A-1-86
Minister of Energy, Mines and Resources, Minis
ter of Finance, Deputy Minister of Energy, Mines
and Resources and Deputy Minister of Finance
(Appellants) (Defendants- Respondents)
v.
Auditor General of Canada (Respondent) (Plain-
tiff- Applicant)
INDEXED AS: CANADA (AUDITOR GENERAL) v. CANADA (M/N-
IS'TER OF ENERGY, MINES AND RESOURCES)
Court of Appeal, Pratte, Heald and Hugessen
JJ.-Ottawa, October 6, 7, 8, 1986 and January
22, 1987.
Constitutional law - Financial administration - Auditor
General - Acquisition by Petro-Canada of Petrofina Canada
Inc. - Parliament authorizing expenditure for acquisition
Appeal from Trial Division judgment Auditor General entitled
to access to Cabinet documents and Petro-Canada records
regarding share valuation - Access sought outside scope of
Auditor General's responsibilities under s. 13 Auditor General
Act Under s. 13 responsibilities limited to audits of
Canadian government departments and federal Crown corpo
rations - S. 13 right of access to be considered in light of s.
14 which allows access to Crown corporations' audits reports
- Parliament, in specifically addressing right to access in s.
14, restricting any general power inferred from s. 13 - S.
7(2)(d) imposing duty to verify whether ministers, in imple
menting will of Parliament as expressed in Appropriation
Acts, acted with due regard to economy and efficiency - S.
7(2)(d) responsibility not extending to determining whether
government acted with due regard to economy and efficiency
- Auditor General's role not to criticize legislation - Appeal
allowed - Auditor General Act, S.C. 1976-77, c. 34, ss. 5, 6,
7, 8, 13, 14 - Financial Administration Act, R.S.C. 1970, c.
F-10, ss. 2, 19, 54, 57, 58, 60, 61(1), 64, 77 - Appropriation
Act, No. 4, 1980-81, S.C. 1980-81-82-83, c. 51, Schedule,
Vote 5c - Petro-Canada Act, S.C. 1974-75-76, c. 61, ss. 17,
18, 26(1) - Canada Evidence Act, R.S.C. 1970, c. E-10, s.
36.3 (as added by S.C. 1980-81-82-83, c. Ill, s. 4) - Federal
Court Act, R.S.C. 1970 (2nd Supp.), c. 10, s. 28(6) - Canadi-
an Bill of Rights, R.S.C. 1970, Appendix III, s. 2.
Energy - Acquisition by Petro-Canada, Crown corpora
tion, of Petrofina Canada Inc. at $120 share - Expenditure of
up to 1.7 billion dollars authorized by Parliament - Auditor
General requesting access to Cabinet documents and Petro-
Canada records pertaining to valuation of shares before and
after acquisition — Appeal from decision granting access
allowed — Auditor General Act, S.C. 1976-77, c. 34, ss. 5, 6,
7, 8, 13, 14 — Petro-Canada Act, S.C. 1974-75-76, c. 61, ss.
17, 18, 26(1).
In February 1981, it was announced that Petro-Canada, a
Crown corporation, had reached an agreement to purchase
Petrofina Canada Inc. at a price of $120 per share. Parliament,
by Vote 5c of the Appropriation Act No. 4, 1980-81, granted
authority to spend up to 1.7 billion dollars to enable Petro-
Canada to acquire the shares and assets of Petrofina. This was
done by the imposition of a special charge on all Canadian
petroleum consumption. The proceeds of that charge were to be
paid into a special non-budgetary account known as the
Canadian Ownership Account.
Requests were made by the Auditor General to the auditor of
Petro-Canada, to officers of Petro-Canada and to the Governor
in Council to obtain information as to the valuation of the
shares of Petrofina before and after its acquisition by Petro-
Canada. Those requests were denied. Access to Cabinet docu
ments was also refused on the ground that the documents
sought constituted confidences of the Queen's Privy Council of
Canada. The Trial Division held ([1985] 1 F.C. 719) that the
Auditor General had the right to access to all the documents
claimed.
The ultimate question is whether the respondent is entitled to
the production of those documents. Fundamental to the deter
mination of that issue is the determination of the nature and
extent of the responsibilities of the Auditor General.
Held (Hugessen J. dissenting), the appeal should be allowed.
Per Heald J.: Subsection 13(1) of the Auditor General Act
cannot be relied upon to support the respondent's claim for
access since the access sought falls outside the scope of the
Auditor General's responsibilities under the said subsection.
(1) Cabinet documents
Under subsection 13(1), the Auditor General is entitled to
access to information that relates to the fulfilment of his
responsibilities and he is also entitled to require from members
of the public service of Canada such information as he deems
necessary for that purpose. Subsection 13(2) empowers the
Auditor General to station his staff in "any department".
Under subsection 13(3), employees of the Auditor General who
are examining the accounts of "a department or of a Crown
corporation" are required to take an oath of secrecy. Taking
into context the scheme of section 13 in isolation, it would
appear at first glance, that the "responsibilities" contemplated
by Parliament in subsection (1) are to be limited to audits of
departments of the Government of Canada and of federal
Crown corporations. Were it otherwise, Parliament in enacting
subsections (2) and (3), would have given to the Auditor
General similar enabling and assisting powers in respect of
Cabinet Ministers and the Privy Council.
