of
consumption
or
sales
tax
with
its
monthly
returns
on
articles
of
its
manufacture
as
shown
on
the
two
ledger
sheets
appended
hereto
as
Appendix
“‘E”’.
19.
In
making
monthly
returns
to
the
Department
as
aforesaid,
Dominion
Engineering
included
amounts
on
account
of
sales
tax
on
the
instalment
payments
becoming
payable
in
accordance
with
the
terms
of
the
contract
for
the
newsprint
machine
in
question,
in
the
accounting
period
to
which
the
returns
pertained,
and
the
amounts
so
included
and
the
dates
on
which
payments
were
made
to
the
Department
are
as
follows:
|
January
17,
1966
|
$55,000.00
|
|
March
21,
1966
|
55,000.00
|
|
May
24,
1966
|
55,000.00
|
|
July
25,
1966
|
44,000.00
|
|
September
26,
1966
|
77,000.00
|
|
November
28,
1966
|
71,500.00
|
|
January
30,
1967
|
77,000.00
|
|
February
29,
1967
|
38,500.00
|
|
May
22,
1967
|
22,000.00
|
|
TOTAL
|
$495,000.00
|
On
or
about
April
10,
1968,
a
refund
of
tax
in
the
amount
of
$34,103.00
was
paid
to
Dominion
Engineering
Works
Limited
by
the
Department
of
National
Revenue
as
a
result
of
changes
in
the
tax
rate
during
the
relevant
periods.
20.
On
January
18,
1968,
K.
V.
Sandford
of
Foster
Business
Services
applied
in
writing
for
a
refund
by
letter
to
the
Director,
Excise
Tax
Operations
as
follows:
“In
accordance
with
the
provisions
of
Section
46
of
the
Excise
Tax
Act
please
accept
this
letter
of
intent,
on
behalf
of
our
clients,
The
Price
Company
Limited
and
Price
(Newfoundland)
Pulp
and
Paper
Limited,
to
file
an
application
in
writing
for
refund
or
deduction
of
federal
sales
tax
paid
on
shipments
of
component
parts
for
Dominion
newsprint
machines
manufactured
and
supplied
by
Dominion
Engineering
Works
Limited
for
our
clients’
premises
at
River
Bend,
Quebec,
and
Grand
Falls,
Newfoundland.”
and
appended
hereto
as
Appendix
“F”
is
a
copy
of
the
letter.
21.
The
Department
of
National
Revenue
has
refused
to
refund
the
sum
of
$460,899.97.
22.
The
Examination
for
Discovery
of
George
Cameron
Brown,
an
officer
of
the
Suppliant,
may
be
used
and
referred
to
in
accordance
with
the
Rules
of
Court.
23.
This
Statement
of
Facts
is
intended
to
shorten
the
trial
of
this
action,
and
the
parties
agree
upon
these
facts
only
for
the
purpose
of
this
action.
No
evidence
may
be
offered
inconsistent
with
this
Statement
but
additional
evidence
not
inconsistent
with
it
may
be
offered
subject
to
all
the
usual
rules
at
the
trial
of
this
action.
The
Agreed
Statement
of
Facts
in
the
other
action
is
Exhibit
P-1,
to
like
effect,
with
necessary
changes
in
details
of
amounts,
dates,
etc.
The
witness
George
C
Brown
is
vice-president
of
The
Price
Company
Limited
and
a
director
of
Price
(Nfld)
Pulp
&
Paper
Limited.
He
testified
that
he
was
in
overall
charge
of
installing
the
two
machines;
that
The
Price
Company
owns
99%
of
the
issued
common
stock
of
the
Price
(Nfld)
company;
that
Rust
Associates
was
engaged
by
the
two
com-
panies
as
consultants
and
as
purchasing
agents
to
purchase
the
machines,
and
as
installers
of
them;
the
two.
companies
had
agreements
with
Rust
Associates
that
they
would
advance
to
Rust
Associates
the
money
for
payment
of
the
sales
taxes
on
the
machines,
and
the
two
companies
did
in
fact
advance
the
money
for
the
taxes,
and
each
company
is
out
of
pocket
for
the
sales
tax
paid.
At
the
trial
it
was
agreed
by
counsel
for
the
parties
that
Dominion
Engineering
Works
Limited
has
no
interest
in
any
right
to
a
recovery
of
the
sales
taxes
in
issue.
In
its
petition
in
this
action
the
suppliant
alleges
that
on
the
date
when
the
sale
of
the
machine
was
made
and
when
title
to
the
goods
passed
to
the
suppliant
the
goods
were
exempt
from
sales
tax
by
virtue
of
the
provisions
of
section
32
and
of
paragraph
1(a)
of
Part
XIII
of
Schedule
ill
of
the
Excise
Tax
Act,
as
amended,
then
in
force;
and,
in
the
alternative,
that
on
the
date
when
the
machine
was
delivered
it
was
exempt
from
sales
tax.
The
suppliant
therefore.
prays
that
the
goods
be
declared
to
be
exempt
from
sales
tax
under
the
Excise
Tax
Act
and
that
the
sales
tax
paid
by
the
suppliant
in
the
sum
of
$460,
899.97
be
returned.
