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A-331-75
Great Canadian Oil Sands Supply Limited and Wabco Equipment Canada Limited (Appellants)
v.
Deputy Minister of National Revenue for Customs and Excise (Respondent)
Court of Appeal, Heald and Ryan JJ. and MacKay D.J.—Toronto, February 25 and March 4, 1976.
Customs and excise Appeal and judicial review Whether trucks and parts, being "machinery and apparatus for use ... for operating oil sands by mining operations" of a "class or kind made in Canada"—Whether question of fact or law— Jurisdiction—Customs Act, R.S.C. 1970, c. C-40 and Tariff Items 41006-1,49215-1,49216-1.
The Tariff Board supported the Deputy Minister's decision that 17 trucks and parts thereof, purchased for overburden removal in the Athabasca oil sands operations, were of a "class or kind made in Canada" and dutiable under Tariff Item 49215-1 in the amount of $554,452.
Held, reversing the Board's decision, the trucks and parts are not subject to any duty since they should have been classified under Item 49216-1. Tariff Items 49215-1 and 49216-1 incor porate a form of end use provision ("for operating oil sands"); in such a case, use becomes the basis for classification and, for purposes of findings of class or kind, all goods that do not meet the end use requirement are excluded. The Board construed the Tariff Items as though they contained no references to oil sands operations, thereby rendering almost meaningless the plain meaning of the words used in the Items. The purpose of the legislators was to grant an exemption for imported machinery necessary for oil sand mining operations where competitive Canadian made machinery is unobtainable. The Board erred in failing to tie the end use to the determination of class or kind. Such error was not one of fact, but of law, and the Court is not without jurisdiction under section 48(1) of the Customs Act.
Canadian Lift Truck Co. Ltd. v. Dep. M.N.R. (1956) 1 D.L.R. (2d) 497, applied. Dominion Engineering Works Ltd. v. Dep. M.N.R. [1958] S.C.R. 652; Dep. M.N.R. v. MacMillan & Bloedel [1965] S.C.R. 366; Dep. M.N.R. v. Saint John Shipbuilding (1966) 55 D.L.R. (2d) 503 and Consumers' Gas Company v. Dep. M.N.R. [1972] F.C. 1057 (affirmed by S.C.C. Oct. 7, 1975), distinguished.
APPEAL and judicial review.
COUNSEL:
J. R. Houston, Q.C., and M. Sclisizzi for appellants.
A. Garneau and W. G. St. John for respondent.
SOLICITORS:
Tilley, Carson & Findlay, Toronto, for appellants.
Deputy Attorney General of Canada for respondent.
The following are the reasons for judgment rendered in English by
HEALD J.: This is a joint proceeding comprising an appeal under section 48(1) of the Customs Act on a question of law from a decision of the Tariff Board and a section 28 application to review and set aside said decision. The proceedings were joined by order of the Chief Justice.
In the decision appealed from, the Tariff Board dismissed the appeal of the appellant from two decisions by the respondent to the effect that 17 Wabco 150 B Haul Pak Rear Dump Trucks and parts thereof were of a "class or kind made in Canada" and were thus dutiable under Tariff Item 49215-1, said duty amounting to $554,452.
The trucks and parts in issue in this appeal were purchased by the appellant, Great Canadian Oil Sands Supply Limited (hereafter G.C.O.S.) from the appellant Wabco Equipment Canada Limited (hereafter Wabco Canada) and were manufac tured in Peoria, Illinois. Said trucks were imported into Canada by Wabco Canada between July 6, 1971 and November 10, 1971 and certain parts for the trucks were imported by the appellants be tween September 29, 1971 and December 30, 1971.
The three tariff items which need to be con sidered in these proceedings read as follows:
Tariff when goods imported
(a) Tariff Item 41006-1 from U.S.A.
