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A-497-79
War Amputations of Canada (Applicant)
v.
Pension Review Board (Respondent)
Court of Appeal, Urie and Ryan JJ. and Kerr D.J.—Ottawa, December 18, 1979 and January 25, 1980.
Judicial review — Application to review and set aside decision of Pension Review Board's interpretation of s. 57 of the Pension Act so as to exclude any unpensioned fraction of a disability in determining entitlement to an exceptional incapacity allowance — Whether Board erred in law — Pen sion Act, R.S.C. 1970, c. P-7, ss. 12(1),(3.2), 57, 81.1 — Federal Court Act, R.S.C. 1970 (2nd Supp.), c. 10, s. 28.
This is a section 28 application to review and set aside the decision of the Pension Review Board whereby, pursuant to section 81.1 of the Pension Act, in response to the request of the applicant, the Board gave its interpretation of section 57 of the Act. The applicant raised the issue as to whether the Board erred in law by interpreting section 57 of the Act so as to exclude an unpensioned fraction of a disability in determining entitlement to an exceptional incapacity allowance or, in other words, that only the pensionable parts of the fractionally-pen- sionable disability may be considered in determining the exist ence of exceptional incapacity within the meaning of section 57.
Held, the section 28 application is allowed. Section 1.1 of the Act provides for a liberal construction of the Act to the end that the obligation of the people and the Government of Canada to provide compensation of those members of the forces who have been disabled or have died as a result of military service, may be fulfilled. Section 12 provides the basis of an award of a pension on an aggravational or fractional basis when the Canadian Pension Commission determines that a medical condition or disability existing prior to enlistment was aggravated during military service. Section 12(3.2) enables the Commission to award an additional pension on a fractional basis where it finds that as a consequence of a pensioned disability the member of the forces suffers an additional dis ability. Schedule A prescribes the various classes of pensions numbering from 1 to 20. Each class includes in it a range of percentage of disability which appears to be found by reference to the table of disabilities made by the Commission pursuant to section 26(2). Section 57(1)(a) provides that where a member of the forces is in receipt of a pension in the amount set out in Class 1 of Schedule A, i.e. 98-100%, he has fulfilled the first condition necessary to qualify him for the exceptional incapaci ty allowance. The difficulty in the interpretation of paragraph (b) has led to this application. The submission of the applicant is that for the purpose of determining whether the incapacity is to be considered exceptional once the member of the forces has attained a disability rating under Class 1 of Schedule A, the
composition of that disability rating is irrelevant; upon a causal relationship being established between the disability for which an applicant is in receipt of a pension and his claimed level of incapacity, the full extent of the incapacity must be considered in assessing the individual's exceptional incapacity application, notwithstanding that one or more of the disabilities for which he is in receipt of a pension may have been awarded on a fractional or aggravational basis. Respondent's counsel says the whole scheme of the Act makes it clear that pensions may only be awarded for injury or disease arising out of military service or for aggravations by such service of pre-existing injury or disease. Section 57 is capable of rival constructions. That being so resort must be had to the object or principle of the statute if that can be collected from its language. Section 57 by its terms represents a deliberate departure from the intention or principle which prevails in the award of a pension. The section does not authorize the award of an additional "pension". It authorizes the payment of an "allowance" if certain conditions are ful filled. Nothing in it indicates that it must be predicated only on pensionable disabilities, nor, by the same token does it exclude from the determination of "exceptional incapacity" that part of the incapacity which is attributable to non-pensionable injury or disease. In determining such incapacity the Commission must take into account the matters referred to in section 57(2). But it is not limited to these matters. Indeed, it is an error in law to interpret subsection (2) as imposing such a limitation.
APPLICATION for judicial review.
COUNSEL:
Brian N. Forbes for applicant.
W. L. Nisbet, Q.C. and T. R. Giles for
respondent.
SOLICITORS:
Adam, Forbes, Singer, Ottawa, for applicant.
Deputy Attorney General of Canada for respondent.
The following are the reasons for judgment rendered in English by
URIE J.: This is a section 28 application to review and set aside a decision of the Pension Review Board whereby, pursuant to section 81.1 of the Pension Act, R.S.C. 1970, c. P-7, as amended, in response to the request of the applicant herein, the Board gave its interpretation of section 57 of the Act. In The War Amputations of Canada v.
The Pension Review Board' this Court held that interpretation decisions of this nature by the Board were reviewable under section 28 of the Federal Court Act, R.S.C. 1970 (2nd Supp.), c. 10.