This view is strengthened by section 5 of the Auditor General
Act which refers to the "auditor of the accounts of Canada".
Pursuant to subsection 54(1)(a) of the Financial Administra
tion Act, the Receiver General is required to keep accounts
showing the "expenditures made under each appropriation".
The Auditor General's responsibility therefore commences after
the appropriations have been passed by Parliament. It cannot
include decisions reached by the Governor in Council which led
to the parliamentary appropriation.
The Auditor General's responsibilities are related to the
implementation of legislative enactments passed by Parliament
and cannot be extended to permit him to challenge the wisdom
of those enactments. In this case, the effect of the Trial
Division judgment would be to allow the Auditor General to
audit the political process prior to the enactment of the Act
which contains the Parliamentary spending authority for the
Petrofina acquisition. The authority conferred upon the Audi
tor General pursuant to subsection 13(1) cannot be interpreted
in such an all-embracing fashion.
(2) Petro-Canada records
The right of access to Petro-Canada's records which might
appear, inferentially, to flow from section 13 must be con
sidered in the light of section 14. Section 14 allows the Auditor
General access to the audit reports of the Crown corporations'
auditors. It allows him to seek further information from the
Crown corporation's officers; and, in the event of their refusal,
he can ask the Governor in Council for an order compelling the
granting of access to the records and the disclosure of further
information.
The fact that Parliament has specifically addressed the ques
tion of the Auditor General's right to access to information in
respect of federal Crown corporations in section 14 serves to
restrict accordingly any general power which could be inferred
from section 13, in the absence of section 14. On this basis, the
Auditor General is not entitled to the unencumbered access to
the records of Petro-Canada which the declaration of the Trial
Division gives him.
The respondent submits that subsection 13(l) allows him to
determine what information relates to the fulfilment of his
duties. The relevant sections of the Act do not provide such
wide powers. When the Auditor General is examining the
accounts of a Crown corporation, he is not auditing the
accounts of Canada. Subsection 14(1) makes this clear since it
refers to the accounts of Canada in contradistinction to the
accounts of a Crown corporation.
Per Pratte J.: Paragraph 7(2)(d) of the Auditor General Act
imposes on the Auditor General the duty of verifying and
reporting whether the various ministers, in implementing the
will of Parliament as expressed in the Appropriation Acts, have
acted with due regard to economy and efficiency. However, for
the respondent to succeed on the basis of that provision, the
responsibility under paragraph 7(2)(d) would have to extend
further so as to include the duty of determining whether the
authorization to spend contained in the Appropriation Act itself
was given with due regard to economy and efficiency. The
respondent would then be empowered to determine whether the
government that caused Parliament to adopt the Appropriation
Act had taken those elements into account.
Such an interpretation cannot stand since it would have the
effect of changing the nature of the Auditor General's duties.
The role of the Auditor General is neither to criticize the
legislation adopted by Parliament nor to pass judgment on the
wisdom of government decisions that result in the adoption of
such legislation. If Parliament had intended to modify the
nature of the functions of the Auditor General in such a radical
way, it would have expressed itself much more clearly.
Per Huggessen J. (dissenting): The question whether the
responsibility of the Auditor General extends to inquiring
whether due regard to economy has been demonstrated and
value for money achieved should be answered in the
affirmative.
Even a narrow view of the Auditor General's function must
include the duty of determining whether money has been spent
for the purpose for which it was appropriated by Parliament.
The language of Vote 5c cannot be overlooked. In authorizing
an investment in Petro-Canada, Parliament did so in order to
increase Canadian public ownership of the oil and gas industry
in Canada through the share purchase acquisition of Petrofina
by Petro-Canada. It follows that an inquiry into whether the
money was spent for the purposes for which it was voted may
properly look beyond the investment in Petro-Canada to the
share purchase and property acquisition by Petro-Canada in
Petrofina.
The proposition that the decision to purchase Petrofina was
purely political and subject therefore to political accountability
only is without merit. It is the Auditor General's duty to tell,
and Parliament's right to know, the economic cost of the
political decision. If the implementation of the decision to
increase Canadian ownership in the oil and gas industry
involved buying shares and assets at a premium over their
market value, then the Auditor General has a duty to say what
that premium was so as to permit others to make the political
judgment as to whether it was worth paying.
The question whether the Auditor General has a right to
require to see the documents relating to the valuation of the
Petrofina shares was also to be answered in the affirmative.
Subsection 13(1) is intended to override both statutes and
common law rules to the contrary. It makes it clear that only a
specific override can prevail. It extends access to all informa
tion relating to the fulfilment of the Auditor General's respon
sibilities. The right to receive information from public servants
and the right to access to other sources of information are two
distinct rights, separated in English by the conjunctive phrase
"and he is also entitled to" and in French by a semi-colon. Thus
the first portion of subsection 13(1) clearly extends to informa-
tion in the possession of persons other than civil servants, who
are exclusively the subject of the second portion.
The primacy decreed under subsection 13(1) must have some
scope for practical application. If the only remedy available to
the Auditor General to enforce the subsection 13(1) right is
through the exercise of his power as commissioner under sub
section 13(4), then the latter power must itself enjoy the
primacy which would include primacy over section 36.3 of the
Canada Evidence Act. The subsidiary argument, that in the
event of denial of access the Auditor General's only remedy is
to make an unfavourable report to Parliament under paragraph
7(1)(6), could not be accepted. A legal right entails a legal
remedy. A declaration of the kind sought in the present pro
ceedings is appropriate as a remedy.
