KEARNEY,
J.:—This
is
an
appeal
from
a
decision
of
the
Income
Tax
Appeal
Board
(1955),
12
Tax
A.B.C.
230,
dated
February
4,
1955,
dismissing
an
appeal
by
the
taxpayer
from
a
reassessment
applicable
to
its
taxation
for
the
year
ending
June
30,
1951.
The
appellant
deducted
from
its
1950-51
income
some
$11,000,
representing
fees
and
disbursements
paid
during
the
said
year
to
its
attorney
for
professional
services
rendered
in
procuring
favourable
modifications
in
the
Customs
Tariff
affecting
materials
imported
by
the
appellant,
from
the
United
States.
The
deduction
was
disallowed
because,
according
to
the
respondent,
the
outlays
in
question
were
not
incurred
by
the
taxpayer
for
the
purpose
of
gaining
or
producing
income,
within
the
meaning
of
Section
12(1)
(a)
of
the
Income
Tax
Act,
S.C.
1948,
c.
52,
but
were
outlays
on
account
of
capital,
within
the
meaning
of
Section
12(1)
(b)
thereof.
Counsel
for
the
appellant
submitted
that
Section
12(1)
(b)
has
no
application
as
the
expenditure
was
in
no
sense
an
outlay
on
account
of
capital,
but
clearly
one
made
for
the
purpose
envisaged
1
in
the
exceptive
provision
contained
in
Section
12(1)
(a).
Section
12
reads
in
part
as
follows:
"12.
(1)
In
computing
income
no
deduction
shall
be
made
in
respect
of
(a)
an
outlay
or
expense
except
to
the
extent
that
it
was
made
or
incurred
by
the
taxpayer
for
the
purpose
of
gaining
or
producing
income
from
property
or
a
business
of
the
taxpayer,
(b)
an
outlay,
loss
or
replacement
of
capital,
a
payment
on
account
of
capital
or
an
allowance
in
respect
of
depreciation,
obsolescence
or
depletion
except
as
expressly
permitted
by
this
Part.’’
The
appellant
company
was
incorporated
in
December
1949
and
began
operations
in
July
1950,
with
the
result
that
its
first
fiscal
year
ended
June
30,
1951.
At
some
time
it
imported
playing
cards
from
the
United
States
in
finished
form,
but
during
its
first
year
of
operations
it
engaged
in
the
business
of
manufacturing
playing
cards
in
Toronto
and
found
it
necessary
to
import
cards
in
the
form
of
lithographed
sheets
from
the
United
States.
Twenty-seven
cards
were
lithographed
on
each
sheet
and
two
such
sheets
formed
a
unit
which
represented
about
35
per
cent
of
the
manufactured
cost
of
a
finished
deck.
Manufacture
of
the
sheets
into
complete
ready-for-sale
decks
was
carried
out
in
the
appellant’s
plant
by
processes
known
as
punch
pressing,
sanding,
gilting,
deck
and
box
wrapping.
The
appellant
found
that
the
rate
of
duty
applicable
was
seven
cents
per
deck,
whether
imported
in
a
complete
state
of
manufacture
or
in
the
form
of
sheets
which
required
the
aforesaid
finishing
processes.
Moreover,
the
duty
of
seven
cents
per
deck
applied,
whether
the
material
was
of
a
quality
to
constitute
a
high
or
a
low-priced
deck.
The
appellant
considered
the
existing
import
duty
contained
in
item
194
of
the
Customs
Tariff
unfair
and
authorized
its
attorney
to
obtain,
if
possible,
a
rectification
thereof
and
a
reduction
in
the
existing
duty
of
seven
cents
per
unit.
The
appellant’s
attorney
succeeded
in
having
a
new
item,
194a,
added
to
the
Customs
Tariff,
which
fixed
a
duty
of
20
per
cent
of
the
value
of
the
imported
unit
in
the
form
of
sheets.
As
a
result
the
appellant
paid
in
the
fiscal
year
1950-51
$29,734
less
in
customs
duties,
and
on
future
imports
will
continue
to
derive
a
similar
advantage
so
long
as
the
existing
legislation
remains
in
force.