The relevant subsections of section 57 of the Act read as follows:
57. (1) In addition to any other allowance or pension award ed under this Act, a member of the forces who
(a) is in receipt of a pension in the amount set out in Class 1 of Schedule A, and
(b) is suffering an exceptional incapacity that is a conse quence of or caused in whole or in part by such disability,
is entitled to an allowance in an amount determined by the Commission, which allowance shall not be less than eight hundred dollars per annum and not more than twenty-four hundred dollars per annum.
(2) Without restricting the generality of paragraph (1)(b), in determining whether the incapacity suffered by a member of the forces is exceptional, account shall be taken of the extent to which the disability for which he is receiving a pension has left the member in a helpless condition or in continuing pain and discomfort, has resulted in loss of enjoyment of life or has shortened his life expectancy.
While the applicant in its memorandum of points for argument raised a number of issues, it seems to me they can all be condensed into the single issue expressed by the respondent in its memorandum, namely, whether or not the Pension Review Board erred in law by interpreting section 57 of the Pension Act so as to exclude any unpensioned fraction of a disability in determining entitlement to an exceptional incapacity allowance. As the last of its points in issue the applicant expressed the question before us in this way:
the validity of the specific ruling of the Pension Review Board that only the pensionable parts of the fractionally-pensionable disability may be considered in determining the existence of exceptional incapacity within the meaning of section 57.
To understand the issues it is necessary to have some understanding of the scheme of the Act. It should first be noted that it is described as an "Act to provide pensions to or in respect of members of the ... Canadian naval, army and air forces."
Section 1.1 says that:
' [1975] F.C. 447.
1.1 The provisions of this Act shall be liberally construed and interpreted to the end that the recognized obligation of the people and Government of Canada to provide compensation to those members of the forces who have been disabled or have died as a result of military service, and to their dependants, may be fulfilled.
Section 12 of the Act provides for the award of pensions and in particular section 12(1)(a) 2 pro vides the basis for an award of a pension on an aggravational or fractional basis when the Canadi- an Pension Commission (hereinafter called the Commission) determines that a medical condition or disability existing prior to enlistment was aggravated during military service. The method adopted to determine the aggravation is to assess the total disability and to award a pension for it on a fractional basis as a means of measuring the degree of the disability attributable to military service. Section 12(3.2) 3 enables the Commission to award an additional pension on a fractional basis where it finds that as a consequence of a pensioned disability the member of the forces suf fers an additional disability. In such circumstance the Commission finds the consequential disability is only partly consequential of the disability for which he receives a pension.
Under the Act, a member of the forces (defined by section 2(1) as being a person who has served in the Canadian Forces or in the naval, army or air forces of Canada or Newfoundland since the com mencement of World War I) may attain a level of pension of 100% as a maximum which, in effect,
2
12. (1) In respect of military service rendered during World War I or during World War II and subject to the exception contained in subsection (2),
(a) pensions shall be awarded in accordance with the rates set out in Schedule A to or in respect of members of the forces when the injury or disease or aggravation thereof resulting in the disability in respect of which the application for pension is made was attributable to or was incurred during such military service;
3
12....
(3.2) In addition to any pension awarded under this section a
member of the forces who is
(a) in receipt of a pension for a disability, and
(b) suffering an additional disability that is in whole or in part a consequence of such disability
shall, on application, be awarded a pension in accordance with the rates set out in Schedule A, in respect of that part of the additional disability that is a consequence of the disability for which he is in receipt of a pension.
represents a measurement of his disability as pro vided under section 26 of the Act. Schedule A, referred to in paragraph (a) of section 12(1) supra, prescribes the various classes of pensions numbering from 1 to 20. Each class includes in it a range of percentage of disability which appears to be found by reference to the table of disabilities made by the Commission pursuant to section 26(2) of the Act. 4 For each class a percentage in round figures is prescribed as the annual rate of pension. Thus, under Schedule A, Class 1 is for a range of disabilities of 98-100%, for which the percentage of pension to be paid annually is 100%.
This brief review of the scheme of the Act brings us to the point where the issue before the Court may be examined namely, the proper con struction or interpretation to be given to section 57 of the Act.
It can be seen that by paragraph (a) of subsec tion (1) of that section, when a member of the forces is in receipt of a pension in the amount set out in Class 1 of Schedule A, i.e. 98-100%, he has fulfilled the first condition necessary to qualify him for the exceptional incapacity allowance. The difficulty arises in the interpretation of paragraph (b) of section 57(1).
