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T-1342-77
Penthouse International Ltd. (Applicant) v.
Minister of National Revenue and Deputy Minis ter of National Revenue for Customs and Excise (Respondents)
Trial Division, Cattanach J.—Ottawa, April 12 and 18, 1977.
Customs and excise — Prerogative writs — Copies of applicant's magazine classified as prohibited goods — Refused entry into Canada — Whether respondents and their agents acted ultra vires in prohibiting entry — Whether goods wrongly classified — Whether "periodical" deemed included in Tariff Item 99201-1 — Whether writ of prohibition open to applicant — Application dismissed — Customs Act, R.S.C. 1970, c. C-40, ss. 46-48, 50 — Customs Tariff, R.S.C. 1970, c. C-41, Tariff Item 99201-1 — Federal Court Act, s. 18.
APPLICATION for writ of prohibition. COUNSEL:
A. E. Golden for applicant. D. Friesen for respondents.
SOLICITORS:
Golden, Levinson, Toronto, for applicant.
Deputy Attorney General of Canada for respondents.
The following are the reasons for judgment rendered in English by
CATTANACH J.: This is an originating notice of motion seeking prohibition, pursuant to section 18 of the Federal Court Act, to restrain and prohibit the respondents herein and their officers, agents, collectors, appraisers and representatives from applying or purporting to apply Item 99201-1 of the Customs Tariff (R.S.C. 1970, c. C-41) to all copies, some 674,000 in number, of the May issue of a periodical magazine entitled Penthouse pub lished by the applicant in Des Moines, Iowa, one of the states of the United States of America and imported into Canada by Metro Toronto News and sold at the wholesale and retail levels on a consignment basis. In my view, the question of title to the goods is immaterial to the issues to be decided which view is shared by both parties.
The ground upon which prohibition is sought is that the respondents in acting as they did in prohibiting the importation into Canada did so in excess of the jurisdiction conferred upon them and, as I construe the matter, that incidental to the alleged lack of jurisdiction or so inextricably inter woven therewith as not to be severable therefrom is the contention that Item 99201-1 of ' Schedule "C" of the Customs Tariff does not apply to periodical publications which the May issue of Penthouse magazine incontrovertibly is.
A further ground was advanced to the effect that the appeal procedure provided in the Customs Act (R.S.C. 1970, c. C-40) when applied to peri odical publications is contrary to the Canadian Bill of Rights in that it deprives the applicant of the enjoyment of property without due process of law. This ground was abandoned by the applicant.
A writ of prohibition, like all prerogative writs, is an extraordinary remedy and is to be used with great caution but in the circumstances of a par ticular case it may be used to ensure the further ance of justice and convenience when none of the ordinary remedies provided by law will serve to do so.
Under the Customs Act an appeal is provided by sections 46, 47 and 48 through departmental hier archy, that is from the collector, to an appraiser, then to the Deputy Minister and from him to the Tariff Board, an administrative tribunal and ulti mately to the Federal Court of Canada. By coinci dence section 50 provides for an appeal when the importation of goods is refused at the border on the ground that the goods as described in Tariff Item 99201-1, are prohibited, which was done in the present instance. Then the process of appeal otherwise provided is circumvented and is to a county or district court judge with appropriate variation for the Province of Quebec. I might add parenthetically that the judge being a persona designata, an application to the Federal Court of Appeal to review and set aside a decision by that judge would appear to be available.
However, that appeal procedure is available to the importer of the goods and not to the exporter. It is admitted that the applicant is not the import-
er of the goods but that it is the exporter from which it follows that the statutory process of appeal is not available to it.
There is no question whatsoever that the appli cant, as exporter of the goods, has a vital and substantial interest in the matter.
It is conceivable that the exporter, or in this instance the applicant, might prevail upon the Deputy Minister to re-determine the tariff classifi cation made of its goods by virtue of section 46(4)(d). Under that section the Deputy Minister may so re-determine "in any ... case where he deems it advisable" within a prescribed time limit. This re-determination of classification is within the discretion of the Deputy Minister who may exer cise it as he deems fit and the section does not confer upon an exporter an appeal as of right to the Deputy Minister.
