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T-4896-77
Theo Jacobs, Edward Jacobs, Joseph Jacobs, Alois Jacobs, Marcel Jacobs, Frans Jacobs and Jacobs Farms Limited (Plaintiffs)
v.
Agricultural Stabilization Board (Defendant)
Trial Division, Mahoney J.โ€”Toronto, June 21; Ottawa, June 27, 1979.
Agriculture โ€” Stabilization subsidies โ€” Apple producers with crop size falling within a defined range provided with a subsidy pursuant to Regulations established under Agricultur al Stabilization Act โ€” Whether or not the Minister of Agriculture had right to impose a floor and ceiling on quantity of apples produced in respect of which a subsidy is payable โ€” Whether or not Board had right to impose such floor or ceiling motu proprio โ€” Whether or not Board, once ceiling and floor were established, had right to authorize payment in excess of the ceiling, albeit on the Minister's direction โ€” Agricultural Stabilization Act, R.S.C. 1970, c. A-9, ss. 4(5), 8(1), 10(1), 11 โ€” Apple Stabilization Regulations, SOR/76-518, ss. 2, 5.
Apples produced during the 1975-76 crop year were made a designated commodity under the Regulations adopted under the Agricultural Stabilization Act and producers with a crop production falling within a range of production levels with a fixed floor and ceiling, were provided with a subsidy. The issues are the right of the Minister of Agriculture to direct the Board to impose a floor and ceiling on the quantity of apples in respect of which a subsidy was payable under the Apple Stabilization Regulations, and the right of the Board to impose such floor and ceiling motu proprio. The Board's counterclaim for the return of subsidy already paid the plaintiffs raises the further issue of whether, once the floor and ceiling had been established, the Board had the right, on the Minister's direction or otherwise, to authorize a payment of the subsidy in excess of the ceiling in the case of a particular producer.
Held, the action is allowed and the counterclaim dismissed. Nothing in the Act or Regulations precludes the Board from extending or amending a limitation on eligibility to subsidy if it has the authority to prescribe such limitation in the first place. The counterclaim must fail whether or not the action succeeds. Nothing in the preamble indicates that programs under the Act were intended by Parliament to be directed toward or away from any category or class of farmer. The ordinary meaning of the Act's substantive provisions need not be stretched in order to accommodate an intention expressed in its preamble. The payment of a subsidy pursuant to the Act is not an ex gratia matter. The annual limitation of $250,000,000 imposed by subsection 13(5) on expenditures directly attributable to action taken to stabilize agricultural prices does not, per se, vest the Board with authority to limit producers' eligibility to subsidy. Section 13 contemplates that amounts becoming payable in a year may exceed that amount but precludes payment of the
excess until the necessary funds are provided by Parliamentary appropriation. The requirement of subsection 4(5) that the Board comply with the Minister's directions relates to "the exercise or performance of its powers, duties and functions under this Act". No such direction can vest the Board with a power, duty or function that it does not already have. The absence of the word "quantity" from section 8 of the Act is significant, taken with the express delegation to the Governor in Council, by paragraph 11(a), of the power to establish ceilings on quantities, for it indicates that the Board had no power to establish the ceiling.
ACTION. COUNSEL:
W. G. Sheppard for plaintiffs. A. S. Fradkin for defendant.
SOLICITORS:
Sheppard, Sheppard, MacIntosh & Harlow, Simcoe, for plaintiffs.
Deputy Attorney General of Canada for defendant.
The following are the reasons for judgment rendered in English by
MAHONEY J.: The issues are the right of the Minister of Agriculture, hereinafter "the Minis ter", to direct the defendant, the Agricultural Sta bilization Board, hereinafter "the Board", to impose a floor and ceiling on the quantity of apples in respect of which a subsidy was payable under the Apple Stabilization Regulations,' hereinafter "the Regulations", and the right of the Board to impose such floor and ceiling motu proprio. The counterclaim raises the further issue of whether, once such floor and ceiling were established, the Board had the right, on the Minister's direction or otherwise, to authorize a payment of the subsidy in excess of the ceiling in the case of a particular producer.
The object of the Agricultural Stabilization Act, 2 hereinafter "the Act", is set forth in its preamble:
WHEREAS it is expedient to enact a measure for the purpose of stabilizing the prices of agricultural commodities in order to assist the industry of agriculture to realize fair returns for its labour and investment, and to maintain a fair relationship between prices received by farmers and the costs of the goods
I SOR/76-518.
2 R.S.C. 1970, c. A-9 as amended by S.C. 1974-75-76, c. 63.
and services that they buy, thus to provide farmers with a fair share of the national income; Therefore Her Majesty, by and with the advice and consent of the Senate and House of Commons of Canada, enacts as follows:
Certain named commodities are the subject of continuing programs under the Act and provision is made for the Governor in Council to designate other commodities as conditions demand. Apples produced and marketed during the 1975-76 crop year were made a designated commodity by the Regulations. The 1975-76 crop year ended August 31, 1976.