The
respondent’s
statement
of
defence
says
that
the
petition
discloses
no
cause
of
action
and
no
grounds
upon
which
the
suppliant
is
entitled
to
any
relief
against
Her
Majesty;
that
if
any
refund
of
tax
became
payable
under
the
Excise
Tax
Act,
which
is
not
admitted,
then
such
a
refund
is
now
prohibited
because
application
in
writing
for
it
was
not
made
within
two
years
of
the
time
when
such
refund
first
became
payable,
as
required
by
the
statute;
and
that
the
goods
\
were
not
exempt
from
the
sales
tax
imposed
by
that
Act.
Section
46
of
the
Act
provides
in
part
as
follows:
46.
(1)
A
deduction
from,
or
refund
of,
any
of
the
taxes
imposed
by
this
Act
may
be
granted
(a)
where
an
overpayment
has
been
made
by
the
taxpayer;
(b)
where
the
tax
was
paid
In
error;
(c)
where
the
original
sale
or
importation
was
subject
to
tax,
but
exemption
is
provided
on
subsequent
sale
by
this
Act;
(5)
No
refund
or
deduction
from
any
of
the
taxes
imposed
by
this
Act:
shall
be
paid
unless
application
in
writing
for
the
same
is
made
by
the
person
entitled
thereto
within
two
years
of
the
time
when
any
such
refund
or
deduction
first
became
payable
under
this
Act
or
under
any
regulation
made
thereunder.
(6)
If:
any
person,
whether
by
mistake
of
law
or
fact,
has
paid
or
overpaid
to
Her
Majesty,
any
moneys
that
have
been
taken
to
account,
as
taxes
imposed
by
this
Act,
such
moneys
shall
not
be
refunded
unless
application
has
been
made
in
writing
within
two
years
after
such
moneys
were
paid
or
overpaid.
In
its
reply
the
suppliant
alleges
that
it
made
an
application
in
writing
for
a
refund
of
the
tax
money
by
letter
dated
January
18,
1968,
addressed
to
the
Department
of
National
Revenue
by
duly
authorized
agent
on
behalf
of
the
suppliant.
This
letter
is
referred
to
in
paragraph
20
of
the
Agreed
Statement
of
Facts.
The
respondent
admits
that
the
letter
was
sent,
but
takes
the
position
that
the
suppliant
was
not
the
party
that
could
apply
for
a
refund.
I
will
now
proceed
to
refer
to
tax
sections
of
the
Excise
Tax
Act.
The
relevant
portion
of
subsection
30(1)
of
the
Act
reads
as
follows:
30.
(1)
There
shall
be
imposed,
levied
and
collected
a
consumption
or
Sales
tax
of
nine*
per
cent
on
the
sale
price
of
all
goods
(a)
produced
or
manufactured
in
Canada
(I)
payable,
in
any
case
other
than
a
case
mentioned
in
subparagraph
(il)
or
(iii),
by
the
producer
or
manufacturer
at
the
time
when
the
goods
are
delivered
to
the
purchaser
or
at
the
time
when
the
property
in
the
goods
passes,
whichever
is
the
earlier,
(it)
payable,
in
a
case
where
the
contract
for
the
sale
of
the
goods
(including
a
hire-purchase
contract
and
any
other
contract
under
which
property
in
the
goods
passes
upon
satisfaction
of
a
condition)
provides
that
the
sale
price
or
other
consideration
shall
be
paid
to
the
manufacturer
or
producer
by
instalments
(whether
the
contract
provides
that
the
goods
are
to
be
delivered
or
property
in
the
goods
is
to
pass
before
or
after
payment
of
any
or
all
instalments),
by
the
producer
or
manufacturer
pro
tanto
at
the
time
each
of
the
instalments
becomes
payable
in
accordance
with
the
terms
of
the
contract,
and
Subparagraph
(ii)
was
in
the
Act
at
all
times
relevant
to
this
action.
Subsection
30(1)
should
be
read,
for
the
purposes
of
this
case,
with
subsection
32(1),
which
was
in
force
at
all
relevant
times
and
is
as
follows:
32.
(1)
The
tax
imposed
by
section
30
does
not
apply
to
the
sale
or
importation
of
the
articles
mentioned
in
Schedule
III.
I
should
say
here
that
prior
to
June
14,
1963,
Schedule
III
included
a
heading
‘‘Machinery
and
Apparatus
to
be
Used
in
Manufacture
or
Production”,
but
that
heading
and
the
goods
enumerated
thereunder
were
repealed
by
SC
1963,
c
12,
subsection
7(6),
effective
June
14,
1963,
and
the
goods
did
not
come
back
into
Schedule
III
until
June
2,
1967,
as
appears
by
the
amendments
next
mentioned.