In the light of such circumstances, I am of the view that the applicant is not obliged to have resorted to the process of the statutory right of appeal through the administrative channels before taking recourse to this Court by way of an applica tion for prohibition.
Furthermore, in my view, the authorities are conclusive that where a lack of jurisdiction is apparent on the face of the proceedings in the tribunal whose action is sought to be prohibited, there is no discretion vested in the superior Court. Prohibition must issue preventing the inferior tri bunal from acting on a matter over which it has no jurisdiction.
On the other hand it is also my view that the numerous authorities make it equally clear that where lack of jurisdiction in the inferior tribunal is not so apparent on the face of the proceedings then the granting of prohibition is discretionary and that the exercise of that discretion remains a judi cial discretion to be exercised according to settled principles.
Here the ground urged in the notice of motion is that the respondents exceeded their jurisdiction under section 14 of the Customs Tariff
Under the general object of the Customs Act and the Customs Tariff an importer of goods is
obliged to make due entry of the goods as required by law.
It is the duty of a collector of customs or other proper official to classify the goods sought to be imported. It is his duty to so classify the goods as being within Schedule A, Schedule B or Schedule C to the Customs Tariff and being schedules to the Act those schedules are as much a part of the Act and as much an enactment as any other part of the Act.
Schedule A concerns goods subject to duty and free goods. Should the collector classify the goods as falling within Schedule A he is obliged to determine if the goods so classified are free or appraise the value for duty if they fall under the British Preferential Tariff, Most Favoured Nation Tariff or General Tariff and apply the appropriate duty indicated.
Likewise, in the performance of his duty he might classify the goods as being within Schedule B as goods subject to drawback for home con sumption or under Schedule C which are goods, the importation of which into Canada is prohibited.
In the exercise of his duty and obligation under the two above-mentioned statutes, which are in pari materia, the collector of customs classified the goods which the applicant exported to Canada as falling within Schedule C, particularly Tariff Item 99201-1 which reads:
Books, printed paper, drawings, paintings, prints, photographs or representations of any kind of a treasonable or seditious, or of an immoral or indecent character.
Counsel for the applicant submitted that the goods in question, which are incontrovertibly peri odical publications, were improperly classified under Item 99201-1 because the word "periodical" does not appear therein and there are numerous instances in Schedules A, B and in Schedule C itself where the word "periodical" is used. In the result his submission was that since there was no specific inclusion in that item of "periodical" as descriptive of the applicant's goods the importation thereof was not prohibited.
This then brings out in stark relief what I consider to be the crux of this matter. The crucial issue may be simply stated. Did the collector of
customs in classifying the goods as he did act within his jurisdiction and erroneously apply the law to a matter within his jurisdiction or, put another way with more appropriate emphasis, did he erroneously decide an issue upon which his jurisdiction depends or did he erroneously decide an issue within his jurisdiction?
If the former is the case then prohibition must be granted but if the latter is the case then prohibi tion must be refused.
After having given careful consideration to what I conceive to be the crucial issue herein as I have indicated immediately above and for the conclu sion I have reached, also indicated above, as to the object of the two statutes that the duty is imposed thereby upon the proper customs officials to classi fy imported goods, which confers jurisdiction upon them to do so, it follows that the respondents acted within their jurisdiction and the decision made was one of law within their jurisdiction.
Having so concluded it is immaterial to this motion whether the decision made within the juris diction was erroneous or not and I do not decide that question but I might add that whether that decision was erroneous is debatable.
Being a periodical I would assume that it con sists of reproductions of photographs on certain pages with accompanying text and reading ma terial but there was no evidence of this before me and if that assumption is correct then part of the overall whole of the goods might fall within the language of Tariff Item 99201-1 such a part by reason of the nature of the goods not being sever- able from the whole.
For the foregoing reasons it follows that the application is dismissed with costs to the respondents.
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