Diesel-powered self propelled dump trucks, mounted on rubber-tired wheels or on rubber- tired wheels and half-tracks, having a rated capacity by struck volume of not less than 9 1 / 2 cubic yards, and by payload weight of not less than 15 tons, and parts thereof, for off-highway use in carrying minerals or other excavated ma terials at mines, quarries, gravel and sand pits or
at construction sites. 10 per cent
(b) and (c) Tariff Items 49215-1 and 49216-1
Machinery and apparatus for use in producing unrefined oil from shales or for operating oil- sands by mining operations or for extracting oil from the sands so mined
49215-1—of a class or kind made in Canada;
parts thereof 10 per cent
49216-1 of a class or kind not made in Canada;
parts thereof Free
Originally, respondent's officials decided to clas sify said trucks and parts under Tariff Item 41006-1. However, this decision was changed and a redetermination made classifying them under Tariff Item 49215-1.
G.C.O.S. has pioneered the mining of oil sands and the extraction of oil from such sands. It was the first and remains the only company to have conducted such operations on a commercial scale in Canada. G.C.O.S. has lease and patent rights in the Athabasca oil sands region of Alberta and has constructed and is operating a plant for extracting oil from the oil sands so mined by it. Sustained commercial production began about 1968.
The body of oil sands which is being mined by G.C.O.S. is covered by a substantial thickness of overburden (averaging 60 feet in depth) which must be stripped and removed in order to expose the oil sands and this operation is of vital impor tance in the mining of these oil sands. In 1969 and 1970, G.C.O.S. removed 6' million tons of over burden a year. Its estimate was that during the year 1971 to 1980, it would have to remove 12
million yards a year in order to sustain its operations.
The problem of disposal of the overburden within the lease site so that mining of the oil sands could continue, necessitates the construction, from the overburden material, of a system of dikes. Any equipment used to remove overburden must be able to travel on the surface of the dikes. The overburden is unusual in its composition, the larg est component being a saturated silt with virtually no compactability. Thus the dikes have an extremely low bearing quality. From its experience before 1970, G.C.O.S. ascertained that equipment having a ground bearing pressure of 66 pounds p.s.i. or less could function on the dikes most of the time, but that equipment having a high ground bearing pressure was unsuited to the conditions on the dikes.
Prior to 1970, G.C.O.S. had been using Cater pillar scrapers for overburden removal. In 1970, it was necessary to replace them because they were wearing out. G.C.O.S. was aware that a new and larger type of truck tire, known as 36" x 51" tires had recently been developed and that these tires had the effect of materially reducing ground bear ing pressure. Accordingly, it investigated what large dump trucks were available having a capaci ty great enough to make their operation economi cal and a ground bearing pressure low enough to permit them to operate on the dikes. A comparison was also made of other features of large dump trucks then on the market. Delivery time was a critical factor since G.C.O.S. required the new equipment on the site by May or June of 1971. '
After considering alternative dump trucks and rejecting most of them for various reasons, the choice was reduced to two prime contenders, the Canadian made Unit Rig 120 (120 tons) and the U.S. made Wabco 150 B truck (150) tons which is in issue in this action. The latter was chosen because it was said there was uncertainty on the part of the Unit Rig Company truck relating to tires and ground pressure; and also because the power to weight ratio of the Wabco truck was more favourable. There was some 141,000 lbs. difference in net weight. This would have resulted in a disastrous drop in payload. A strong factor in the decision was the fact that the Wabco truck was
designed to be equipped with the new 36" x 51" tires which meant G.C.O.S. could operate with an economic, adequate loading of the vehicle for dif ferent conditions of 65 or 66 pounds ground pres sure. The commitment to purchase the Wabco trucks was made on November 10, 1970.