SC
1966-67,
c
40,
section
9
added
a
new
Schedule
V,
which
included
“machinery
and
apparatus
sold
to
or
imported
by
manufacturers
or
producers
for
use
by
them
directly
in
the
manufacture
or
production
of
goods”,
and
subsection
4(3)
of
this
statute
amended
subsection
32(3)
of
the
Excise
Tax
Act
to
read
as
follows:
32.
(3)
There
shall
be
imposed,
levied
and
collected
only
three-eighths
of
the
tax
imposed
by
section
30
on
the
sale
or
importation
of
the
articles
enumerated
in
Schedule
V,
and
with
respect
to
any
such
articles
delivered
to
the
purchaser
or
imported
or
taken
out
of
warehouse
for
consumption
after
March
31,
1968,
the
tax
imposed
by
section
30
shall
not
apply.
This
statute
also
provided
by
section
10
that
subsection
32(3)
of
the
Excise
Tax
Act
as
enacted
by
section
4
of
this
statute
applies
to
articles
in
Schedule
V
that
are,
in
the
case
of
goods
manufactured
in
Canada,
delivered
to
the
purchaser
after
March
31,
1967.
That
statute
1966-67,
c
40,
was
followed
by
SC
1966-67,
c
79,
which
increased
the
sales
tax
to
9%,
and
by
section
2
amended
subsection
32(3)
of
the
Excise
Tax
Act
to
read
as
follows:
32.
(3)
There
shall
be
imposed,
levied
and
collected
only
three-ninths
of
the
tax
imposed
by
section
30
on
the
sale
or
importation
of
the
articles
enumerated
in
Schedule
V,
and
with
respect
to
any
such
articles
delivered
to
the
purchaser
or
imported
or
taken
out
of
warehouse
for
consumption
after
March
31,
1968,
the
tax
imposed
by
section
30
shall
not
apply.
Next
in
time
came
SC
1967-68,
c
29,
which
by
section
12
repealed
Schedule
V,
and
by
subsection
11(10),
effective
June
2,
1967,
added
a
new
Part
XHI
of
Schedule
IH,
which
includes
in
paragraph
1(a)
“machinery
and
apparatus
sold
to
or
imported
by
manufacturers
or
producers
for
use
by
them
directly
in
the
manufacture
or
production
of
goods”;
and
by
section
13
provided
as
follows:
13.
(1)
Sections
5
and
12
and
subsections
(1),
(3),
(4),
(6)
and
(10)
of
section
11
of
this
Act
shall
be
deemed
to
have
come
into
force
on
June
2,
1967,
and
to
have
applied
to
all
goods
mentioned
therein
imported
or
taken
out
of
warehouse
for
consumption
on
or
after
that
day
and
to
have
applied
to
goods
previously
imported
for
which
no
entry
for
consumption
was
made
before
that
day.
On
the
question
of
the
incidence
of
sales
tax
counsel
for
the
suppliant
submitted
that
a
conditional
contract
of
sale
(such
as
the
contract
in
this
case)
is
an
executory
contract
and
that
it
does
not
constitute
a
“sale”
under
the
Excise
Tax
Act;
and
that
unless
and
until
title
to
the
goods
here
under
consideration
passed,
no
sales
tax
was
payable;
and
by
the
time
title
passed,
the
goods
were
exempt
from
tax
by
virtue
of
SC
1967-68,
c
29.
He
distinguished
sales
from
agreements
to
sell,
and
in
that
respect
referred
to
Halsbury,
3rd
ed,
vol
34,
at
page
5,
which
says
that
“sale
is
the
transfer,
by
mutual
consent,
of
the
ownership
of
a
thing
from
one
person
to
another
for
a
money
price”;
to
Benjamin
on
Sale,
8th
ed,
at
page
297
as
follows:
After
a
contract
of
sale
has
been
formed,
the
first
question
which
suggests
itself
is
naturally,
What
is
its
effect?
When
does
the
bargain
amount
to
an
actual
sale,
and
when
is
it
a
mere
executory
agreement,
or,
as
it
is
now
called,
an
agreement
to
sell?
We
have
already
seen
that
the
distinction
consists
in
this,
that
in
a
sale,
the
thing
which
is
the
subject
of
the
contract
becomes
the
property
of
the
buyer
(under
the
contract,
that
is
to
say),
the
moment
the
contract
is
concluded,
and
without
regard
to
the
fact
whether
the
goods
be
delivered
to
the
buyer
or
remain
in
possession
of
the
seller,
whereas
in
the
agreement
to
sell,
the
property
is
to
pass
at
a
future
time
or
subject
to
the
fulfilment
of
some
condition,
and
the
goods
remain
the
property
of
the
seller
till
the
contract
is
executed.
In
the
one
case,
A
sells
to
B:
in
the
other,
he
only
promises
to
sell.
to
paragraph
2(f)
of
the
Statutes
of
Newfoundland,
1955,
which
defines
“conditional
sale”;
and
to
Faribault’s
Traité
de
Droit
Civil
du
Québec,
vol
11,
as
follows:
Lorsque
le
vendeur
conserve
la
propriété
de
la
chose
vendue
jusqu’a
ce
que
le
prix
soit
entièrement
payé,
l’acheteur
n’a
pas
le
droit
de
vendre
cette
chose
puisqu’elle
ne
lui
appartient
pas.
