Judgments

Decision Information

Decision Content

A-553-79
E.W. Bickle Ltd. (Applicant)
v.
Minister of National Revenue (Respondent)
Court of Appeal, Pratte, Heald and Urie JJ.— Vancouver, December 9 and 11, 1980.
Judicial review Federal sales tax — Exemptions
Newspapers — Application to review and set aside Minister's decision that certain publications are not "newspapers" and therefore do not fall within exemption provided for in s. 3 of Part III of Schedule III to Excise Tax Act — Whether this
Court can interfere with respondent's decision Federal
Court Act, R.S.C. 1970 (2nd Supp.), c. 10, s. 28 Excise Tax
Act, R.S.C. 1970, c. E-13, ss. 27, 29(1), Schedule III, Part III, s. 3.
This is a section 28 application to review and set aside a decision of the respondent that certain publications are not newspapers for the purpose of the exemption from federal sales tax provided for in section 3, Part III of Schedule I11, of the Excise Tax Act. That decision was rendered following a judg ment of this Court rendered on a previous section 28 applica tion dealing with this matter. In its judgment, this Court referred the matter back to the respondent who held, inter alia, that two of the publications in issue therein were not newspa pers and hence, subject to federal sales tax. The question is whether this Court can interfere with the respondent's decision.
Held, the application is dismissed. The final paragraph of Part Ill of Schedule III of the Excise Tax Act requires the Minister of National Revenue to, essentially, formulate an opinion. Facts must be established to enable the opinion to be reached. There is no question that on the record there was evidence that the publications in issue here were not newspa pers for the purpose of the exempting provisions of the Act. That being so and it being clear that he had regard to the law relating to the issue, this Court ought not to interfere with the decision the Act calls upon him to make. If this Court were to refer the matter back to the Minister requiring him to find that the publications are newspapers, it would be substituting its opinion for his. This the Court cannot do.
APPLICATION for judicial review. COUNSEL:
M. Shepard for applicant. W. Hohmann for respondent.
SOLICITORS:
Russell & DuMoulin, Vancouver, for appli cant.
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 respondent made pursuant to the Excise Tax Act, R.S.C. 1970, c. E-13 (hereinafter called "the Act"), wherein he held that two publications, The Cen tury 21 Gold Post and Real Estate Victoria are not "newspapers" for the purpose of the exemption from federal sales tax provided in section 3 of Part III of Schedule III of the Act.
This matter has been the subject of a previous section 28 application by the same applicant. That application resulted in a judgment of this Court referring the matter back to the Minister for reconsideration on the basis of the application of the statute to the facts as disclosed in the material submitted to the Minister. The reasons for judg ment of the Court disclose that the respondent in making the decision there under review, found the two publications, which are the subject of this application to be taxable on the following basis:
The weekly publication "Real Estate Victoria" ... has been examined, as it contains over 95 percent advertising has also been ruled to be a taxable publication.
The "Century 21 Gold Post", issued on a random basis, con taining 100 percent advertising is a taxable publication ....
It is common ground that the descriptions accu rately depict the contents of each publication at issue herein.
In the impugned Ministerial decision in that application two other of the applicant's publica tions were also found not to be covered by the exemption provisions of the Act. In that decision the Minister made the following findings in respect of all four publications:
I have examined these publications and have found that they are essentially advertising circulars. Publications of this kind have not been granted exempt status as newspapers, and I can only confirm the previous decisions that they are subject to sales tax.
I have noted your reference to the case of "The King v Montreal Stock Exchange and Exchange Printing Co." and I must tell you that, over the years, this case has been mentioned by other persons writing to my Department. After reference to legal counsel, our position is that it is not a precedent and does not preclude the exercise of statutory discretion conveyed to the Minister of National Revenue by the Excise Tax Act.
The authority for the Minister's decision both in this case and in the previous case is found in section 27 of the Act which imposes a sales tax on goods produced or manufactured in, or imported into, Canada and in section 29(1) thereof, which exempts from that tax articles mentioned in Schedule III to the Act. As previously noted, section 3 of Part III of Schedule III mentions, inter alia, "newspapers". It reads as follows:
3. College and school annuals; magazines and literary papers unbound regularly issued at stated intervals not less frequently than four times yearly; newspapers; sheet music; materials for use exclusively in the manufacture thereof.
At the end of Part III appear the following words:
The Minister shall be the sole judge as to whether any printed material comes within any of the classes mentioned in sections 1, 3, 5 and 8 of this Part.