The policy of the Commission, arising out of its interpretation of the section, is disclosed in a letter from the Chairman of the Commission to the Secretary of the applicant dated November 10, 1978, which is part of the record, the relevant portion of which follows:
The current practice of the Commission is that only to the extent that a disability was pensionable would account be taken of the extent to which it contributed to the member's exception al incapacity.
This policy was challenged by the applicant when it requested an interpretation of section 57 of the Act as it was permitted to do by section 81.1
4
26....
(2) The estimate of the extent of a disability shall be based on the instructions and a table of disabilities to be made by the Commission for the guidance of physicians and surgeons making medical examinations for pension purposes.
thereof. It is the Board's interpretation made pur suant to that request which is attacked in this section 28 application.
The problem arises where an applicant for an exceptional disability allowance has attained a Class 1 level of pension through the combined result of grants of entitlement for a number of disabilities, one or more of which may have been awarded on a fractional or aggravational basis. To illustrate the problem, the applicant in its memo randum of fact and law set out the following hypothetical case wherein a number of conditions or disabilities have been pensioned resulting in a total rate of pension provided for in Class 1 of Schedule A to the Act. The applicant's example was slightly amended, for ease of calculation, at the suggestion of counsel for the respondent.
1) Amputation of left leg—below knee (attributable
to military service) 70%
2) Gunshot wound—right knee (attributable to
military service) 10%
3) Osteo-arthritis lumbar spine (1/5 consequential
on amputation of left leg, S.12 (3.2)) 20%
4) Right shoulder injury (1/5 consequential on
amputation left leg, S.12 (3.2)) 5%
5) Right ankle injury (1/5 consequential of amputa
tion of left leg) 5%
While the percentage of disabilities for which entitlement may be granted may total 110%, as in the example, or even a larger total percentage than that, the actual payment for disability, pursuant to sections 12 and 26, can never exceed the rate for pension set out in Class 1 of Schedule A to the Act. It may be further noteworthy, for the purpose of understanding the policy of the Commission and the interpretation given to section 57 by the Pen sion Review Board, that the unpensionable frac tions of disabilities 3), 4) and 5), namely four- fifths of 100% in item 3), and four-fifths of 25% in items 4) and 5), total 120%. It is the contention of the respondent that only the pensioned part of the disability may be considered in determining whether or not the incapacity is considered to be exceptional, and that no allowance for the unpen- sioned part may be granted under the scheme of the Act.
On the other hand, the submission of the appli cant, in general terms, is that for the purpose of determining whether the incapacity is to be con-
sidered exceptional once the member of the forces has attained a disability rating under Class 1 of Schedule A, the composition of that disability rating is irrelevant. The applicant's view is "upon a causal relationship being established in whole or in part between the disability or disabilities for which an applicant is in receipt of a pension, and his claimed level of incapacity, the full extent of the incapacity must be considered by the Canadian Pension Commission in assessing the individual's exceptional incapacity application, notwithstand ing that one or more of the disabilities for which he is in receipt of a pension may have been award ed on a fractional or aggravational basis".
The Pension Review Board dealt with the foregoing submissions in the following excerpt from its reasons:
The second construction, that of the applicant, accepts the premise that the extent of the incapacity is exceptional only to the extent that it is related to the disability for which the member is in receipt of a pension. It also accepts that "such disability" in paragraph 57(1)(b) refers to the disability for which the member is in receipt of a pension as determined in an earlier interpretation (I-15).
The applicant argued that, in a Class 1 pensioner, once a consequential relationship can be established between the mem ber's exceptional incapacity and a fractional pensionable dis ability the extent of the exceptional incapacity must be based on the entire disability.
To suggest that once a consequential relationship can be established between a disability fractionally pensionable and the incapacity the full extent of the disability must be con sidered in determining the exceptional nature of the incapacity is to suggest that the member is in receipt of a pension for the full extent of the disability.
Extensive reference was made to discounting or devaluing or segregating the member's entitlement. Again, this assumes that the member holds entitlement for the full disability. The rele vant words are the following:
Section 57(1)(a) Class 1 pensioner
(Schedule A)
Section 57(1)(b) such disability
Section 57(2) disability for which he is in receipt
of a pension.