En
la
vendant,
il
vend
la
chose
d’autrui,
et
son
vendeur
a
alors
le
droit
de
la
revendiquer
contre
le
second
acheteur
et
même
contre
tout
acheteur
subséquent,
sauf
le
cas
ou
le
dernier
acheteur
l’aurait
acheté
d’un
trafiquant
en
semblables
matières.
Dans
cette
dernière
hypothèse,
le
premier
vendeur
ne
peut
lui
revendiquer
la
chose
qu’en
offrant
de
lui
rembourser
le
prix
qu'il
a
payé.
On
that
issue
of
sale
counsel
for
the
respondent
submitted
that
subparagraph
30(1)(a)(ii)
was
in
the
Act
at
all
material
times;
in
the
case
of
a
one-payment
contract
where
payment
is
to
be
made
when
the
goods
are
delivered
or
when
the
property
in
the
goods
passes,
whichever
is
the
earlier,
there
is
a
tax
payable
as
in
subparagraph
(i)
of
paragraph
30(1)(a);
in
the
case
of
instalment
contracts
there
is
a
like
tax
with
a
difference
that
it
is
payable
pro
tanto
as
provided
in
subparagraph
(ii);
that
the
object
of
the
section
is
to
produce
an
economic
result
with
imposition
of
tax
in
each
situation;
and
that
there
was
an
exigible
tax
on
the
goods
concerned
in
this
action
payable
at
the
time
each
of
the
instalments
became
payable
In
accordance
with
the
terms
of
the
contract
for
the
goods.
One
of
the
closest
cases
to
this
case,
referred
to
by
counsel
on
each
side,
is
The
King
v
Dominion
Engineering
Company
Limited
before
the
Supreme
Court
of
Canada
([1944]
SCR
371;
[1944]
CTC
216;
2
DTC
674)
and
the
Privy
Council
([1947]
1
DLR
1;
2
DTC
890).
It
was
an
action
by
the
Crown
to
recover
sales
tax
claimed
in
respect
of
a
contract
of
sale
of
a
machine
that
was
to
be
built
by
Dominion
Engineering
for
the
purchaser,
Lake
Sulphite
Pulp
Company,
the
price
to
be
payable
in
nine
monthly
instalments,
plus
a
balance
when
the
machine
would
be
in
operation,
title
to
pass
on
payment
in
full.
Six
instalments
of
the
price
were
paid
to
Dominion
under
the
contract,
and
Dominion
paid
the
sales
tax
on
them.
The
purchaser
then
went
bankrupt
and
the
three
remaining
instalments
were
not
paid.
The
machine
was
never
delivered
to
the
purchaser.
The
Crown’s
claim
was
to
recover
from
Dominion
sales
tax
on
the
three
unpaid
instalments.
The
taxing
provision
was
subsection
86(1)
of
the
Special
War
Revenue
Act,
RSC
1927,
c
179,
reading
as
follows:
86.
(1)
There
shall
be
imposed,
levied
and
collected
a
consumption
or
sales
tax
of
eight
per
cent,
on
the
sale
price
of
all
goods
(a)
produced
or
manufactured
in
Canada,
payable
by
the
producer
or
manfacturer
at
the
time
of
the
delivery
of
such
goods
to
the
purchaser
thereof.
Provided
that
in
the
case
of
any
contract
for
the
sale
of
goods
wherein
it
is
provided
that
the
sale
price
shall
be
paid
to
the
manufacturer
or
producer
by
instalments.
as
the
work
progresses,
or
under
any
form
of
conditional
sales
agreement,
contract
of
hire-purchase
or
any
form
of
contract
whereby
the
property
in
the
goods
sold
does
not
pass
to
the
purchaser
thereof
until
a
future
date,
notwithstanding
partial
payment
by
instalments,
the
said
tax
shall
be
payable
pro
tanto
at
the
time
each
of
such
instalments
falls
due
and
becomes
payable
in
accordance
with
the
terms
of
the
contract,
and
all
such
transactions
shall
for
the
purposes
of
this
section,
be
regarded
as
sales
and
deliveries.
Provided
further
that
in
any
case
where
there
is
no
physical
delivery
of
the
goods
by
the
manufacturer
or
producer,
the
said
tax
shall
be
payable
when
the
property
in
the
said
goods
passes
to
the
purchaser
thereof.
Rand,
J
delivering
the
judgment
of
the
Chief
Justice
and
of
Kerwin,
Taschereau
and
Rand,
JJ,
said
in
part
as
follows:
The
words
“such
transactions”
refer
either
to
the
contracts
themselves
or
to
the
successive
liabilities
for
instalments.
But
in
either
sense
the
expression
“becomes
payable”
is
not
to
be
limited
solely
to
the
event
of
the
day
named
for
the
payment
of
the
instalment.
What
is
contemplated
Is
an
obligation
to
pay
arising
from
the
legal
effectiveness
of
the
contract.