In the reasons for judgment of the Court, deliv ered by Jackett C.J., on March 27, 1979» appear the following paragraphs:
Very briefly, as I understand it, there has been a long-stand ing exemption of "newspapers" from sales tax under the Excise Tax Act and, more recently, the Minister has been made the "judge" of whether a particular publication falls within that exemption. The Minister has not, however, as I understand the statute, been empowered, arbitrarily or otherwise, to vary the ambit of the exemption. In making a decision as to whether the exemption applies, the Minister's duty as I conceive it, is to find the facts and apply the exempting words. In this case, the vital word—newspaper—has been the subject of a judgment of the Supreme Court of Canada and, in making his decision, the Minister has rejected that judgment and has laid claim to a "statutory discretion", which he, apparently, regards as giving him a power to vary the ambit of the exemption from what it would be if the Supreme Court's view were applied. In taking this view, 1 am of opinion that the Minister erred in law, as I find nothing in the statute empowering him to do anything other than be the "judge" as to whether the law contained in the particular section of Part III applied to the facts before him.
1 am further of opinion that it cannot be said that the Minister's decision might not have been different if he had applied the ordinary meaning of the word "newspaper" instead of applying, as it seems probable that he did, the arbitrary definition that had already been conveyed by his Department to the applicant. While I recognize that opinions may differ, when I read the publications that were the subject matter of the decision attacked in the light of the Supreme Court's judgment in the Montreal Stock Exchange case, I can see room for the conclusion that they are "newspapers" even though they consist exclusively, or almost exclusively of advertisements. As I under stand them, they are not mere "advertising circulars" in the sense of advertising by the person who distributes them. On the
[1979] 2 F.C. 448, at pp. 455-456.
contrary they contain information (news) as to what is avail able in particular fields of commerce even though such infor mation is conveyed by way of advertising by third parties who have things to sell. [Emphasis added.]
The reference to the Supreme Court decision in the Stock Exchange case is to The King v. Mon- treal Stock Exchange. 2 That is also the case to which reference was made in the excerpt from the Minister's decision in the earlier section 28 application quoted above.
The relevant portion of the reasons for judgment of that case read as follows [at pages 615-6171:
For some years the Montreal Stock Exchange and later the Exchange Printing Company printed, about noon of each day that the Exchange was in session, a sheet showing the transac tions on the Exchange during the morning, and in the afternoon a similar record of the transactions for the remainder of the day. In like manner were published the transactions on the Montreal Curb market. Each week was printed a "comparative review of transactions" on the Exchange and a "comparative review of transactions" on the Curb.
These sheets from time to time contained notices of divi dends, annual meetings and the loss of certificates, in connec tion with companies whose stock was listed on the Exchange. The weekly publications besides summaries of the week's busi ness, contained a tabulation comparing the business of that particular week with the business of the corresponding week in the previous year.
The members of the Exchange formed the greater bulk of the users of these sheets for which they paid on a sliding scale but copies were also exchanged with similar institutions in Canada and the United States. Some were sold to outsiders and the result of the evidence of the acting secretary-treasurer of the Exchange is that any member of the public might become a subscriber.
The term "newspapers" is not defined in the Act and while we were referred to various definitions in other Dominion and provincial statutes, the statement of the present Chief Justice, in delivering the judgment of the Court in Milne-Bingham Printing Co. Limited v. The King ([1930] S.C.R. 282, at 283) is peculiarly appropriate.
The usage of that word in other statutes may be looked at, if the other statute happens to be in pari materia, but it is altogether a fallacy to suppose that because two statutes are in pari materia, a definition in one can be bodily transferred to the other. * * *
In the instant case, the word under discussion is not defined in any statute in pari materia and it remains only to give to it the ordinary meaning that it usually bears. Webster's New Interna tional Dictionary may be taken as giving a definition of "news-
2 [1935] S.C.R. 614.
paper" which is expressed in corresponding terms in other well recognized dictionaries:—
a paper printed and distributed at stated intervals * * * to convey news * * * and other matters of public interest.
The sheets in question meet these requirements; the mere fact that any particular publication is meant to interest only a section of the public does not limit the meaning of the expres sion as a reference to religious or fraternal publications will at once make clear. The sheets in question contain not merely a record of transactions on the Exchange or curb market but also information to those desiring it as to such transactions; and the other items from time to time included give "tidings, new information, fresh events reported," (vide Concise Oxford Dic tionary defining "news").