It should be observed that the word "disability" is used in conjunction with Schedule A of the Pension Act and that it has a specific meaning in this context. It means the loss or lessening of the power to will and to do any normal, mental or physical act as a result of injury or disease or aggravation thereof.
The wording of subsection 57(2) makes it mandatory, in determining if the incapacity is exceptional, that account shall
be taken of the disability from injury, disease or aggravation thereof for which the member is receiving a pension.
It follows that a member in receipt of a pension on a one-fifth aggravation basis is not in receipt of a pension for the non-service-related disability but is in receipt of a pension for an aggravation of the disability. "Such disability" in subsection (1) refers to the disability which made him a Class 1 pensioner and the disability for which he is in receipt of a pension is not the non-service-related disability but its aggravation. If a member is a Class 1 pensioner by virtue of aggravations of non-service-related disabilities, he is in receipt of a pension for the aggravations of the disabilities and subsection 57(2) states that account shall be taken of the extent to which the aggrava tions contributed to his incapacity. This merely gives the word ing of subsection 57(2) its ordinary meaning and is fully compatible with the scheme of the Act. Under section 26, only the aggravation is assessed. The same is true of subsection 12(3.2) in cases where the primary entitlement is held on an aggravation basis. The consequential award is then made on an aggravation basis. Similarly paragraph 12(1)(c) states categorically: "No pension shall be paid for a disability or disabling condition that at the time he became a member was obvious or was recorded on medical examination prior to enlistment".
Reference was made to a possible conflict between the Canadian Pension Commission construction of section 57 and the wording of section 26.1. The basic requirement of section 26.1 is that the member be a pensioner. He can be any one of the 20 classes of pensioner. This issue was resolved by Interpre tation I-16 (1976 PRBR 1). Section 57 requires that he be a Class 1 pensioner. The basic requirement is the same: in both cases he must be a pensioner. The difference is merely one of two different requirements and raises no conflict.
The third construction, that of the Canadian Pension Com mission, on which its policy statement is based, is that only to the extent that a disability is pensionable is account taken of the extent to which it contributed to the member's exceptional incapacity. In the view of this Board, as appears from what has been said, such a construction is the correct one.
Let it first be said that the Board was, in my opinion, clearly wrong when it held in its interpre tation of subsections (1) and (2) of section 57 that regard must first be had to subsection (2) and that "it is only after this determination has been made that the operative section of subsection (1) can take effect." Such an interpretation restricts the breadth of the application of subsection (2), viz., "Without restricting the generality of paragraph (1)(b)...".
As I see it, the only way the Board's view of the function of subsection (2) could be maintained would be to ignore those words. But they cannot be ignored. They are vital. Among other things, they mean that the subsection is not to restrict the scope of the term "exceptional incapacity" for that would be to restrict the generality, the "reach", of subsection (1)(b). Their presence, in fact, points to Parliament's intention that, in determining wheth er the incapacity suffered is exceptional, certain objective tests must be taken into account. These tests are not, however, to be read as restricting the general requirement of subsection (1)(b), which is that exceptional incapacity is to be determined by whatever criteria are relevant. The purpose of subsection (2) is to make clear that account must be taken of the matters mentioned, along with other relevant factors, in determining whether an incapacity is exceptional.
However, this error does not of itself invalidate the Board's ultimate view as to the interpretation of section 57(1). The difficulty in interpreting the provision is caused by the somewhat obscure word ing of paragraph (b). The words "such disability" appearing at the end of the paragraph are without grammatical antecedent. It is common ground that they refer to Class 1 of Schedule A disabilities as referred to in paragraph (a) of the section, and I think that this is the correct view.
Still, that does not end the matter. As has been already noted, a 100% disability pension may be composed of one or more fractional awards for aggravations of conditions which were not wholly occasioned by military service or were consequen tial only in part on disabilities incurred during military service. The contention of the applicant is that, once the 100% pension has been awarded, no account need be taken of the composition of the disabilities leading to the 100% pension award for the purpose of determining whether or not an applicant is entitled to an allowance for exception al incapacity under section 57. The applicant sub mitted that the Parliamentary intention that this be so is shown by the use in the section of the word "incapacity" rather than "disability" and of the word "allowance" rather than "pension"; both of these words are used for precise purposes through-
out the other sections of the Act. It was also submitted that an applicant for an exceptional incapacity allowance must firstly satisfy the Com mission that he is a Class 1 pensioner and, second ly, that the claimed exceptional incapacity is a consequence of or caused in whole or in part by the disabilities for which he is in receipt of the Class 1 pension.