Although
the
section.
declares
the
“transaction”
to
be
a
constructive
sale
and
delivery,
the
fundamental
support
of
the
tax
is
an
executory
contract
leading
to
the
transfer
of
title
and
possession.
That
contract
is
conceived
as
a
potential
sale
to
which
in
turn
is
related
a
potential
total
tax:
“the
tax
shall
be
payable”.
Pro
tanto
portions
of
the
tax
are
related
to
instalments
of
price
and,
when
the
latter
become
payable
as
parts
of
a
whole,
the
right
to
the
tax
takes
on
the
same
character:
but
throughout,
the
tax
depends
for
its
efficacy
upon
the
maturing
contract.
For
the
total
tax
there
is
only
an
inchoate
liability
created
by
the
making
of
the
agreement:
and
to
sustain
the
right
to
the
tax,
the
instalment
become
payable
must
remain
an
obligation
of
an
executory
contract.
The
legal
liability
at
any
time
for
any
portion
of
the
tax
in
no
degree
restricts
the
parties
in
good
faith
from
modifying
the
contract
as
they
see
fit,
and
a
fortiori
it
does
not
prevent
a
modification
by
operation
of
law.
If,
in
the
legal
result,
the
actual
transaction
ceases
to
be
one
of
sale,
then
the
necessary
support
for
the
tax
disappears.
That
result,
at
least
where
the
termination
of
the
contract
does
not
effect
a
total
rescission,
will
not
affect
the
right
to
taxes
on
any
portion
of
the
price
paid
to
the
seller
nor
does
it
touch
those
that
have
been
collected
or
reduced
to
judgment
by
the
Crown.
The
fact
of
bankruptcy
intervening
is,
in
my
opinion,
a
circumstance
fatal
to
the
right
of
the
Crown
to
maintain
this
information.
When,
on
February
22nd,
the
liquidation
order
was
made,
the
instalments
for
the
balance
of
purchase
price
ceased
‘to
be
“due”
and
“payable”
within
the
meaning
of
the
statute.
What
remained
to
the
respondent
was
to
prove
for
unliquidated
damages
subject
to
the
right
of
the
liquidator
to
elect.
to
complete
the
contract.
It
is
not
suggested
there
was
any
such
election
prior
to
the
commencement
of
this
proceeding.
But
the
respondent
could
not
have
enforced
payment
of
the
remaining
instalments
and
the
essential
condition
of
the
tax
that
they
should
continue
as
effective
obligations
of
a
contract
of
sale
was
not
existing
when
the
information
was
issued.
A
right
of
election
by
the
liquidator
even
then
continuing
could
not
affect
the
present
proceeding.
This
interpretation
of
the
Act
does
not
mean
that
either
price
or
instalment
of
price
in
such
a
contract
must
be
received
before
the
tax
is
exigible
but
it
does
mean
that
where
the
obligation
of
such
an
executory
contract
Is
by
operation
of
law
destroyed,
then
unpaid
taxes
related
to
Its
terms,
themselves
suffer
a
corresponding
effect.
If
that
were
not
so,
sellers
with
unsold
property
on
their
hands
would
be
liable
for
taxes
In
respect
of
purchase
price
not
only
unpaid
but
the
legal
right
to
which
had
been
annulled:
and
on
the.
other
hand
a
resale
of
the
same
property
would.
attach
to
Itself
a
new
tax
unrelated
in
any
sense
to
that
attributed
to
the:
first
sale.
What
is
created
is
a
tax
liability
running
parallel,
to
-executory
commercial
transactions
which,
before
their
completion,
is
exposed
to
the
effect
of
contractual
changes
or
fundamental
legal
infirmities
to
which
they
may
become
subjected.
+
Hudson,
J
said
in
part
as
follows:
There
is
no
dispute
as
to
any
material
facts
and
the
whole
question
is
as
to
the
interpretation
of
the
section
in
relation
to
the
facts.
It
must
be
kept
in
mind
that
the
machinery
was
being
sold
as
a
unit,
that
it
was
never
completely
manufactured,
and
that
physical
delivery
had
not
been
made
of
any,
except
a
small
part
of
the
value
of
$1,200
and
that
the
property
in
such
part
of
the
machine
as
had
been
manufactured
did
not
pass
to
the
purchaser.
...
This
section
requires
careful
analysis.
Under
(a)
the
tax
is
payable
on
delivery
of
the
goods.
In
the
first
proviso,
provision
is
made
for
earlier
payments
in
cases
where
the
contract
calls
for
payment
by
instalments.
In
most
of
the
cases
falling
with
this
proviso
there
would
be
an
actual
physical
delivery
of
the
goods
agreed
to
be
sold.
For
example,
in
cases
of
conditional
sales
and
hire-
purchase,
this
is
almost
invariably
the
case.
In
some,
however,
there
would
not
be
physical
delivery
and
for
such
it
is
provided
that
a
constructive
or
notional
delivery
should
be
assumed.
The
second
proviso
does
not
apply
to
cases
where
there
is
an
actual
physical
delivery,
but
in
any
other
cases
makes
the
tax
payable
when
the
property
in
the
goods
passes
to
the
purchaser.