There was some suggestion that a Canadian made 150 ton Terex truck manufactured by Gen eral Motors Diesel Division was a "contender". However, on the evidence, it is clear that only 4 of these units were manufactured between September of 1970 and November of 1971 and that they were merely prototypes and had not yet gone into pro duction at the time of purchase of the Wabco trucks by G.C.O.S. The evidence establishes that on November 10, 1970, none of the four units were in use. They were clearly not in contention as far as G.C.O.S. was concerned nor were they available to G.C.O.S. as an alternative to the Wabco trucks at any relevant time.
The Tariff Board, in a split 2 - 1 decision decided that subject trucks and parts were covered by Tariff Item 49215-1—"of a class or kind made in Canada". The dissenting member of the Board would have classified subject trucks and parts as being covered by Tariff Item 49216-1—"of a class or kind not made in Canada". All 3 members of the Board agreed that Tariff Item 41006-1 did not apply. The parties to this appeal also agree that Tariff Item 41006-1 does not apply (although the intervenant in the proceedings before the Tariff Board, General Motors of Canada did so submit but said intervenant is not a party to this appeal).
While there is no issue between the parties on the applicability of Tariff Item 41006-1, I should say that I agree with the reasons expressed in the majority judgment of the Tariff Board for holding that Tariff Item 41006-1 does not apply, said reasons being contained at pages 10 and 11 of the majority judgment. (Appeal Book, pages 796 and 797.)
Accordingly, the question to be decided in these proceedings is whether subject trucks and parts, being undoubtedly "machinery and apparatus for use ... for operating oil-sands by mining opera tions ..." were "of a class or kind made in Canada".
At page 13 of the majority judgment it is stated: "From the evidence, ... , the Board has some reason for believing that at the time when the trucks in issue entered Canada, there were in fact no trucks immediately available from Canadian manufacturers which could negotiate the difficult soil conditions which obtain on the dikes at the GCOS mine site at Fort McMurray as successful ly as did the trucks in issue; nor has the Board any reason to doubt that this success was largely due to the relatively low ground bearing pressure of the Wabco 150 B Haulpak Rear Dump Truck." The dissenting member of the Board agreed with the above statement from the majority judgment. At pages 16 and 17 of his judgment (pages 802 and 803 of the Appeal Book), the dissenting member of the Board stated:
The tariff structure is a method of classifying goods for import tax purposes by use of the tariff item. Characteristical ly, the tariff item names or describes the goods that are to fall under its provisions. Under this circumstance, the enactment of a class or kind provision in conjunction with the description contained in the item, provides for the establishment of such categories of goods within the classification as described in the item. The limits of such categories may vary in scope as the relevant jurisprudence will show.
However, where end use is enacted as part of an item, the item becomes only in part a description of goods as such. Classification must then be based both upon the goods as described, and the use as designated. While this adds a new dimension to the requirements of an item, it also has the effect of restricting its application. Inasmuch as the class or kind concept has no relevance or identity except in relation to the item in which it is enacted, it is' obvious that the finding of a category of class or kind of goods in the context of an end use provision, will necessarily be specific, because the item itself is specific to a particular use. However, the nature and breadth of the evidence to be considered in establishing appropriate cri teria will be as broad as the scope and character of the activity described in the item.
It is difficult to construe the wording of tariff items 49215-1 and 49216-1 as other than an expression or intent to assist in the development of the oil sands. These items refer to ma chinery and apparatus and describe the scope and character of the activity as "for operating oil-sands by mining operations or for extracting oil from the sands so mined", both specific procedures. In the present appeal, the evidence is that mining of the tar sands is a specific procedure which entails the meeting of very specific requirements. Consequently it follows that to the degree that the mining of the tar sands requires a particular kind, type, size or capacity of machinery and apparatus, to that degree specificity is appropriate in fixing the limits of a class or kind finding in the present appeal.