On the other hand, respondent's counsel says the whole scheme of the Act makes it abundantly clear that pensions may only be awarded for injury or disease arising out of military service or for aggra vations by such service of pre-existing injury or disease. He points to sections 12(1) and (2) and 26(1) in particular, in support of this contention. In his submission, as stated in his memorandum of points to be argued, he says that:
11. Section 57 does not provide access to additional compensa tion to every pensioner who suffers exceptional incapacity. A member of the forces may be pensioned at less than 100% but nevertheless suffer exceptional incapacity caused by fully pensioned and partly pensioned disabilities. Such members are excluded from the operation of Section 57 even though their pensioned disability may be assessed as high as 90% and may have contributed substantially to his incapacity. It is therefore clear that the purpose of Section 57 is to provide compensation for a member of the Forces in excess of that provided in Schedule A of the Act.
12. a) To be entitled to an allowance based on exceptional incapacity, a member of the Forces must be
i) in receipt of a Class I pension;
ii) suffering an exceptional incapacity that is a conse quence of or caused in whole or in part by a disabili ty for which he is receiving the Class I pension.
b) In determining the existence of exceptional incapacity, the Commission must take account of the extent to which the disability for which he is receiving a pension has left the member in a helpless condition or in continuing pain and discomfort, has resulted in loss of enjoyment of life or has shortened his life expectancy.
13. The opening words of subsection 57(2) make it clear that the factors set out in (b) above are not the only factors that may be considered by the Commission in determining the existence of exceptional incapacity. These words cannot be relied upon to support the contention that the Commission must include consideration of any disability or unpensioned fraction thereof not attributable to military service.
The words "exceptional incapacity that is a consequence of or caused in whole or in part ..." in paragraph 57(1)(b) indicate that exceptional incapacity may be a consequence of or caused "in part" by the disability for which a Class I
pension has been awarded. These words cannot be con strued to mean that the unpensioned part or degree of a disability must be considered in determining whether the incapacity is exceptional.
There can be no question that the legislative scheme is important in interpreting a particular section of a statute. In that connection in the recent decision of the Supreme Court of Canada in The Queen v. Compagnie Immobilière BCN Limitée', Pratte J. had this to say:
One of the most important rules to be followed in the interpretation of a particular provision of a statute was expressed as follows by Lord Herschell in Colquhoun v. Brooks ((1889), 14 A.C. 493), at p. 506:
It is beyond dispute, too, that we are entitled and indeed bound when construing the terms of any provision found in a statute to consider any other parts of the Act which throw light upon the intention of the legislature and which may serve to shew that the particular provision ought not to be construed as it would be if considered alone and apart from the rest of the Act.
And, in Canada Sugar Refining Company, Limited v. The Queen ([1898] A.C. 735), Lord Davey said at p. 741:
... Every clause of a statute should be construed with reference to the context and the other clauses of the Act, so as, so far as possible, to make a consistent enactment of the whole statute or series of statutes relating to the subject-matter.
In an earlier judgment of the Supreme Court in McBratney v. McBratney, 6 Duff J., as he then was, enunciated the principle of construction in the following way:
Of course where you have rival constructions of which the language of the statute is capable you must resort to the object or principle of the statute if the object or the principle of it can be collected from its language; and if one find there some governing intention or governing principle expressed or plainly implied then the construction which best gives effect to the governing intention or principle ought to prevail against a construction which, though agreeing better with the literal effect of the words of the enactment runs counter to the principle and spirit of it; for as Lord Selborne pointed out in Caledonian Railway Co. v. North British Railway Co. (6 App. Cas. 114), that which is within the spirit of the statute where it can be collected from the words of it is the law, and not the very letter of the statute where the letter does not carry out the object of it. See Cox v. Hakes (15 App. Cas. 506 at p. 517); Eastman Co. v. Comptroller General ([1898] A.C. 571, at p. 575).
Section 57 is, of course, as counsel have argued, capable of rival constructions. That being so resort
5 [1979] 1 S.C.R. 865 at p. 872.
6 (1919) 59 S.C.R. 550 at p. 561.
must be had to the object or principle of the statute if that can be collected from its language. In the case of the statute here in question, the Pension Act, I think that it can. Its principal sections have already been referred to earlier in these reasons. To those I would only add the definition of "disability" and "pension" found in section 2, reading as follows:
2. (1) ...