Finally, although the Auditor General is the one who in the
first instance must decide what is properly within the scope of
his inquiry, any dispute as to his judgment on the point must be
determined by a court of law.
CASE JUDICIALLY CONSIDERED
REFERRED TO:
British Columbia Development Corporation et al. v.
Friedmann, Ombudsman et al., [1984] 2 S.C.R. 447.
COUNSEL:
W. I. C. Binnie, Q.C. and Graham R. Garton
for appellants (defendants-respondents).
Gordon F. Henderson, Q.C., Emilio S. Bina-
vince and Martin W. Mason for respondent
(plaintiff-applicant).
SOLICITORS:
Deputy Attorney General of Canada for
appellants (defendants-respondents).
Gowling & Henderson, Ottawa, for respon
dent (plaintiff-applicant).
The following are the reasons for judgment
rendered in English by
PRATTE J.: I have had the privilege of reading
the reasons for judgment prepared by my brother
Hugessen J. as well as those of my brother Heald
J. Like Mr. Justice Heald, I cannot share the
opinion of our brother on the nature of the Auditor
General's responsibilities.
The ultimate question to be answered in this
case is whether the respondent is entitled to the
production of certain documents relating to the
evaluation of the shares of Petrofina Canada Inc.
Leaving aside the problem arising from the alleged
confidential nature of those documents, the
respondent's entitlement to the production of those
documents must flow from sections 13 and 14 of
the Auditor General Act [S.C. 1976-77, c. 34].
Clearly, the powers conferred by those two sec
tions can only be exercised by him in the fulfil
ment of his responsibilities under the Act. What
ever be the extent of those powers, therefore, they
cannot be used to obtain documents, be they confi
dential or not, for a purpose other than the fulfil
ment of the Auditor General's responsibilities as
they are defined in the Act. The first and essential
question to be resolved in this case is, therefore,
that on which I disagree with my brother Hugess-
en J., namely, what is the nature and the extent of
the respondent's responsibilities under the Auditor
General Act?
The respondent is the "auditor of the accounts
of Canada". He is not the auditor of the accounts
of Crown corporations like Petro-Canada. What
ever be his rights under sections 13 and 14, he may
only exercise them in fulfilling his responsibility as
auditor of the accounts of Canada. This observa
tion is not superfluous since the documents sought
by the respondent relate to the evaluation of the
shares of Petrofina Canada Inc. prior to their
acquisition by Petro-Canada. Those documents
would clearly be relevant in an audit of the
accounts of Petro-Canada; they are not so clearly
related to an audit of the accounts of Canada.
A second preliminary observation. Counsel for
the respondent laid much stress, during argument,
on the legislative history of the Auditor General
Act which, according to him, shows that the
responsibilities of the Auditor General have been
constantly increased and that, for that reason, the
law now in force should be interpreted in a way
consistent with this desire of Parliament to enlarge
those responsibilities. I do not see any merit in that
argument. The gradual enlargement of the respon
sibilities of the Auditor General cannot be denied.
That evolution, however, does not help in deter
mining the precise limits of those responsibilities
as they are now defined by the statute. In my view,
all that need to be said of that legislative history
for our purposes is that the powers that the
respondent is asserting in this case certainly exceed
the limits of his responsibilities as they were
defined before the coming into force of the Audi
tor General Act in 1977. The Auditor General's
responsibilities with respect to government expen
ditures were then limited to verifying and report
ing, first, whether they were accurately reflected in
the public accounts and, second, whether they had
been authorized by Parliament. Clearly, the docu
ments to which the respondent seeks access in this
case do not relate to the fulfilment of those respon
sibilities. The question, therefore, is whether the
Auditor General Act of 1977 has increased the
responsibilities of the Auditor General so as to
justify the demands that he makes in this case.
The Auditor General Act of 1977 has modified
the responsibilities of the Auditor General with
respect to expenditures in only one way. In addi
tion to the duties that he formerly had of reporting
to the House whether the public accounts accu
rately reflected those expenditures and whether all
those expenditures had been authorized by Parlia
ment, paragraph 7(2)(d) of the new Act imposed
on the Auditor General the duty of reporting
whether "money has been expended without due
regard to economy or efficiency".
All government expenditures must be authorized
by Parliament. Paragraph 7(2)(d), therefore, must
refer to money that has been expended pursuant to
the authorization of Parliament. It is on that basis
that the meaning of paragraph 7(2)(d) must be
determined.
When Parliament appropriates a sum of money
for a given purpose, it thereby authorizes the
Minister of the department concerned to spend
that sum for the purpose specified. In most cases,
however, Appropriation Acts leave many things to
the discretion of the Minister who must decide the
manner in which he will spend the money for the
specified purpose. For instance, the Minister who
is authorized to spend X dollars to build an office
building must determine the location of the build
ing, choose the architect, the contractor, etc.