Omitting
the
rate
of
duty
applicable,
the
two
aforesaid
tariff
items
read
as
follows:
“19
4.
Playing
cards,
in
packs
or
in
sheet
form,
n.o.p.;
cards
and
sheets
partly
lithographed
or
printed,
for
use
in
the
manufacture
of
such
playing
cards
.
.
.”’
“19
4a.
Wholly
or
partially
lithographed
or
printed
sheets
when
imported
by
manufacturers
of
playing
cards
for
use
exclusively
in
the
manufacture
of
playing
cards
in
their
own
factories.’’
Item
194,
as
set
out
above,
resulted
from
an
amendment
in
1937
(S.C.
1937,
c.
26,
s.
2)
to
‘‘An
Act
Respecting
the
Duties
of
Customs’’,
to
give
it
its
short
title,
the
Customs
Tariff
(R.S.C.
1927,
c.
44
now
R.S.C.
1952,
c.
60).
Owing
to
parliamentary
delays,
item
194a
was
not
enacted
until
1952
(S.C.
1952,
c.
23,
s.
1
and
Schedule
A,
Part
III),
but
in
the
meantime
the
appellant
received
the
benefits
contained
in
the
said
item
by
means
of
two
Orders-in-Council,
P.C.
5744
dated
November
29,
1950
(Ex.
3)
and
P.C.
4611
dated
September
5,
1951
(Ex.
4).
Furthermore,
P.C.
5744
was
made
retroactive
to
August
1,
1950,
and
the
appellant
received
a
refund
of
some
$13,000,
which
was
included
in
the
amount
of
$29,734
previously
mentioned.
Counsel
for
the
respondent
submitted
that,
first
and
foremost,
the
purpose
and
effect
of
the
services
for
which
appellant’s
attorney
was
paid
were
to
secure
an
enduring
benefit
in
the
form
of
a
continuing
tariff
advantage
for
the
appellant
and
that,
therefore,
the
cost
of
those
services
was
a
payment
on
account
of
capital,
the
deduction
of
which
is
prohibited
by
Section
12(1)
(b).
Alternatively,
it
was
submitted
that
the
cost
of
the
said
services
was
an
outlay
or
expense
not
made
or
incurred
by
the
appellant
for
the
purpose
of
gaining
or
producing
income
from
the
appellant’s
business
and
therefore
its
deduction
was
prohibited
by
Section
12(1)
(a).
In
support
of
the
alternative
statement,
it
was
also
submitted
that,
because
the
expenditure
was
made
to
decrease
cost
or
save
expense,
it
could
not
be
said
to
have
been
made
for
the
purpose
of
gaining
or
producing
income,
or
to
have
been
directly
related
to
that
purpose.
Likewise,
since
it
was
made
to
secure
from
the
government
a
concession
in
customs
duties
or
taxes,
it
could
not
have
been
made
for
the
purpose
of
gaining
or
producing
income
from
the
business
of
the
appellant.
In
addition,
it
was
not
directly
related
to
the
earning
of
income
notwithstanding
that
incidentally
it
had
the
effect
of
increasing
income.
Counsel
for
the
appellant
supported
his
submissions
by
the
following
statements.
Not
only
the
purpose
but
the
effect
of
the
expenditure
was
to
produce
income.
The
advantage
received
must
be
regarded
not
as
an
enduring
but
as
a
short-term
benefit.
The
benefit
was
not
an
exclusive
one
and
the
appellant
had
no
assurance
that
it
would
not
be
withdrawn.
Moreover,
even
admitting
that
the
expenditure
had
been
made
to
secure
an
enduring
benefit,
it
nevertheless
should
not
be
regarded
as
a
payment
on
account
of
capital
as
its
deduction
is
permissible
under
ordinary
principles
of
commercial
trading
and
accepted
business
practice
;
and
under
these
same
principles
it
could
not
properly
be
set
up
on
the
company’s
books
of
account
as
a
capital
asset
and
depreciated.