"disability" means the loss or lessening of the power to will and to do any normal mental or physical act;
"pension" means a pension payable under this Act on account of the death or disability of a member of the forces and includes an additional pension, temporary pension or final payment payable under this Act to or in respect of a member of the forces;
No definitions of either "incapacity" or of "allowance" appear in the statute and those two words are conspicuously present and important words in section 57.
There is no question that sections 12(1), 12(2) and 12(3.2) make it abundantly clear that pen sions are awarded to members of the forces who suffer from injury or disease or aggravation there of resulting in a pensionable disability if they were attributable to or incurred during military service rendered during World War I or World War II. Section 26, as previously noted, verifies that the award of pension will be made in accordance with the extent of the disability resulting from such injury or disease or aggravation thereof. The scheme, thus, is to ensure that pensions are pay able only in respect of that portion of a disability which is attributable to military service. Further more, the scheme is, in fact, followed in the award of pensions for various disabilities, based on injury or disease suffered wholly as a result of military service and, on a fractional basis, as a result of aggravation of a pre-existing condition arising from military service or a condition arising in part as a consequence of injury or disease incurred during military service. The hypothetical case given earlier herein illustrates the kind of mix of disabilities which may occur.
In my view, section 57 by its terms represents a deliberate departure from the intention or princi ple which prevails in the award of a pension. The
section does not authorize the award of an addi tional "pension". It authorizes the payment of an "allowance" if certain conditions are fulfilled. Nothing in it indicates that it must be predicated only on pensionable disabilities, nor, by the same token, does it exclude from the determination of "exceptional incapacity" that part of the incapaci ty which is attributable to non-pensionable injury or disease.
It is my opinion that the language used indicates that Parliament intended by the enactment of this section to provide an allowance to those veterans who are in receipt of a 100% pension, if the applicants for the allowance can demonstrate their entitlement by showing that the disability or accumulation of disabilities for which they receive the pension results in exceptional incapacity; and that their incapacity is a consequence of, or is caused in whole or in part by, the pensioned disability or accumulation of disabilities. In deter mining such incapacity the Commission, of course, must take into account the matters referred to in section 57(2). But it is not limited to these mat ters. Indeed, it is an error in law to interpret subsection (2) as imposing such a limitation.
Such an interpretation is not strained. It flows naturally from the words used and, moreover, follows the mandate given in section 1.1 (set out earlier in these reasons) that "The provisions of this Act shall be liberally construed and interpret ed ..." for the reasons therein stated. Neither does it represent a failure to recognize the rule enun ciated by Duff J. in the McBratney v. McBratney case, supra, since obviously that rule only applies if a contrary intention does not appear in the statute. In my view, a contrary intention does appear since, as stated above, I believe that section 57 represents a departure from the principle which prevails in the award of a pension.
On the other hand, to accept the argument advanced by counsel for the respondent requires an interpretation of the words "in part" which is not natural. It calls for the conclusion that the unpen- sioned part of a disability must be disregarded in determining whéther the incapacity is exceptional. I do not believe that the words are capable of such a construction. It would require that the scheme of the Act in respect of the award of pensions, namely, that they be awarded only in respect of
injury or disease or the aggravation of an injury or disease incurred during military service must pre vail in deciding whether an incapacity is exception al despite the plain meaning of the words in para graph (a) of subsection 57(1) which requires only that the applicant be the recipient of a Class 1 pension.
The logic in requiring different considerations to be applied in determining exceptional incapacity is, I think, unassailable. A member of the forces who is receiving a 100% pension, no matter what the composition of the disabilities whereby such a level is awarded, is either exceptionally inca pacitated by those disabilities or he is not. He merely has to show the consequential relationship between the incapacity and the sum of his disabili ties, each of which has already had the unpension- able part excluded from it. To repeat the process of exclusion would, in my view, not be consonant with the meaning of the section or with the liberal interpretation of the statute required by section 1.1. Exceptional incapacity must include incapaci ty occasioned in part by the aggravation of a pre-existing injury or disease, or which is, in part but not wholly, a consequence of a pensioned disability which is itself wholly due to military service.
Accordingly, I would grant the section 28 application and set aside the decision of the Pen sion Review Board dated July 23, 1979 and direct the Board to interpret section 57 of the Act in accordance with these reasons.
* * *
RYAN J.: I agree.
* * *
KERR D.J.: I agree.
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