TAVENDER,
J.D.C.:—This
is
a
criminal
appeal
from
a
conviction
by
a
magistrate
on
five
counts
under
the
Income
Tax
Act.
Jensen
appeals
against
conviction;
Chalmers
appeals
against
conviction
and
sentence;
and
the
Crown
appeals
against
sentence.
The
appellants-accused
are
charged
that:
“1.
On
or
about
the
6th
day
of
April,
1959,
Sejer
Jensen
of
Wayne,
in
the
Province
of
Alberta,
Farmer,
and
Donald
R.
Chalmers,
of
the
City
of
Calgary,
in
the
Province
of
Alberta,
Accountant,
did
at
Calgary,
Alberta,
make,
participate
in,
assent
to
or
acquiesce
in
the
making
of
false
statements
in
the
1958
T1
General
Return
of
the
income
of
the
said
Sejer
Jensen
for
the
taxation
year
1958
filed
pursuant
to
the
Income
Tax
Act,
being
Chapter
148
of
the
Revised
Statutes
of
Canada,
1952,
and
amendments
thereto,
contrary
to
Section
132(1)
(a)
of
the
said
Income
Tax
Act;’’
Counts
2,
3,
4
and
5
read
the
same
except
that
they
relate
to
subsequent
years.
Upon
opening
the
trial
de
novo
both
counsel
for
the
appellants-
accused
objected
to
the
appeal
proceeding
on
the
ground
that
each
of
the
counts
in
the
Information
was
void
for
duplicity.
It
was
agreed
that
this
objection
had
been
taken
before
the
magistrate.
The
charges
were
laid
very
much
in
the
language
of
Section
132(1)
(a)
of
the
Income
Tax
Act,
R.S.C.
1952,
c.
148,
which
reads
:
“132.
(1)
Every
person
who
has
(a)
made,
or
participated
in,
assented
to
or
acquiesced
in
the
making
of,
false
or
deceptive
statements
in
a
return,
certificate,
statement
or
answer
filed
or
made
as
required
by
or
under
this
Act
or
a
regulation,
.
.
.
is
guilty
of
an
offence
.
.
.”?
The
Criminal
Code
of
Canada
in
dealing
with
Summary
Con-
victions
provides
:
‘4696.
(1)
In
proceedings
to
which
this
Part
applies,
the
information
(a)
shall
be
in
writing
and
under
oath,
and
(b)
may
charge
more
than
one
offence
or
relate
to
more
than
one
matter
of
complaint,
but
where
more
than
one
offence
is
charged
or
the
information
relates
to
more
than
one
matter
of
complaint,
each
offence
or
matter
of
complaint,
as
the
case
may
be,
shall
be
set
out
in
a
separate
count.
703.
No
information,
summons,
conviction,
order
or
process
shall
be
deemed
to
charge
two
offences
or
to
be
uncertain
by
reason
only
that
it
states
that
the
alleged
offence
was
committed
(a)
in
different
modes,
or
(b)
in
respect
of
one
or
other
of
several
articles,
either
conjunctively
or
disjunctively.”’
By
Sections
704
and
727(4)
of
the
Criminal
Code
it
is
provided
that
an
objection
to
an
information
for
a
defect
apparent
on
its
face
shall
be
taken
before
plea
and
thereafter
only
by
leave
of
the
summary
conviction
court.
Such
an
objection
was
taken
before
the
magistrate
in
this
case
and
it
is
therefore
open
to
me
to
consider
the
validity
of
the
information
(Regina
v.
Dillon
(1964),
47
W.W.R.
510).
Counsel
referred
me
to
a
considerable
number
of
cases
and
I
have
examined
a
few
additional
ones.
These
cases
are
:
Rex
v.
Madill
No.
1,
[1943]
1
W.W.R.
365;
Regina
v.
Schultz
(1962),
39
W.W.R.
23:
Archer
v.
The
Queen,
[1955]
S.C.R.
33;
Regina
v.
Gulvas
(1962),
39
W.W.R.
452;
Regina
v.
Chaikoff
(1953),
16
CLR.
385:
Regina
v.