I agree with the views of the dissenting member as above expressed and I do not agree with the view of the majority of the Board that the end use should not be tied to the determination of class or kind. I also agree with the view of the minority member where he stated at page 16 of his judg ment (page 802 of the Appeal Book):
... the present appeal is in respect to a tariff item which incorporated a form of end use provision, namely, "for operat ing oil-sands". Where a use provision is enacted use becomes more than a facet of the evidence as to the nature of the goods, it becomes the basis for classification under the item. This will exclude for purposes of findings of class or kind, all goods that do not meet this end use requirement, inasmuch as they will not be the goods described in the item.
To construe Tariff Items 49215-1 and 49216-1 in the manner they were construed by the majority of the Board is to read these items as though the references to oil-sands operations were entirely absent therefrom. Such a construction would dis tort and render almost meaningless the clear and plain meaning of the words employed in said Items by the legislators.
A reading of these tariff items makes it clear to me that the legislators, in enacting them, intended to grant an exemption for imported machinery, necessary for oil sand mining operations where it was not possible to obtain competitive machinery "made in Canada"—that is—competitive in the sense of being economically feasible and capable of performing the same functions.
I have therefore concluded that the Board majority made a serious error in construing said tariff items in the manner above described.
It is submitted, however, by counsel for the respondent, that if the majority of the Board were in error, that said error was not an error on a question of law, but rather one of fact and since section 48(1) of the Customs Act provides for an appeal to this Court only on a question of law, this Court is without jurisdiction to grant the relief asked for by the appellants. The leading authority, in this connection, is the Supreme Court judgment of Kellock J. in Canadian Lift Truck Co. Ltd. v. Dep. M.N.R.' At page 498 of the judgment, Mr. Justice Kellock said:
While the construction of a statutory enactment is a question of law, and the question as to whether a particular matter or thing is of such a nature or kind as to fall within the legal definition is a question of fact, nevertheless if it appears to the appellate Court that the tribunal of fact had acted either without any evidence or that no person, properly instructed as to the law and acting judicially, could have reached the particu lar determination, the Court may proceed on the assumption that a misconception of law has been responsible for the determination; Edwards vs Bairstow, [1955] 3 All E.R. 48. [The underlining is mine.]
In my view, the majority of the Board erred in construing subject Tariff Items in failing to tie the end use to the determination of class or kind and such an error, on the authority of the Canadian Lift Truck case referred to (supra) is an error of law which clothes this Court with jurisdiction to grant relief to the appellants.
In addition to the Canadian Lift Truck case (supra) counsel also relied on the Dominion Engi neering case,' the MacMillan Bloedel case,' the
(1956) 1 D.L.R. (2d) 497 at 498.
2 Dominion Engineering Works Ltd. v. Dep. M.N.R. [1958] S.C.R. 652.
' Dep. M.N.R. v. MacMillan & Bloedel (Alberni) Limited [1965] S.C.R. 366.
Saint John Shipbuilding case,' and the Consum ers' Gas case,' in support of his submission that whether subject trucks are of a class or kind made in Canada within the meaning of Tariff Item 49215-1 is a question of fact and not of law.
However, the Canadian Lift Truck case, the Dominion Engineering case, the MacMillan Bloe- del case, and the Saint John Shipbuilding case were all cases under old Tariff Item 427a which read as follows:
427a. All machinery composed wholly or in part of iron or steel, n.o.p., of a class or kind not made in Canada; complete parts of the foregoing.
In my opinion, these cases have no application to the present case, because, as pointed out in the dissenting judgment (Appeal Book page 802), no provision with respect to end use was contained in Tariff Item 427a and thus those cases were decid ed solely on the basis of the nature of the goods per se.