When Parliament authorizes an expenditure of
that kind, it certainly expects the Minister con
cerned to make those decisions relating to the
manner in which the money will be spent with
"due regard to economy and efficiency". I have,
therefore, no difficulty in concluding that the new
responsibility bestowed on the Auditor General
merely imposes on him the duty of verifying and
reporting whether the various ministers, in imple
menting the will of Parliament as expressed in the
Appropriation Acts, acted with due regard to
economy and efficiency. Thus, that new responsi
bility is merely an extension of the responsibility
that the Auditor General already had of verifying
that the government had complied with the wishes
of Parliament by making no expenditures except
those authorized by Appropriation Acts.
If the new responsibility of the Auditor General
does not extend further than that, it would certain
ly not justify the demands made by the respondent.
In this case, Parliament had authorized the Minis
ter of Energy, Mines and Resources to spend up to
1.7 billion dollars to acquire shares of Petro-
Canada so as to enable that Crown corporation to
purchase Petrofina Canada Inc. The Minister was
given very little discretion by that legislation: he
could neither fix the conditions at which Petrofina
Canada Inc. would be acquired nor refuse to
approve the terms of that acquisition. As all the
documents of which the production is sought by
the respondent in these proceedings relate to the
evaluation of Petrofina Canada Inc., they do not
relate in any way to the fulfilment of the Auditor
General's new responsibility of verifying that the
money appropriated by Parliament had been spent
by the Minister of Energy, Mines and Resources,
with due regard to economy and efficiency. If the
Minister had no discretion in the matter, he could
not have regard to economy and efficiency.
In order for the respondent to succeed, there
fore, the new responsibility of the Auditor General
under paragraph 7(2)(d) must extend further than
I have said so as to include, not only the duty to
determine whether a Minister, in spending money
pursuant to an Appropriation Act, complied with
the implied wish of Parliament that the authorized
expenditures be made in a manner consistent with
economy and efficiency, but also the duty of deter
mining whether the authorization to spend con
tained in the Appropriation Act itself was given
with due regard to economy and efficiency. Then,
the respondent would have the power, that he
asserts here, of determining whether the govern
ment that caused Parliament to adopt the Appro-
priation Act here in question had due regard to
economy and efficiency. I cannot give such a wide
interpretation to paragraph 7(2)(d) of the Auditor
General Act which would, in my opinion, have the
effect of not merely enlarging the responsibilities
of the Auditor General but of changing their very
nature. The role of the Auditor General, as I
understand it, is neither to criticize the legislation
adopted by Parliament nor pass judgment on the
wisdom of government decisions that resulted in
the adoption of such legislation. If Parliament had
intended to modify the nature of the functions of
the Auditor General in such a radical way, it
would, in my opinion, have expressed itself much
more clearly.
For these reasons, I am therefore of opinion that
the documents of which the respondent seeks the
production in this case do not relate in any manner
to the fulfilment of his responsibilities.
I would allow the appeal, set aside the judgment
of the Trial Division and dismiss the action of the
respondent, with costs both in this Court and in
the Trial Division.
* * *
The following are the reasons for judgment
rendered in English by
HEALD J.: I have read the reasons for judgment
herein prepared by my brother Hugessen J. Since I
am in substantial disagreement with the result
which he proposes and with his reasons for so
concluding, it is necessary to express my own views
as to the proper conclusions to be reached on this
appeal.
Initially, I should say that I agree with Hugess-
en J. that the issues in this case were not fully
stated in the Trial Division [[1985] 1 F.C. 719].' I
also think my brother Hugessen's characterization
of the central issue is more accurate,—i.e.,—to
determine the nature and extent of the respon
d I also agree with his observations about the practice adopt
ed, in the Trial Division, in this case, of issuing two sets of
reasons for judgment. I concur with him that such a method of
proceeding is not to be recommended since it fails to "contrib-
ute to the proper and orderly dispatch of judicial business".
sibilities of the Auditor General and, in making
that determination, to decide whether his duty to
make examinations and inquiries and to report to
the House of Commons includes the responsibility
to track the use of public funds past the first
recipient and on to the ultimate beneficiary in
order to decide whether the Canadian people have
had value for their money. Out of this general
issue, there arise two subsequent issues which were
also discussed by Hugessen J. The first subsequent
issue is—Does the responsibility of the Auditor
General require him to inquire into whether due
regard for economy has been demonstrated and
value for money achieved in the Petrofina acquisi
tion? And, if the answer to the first subsequent
issue is in the affirmative, then a second subse
quent issue arises—Does the Auditor General have
the right to demand to see the Cabinet documents
and the records of Petro-Canada relating to the
Petrofina acquisition and, in the event of refusal of
access, to enforce that right through the Courts?
My disagreement with my brother relates to the
determination of those issues.
More specifically, I do not think a proper inter
pretation of subsection 13 (1) of the Auditor Gen
eral Act, leads to the conclusion that, pursuant to
the authority of that subsection, the Auditor Gen
eral has the right, on the facts of this case, to
access to all Cabinet documents dealing with the
Petrofina acquisition. Likewise, I have the view
that subsection 13(1) does not entitle the Auditor
General to access to the records of Petro-Canada.
Subsection 13(1) requires careful analysis. It
reads:
13. (1) Except as provided by any other Act of Parliament
that expressly refers to this subsection, the Auditor General is
entitled to free access at all convenient times to information
that relates to the fulfilment of his responsibilities and he is also
entitled to require and receive from members of the public
service of Canada such information, reports and explanations
as he deems necessary for that purpose. [Emphasis added.]