I
think
it
is
of
first
importance
to
determine
if
the
$11,000
paid
to
the
attorney
constituted
a
payment
on
account
of
capital,
within
the
meaning
of
Section
12(1)
(b)
because,
as
pointed
out
by
counsel
for
the
respondent,
provided
the
deduction
were
found
to
be
prohibited
by
paragraph
(b),
further
enquiry
into
whether
it
fell
outside
or
within
the
exceptive
provision
of
paragraph
(a)
could
be
dispensed
with.
On
the
other
hand,
such
enquiry
would
be
necessary
in
the
event
of
a
finding
that
the
deduction
was
not
excluded
by
paragraph
(b).
Authority
for
this
statement
is
found
in
the
observations
of
Thorson,
P.,
in
8133006
Gold
Mines
Limited
v.
M.N.R.,
[1945]
Ex.
C.R.
257
at
261
;
[1945]
C.T.C.
397,
when
dealing
with
the
corresponding
paragraphs
(a)
and
(b)
of
Section
6
of
the
Income
War
Tax
Act.
The
same
reasoning
was
recently
applied
to
Section
12(1)
(a)
and
(b)
of
the
Income
Tax
Act
by
Cameron,
J.,
in
Thompson
Construction
(Chemong)
Ltd.
v.
M.N.R.,
[1957]
Ex.
C.R.
96
at
102;
[1957]
C.T.C.
155.
In
determining
whether
or
not
the
deduction
was
excluded
by
paragraph
(b),
I
will
begin
by
considering
the
purpose
of
the
expenditure
and
the
nature
of
the
benefit
sought.
The
general
manager
testified
(pp.
7
and
12
of
the
transcript)
that
the
sole
purpose
of
the
expenditure
was
to
reduce
the
duty
from
seven
cents
per
deck
in
sheet
form
to
twenty
per
cent
of
the
value
thereof,
which
made
a
difference
of
four
cents
per
pack.
The
evidence
of
the
attorney
shows
that
the
services
performed
by
him
were
related
to
securing
a
rectification
in
the
tariff,
which
he
considered
could
not
be
brought
about
otherwise
than
by
a
statutory
amendment
(p.
26
of
the
transcript).
It
shows
also
that,
because
"the
House
was
not
in
session”,
delays
occurred
in
securing
the
statutory
amendment,
and
it
was
only
as
an
interim
measure
that
the
attorney
asked
to
have
an
Order-in-
Council
passed
(p.
23).
This
was
done
and
in
fact
a
second
one
was
required.
Even
the
first
Order-in-Council
had
to
be
delayed
pending
the
result
of
an
International
Tariff
Conference
in
England
which
the
attorney
attended
(p.
21).
Only
because
of
this
was
it
made
retroactive
and
did
the
appellant
receive
a
refund
of
some
$13,000.
Although
the
general
manager
of.
the
appellant
made
some
reference
to
a
rebate,
I
do
not
think
he
contended
that
it
was
sought,
and
the
following
evidence
of
the
attorney,
at
p.
24,
plainly
shows
that
such
was
not
the
case.
"'The
Tariff
Commissioner
drew
to
my
attention
that
to
right
this
wrong
he
would
even
recommend
that
the
Order-in-Council
be
made
retroactive,
which
produced
for
the
company
an
additional
$13,000
profiit
for
that
one
year,
and
we
recovered
a
cheque
for
some
$13,000.1
did
not
even
go
to
seek
that,
but
as
a
result
of
my
efforts
that
was
a
by-product,
and
to
the
company
a
very
healthy
and
desirable
by-product.
‘
‘
Thus
the
evidence
does
not
support
the
suggestion
that
the
appellant’s
purpose
was
to
secure
a
refund
or
a
benefit
limited
to
the
duration
of
an
Order-in-Council.
Again,
at
p.
14,
the
same
witness,
speaking
of
the
extent
and
duration
of
the
benefit,
said:
A.
If
the
tariff
does
not
change
we
actually
gain
as
long
as
the
tariff
remains
as
it
is.
Q.
And
you
might
expect
to
get
$29,000
each
year?
A.
Depending
on
business
conditions.
Q.
Has
the
tariff
been
changed
since?
A.
The
tariff
has
not
been
changed,
no.”
In
the
light
of
the
foregoing
evidence,
and
also
because
it
was
so
much
in
the
interest
of
the
appellant
to
secure
a
favourable
modification
in
the
tariff
for
as
long
a
period
as
statutory
rights
would
give
it,
I
find
that
such
was
the
appellant’s
purpose.