The
facts
in
the
present
case
may
bring
it
within
the
language
of
the
first
proviso.
By
the
contract
the
sales
price
was
to
be
paid
in
instalments
in
the
nature
of
progress
payments
although
there
was
no
provision
that
these
instalments
should
be
made
in
accordance
with
any
particular
rate
of
progress.
I
think,
however,
that
it
must
be
assumed
that
it
was
the
intention
of
the
parties
that
the
payments
should
not
become
payable
until
the
respondent
was
making
fair
progress
in
its
work.
This
was
the
interpretation
of
the
Lake
Sulphite
Pulp
Company
officials
because
it
appears
from
the
evidence
that
that
Company’s
manager
protested
against
the
delays
of
the
respondent,
and
in
fact
held
up
the
December
payment
for
some
time
on
that
account.
It
is
a
question
whether
or
not
the
instalments
in
respect
of
which
the
Crown
claims
ever
fell
due
and
became
payable
but,
even
if
this
were
so,
I
am
of
the
opinion
that
the
second
proviso
must
prevail.
The
language
is
unqualified
and
it
is
clear
that
the
property
in
the
goods
never
passed
to
the
purchaser.
The
second
proviso
does
not
destroy
altogether
the
first
but
applies
only
to
cases
where
there
is
no
physical
delivery.
I
think
for
that
reason
that
the
rule
of
construction
approved
of
in
Forbes
v
Git
([1923]
AC
256)
is
applicable.
The
machinery
was
never
completed
and
thus
was
never
capable
of
physical
delivery
in
fulfilment
of
the
contract.
The
Privy
Council
held
that
the
second
proviso
prevailed
and
consequently,
as
there
had
been
no
physical
delivery
of
the
goods
and
as
the
property
in
the
goods
had
never
passed
to
the
purchaser,
the
tax
had
never
become
payable.
The
judgment
was
delivered
by
Lord
Macmillan,
who
said
in
part
as
follows:
In
imposing
a
sales
tax
one
of
the
difficulties
which
confront
the
Legislature
lies
in
the
selection
of
the
point
of
time
at
which
the
tax
shall
attach
and
become
due.
In
the
case
of
an
ordinary
retail
sale
for
cash
across
the
counter
of
a
shop,
the
stages
of
agreement,
appropriation
of
the
goods
to
the
contract,
delivery,
payment
of
the
price
and
passing
of
the
property
are
all
practically
simultaneous.
But
in
more
complicated
transactions
for
the
sale
of
goods
to
be
produced
or
manufactured
these
stages
may
be
spaced
in
time
in
various
ways.
The
point
of
time
which
s
86
has
selected
as
in
general
the
time
for
imposing,
levying
and
collecting
sales
tax
is
the
time
of
the
delivery
of
the
goods
to
the
purchaser.
Liability
for
the
tax,
as
was
pointed
out
for
the
Crown,
is
not
made
dependent
on
the
price
being
paid,
for
the
goods
may
be
delivered
on
credit
and
the
purchaser
may
default
in
payment.
In
the
present
case,
however,
the
goods
were
never
delivered
and
the
general
rule
is
inapplicable.
But
the
leading
words
of
the
enactment
are
followed
by
two
provisos,
which
are
both
designed
to
qualify
the
generality
of
the
main
rule
in
the
matter
of
delivery.
The
first
proviso
introduces
the
conception
of
a
notional
delivery
which
is
to
be
held
to
take
place
in
certain
specified
cases,
a
feature
of
which
is
that
the
property
in
the
goods
sold
does
not
pass
to
the
purchaser
until
a
future
date.
In
particular
where
the
contract
provides
that
the
sale
price
shall
be
paid
to
the
manufacturer
or
producer
as
the
work
progresses
the
tax
is
to
be
payable
pro
tanto
at
the
time
each
of
such
instalments
falls
due
and
becomes
payable
in
accordance
with
the
contract.
The
Crown
not
unnaturally
relies
on
this
as
exactly
and
literally
fitting
the
present
case.
Mr
Justice
Angers
in
his
judgment
([1943}
8
DLR
12,
Ex
CR
49)
valiantly
combats
this
conclusion
the
injustice
of
which
has
obviously
seemed
to
him
more
shocking
than
it
perhaps
appears
to
their
Lordships
who
have
by
long
experience
become
indurated
to
the
arbitrariness
of
taxation.
In
the
Supreme
Court
also
([1944]
4
DLR
505,
SCR
371)
the
Crown’s
contention
on
the
first
proviso
is
countered
and
rejected.
Their
Lordships,
however,
do
not
find
it
necessary
to
pursue
or
review
this
argument
for,
however
aptly
the
first
proviso
may
seem
to
fit
the
Crown’s
case,
they
find
in
the
second
proviso
a
sufficient
and
complete
answer
to
it.
The
second
proviso
qualifies
the
main
enactment
in
the
matter
of
delivery
no
less
than
does
the
first
proviso,
and
it
also
qualifies
the
first
proviso
itself.