I agree with my brother Hugessen that the
changes in language from the former provision
(subsection 57(1) of the Financial Administration
Act [R.S.C. 1970, c. F-10]) make it clear that
subsection 13(1) is intended to override both stat
ute and common law rules to the contrary and that
the override must be specific. Nevertheless, this
paramountcy is restricted to information relating
to the fulfilment of the responsibilities of the Audi
tor General. Accordingly, if the Cabinet confi
dences in issue or the right of access to the records
of Petro-Canada do not relate to "the fulfilment of
his responsibilities", the paramount language at
the commencement of the subsection does not
assist the respondent.
THE PARAMETERS OF THE RESPONSIBILITIES OF
THE AUDITOR GENERAL
(a) With respect to Cabinet documents
The opening portion of subsection 13(1) which
restricts the Auditor General's access to informa
tion relating to the "fulfilment of his responsibili
ties" is separated from the remainder of the sub
section by the word "and". Thus, the broad
discretion conferred upon the Auditor General in
the second portion of the subsection refers only to
the "public service" and not to Ministers of the
Crown, the Queen's Privy Council or the
employees of Petro-Canada. 2 It is also significant
that in subsection 13(2), the Auditor General is
empowered to station members of his staff in "any
department" for the effective discharge of his
duties. Furthermore, in subsection 13(3),
employees of the Auditor General who are exam
ining the accounts of "a department or of a Crown
corporation" are required to take an oath of secre
cy. Accordingly, taking into context the scheme of
section 13 in isolation, it seems at first glance, that
the "responsibilities" contemplated by Parliament
in subsection (1) are to be limited to audits of
2 Sections 17 and 18 of the Petro-Canada Act [S.C. 1974-
75-76, c. 61 ] provide that the Corporation's officers, agents and
employees "shall be deemed not to be employed in the public
service of Canada" except only for certain specified purposes
relating to superannuation and employees compensation. In so
far as Ministers of the Crown are concerned, they are clearly
not members of the public service of Canada since in the
definition of "public officer" in section 2 of the Financial
Administration Act, Ministers are separately mentioned vis-Ã -
vis members of the public service of Canada. The definition in
section 2 reads: "public officer includes a Minister and any
person employed in the public service of Canada". (The empha
sis is mine.)
departments of the Government of Canada and of
federal Crown corporations. Were it otherwise, I
would have expected Parliament in enacting sub
sections (2) and (3), to give to the Auditor General
similar enabling and assisting powers in respect of
Cabinet Ministers and the Privy Council. 3
This view of the matter is strengthened, in my
opinion, by references to other sections of the
Auditor General Act as well as to sections of
related statutes. Section 5 of the Auditor General
Act provides:
5. The Auditor General is the auditor of the accounts of
Canada, including those relating to the Consolidated Revenue
Fund and as such shall make such examinations and inquiries
as he considers necessary to enable him to report as required by
this Act. [Emphasis added.]
The reference to reporting undoubtedly refers to
the requirement contained in section 7 of the Act
that the Auditor General report annually to the
House of Commons as well as to the permissive
authority with respect to special reports to the
House of Commons conferred upon him pursuant
to section 8. The expression "accounts of Canada"
is not defined in the Auditor General Act. How
ever, it is referred to in the Financial Administra
tion Act. Section 54 of that Act provides:
54. (1) Subject to regulations of the Treasury Board, the
Receiver General shall cause accounts to be kept in such
manner as to show
(a) the expenditures made under each appropriation;
(b) the revenues of Canada; and
3 Subsections 13(2) and 13(3) read as follows:
13....
(2) In order to carry out his duties more effectively, the
Auditor General may station in any department any person
employed in his office, and the department shall provide the
necessary office accommodation for any person so stationed.
(3) The Auditor General shall require every person
employed in his office who is to examine the accounts of a
department or of a Crown corporation pursuant to this Act to
comply with any security requirements applicable to, and to
take any oath of secrecy required to be taken by, persons
employed in that department or Crown corporation.
(c) the other payments into and out of the Consolidated
Revenue Fund.
(2) The Receiver General
(a) shall cause accounts to be kept to show such of the assets
and direct and contingent liabilities of Canada, and
(b) shall establish such reserves with respect to the assets and
liabilities,
as, in the opinion of the Minister, are required to give a true
and fair view of the financial position of Canada.
(3) The accounts of Canada shall be kept in the currency of
Canada.
This is consistent with section 19 of the same Act
which provides:
19. Subject to the British North America Acts, 1867 to 1965,
no payments shall be made out of the Consolidated Revenue
Fund without the authority of Parliament.
Thus, pursuant to subsection 54(1)(a), supra, the
Receiver General is required to keep accounts
showing "the expenditures made under each
appropriation". These accounts form a part of the
"accounts of Canada". They are a part of the
accounts which the Auditor General is charged
with reporting on to the House of Commons.
However, his responsibility commences after the
appropriations have been passed by Parliament.
Therefore, I agree with counsel for the appellants
that the "responsibilities of the Auditor General"
are "downstream" of the Appropriation Act or
other authorizing statute, and that the work of the
Office of the Auditor General in respect of which
he must report to the Commons annually pursuant
to section 7 would not include decisions reached by
the Governor in Council which led to the Parlia
mentary appropriation (Vote 5c of Appropriation
Act No. 4, 1980-81 [S.C. 1980-81-82-83, c. 51]).