It
is
true,
of
course,
that
the
amendment
made
to
the
Customs
Tariff
is
not
reserved
for
the
sole
use
of
the
appellant.
N
everthe-
less
it.
is
less
general
than
item
194
and
is
applicable
only
to
wholly
or
partially
lithographed
units
"‘when
imported
by
manufacturers
of
playing
cards
for
use
exclusively
in
their
own
factories^.
This
provision
was
made
to
fit
the
appellant’s
situation
at
its
request
and,
although
someone
else
who
could
conform
to
its
requirements
might
avail
himself
of
it,
it
still
constitutes,
in
my
opinion,
and
will
likely
continue
to
constitute
an
important
benefit
or
advantage
to
the
appellant.
It
is
likewise
true,
as
argued
by
counsel
for
the
appellant,
that
the
company
had
no
assurance
that,
once
the
amending
Act
was
passed
by
Parliament,
it
would
not
at
some
later
date
be
revoked
or
modified.
For
example,
a
change
of
policy
at
governmental
level
on
tariff
matters
could
result
in
a
general
increase
or
reduction
in
customs
duties.
However,
in
virtue
of
R.S.C.
1952,
ce.
158,
Section
8,
every
federal
statute
is
subject
to
amendment,
alteration
or
repeal,
by
a
subsequent
Act,
even
if
passed
at
the
same
session
of
Parliament
during
which
the
original
Act
was
passed.
This
leads
to
the
legal
question
of
the
duration
of
a
statute.
As
pointed
out
at
p.
61
in
Craies
on
Statute
Law,
5th
ed.,
Acts
are
classified
by
reference
to
their
duration
as
temporary
or
perpetual.
(a)
Temporary.
Temporary
statutes
are
those
on
the
duration
of
which
some
limit
is
put
by
Parliament.
(b)
Perpetual.
Perpetual
Acts
are
those
upon
whose
continuance
no
limitation
of
time
is
expressly
named
or
necessarily
to
be
understood.
They
are
no
perpetual
in
the
sense
of
being
irrevocable.”
And
again
under
the
title
"Duration
of
Statutes’’,
at
p.
374:
"‘3.
Duration
presumably
perpetual.
Every
statute
for
which
no
time
is
limited
is
called
a
perpetual
Act,
and
continues
in
force
until
it
is
repealed.”
The
same
statement
appears
in
Halsbury’s
Laws
of
England,
2nd
ed.;
Vol.
31,
Art.
664,
"
"
The
duration
of
a
statute
is
prima
facie
perpetual.”
In
speaking
of
burden
of
proof,
Phipson
on
Evidence,
9th
ed.,
p.
30,
says
:
"(1)
Where
a
disputable
presumption
of
law
exists,
or
a
prima
facie
case
has
been
proved,
in
favour
of
a
party,
it
lies
upon
his
adversary
to
rebut
it.”
I
am
of
the
opinion
that
in
the
present
instance
at
least
a
prima
facie
case
has
been
established
and
that
we
are
dealing
not
with
a
temporary
statutebut
with
one
which
must
be
deemed
to
be
perpetual.
There
remains
the
important
question
of
whether
the
expenditure
should
be
attributed
to
capital
or
to
revenue.
The
appellant
caused
to
be
heard
two
chartered
accountants.
One
of
them,
Mr.
Parkinson,
C.A.,
after
saying
he
considered
the
expenditure
deductible
by
the
ordinary
principles
of
commercial
and
trading
practice
and
that,
as
an
auditor,
he
thought
he
would
oppose
setting
it
up
as
an
asset,
made
the
following
statement,
p.
31
of
the
transcript,
(which
I
think,
in
a
measure
recognizes
the
continuing
nature
of
the
benefit
obtained)
:
"‘
.
certainly
we
can
use
hindsight
when
we
know
the
tariffs
have
not
since
been
changed.
Using
hindsight
we
possibly
could
have
amortized
the
cost
of
that
charge
over
future
years.
