TRUEMAN,
J.A.:—The
Magistrate
of
the
Provincial
Police
Court,
though
finding
the
accused
in
each
case
guilty
for
failing
on
October
25
and
26,
1923,
to
give
information
demanded
by
the
Minister
under
sec.
8
of
the
Income
War
Tax
Act,
1917
(Can.),
e.
28,
as
amended
by
sees.
11
and
12
of
1920
(Can.),
e.
49.
imposed
no
fine,
and
suspended
sentence.
At
the
request
of
counsel
for
the
Crown
the
Police
Magistrate
reserved
the
following
questions
for
this
Court:
1.
Whether
he
was
required
by
sec.
9(1)
of
the
Income
War
Tax
Act,
1917,
as
amended
by
1919
(Can.),
e.
55,
see.
7:
1920
(Can.),
c.
49,
sec.
18;
1921
(Can.),
ce.
33,
sec.
4,
to
impose
a
penalty
of
$25
for
each
day
on
which
default
continued.
>,
Whether
under
the
said
Acts,
and
law
relating
thereto,
he
had
a
discretion
enabling
him
to
impose
a
lesser
penalty
than
$25
for.
each
day
of
default.
3.
Whether
he
had
power
to
suspend
sentence.
Sec.
9(1)
of
the
Income
War
Tax
Act,
as
amended,
provides
that
for
every
default
in
complying
with
sec.
8,
"‘the
persons
in
default
shall
each
be
liable
on
summary
conviction
to
a
penalty
of
twenty-five
dollars
for
each
day
during
which
the
default
continues?
’
By
subsec.
2:
"‘Any
person
making
a
false
statement
in
any
return
or
in
any
information
required
by
the
Minister,
shall
be
liable
on
summary
conviction
to
a
penalty
not
exceeding
ten
thousand
dollars
or
to
six
months’
imprisonment,
or
to
both
fine
and
imprisonment.’’
In
Rex
v.
Thompson
Mfg.
Co.
(1920)
47
O.L.R.
103,
Latehford,
J.,
held
that
under
sec.
9(1)
the
Magistrate
has
no
discrettion
to
limit
the
number
of
the
days
for
which
the
penalty
was
to
be
imposed,
or
to
reduce
the
amount
of
the
penalty
fixed
by
the
section
for
each
day’s
default.
The
Supreme
Court
of
Nova
Scotia
came
to
the
same
conclusion
in
The
King
v.
Smith
[1923]
1
D.L.R.
820,
38
Can.
C.C.
327,
56
N.S.R.
72,
Harris,
C.J.,
dissenting
on
the
ground
that
sec.
9
(1)
is
subject
to
the
discretion
provided
for
in
sec.
1029
of
the
Code.
The
utmost,
it
seems
to
me,
that
can
be
said
in
support
of
the
view
that
sec.
9(1)
provides
for
a
discretion
is
that
if
a
discretion
were
not
intended,
language
with
a
peremptory
significance
obvious
to
the
lay
mind
would
have
been
used;
familiar
examples
of
which
would
be
known
to
the
parliamentary
draftsman.
For
the
words
‘‘shall
be
liable”
there
might
have
been
substituted.
‘‘shall
forfeit’’
or
‘‘shall
ineur’’
or
‘‘shall
suffer’’
or
‘‘shall
pay”.
See
Customs
Law
Act,
1976
(Imp.),
c.
36,
secs.
106
and
168
;
Act,
1
Wm.
&
M.
c.
18
;
Customs
Act,
R.S.C.
1906,
c.
48,
secs.
186,
187,
189,
193;
and
Act,
1
Jac.
1,
ce.
27.
Yet
in
what
respect
are
these
examples
more
absolute
in
fixing
liability
or
wherein
do
they
exclude
discretion
to
a
more
positive
degree
than
do
the
words
in
the
section?
Discretion
can
only
exist
if
provision
is
made
for
it.
To
import
a
discretion
here
is
to
hold
that
the
words
44
shall
be
liable”,
etc.,
mean,
in
one
view,
‘‘shall
be
liable
to
a
penalty
not
exceeding
twenty-
five
dollars
‘
and
in
another
view,
as
no
minimum
sum
is
named,
discretion
to
impose
no
penalty
at
all.
The
notion
that
the
penalty
is
discretionary
would
appear
to
be
the
result
of
suggestion,
derived
from
the
habitual
use
in
statutory
provisions
of
the
words
"‘shall
be
liable”
when
conferring
discretion
to
impose
a
fine
within
the
limits
of
a
maximum
and
a
minimum
sum.
If
the
words
are
removed
from
the
influence
of
this
suggestion,
and
are
read
literally,
their
mandatory
nature
is
seen
to
be
beyond
question.
See
Foss
Lbr.
Co.
v.
The
King
(1912)
8
D.L.R.
437,
47
S.C.R.
180;
Re
Burton
and
Blinkhorn
[1903]
2
K.B.
300;
Howard
v.
Bodington
(1877)
2
P.D.
203,
at
p.
211.
The
view
adopted
by
Harris,
C.J.,
in
The
King
v.
Smith,
supra,
that
sec.
9(1)
is
to
be
read
subject
to
sec.
1029
of
the
Code
is
pressed
upon
us
by
counsel
for
the
defendant.
Sec.
1029
provides
as
follows:
"Whenever
a
fine
may
be
awarded
or
a
penalty
imposed
for
any
offence,
the
amount
of
such
fine
or
penalty
shall,
within
such
limits,
if
any,
as
are
prescribed
in
that
behalf,
be
in
the
discretion
of
the
court
or
person
passing
sentence
or
convicting,
as
the
case
may
be.’
Harris,
C.J.,
considered
that
if
the
words
"‘within
such
limits,
if
any,
as
are
prescribed
in
that
behalf’’,
were
read
as
if
in
brackets,
it
clearly
appeared
that
the
Court
had
an
unlimited
discretion
as
to
the
amount
of
a
penalty
or
fine
in
all
cases,
provided
that
where
there
are
any
limits
prescribed
the
discretion
must
be
exercised
within
those
limits.
With
great
respect,
while
appreciating
that
the
words
"‘if
any’’
lend
colour
to
this
contention,
I
am
unable
to
adopt
it.
It
involves
a
recasting
of
the
section,
which
will
then
read
as
follows:
"
"
Whenever
a
fine
may
be
awarded
or
a
penalty
imposed
for
any
offence,
the
amount
of
such
fine
or
penalty
shall
be
in
the
discretion
of
the
Court
or
person
passing
sentence
or
convicting,
as
the
case
may
be
;
provided,
however,
that
where
limits
are
prescribed
as
to
the
amount
of
such
fine
or
penalty,
the
discretion
of
the
Court
shall
be
subject
to
such
limits.
This
construction
is
not
required
by
any
difficulty
in
reading
the
section
in
its
ordinary
and
literal
sense.
Why
should
it
be
considered
that
where
a
penalty
is
fixed
by
Parliament
the
Court
should
under
sec.
1029,
have
power
to
reduce
it
to
any
or
no
amount,
though
where
a
maximum
and
a
minimum
limit
is
set,
the
discretion
is
kept
within
it?
If
the
discretion
under
the
section
is
unfettered
in
the
one
case,
there
is
no
reason
why
Parliament
should
not
have
made
it
equally
elastic
in
the
other.
I
would
answer
the
first
question
in
the
affirmative,
and
the
second
and
third
questions
in
the
negative.
The
third
question
is
concluded
by
the
judgment
of
this
Court
in
Rex
v.
Hiebert
(1923)
33
Man.
L.R.
375.
Judgment
accordingly.