I also agree with counsel for the appellants that
the Auditor General's responsibilities are related
to the implementation of legislative enactments
passed by Parliament and cannot be extended to
permitting the Auditor General to challenge the
wisdom of those enactments. In this case, the
effect of the Trial Division judgment would be to
allow the Auditor General to audit the political
process prior to March 31, 1981, the date of
enactment of Appropriation Act No. 4, which Act
contains the parliamentary spending authority for
the Petrofina acquisition. I am unable to interpret
the authority conferred upon the Auditor General
pursuant to subsection 13 (1) in such an all-
embracing fashion.
(b) With respect to the records of Petro-Canada
I said earlier that my appreciation of subsection
(1) of section 13 when read in context with subsec
tions (2) and (3) of that section led me to conclude
that the "responsibilities" envisaged by Parliament
in subsection (1) may be restricted to audits of
federal government departments and of federal
Crown corporations. Since Petro-Canada is a fed
eral Crown corporation and since the respondent
takes the position that he has the right of access to
the records of Petro-Canada in the course of his
audit of the accounts of Canada, it is necessary to
examine more closely the situation with respect to
Petro-Canada. In particular, it is necessary to
consider the provisions of section 14 of the Auditor
General Act. That section reads:
14. (1) Notwithstanding subsections (2) and (3), in order to
fulfil his responsibilities as the auditor of the accounts of
Canada, the Auditor General may rely on the report of the duly
appointed auditor of a Crown corporation or of any subsidiary
of a Crown corporation.
(2) The Auditor General may request a Crown corporation
to obtain and furnish to him such information and explanations
from its present or former directors, officers, employees, agents
and auditors or those of any of its subsidiaries as are, in his
opinion, necessary to enable him to fulfil his responsibilities as
the auditor of the accounts of Canada.
(3) If, in the opinion of the Auditor General, a Crown
corporation, in response to a request made under subsection
(2), fails to provide any or sufficient information or explana
tions, he may so advise the Governor in Council, who may
thereupon direct the officers of the corporation to furnish the
Auditor General with such information and explanations and to
give him access to those records, documents, books, accounts
and vouchers of the corporation or any of its subsidiaries access
to which is, in the opinion of the Auditor General, necessary for
him to fulfil his responsibilities as the auditor of the accounts of
Canada.
Subsection 14(1) empowers the Auditor General,
in the fulfilment of his responsibilities to audit the
accounts of Canada, to have access to and rely
upon the reports of duly appointed auditors of
Crown corporations. 4 Subsection 14(2) entitles the
Auditor General to obtain information and expla
nations from the directors, officers, employees,
agents and auditors of a Crown corporation. Sub
section 14(3) permits the Auditor General, in
cases where he believes that a Crown corporation
has failed to provide sufficient information, to ask
the Governor in Council to direct the Crown cor
poration's officers to furnish the Auditor General
with such further explanations and information as
he considers necessary and to give him such fur
ther access to the Corporation's records as he
considers necessary. 5
In my view, section 14, supra, must be read in
context with section 13 and when this is done, I
think it clear that any entitlement to access to the
records of a Crown corporation such as Petro-
Canada which might appear, inferentially, to flow
from the provisions of section 13, must be con
sidered in the light of the provisions of section 14.
Section 14 addresses with particularity the rights
of the Auditor General with respect to the records
of a Crown corporation. Section 14 allows the
Auditor General access to the audit reports of the
Crown corporation's auditors; it allows him to ask
for further information and particulars from the
Crown corporation and its auditors; and, in the
event of their refusal, he can go to the Governor in
Council for an order compelling access to the
records and compelling further information and
explanations.
° Subsection 26(1) of the Petro-Canada Act provides:
26. (1) ... the accounts of the Corporation shall be audit
ed each year by an auditor appointed by the Governor in
Council.
In fact the firm of Peat Marwick Mitchell was the auditor of
Petro-Canada at all relevant times.
5 Pursuant to subsection 14(2) the Auditor General did
demand from Petro-Canada information relating to its acquisi
tion of Petrofina. Petro-Canada referred the Auditor General
to its auditors. Subsequently the Auditor General applied to the
Governor in Council pursuant to subsection 14(3) for an Order
in Council compelling Petro-Canada to furnish the Auditor
General with the information requested. By Order in Council
dated June 26, 1984, the Governor in Council refused to direct
the officers of Petro-Canada to provide the desired information.
In my view, the fact that Parliament has specifi
cally addressed the question of the Auditor Gener
al's right to access and to information in respect of
federal Crown corporations in section 14 serves to
restrict accordingly any general power which could
be inferred from section 13, in the absence of
section 14. On this basis, it is my view that the
Auditor General is not entitled to the unencum-
bered access to the records of Petro-Canada which
the declaration of the Trial Division gives him. I
have this opinion because the access sought by the
respondent falls outside the purview of his respon
sibilities and thus subsection 13(1) cannot be
relied on to support his claim for access.
(c) The submissions of the respondent relative to
(a) and (b) supra.