I am likewise of the view that the Consumers' Gas case does not assist the respondent. In that case the appellant public utility companies appealed from a declaration of the Tariff Board that regulators used by them in reducing the pres sure of gas delivered to their customers were not used "in the manufacture or production of goods" within the meaning of paragraph 1(a) of Part XIII of Schedule III of the Excise Tax Act, so as to be exempt from sales tax. The appeal was dismissed by the Federal Court of Appeal. In the majority judgment, Chief Justice Jackett said at page 1062:
It would appear to me from this decision that the question as to whether, in the circumstances of a particular case, a particu lar process is one of "manufacture" or "production" is, within wide limits, a question of fact for decision by the Tariff Board in a case that arises as this one did. In other words, as I understand it, what is "manufacture" or "production" depends on the sense in which those words are used in the context of different situations. In the context of this case, I cannot con clude that the Tariff Board was wrong in law in not finding
4 Dep. M.N.R. v. Saint John Shipbuilding & Dry Dock Ltd. (1966) 55 D.L.R. (2d) 503.
5 Consumers' Gas Company v. Dep. M.N.R. [ 1972] F.C. 1057—affirmed by Supreme Court of Canada—October 7, 1975 [(1976) 59 D.L.R. (3d) 610].
that changing the pressure of the natural gas in the regulators is "manufacture" or "production".
If I am wrong in my view that the question is one of fact—if, in other words, once the basic facts are established, it is a question of law for the Court as to whether they fall within the exemption provision—then, I am of the view that the Tariff Board's decision was correct.
What is "manufacture" or "production" within the ordinary sense of those words is something that varies according to the context or class of activity involved. A merchandiser or retailer does many things in the course of distribution that are neces sary to make his goods acceptable to, or usable by, his custom ers. Generally speaking, if those things are things normally done by the distributor in the course of distribution, they would not be regarded by the business community as manufacture or production. Certainly, it would be a shock to a retailer if he found that such acts made him liable to consumption or sales tax on the retail sale price. On the other hand, a retailer can combine the role of manufacturer and retailer, and it is a question, if not of fact, of characterization, to decide whether border line acts fall in one class or the other. In my view, merely changing the pressure of natural gas, when it is a reversible act such as it appears to be in this case, cannot, within the ordinary sense in which the words are used, be regarded as either "manufacture" or "production".
The situation in that case is quite different from that in the case at bar. What I perceive the learned Chief Justice to be stating in the passage above quoted, is that, in his view, the question as to whether a particular process is one of "manufac- ture" or "production" is one of fact depending on the circumstances of a particular case but, if it is a question of law, then, in that case, the Tariff Board did not misdirect themselves on the question of law. In the case at bar, the Tariff Board was required to interpret and construe Tariff Items 49215-1 and 49216-1, and in so doing, the majori ty of the Board erred in law in effectively ignoring the end-use provisions thereof, thus approaching the task of classification under said Tariff Items, on an improper basis. Accordingly, the majority decision of the Board cannot be allowed to stand, and must be reversed.
Section 48(17) of the Customs Act provides the way in which the Court may dispose of an appeal of this kind and reads as follows:
(17) The Court may dispose of an appeal by making such order or finding as the nature of the matter may require, and, without limiting the generality of the foregoing, may
(a) declare what rate of duty is applicable, or that no rate of duty is applicable, to the specific goods or the class of goods with respect to which the appeal to the Tariff Board was taken,
(b) declare the value for duty of the specific goods or class of goods, or
(c) refer the matter back to the Tariff Board for re-hearing.
Accordingly, pursuant to section 48(17)(a), I would declare that the 17 Wabco 150 B Haul Pak Rear Dump Trucks and parts thereof owned by the appellants herein are not subject to any duty since they should have been classified under Tariff Item 49216-1. It is also not in dispute that duty in the sum of $554,452 was paid on subject trucks and parts (see notice of appeal, paragraph 2 of statement of facts and statutory provisions—see also reply to notice of appeal, paragraph 1 of statement of facts and statutory provisions).
Since the Court is empowered to make such an order "as the nature of the matter may require," I would order, additionally, that the duty in the sum of $554,452, referred to (supra) be returned to the appellants by the respondent. The appellants, not having asked for costs, either in the pleadings or in the submissions before us, there will be no order as to costs.
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RYAN J.: I concur.
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MACKAY D.J.: I concur.
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