On
the
other
hand,
trying
to
use
foresight
at
the
beginning
where
there
is
no
guarantee
that
the
benefit
is
to
last
indefinitely,
and
having
regard
to
the
fact
that
his
(its)
income
was
increased
$29,
000
in
the
year
under
review,
it
would
be
prudent
business
practice
to
deduct
it
completely.’’
Counsel
for
the
respondent
did
not
take
issue
with
the
concluding
words
of
the
opinion
above
expressed.
He
submitted
that
such
complete
deduction
has
been
held
to
be
prohibited
for
income
tax
purposes
because
the
expenditure
is
regarded
as
an
outlay
to
secure
an
enduring
benefit,
and
that
such
decision
must
prevail
over
business
practice
or
good
accountancy.
He
then
referred
to
M.N.R.
v.
Dominion
Natural
Gas
Co.
Ltd.,
[1941]
S.C.R.
19;
[1940-41]
C.T.C.
155.
The
legal
expenses
incurred
in
the
case
cited
resulted
from
the
defence
of
an
action
brought
against
the
taxpayer
by
way
of
an
attack
on
its
franchise
rights
to
continue
to
supply
natural
gas
to
parts
of
the
City
of
Hamilton
by
a
company
which
also
claimed
franchise
rights
therein.
Duff,
C.J.,
while
stating
that
"
"
in
the
ordinary
course,
.
.
.,
legal
expenses
are
simply
current
expenditure
and
deductible
as
such
;
but
that
is
not
necessarily
so
.
.
.,”
came
to
the
conclusion
that
the
expenditure
should
be
attributed
to
capital.
Vide
p.
24.
‘It
satisfies,
I
think,
the
criterion
laid
down
by
Lord
Cave
in
British
Insulated
v.
Atherton.
The
expenditure
was
incurred
‘once
and
for
all’
and
it
was
incurred
for
the
purpose
and
with
the
effect
of
procuring
for
the
company
‘the
advantage
of
an
enduring
benefit’.
The
settlement
of
the
issue
raised
by
the
proceedings
attacking
the
rights
of
the
respondents
with
the
object
of
excluding
them
from
carrying
on
their
undertakings
within
the
limits
of
the
City
of
Hamilton
was,
I
think,
an
enduring
benefit
within
the
sense
of
Lord
Cave’s
lan-
guage
.
.
The
character
of
the
expenditure
is
for
our
present
purposes,
I
think,
analogous
to
that
of
the
expenditure
in
question
in
Moore
v.
Hare,
where
promotion
expenses
incurred
by
coalmasters
in
connection
with
two
parliamentary
bills
giving
authority
to
construct
a
line
to
serve
the
coalfield
were
held
to
be
capital
expenditures.”
In
the
case
of
Montreal
Light,
Heat
and
Power
Consolidated
v.
M.N.R.,
[1942]
S.C.R.
89;
[1942]
C.T.C.
1,
wherein
the
company
sought
to
deduct
as
a
current
expense
the
expenditure
made
to
reduce
carrying
charges
on
its
bonds,
Duff,
C.J.,
at
p.
92
[[1942]
C.T.C.
6],
again
invoked
what
was
said
in
the
Atherton
case
in
these
terms
:
I
think,
moreover,
that
these
disbursements
were
made
for
a
purpose
which
falls
within
the
principle
enunciated
by
Lord
Cave
in
the
British
Insulated
and
Helsby
Cables
Lid.
v.
Atherton;
that
is
to
say,
the
expenditures
were
made
with
a
view
to
securing
an
enduring
benefit,
the
reduction
of
the
cost
of
borrowed
capital
over
a
period
of
at
least
fifteen
years.’’
When
later
heard
before
the
Privy
Council
[1944]
A.C.
126;
[1944]
C.T.C.
94,
the
ensuing
judgment
was
based
not
on
the
prohibition
contained
in
Section
6(1)
(b)
of
the
Income
War
Lax
Act
but
on
that
contained
in
Section
6(1)
(a)
thereof.
Nevertheless
Lord
Macmillan,
at
p.
135
[1944]
C.T.C.
101,
stated:
‘
‘.
.
.
their
Lordships
in
no
way
dissent
from
the
view
that
the
second
objection
(namely,
that
the
expense
was
a
capital
one)
also
applies.”