For
it
provides
“further”
that
‘in
any
case
where
there
is
no
physical
delivery
of
the
goods,”
the
taxes
to
be
payable
when
the
property
in
the
goods
passes
to
the
purchaser.
Thus
where
there
is
no
physical
delivery
the
notional
delivery
which
the
first
proviso
introduces
is
rendered
inapplicable.
Mr
Justice
Angers
found
in
the
second
proviso
an
alternative
ground
for
his
decision
against
the
Crown
and
it
is
the
main
ground
of
Mr
Justice
Hudson’s
judgment
in
the
Supreme
Court.
In
their
Lordships’
view
this
proviso
presents
an
insuperable
obstacle
to
the
Crown’s
claim.
There
has
been
no
physical
delivery
of
the
goods
by
the
Dominion
Company
to
the
Pulp
Company.
The
proviso
enacts
that
“in
any
case”
where
there
has
been
no
physical
delivery
the
tax
is
to
be
payable
when
the
property
passes.
The
property
in
the
goods
in
question
has
never
passed
to
the
Pulp
Company.
Consequently
the
tax
has
never
become
payable.
If
the
second
proviso
is
repugnant
in
any
way
to
the
first
proviso
it
must
prevail
for
it
stands
last
in
the
enactment
and
so,
to
quote
Lord
Tenterden
CJ,
“speaks
the
last
intention
of
the
makers”:
The
King
v
Justice
of
Middlesex
(1831),
2
B
&
Ad
818
at
p
821,
109
ER
1347.
The
last
word
is
with
the
respondent,
the
Dominion
Company,
and
must
prevail.
Their
Lordships
recognize
that
the
result
of
their
view
may
lead
to
anomalies.
It
would
indeed
have
absolved
the
Dominion
Company
from
liability
to
pay
sales
tax
on
the
six
instalments
which
they
in
fact
received
and
on
which
they
paid
tax.
But
anomalies
in
tax
legislation
are
far
from
being
uncommon,
and
the
remedy
lies
to
the
hand
of
the
Government
which
has
apparently
since
1927
passed
some
twenty
amending
statutes
affecting
the
Special
War
Revenue
Act.
The
second
proviso
that
was
held
to
prevail
in
the
Dominion
Engineering
case
is
not
in
the
present
paragraph
30(1
)(a)
of
the
Excise
Tax
Act.
Neither
is
there
in
the
present
case,
as
there
was
in
the
Dominion
Engineering
case,
a
destruction
of
the
purchaser’s
obligation
to
pay
all
of
the
instalments
of
the
purchase
price.
It
appears
to
me
that
subsection
30(1)
deals
specially
in
subparagraph
(a)(ii)
with
conditional
sales
contracts
for
the
sale
of
goods
where
the
contract
provides
that
the
sale
price
shall
be
paid
to
the
manufacturer
or
producer
by
instalments,
and
I
think
that
in
the
case
of
such
instalment
contracts
the
subsection
imposes
a
sales
tax”
payable
on
the
sale
price
pro
tanto
at
the
time
each
of
the
instalments
becomes
payable
in
accordance
with
the
terms
of
the
contract.
In
the
present
case
the
contract
falls
within
subparagraph
30(1)(a)(ii)
and
in
my
opinion
the
sales
tax
was
exigible
on
the
sale
price
of
the
goods
pro
tanto
at
the
time
each
of
the
instalments
became.
payable
in
accordance
with
the
terms
of
the
contract.
However,
if
any
of
the
taxes
paid
were
not
exigible
because
of
the
goods
having
been
put
back
in
Schedule
III
on
June
2,
1967,
or
for
any
other
reason,
there
is
the
question
whether
the
suppliant
is
entitled
to
a
refund
under
the
provisions
of
subsection
46(1)
of
the
Act.
The
Crown
says
that
if
any
refund
became
payable
it
is
now
prohibited
because
an
application
in
writing
for
it
was
not
made
within
two
years
of
the
time
when
such
refund
first
became
payable.
It
was
agreed
on
behalf
of
the
Crown
that
the
letter
set
forth
in
paragraph
19
of
the
Agreed
Statement
of
Facts
was
sent
on
January
18,
1968.
But,
even
if
that
letter
is
treated
as
an
application,
it
is
an
application
by
the
suppliant,
not
by
the
manufacturer,
and
as
1
construe
section
46
the
person
who
is
entitled
under
subsection.
(1)
to
a
“refund”
of
taxes
paid
to
the
Crown
is
the
person
who
paid
the
taxes
to
the
Crown.
In
the
present
case
it
was
the
manufacturer,
not
the
suppliant,
who
was
liable
to
pay
the
tax-
and
who
made
the
payments
to
the
Crown,
as
appears
by
paragraph
18
of
the
Agreed
Statement
of
Facts,
albeit
with
funds
provided
by
the
suppliant.
In
The
Queen
v
M
Geller
Inc,
[1963]
CTC
438;
63
DTC
1274,
a
tax
was
imposed
under
section
80A
of
the
Excise
Tax
Act,
then
applicable,
on
furs
dressed
in
Canada,
payable
by
the
dresser.