Being of opinion that the publications are newspapers for the purposes of the Special War Revenue Act, the respondents have brought themselves within the language of an exempting pro viso. Dominion Press Limited v. Minister of Customs and Excise ([19281 A.C. 340).
The matter having been remitted to the respond ent was reconsidered by him as directed with the result that a new decision was rendered in respect of the four publications, the relevant portion of which follows:
I have reviewed these publications in light of the judgment rendered by the Federal Court of Appeal in "E.W. Bickle and the Minister of National Revenue", and I have concluded that the publications "Rapid Auto Mart Magazine" and "Buy Sell & Trade" are newspapers for purposes of the Excise Tax Act.
By applying the same considerations to "The Century 21 Gold Post" and "Real Estate Victoria", I have concluded these publications not to be newspapers and therefore subject to federal sales tax. [Emphasis added.]
It is that portion of the decision embodied in the second paragraph above quoted which is the basis of this section 28 application.
Counsel for the applicant first submitted that the respondent was not entitled to rule that the two publications at issue herein are not newspapers because, in his view, that matter has been rendered res judicata by virtue of this Court's decision in the previous section 28 application. I cannot agree. It is quite clear that all that the Court did in the previous decision is to find that the Minister was not entitled to hold, as he did, that "... it [the Montreal Stock Exchange case] is not a precedent and does not preclude the exercise of statutory discretion conveyed to the Minister of National Revenue by the Excise Tax Act." The Chief Jus tice did say that "... I can see room for the
conclusion that they are `newspapers'..." but that is not a finding which bound the Minister. In my opinion, it only served to indicate to the Minister that, in light of the Montreal Stock Exchange case, he might form the opinion that the publica tions were newspapers. That decision was one to be made by him, not the Court, and the Court did not decide the question. The question of whether or not the publications which are the subject of this application are newspapers is thus not res judicata.
The question of the jurisdiction of this Court to entertain an application to review the Minister's decision in this case was raised by the Court but both counsel agreed that since it was held in the first Bickle case that such a decision was review- able, that aspect of the matter was not in issue in this proceeding. Because of that, I am assuming for purposes of this application, that the Minister's decision under review herein is amenable to such a review under section 28 of the Federal Court Act.
Applicant counsel's next submission was that on the basis of the Montreal Stock Exchange case, supra, the Minister erred in failing to find that the publications which are the subject-matter of this application are newspapers because they meet the criteria required by that case to be used by him in judging their tax status for the purpose of the exemption provided in Schedule III of the Act.
The short answer to that submission, it seems to me, is that it is implicit from the excerpt from the Minister's ruling which was quoted earlier herein that, in accordance with the Court's direction, he reconsidered his decision in light of the reasons for judgment in that case. They required that he make his ruling bearing in mind what had been said by the Supreme Court of Canada in the Montreal Stock Exchange case on the meaning of the word "newspaper". Not only does his ruling make it clear that he did so but, perhaps more importantly, he demonstrated that he did so by reversing his previous decision in respect of two of the appli cant's publications by finding that they are news papers within the meaning of the exempting provi sions of the Act. He, thus, performed his duty of finding the facts and applying the exempting words. This is what is required of him by the final paragraph of Part III of Schedule III of the Act.
Essentially what he has to do is formulate an opinion. Facts must be established to enable the opinion to be reached. There is no question that on the record there was evidence upon which he could properly have reached the conclusion that the pub lications in issue in the case at bar were not newspapers for the purpose of the exempting provisions of the Act. That being so and it being clear that he had regard to the law relating to the issue we ought not to interfere with the decision the Act calls upon him to make. If we were to give effect to applicant counsel's submission, we would have to refer the matter back to the Minister requiring him to find that the publications are newspapers. In effect, then, we would be substitut ing our opinion for his. This we cannot do. 3
Accordingly, I would dismiss the section 28 application.
* * *
PRATTE J.: I agree.
* * *
HEALD J.: I concur.
3 Compare Canadian National Railways Co. v. The Bell Telephone Co. of Canada [1939] S.C.R. 308, and Memorial Gardens Association (Canada) Ltd. v. Colwood Cemetery Co. [1958] S.C.R. 353 and Consumers' Association of Canada v. The Hydra-Electric Power Commission of Ontario [1974] 1 F.C. 453 at p. 457.
 You are being directed to the most recent version of the statute which may not be the version considered at the time of the judgment.