In
argument,
counsel
for
the
appellant
observed
that
instances
are
not
lacking
where
legal
expenditures
have
been
attributed
to
revenue
rather
than
to
capital
and,
as
no
two
cases
are
identical,
each
must
be
judged
on
its
own
merits.
He
then
cited
particularly
M.N.R.
v.
L.
D.
Caulk
Co.
of
Canada
Ltd.,
[1954]
S.C.R.
55;
[1954]
C.T.C.
28;
M.N.R.
v.
Kellogg
Co.
of
Canada
Lid.,
[1943]
S.C.R.
58;
[1943]
C.T.C.
1.
In
the
Caulk
case
which
distinguished
the
Dominion
Natural
Gras
case,
it
was
held
that
expenses
‘incurred
by
the
taxpayer
in
successfully
defending
itself
against
a
criminal
charge
instigated
by
the
government
under
the
Combines
Investigation
Act,
and
in
making
representations
to
the
Commissioner
administering
the
said
Act,
were
wholly,
exclusively
and
necessarily
laid
out
for
the
purpose
of
earning
income.
I
do
not
think
the
principles
applied
in
that
case,
wherein
a
branch
of
the
government
sought
to
prevent
the
taxpayer
from
carrying
on
business
in
its
accus-
tomed
manner,
are
applicable
in
the
instant
case.
Here
the
appellant
is
free
to
import
its
basic
material
without
interference
but
seeks
a
new
particular
concession
by
way
of
diminished
duties;
and
the
immediate
problem
is
to
determine
whether
or
not
the
appellant
is
deemed
to
have
made
a
capital
expenditure
because
the
expenditure
was
made
in
order
to
obtain
a
continuing
benefit
or
advantage.
I
do
not
think
that
such
an
issue
arose
in
the
Caulk
case.
The
same,
in
my
opinion,
is
true
of
the
judgment
delivered
by
Duff,
C.J.,
in
the
Kellogg
case
wherein
the
appellant
had
no
reasonable
alternative
but
to
defend
itself
against
injunction
proceedings
aimed
at
preventing
it
from
making
use
of
ordinary
descriptive
words
in
connection
with
the
sale
of
its
products.
Here
the
appellant
is
not
faced
with
the
necessity
of
defending
itself
against
someone
seeking
to
deprive
it
of
its
common
law
rights,
but
rather
does
it
seek
the
enactment
of
a
statute
which
will
procure
for
it
a
long-term
advantage
which
it
did
not
previously
possess.
Although,
admittedly,
the
facts
in
the
Dominion
Natural
Gas
and
the
Montreal
Light,
Heat
and
Power
cases
differ
from
those
in
the
present
one,
I
nevertheless
feel
bound
to
follow
them
because
they
contain
certain
criteria
which,
I
believe,
mutatis
mutandis,
are
apposite
herein.
The
expenditure
under
consideration
was,
in
my
opinion,
made
once
and
for
all
to
secure
a
benefit
or
advantage
that
was
expected
to
be
enjoyed
over
a
lengthy
though
indefinite
future
period.
The
purpose
which
motivated
the
expenditure
was
the
appellant’s
desire
to
pay
less
customs
duties
in
the
future
than
in
the
past.
The
fact
that,
in
the
last
analysis,
an
increase
in
income
should
accrue
to
the
appellant
does
not,
I
consider,
affect
the
validity
of
the
above-mentioned
conclusion.
I
therefore
find
that
the
expenditure
in
question
should
be
regarded
as
constituting
a
payment
on
account
of
capital,
the
deduction
of
which
is
prohibited
under
Section
12(1)
(b).
Since
I
find
that
the
deduction
sought
is
so
prohibited,
I
do
not
think
it
necessary
to
discuss
the
respondent’s
alternative
submission
or
the
reasons
advanced
by
the
appellant
in
support
of
its
contention
that
the
case
falls
within
the
exceptive
provision
of
Section
12(1)
(a).
For
the
above-mentioned
reasons,
I
consider
that
the
appeal
in
this
case
should
be
dismissed
with
costs.
Judgment
accordingly.