It is said, however, on behalf of the respondent
that subsection 13 (1) allows the respondent "to
determine what information relates to the fulfil
ment of his responsibilities" (respondent's memo
randum, paragraph 33). It was further submitted
(respondent's memorandum, paragraph 35): "con-
sidering Sections 5, 6, and 7, the Respondent has,
under Section 13, the entitlement to free access to
information and to require and to receive any
information, reports and explanations which the
Respondent deems necessary to enable him to
fulfil his responsibilities under the Auditor Gener
al Act". This is a sweeping proposition. It would
give the Auditor General carte blanche. He would
be the sole arbiter of where his "responsibilities"
commenced and terminated. In my view, the rele
vant sections of the Act cannot reasonably be
interpreted to provide such wide powers for the
reasons given earlier herein. Furthermore, section
5 gives the Auditor General wide powers with the
use of the words "as he considers necessary" but
only when he is auditing the accounts of Canada.
When he is examining the accounts of a Crown
corporation, he is not auditing the accounts of
Canada. Subsection 14(1) makes this clear in my
view since it refers to the accounts of Canada in
contradistinction to the accounts of a Crown cor
poration. If it could be said that the accounts of
Canada include the accounts of Crown corpora
tions, then the enabling provisions of section 14
would be redundant since the Auditor General has
all the powers necessary for the discharge of his
responsibility pursuant to section 5 in so far as the
accounts of Canada are concerned. 6 Likewise, sub
section 13(1) gives him wide powers by employing
the words "as he deems necessary" but only for
purposes relating to "the fulfilment of his
responsibilities".
In addition to rendering redundant the enabling
provisions of section 14 of the Act, the interpreta
tion of subsection 13(1) advocated by the respon
dent would render nugatory the provisions of sub
section (3) of section 14. As noted earlier herein,
the Governor in Council refused, pursuant to sub
section 14(3) to direct Petro-Canada to deliver the
information sought by the Auditor General with
respect to Petro-Canada's acquisition of Petrofina.
By demanding the same information directly from
the appellants as directors of Petro-Canada pursu
ant to subsection 13(1), the respondent seeks to
effectively reverse the decision of the Governor in
Council, a result which he could not achieve by
recourse to the courts since, pursuant to subsection
28(6) of the Federal Court Act [R.S.C. 1970 (2nd
Supp.), c. 10], this Court has no jurisdiction to
review any decision or order of the Governor in
Council. In my view such an interpretation of the
words used in subsection 13(1) would be quite
improper since the consequence thereof would be
to achieve a result by indirect means which was
impermissible through direct action.
Since I have concluded, for the reasons
expressed supra, that the access sought by the
respondent and given to him in the declaration of
the Trial Division goes far beyond his entitlement
pursuant to subsection 13(1) because that access
lies outside the parameters of his assigned respon
sibilities, it is unnecessary to deal with the issues of
6 If any further support were needed for this view of the
matter, I think the provisions of section 77 of the Financial
Administration Act which set out in detail the way in which the
accounts of a federal Crown corporation are to be audited, and
reported upon, to the responsible Minister, are clear evidence
that Parliament intended the accounts of Crown corporations to
be separate from the accounts of Canada.
Crown privilege and the constitutional conventions
of Cabinet confidentiality which were canvassed
extensively by both counsel, in their memoranda,
and at the hearing of the appeal.
THE REMEDIES AVAILABLE TO THE AUDITOR
GENERAL
Before concluding, I would like to express some
views as to the remedies which are open to the
Auditor General in the discharge of his respon
sibilities. In my view the Auditor General has a
hierarchy of remedies available to him under the
Auditor General Act. The first remedy which is, in
my view, a primary remedy, is founded in para
graph 7(1)(b) of the Auditor General Act. Subsec
tion 7(1) reads:
7. (1) The Auditor General shall report annually to the
House of Commons
(a) on the work of his office; and
(b) on whether, in carrying on the work of his office, he
received all the information and explanations he required.
The next remedy is nourished by the provisions of
subsection 13(4) of the Auditor General Act. That
subsection reads:
13....
(4) The Auditor General may examine any person on oath on
any matter pertaining to any account subject to audit by him
and for the purposes of any such examination the Auditor
General may exercise all the powers of a commissioner under
Part 1 of the Inquiries Act.
The third remedy is the remedy provided pursuant
to subsection 13(1) which, as noted supra, is the
most comprehensive remedy because of the para-
mountcy clause expressed at the outset of the
subsection.
I conclude that the subsection 13(4) remedy is a
less powerful one than the remedy under subsec
tion 13(1) because of the absence of the para-
mountcy clause in subsection 13(4). This conclu
sion is reinforced, in my view, when the application
of section 36.3 of the Canada Evidence Act
[R.S.C. 1970, c. E-10 (as added by S.C. 1980-81-
82-83, c. 111, s. 4)] 7 to each of the subsections is
analyzed. Because of the absence of a paramount-
cy clause in subsection 13(4), I think that a certifi
cate filed pursuant to subsection 36.3(1) would
effectively preclude any action under subsection
13(4) by the Auditor General in the areas encom
passed by the subsection 36.3(1) certificate.
That section reads as follows:
36.3 (1) Where a Minister of the Crown or the Clerk of
the Privy Council objects to the disclosure of information
before a court, person or body with jurisdiction to compel the
production of information by certifying in writing that the
information constitutes a confidence of the Queen's Privy
Council for Canada, disclosure of the information shall be
refused without examination or hearing of the information by
the court, person or body.