Kitchener
News
Co.
(1954),
18
C.R.
239;
Rex
v.
Switucha
(1950),
10
C.R.
114;
Regina
v.
Horwitz
(1963-
64),
45
W.W.R.
507;
Rex.
v.
Safeway
Stores
Ltd.,
[1938]
2
W.W.R.
479;
The
Queen
v.
Machacek,
[1961]
S.C.R.
163;
[1961]
0.T.0.
1;
Rex
v.
Clarke
&
Tomkins
(1947),
90
C.C.C.
280;
Eddy
Match
Co.
Ltd.
v.
The
Queen
(1953),
109
C.C.C.
1;
Regina
v.
Zentner
(1959),
29
W.W.R.
679;
De
Bussche
v.
Alt
(1878),
8
Ch.
D.
286:
The
King
v.
Michaud
(1909),
17
C.C.C.
86;
Rex
v.
McManus
(1919),
31
C.C.C.
180;
Brown
v.
The
Queen,
[1957]
Rap.
Jud.
de
Que.
(Q.B.)
169;
Regina
v.
Dominion
Glass
Co.
(1964),
43
C.R.
288;
Regina
v.
Dillon
(1964),
47
W.W.R.
510;
Regina
v.
Lehedor,
[1962]
O.W.N.
233;
and
Regina
v.
Worden,
[1962]
O.W.N,
61.
None
of
these
cases
were
exactly
in
the
wording
of
the
charges
herein
except
the
case
of
Regina
v.
Zentner,
supra,
in
which
a
charge
was
laid
under
the
Income
Tax
Act
of
that
period
in
the
following
words:
“That
Frank
Zentner
of
Simpson,
in
the
Province
of
Saskatchewan,
did,
on
or
about
the
31st
day
of
May,
1949,
make
or
assent
or
acquiesce
in
the
making
of
false
or
deceptive
statements
in
a
return
required
to
be
filed
pursuant
to
the
provisions
of
the
Income
War
Tax
Act,
Chapter
97,
R.S.C.
1927,
and
amendments
thereto
to
wit,
his
1948
income
tax
return
on
Form
T1
thereby
evading
the
payment
of
taxes
in
the
sum
of
$1,311.52
all
contrary
to
the
provisions
of
Section
80(1)
of
the
Income
War
Tax
Act
and
amendments
thereto.’’
In
that
case
the
magistrate
after
entering
on
the
trial
refused
to
proceed
with
it.
An
application
for
mandamus
was
refused
by
McKercher,
J.
In
dealing
with
the
matter
he
held
that
one
information
may
not
charge
an
accused
both
with
the
making
of
a
false
statement
contrary
to
Section
80(1)
of
the
Income
War
Tax
Act
and
also
with
evading
thereby
a
stated
amount
of
income
tax.
(Quoted
from
headnote,
29
W.W.R.
16.)
On
appeal
Martin,
C.J.S.,
giving
judgment
for
the
majority
of
the
Saskatchewan
Court
of
Appeal,
Procter,
J.A.
dissenting,
said
at
p.
684:
“I
cannot
agree
that
the
information
contains
two
charges.
It
is
plain
that
the
information
charges
the
accused
with
making
false
or
deceptive
statements
contrary
to
the
provisions
of
section
80(1).
The
learned
trial
judge
in
chambers
apparently
found
that
the
words
thereby
evading
the
payment
of
taxes
in
the
sum
of
$1,311.52’
had
the
effect
of
charging
the
accused
with
a
second
offence.’’
In
the
result,
Martin,
C.J.S.
held
the
charge
was
not
void
for
duplicity.
It
does
not
appear
that
the
question
was
considered
in
the
light
of
the
words
‘‘making
or
assenting
or
acquiescing
in
making”.
I
do
not
think
I
should
follow
this
case.
It
is
not
my
intention
to
consider
the
remainder
of
the
said
cases
individually.
I
think
in
this
Province
the
case
of
Rex
v.
Madill
(No.
1),
supra,
approved
by
our
Court
of
Appeal
recently
in
Regina
v.