The
judgment
of
the
Supreme
Court
of
Canada
said
in
part
as
follows
(pp
439-
40
[1275-6]):
The
respondent
M
Geller
Inc
is
a
dealer
in
sheepskins,
and
some
of
this
material
was
dressed
in
Canada
by
Nu-Way
Lambskin
Processors
Ltd,
both
firms
operating
in
the
City
and
District
of
Montreal.
Nu-Way,
as
dresser
was
responsible
for
the
payment
of
the
tax
under
s
80A
and
paid
$20,011.72
to
Her
Majesty
the
Queen,
and
on
March
8,
1957,
the
present
respondent
and
Nu-Way
filed
a
petition
of
right
claiming
from
Her
Majesty
the
Queen
the
sum
of
$20,956.74.
It
is
argued
that
the
tax
imposed
on
dressed
furs
in
Canada
is
illegal
because
sheepskin
is
not
a
fur
falling
within
the
meaning
of
the
Act.
It
is
admitted.
by
all
parties
that
M
Geller
Inc
reimbursed
to
Nu-Way
the
sum
of
$20,956.74
paid
to
Her
Majesty
the
Queen
by
the
latter.
Both
Nu-Way
and
the
respondent
M
Geller
Inc
claimed
a
refund
of
the
“amount
paid.
The
respondent
in
the
present
case
alleged
that
it
was
the
only
one
that
was
required
to
pay
the
tax,
that
it
paid
the
tax
through
the
intermediary
of
Nu-Way
Lambskin
and
that,
having
made
a
demand
for
refund
in
writing
within
two
years
from
the
date
of
payment,
as
required
by
the
Act,
it
was
entitled
to
such
a
refund.
The
learned
trial
judge
[[1960]
Ex
CR
512]
dismissed
the
petition
of
right
of
the
suppliant
Nu-Way
Lambskin
on
the
ground
that
it
failed
to
apply
for
a
refund
within
the
statutory
delay.
Section
105(6)
provides
as
follows:
‘105.
(6)
if
any
person,
whether
by’
mistake
of
law
or
fact,
has
paid‘
or
overpaid
to
His
Majesty,
any
moneys
which
have
been
taken
to
account,
as
taxes
imposed
by
this
Act,
such
moneys
shall
not
be
refunded
unless
application
has
been
made
in
writing
within
two
years
after
such
moneys
were
paid
or
overpaid.”
—;
The
claim
of
the
respondent
however
was
maintained
on
the
ground
that
the
right
to
claim
a
refund
is
open
to
any
person
who
has
paid
moneys
which
have
been
taken
to
account
as
taxes
imposed
by
the
Act
and
thai
the
evidence
established
that
the
respondent
is
in
fact
the
person
who
paid
the
moneys
in
question
to
Her
Majesty.
-
»
It
is
clear
and
admitted
that
the
said
sum
of
$20,956.74
was
paid
as
tax
and
that
it
was
not
legally
owing,
as
this
Court
decided
in
several
cases
and
particularly
in
Universal
Fur
Dressers
&
Dyers
Ltd
v
Her
Majesty
the
Queen,
[1956]
SCR
632;
[1963]
CTC
435.
In
that
case
it
was
held
by
this
Court
that
mouton
was
not
fur
and,
therefore,
not
taxable
under
Section
80A
of
the
Excise
Tax
Act.
Before
this
Court
Nu-Way
did
not
appeal,
and
we
are
concerned
therefore
only
with
the
appeal
of
Her
Majesty
the
Queen
against
the
present
respondent.
I
have
reached
the
conclusion
that
this
appeal
should
be
allowed
and
the
petition
dismissed
in
part.
The
person
obliged
to
pay
the
tax
is
the
dresser,
and
the
person
eniitled
to
a
refund
is
the
dresser
if
the
tax
has
been
paid
through
mistake
of
law
or
fact.
In
the
present
case,
the
tax
was
paid
by
the
dresser
Nu-Way
and
it
was
the
sole
person
entitled
to
a
refund.
This
was
denied
by
the
Exchequer
Court,
and
rightly
in
view
of
the
terms
of
Section
105(6).
The
respondent
has
no
legal
right
to
claim.
It
is
true
that
M
Geller
Inc
reimbursed
Nu-Way;,
but
this
payment
does
not
give
a
right
of
action
to
the
former,
which
the
law
denies.
The
arrangements
made
between
Geller
and
Nu-Way
are
of
no
concern
to
the
appeliant..
They
are
res
inter
alios
acta
and
cannot
affect
the
rights
of
the
Crown.
:
;
...
.,
.
.
.,
...
-,
.
ioregomg
reasons
the
For
the
foregoing
reasons
the
petition
of
right
herein
is
dismissed.
Her
Majesty
Is
entitled
to
be
paid,
by
the
suppliant,
her
costs
of
the
action,
to
be
taxed.
.
As
both.
actions
were
ed
together,
only
one
set
of
counsel
fees
will
be.
allowed.,
,
.
.
.
‘A
\.