In submitting the proposed Regulations to the Treasury Board the Minister stated:
Eligibility limitations have been set at 25,000 lbs. to 750,000 lbs. to achieve the maximum impact of the support program on producers, ensuring that the main direction of the support program is towards the medium size efficient fulltime pro ducers rather than smaller parttime operators and limiting the assistance to those very large producers who are better able to cope with the economic vagaries of the market place than the average.
The Board, at a meeting on July 8, 1976, adopted those eligibility limitations and I assume, although it is not in evidence, that they were mentioned in the Minister's recommendation to the Governor in Council. The Regulations, made August 5, 1976, are silent as to both floor and ceiling although the press release, dated August 9, announcing the program reiterated them. Following representa tions by trade associations, the Board, at a meeting December 24, 1976, ordered an increase in the maximum amount payable to producers where two or more partners were involved. A maximum of three partners in any producer were made eligible and the 25,000 pounds minimum was to apply to each partner. This change was announced by the Minister in a press release dated January 6, 1977.
The Regulations provide for payment of a sub sidy of two and one-tenth cents per pound for apples sold as fresh apples or peelers, i.e. for apple sauce or pie filling, and nine-tenths of a cent per pound if sold for juice, juice concentrate or vinegar.
Claim forms for the subsidy were distributed to producers early in September 1976. Included on their face was the following:
Please note that claims will be accepted if the total quantity of apples marketed exceeds 25,000 lbs. to a maximum of 750,000 lbs.
The plaintiff, Jacobs Farms Limited, hereinafter "the Company", is a very large producer of apples and other crops. The individual plaintiffs are all shareholders and employees of the Company. When the claim forms arrived, Theo Jacobs, the treasurer and sales manager, had his secretary go through the invoices for sales of apples eligible for subsidy and sort them into seven batches covering quantities that would support payment for the maximum quantities prescribed. Claims were filed, in mid-September, as follows:
Pounds of Fresh or Pounds of
Claimant Processing Apples Juicing Apples
The Company 790,233
Theo Jacobs 791,005
Edward Jacobs 823,216
Joseph Jacobs 777,397
Alois Jacobs 434,892 357,300
Marcel Jacobs 787,454
Frans Jacobs 780,893
Total 4,361,874 1,180,516
Supporting invoices all disclosed that the Com pany was vendor of the apples. The Board acted on the basis that it was the Company that was the producer eligible to claim subsidy. It was not misled nor did it act to its detriment in any way because claims were made in the name of the individual plaintiffs. The Board investigated the claims and was fully apprised of the actual situation.
Initially, a payment of $15,750 (750,000 lbs @ $0.021) was made to the Company. Following the Board's decision of December 24, 1976, a further $31,500 was paid the Company, giving it the maximum subsidy allowable for a partnership of three members. It is this $31,500 that the Board, by its counterclaim, seeks to recover.
The Board admits that, prior to August 31, 1976, the Company had marketed 5,256,380 pounds of fresh apples and peelers and 842,790 pounds of juicers. It does not admit that the Company had itself produced them all. The Com pany does buy and resell apples produced by
others. No explanation was given of the reduction in the quantity of juicers from the 1,180,516 pounds originally claimed. Theo Jacobs was entire ly credible. His evidence is that the above quanti ties were produced, as well as sold, by the Com pany during the crop year and that the information was derived from the Company's records by his secretary acting on his directions. Evidence as to outside purchases was tendered. This evidence was not contradicted in any way and I accept it.
A number of the Board's contentions can be disposed of summarily:
Firstly, as to the counterclaim, which was not vigorously pressed, I see nothing in the Act or Regulations that would preclude the Board from extending or amending a limitation on eligibility to subsidy if it has the authority to prescribe such limitation in the first place. It follows that the counterclaim must fail whether or not the action succeeds.
Secondly, nothing in its preamble leads me to the conclusion that programs under the Act were intended by Parliament to be directed toward or away from any category or class of farmer. It is simply not necessary to strain or stretch the ordi nary meaning of the substantive provisions of the Act in order to accommodate an intention expressed in its preamble.
Thirdly, I find nothing in the Act that leads me to agree that the payment of a subsidy pursuant to it is an ex gratia matter.
Fourthly, the annual limitation of $250,000,000 imposed by subsection 13(5) on expenditures directly attributable to action taken to stabilize agricultural prices does not, per se, vest the Board with authority to limit producers' eligibility to subsidy. On the contrary, taken as a whole, section 13 appears clearly to contemplate that amounts becoming payable in a year may well exceed $250,000,000; it does, however, preclude payment of that excess until necessary funds are provided by a Parliamentary appropriation. In fact, subsi dies payable during the fiscal year ended March 31, 1977, did exceed the limit and a supplementary appropriation was made to permit their payment. Having said that about section 13, I must add that this issue was not fairly raised by the Board in its
pleadings and the plaintiffs' objection, based on non-compliance with Rule 409, was well taken. 3
Pertinent provisions of the Act follow:
4....