Schultz,
supra,
clearly
sets
out
the
principles
upon
which
the
question
of
duplicity
is
to
be
decided.
In
the
Madill
case,
F.
Ford,
J.A.,
at
p.
369
says:
‘The
test
may,
I
think,
be
found
in
the
answer
to
the
question
whether
evidence
can
be
given
the
distinct
acts,
committed
by
the
person
charged,
constituting
two
or
more
offences.??
The
principle
is
clear.
The
application
of
the
principle
is
more
difficult.
In
the
present
case
two
accused
are
charged
jointly
that
they
did
‘‘make,
participate
in,
assent
to
or
acquiesce
in
the
making
of
false
statements’’.
Jensen
is
a
farmer
and
the
taxpayer,
Chalmers
is
an
accountant.
Can
evidence
be
given
of
distinct
acts
committed
by
these
persons
constituting
two
or
more
offences?
In
my
opinion
these
two
accused
are
charged
jointly
with
two
and
possibly
three
distinct
offences.
Although
the
words
in
the
information
are
words
in
common
use
I
have
looked
at
The
Shorter
Oxford
English
Dictionary
and
find
that
some
of
the
definitions
are
as
follows:
‘“make—compose,
write
as
the
author,
draw
up.
participate—partake.
assent—to
give
the
concurrence
of
one’s
will,
to
agree
to,
to
submit,
yield.
acquiesce—to
agree
tacitly
to,
concur
in,
to,
with.”
If
the
accountant
composed
or
drew
up
the
returns
in
question
from
information
obtained
by
him,
then
it
can
be
said
that
he
made
the
false
statements
complained
of.
In
this
event
the
taxpayer
did
not
make
the
statements,
at
least
not
in
this
sense.
If
the
taxpayer
made
the
false
statements
in
he
sense
of
signing
the
forms,
then
the
accountant
did
not
make
the
statements
in
this
sense.
If
the
taxpayer
provided
false
information
unknown
to
the
accountant,
then
I
do
not
think
it
could
possibly
be
said
that
the
latter
participated
in,
assented
to
or
acquiesced
in
such
statements.
If
the
accountant
accidentally
made
a
mistake
in
the
returns
which
favoured
the
taxpayer
and
of
which
mistake
the
latter
had
knowledge,
it
could
be
said
that
the
taxpayer
assented
to
or
acquiesced
in
the
false
statement
but
I
do
not
think
this
could
be
said
of
the
accountant.
In
my
view
evidence
could
be
given
in
this
case
of
distinct
acts
committed
by
the
persons
charged
constituting
two
or
more
offences
and
thus
the
counts
would
be
multifarious
and
bad.
‘Counsel
for
the
Crown
then
argued
that
if
the
information
charged
more
than
one
offence
this
did
not
make
it
void
by
reason
of
Section
136(2)
of
the
Income
Tax
Act
which
provides:
“136.
(2)
An
information
or
complaint
in
respect
of
an
offence
under
this
Act
may
be
for
one
or
more
offences
and
no
information,
complaint,
warrant,
conviction
or
other
proceeding
in
a
prosecution
under
this
Act
is
objectionable
or
insufficient
by
reason
of
the
fact
that
it
relates
to
two
or
more
offences.
’
’
In
my
view
it
would
require
much
stronger
words
than
these
for
the
Courts
to
hold
that
Parliament
intended
to
abrogate
the
duplicity
rules.
I
do
not
think
this
section
alters
in
any
way
the
criminal
practice.
An
information
may
be
for
one
or
more
offences
but
where
more
than
one
offence
is
charged
each
offence
shall
be
set
out
in
a
separate
count.
The
counts
in
the
information
each
being
void
for
duplicity
and
objection
having
been
taken
in
the
summary
conviction
court,
I
allow
the
appeals
of
the
appellants-accused
and
quash
the
convictions.
The
appeal
of
the
Crown
is
dismissed.
The
appellants-accused
ought
to
have
their
costs
of
the
appeals.
Security
for
costs
will
be
returned
to
the
respective
appellants-
accused.
The
fines
and
costs
below
ought
to
be
returned
to
the
respective
appellants-accused.