(5) The Board shall comply with any directions from time to time given to it by the Governor in Council or the Minister respecting the exercise or performance of its powers, duties and functions under this Act.
8. (1) In each year the Board shall establish the base price for each agricultural commodity, or the grade, quality, variety, class, type or form thereof, the price of which is to be stabilized under this Act.
10. (1) Subject to and in accordance with any regulations that may be made by the Governor in Council, the Board may
(b) pay to producers of an agricultural commodity, directly or through such agent as the Board may determine, the amount by which the prescribed price exceeds a price deter mined by the Board to be the average price at which the commodity is sold in such markets and during such periods as the Board considers appropriate;
(g) do all such acts and things as are necessary or incidental to the exercise of any of its powers, duties or functions under this Act.
11. The Governor in Council may make regulations,
(a) establishing ceilings on the quantity or value of an agricultural commodity eligible for price stabilization under this Act;
(b) prescribing or designating anything that by this Act is to be prescribed or designated by the Governor in Council; and
(c) generally for carrying out the purposes and provisions of this Act.
The Regulations provide:
2. In these Regulations, "producer" means a person residing in Canada and producing apples.
3 Rule 409. A party shall plead specifically any matter (for example, performance, release, statute of limitation, prescrip tion, fraud or any fact showing illegality)
(a) that he alleges makes a claim or defence of the opposite party not maintainable;
(b) that, if not specifically pleaded, might take the opposite party by surprise; or
(e) that raises issues of fact not arising out of the preceding pleading.
5. (1) The Board may make payments to producers of
(a) 2.1 cents per pound of apples sold as fresh apples or peelers, and
(b) 0.9 cent per pound of apples sold for juice, juice concen trate or vinegar,
for the purpose of stabilizing the price of such designated commodities at the prescribed price.
(2) Payments made pursuant to subsection (1) shall be paid directly by the Board or through such marketing agency as the Board may determine in respect of apples grown during the 1975 crop year and marketed on or before August 31, 1976, where the Board is satisfied as to the designated commodity that such apples comprise.
The requirement of subsection 4(5) that the Board comply with the Minister's directions relates to "the exercise or performance of its powers, duties and functions under this Act". No such direction can vest the Board with a power, duty or function that it does not already have. Nothing in the Act empowers the Minister to prescribe either minimum or maximum quantities of a commodity in respect of which a producer is entitled to subsidy. No such direction by him could have any effect unless the power were already vested in the Board and the Minister were merely directing the Board to exercise it.
It was argued that the floor could have been imposed by way of defining what a producer was. I do not have to decide that because it was not done. Clearly, the Governor in Council could, under paragraph 11(a) have imposed the ceiling, if not the floor. He did not do so.
The absence of the word "quantity" from sec tion 8 of the Act is significant. That, taken with the express delegation to the Governor in Council, by paragraph 11(a), of the power to establish ceilings on quantities, leads me to conclude that the Board itself has no such power. To adopt the constitutional analogy suggested by plaintiffs' counsel, the specific field has been expressly dele gated to the Governor in Council and no room is left for the Board to take action in respect of it under paragraph 10(1)(g), its general power to do what is necessary or incidental to the carrying out of its mandate.
The evidence adduced that the floor and ceiling were features of the proposed program prior to the making of the Regulation by the Governor in Council was objected to and, again, the objection was well taken. Just as the intention of Parliament is expressed by its Acts and no reference is to be had to Parliamentary debates, so the intention of the Governor in Council must be gleaned from the regulation made and the Act under which it was made, not from material submitted to the Gover nor in Council in support of the Minister's recommendation.
Whatever value as evidence a press release might be, if that press release were issued with the publication of the program and before any dispute as to the interpretation of a particular regulation arose and if the regulation were truly ambiguous, it is of no value where, as here, there is no ambiguity and, hence, no necessity to seek assist ance from extraneous sources in the construction of the regulation. Press releases issued after a dispute as to interpretation has arisen are clearly inadmissible.
The limitations on eligibility were ultra vires the authority of the Board. The Company was, of the plaintiffs, the only producer entitled to claim the subsidy. It was misled by the Board to claim subsidy for a lesser quantity of apples than it was entitled to claim. It is, in the circumstances, en titled to be paid subsidy in respect of the quantity to which it was actually entitled and not just the quantity comprised in the applications made by it and by the other plaintiffs on its behalf.
The Company is entitled to a declaration to the foregoing effect and to an order in the nature of mandamus requiring the Board to requisition from the Minister of Finance payment to the Company of the further sum of $70,719.09, being the total subsidy payable in respect of 5,256,380 pounds at 2.1ยข and 842,790 pounds at 9/10 of a cent less the $47,250 already paid. The counterclaim will be dismissed. The plaintiffs are entitled to costs of the action and the counterclaim.
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