(2) For the purpose of subsection (1), "a confidence of the
Queen's Privy Council for Canada" includes, without
restricting the generality thereof, information contained in
(a) a memorandum the purpose of which is to present
proposals or recommendations to Council;
(b) a discussion paper the purpose of which is to present
background explanations, analyses of problems or policy
options to Council for consideration by Council in making
decisions;
(c) an agendum of Council or a record recording delibera
tions or decisions of Council;
(d) a record used for or reflecting communications or
discussions between Ministers of the Crown on matters
relating to the making of government decisions or the
formulation of government policy;
(e) a record the purpose of which is to brief Ministers of
the Crown in relation to matters that are brought before,
or are proposed to be brought before, Council or that are
the subject of communications or discussions referred to in
paragraph (d); and
(f) draft legislation.
(3) For the purposes of subsection (2), "Council" means
the Queen's Privy Council for Canada, committees of the
Queen's Privy Council for Canada, Cabinet and committees
of Cabinet.
(4) Subsection (1) does not apply in respect of
(a) a confidence of the Queen's Privy Council for Canada
that has been in existence for more than twenty years; or
(b) a discussion paper described in paragraph (2)(b)
(i) if the decisions to which the discussion paper relates
have been made public, or
(ii) where the decisions have not been made public, if
four years have passed since the decisions were made.
However, it seems to me that a more serious
problem could arise were the Auditor General to
seek enforcement of a subsection 13(1) remedy in
the face of a subsection 36.3(1) certificate. Assum
ing, for the sake of argument, that the Auditor's
view that he is the sole arbiter of the parameters of
his responsibilities is the correct one, then the
interesting question arises as to how he would be
able to enforce his subsection 13(1) rights through
the courts. Assuming, for example, that he were to
make an application to the Court for access to
Cabinet documents, and, assuming that a minister
of the Crown or the Clerk of the Privy Council
were to file a certificate pursuant to subsection
36.3(1), the provisions of that subsection, if appli
cable, would require the Court to refuse disclosure
of the information "without examination ... of the
information by the court". In my view, this situa
tion demonstrates clearly the difficulties involved
in providing an effective and realistic remedy for
the rights asserted by the respondent pursuant to
subsection 13(1). While this problem is not before
the Court in this appeal, I think it relevant to
consider the lack of a viable remedy when testing
the validity of the respondent's submissions con
cerning the sweep of his authority. Put another
way, if the Court was required to deal with an
application by the Auditor General to enforce his
right to access under subsection 13(1), and, in
response, thereto, a certificate pursuant to subsec
tion 36.3(1) were filed, the Court might well be in
the difficult position of attempting to determine
whether the Auditor General was acting within his
responsibilities without being able to examine the
information in question because of the strictures
contained in subsection 36.3(1). The Court would
be in this position because, if the Auditor General
was acting within his responsibilities, pursuant to
subsection 13(1), section 36.3 of the Canada Evi
dence Act would have no application. If, however,
the Auditor General was acting outside the scope
of his responsibilities, subsection 13(1) would not
apply so as to oust the application of section 36.3.
Accordingly, the threshold question for the Court
would be whether or not the Auditor General was
acting within his responsibilities. In order to deter
mine the answer to this threshold question, the
Court might conceivably need to have access to the
information in question. By having that access, the
Court would be in violation of subsection 36.3(1)
in advance of being able to determine whether or
not the Auditor General was to be bound by its
provisions. If, after seeing the material, the Court
concluded that the Auditor General was acting
within the scope of his responsibilities in seeking
access, then the provisions of subsection 36.3(1)
would not apply because of the paramountcy
provisions of subsection 13(1) of the Auditor Gen
eral Act. If, conversely, the Court decided that the
Auditor General was acting outside the scope of
his responsibilities, the paramountcy provisions of
subsection 13 (1) would not apply, and subsection
36.3(1) would operate to prevent the Court's
access to the material in question. In such circum
stances, the Court would have been placed in the
embarrassing and difficult position of having
breached subsection 36.3(1) in order to discharge
its duties with respect to the subsection 13(1)
application of the Auditor General.
In my view, such a repugnant and inconsistent
consequence demonstrates forcibly that Parlia
ment could never have intended that the parame
ters of subsection 13(1) would include confidences
of the Privy Council, Ministers and the Cabinet.
CONCLUSION
For all of the above reasons, I have concluded
that the respondent is not entitled to any of the
relief given to him by the Trial Division. I would
therefore allow the appeal with costs, set aside the
judgment of the Trial Division and substitute
therefor a judgment dismissing the respondent's
action and application with costs.
* * *
The following are the reasons for judgment
rendered in English by
HUGESSEN J. (dissenting): The issue in these
proceedings was stated by the Associate Chief
Justice, presiding in the Trial Division, in the
following terms:
The issue in this case, in the briefest possible terms, is
whether the right of access to information, given to the Auditor
General of Canada in section 13 of the Auditor General Act,
S.C. 1976-77, c. 34, takes precedence over or must defer to the
convention of confidence of the Queen's Privy Council for
Canada. [Reasons for judgment, November 1, 1985, Case, pp.
3174-3175. 8 1*
As I see it, there is another issue underlying the
question stated by the Trial Judge that requires to
be answered first. It is to know the nature and
extent of the responsibilities of the Auditor Gener
al. More particularly, it is to know whether the
Auditor General's duty to make examinations and
inquiries and to report to the House of Commons
includes the responsibility to follow the use which
has been made of public funds beyond their
immediate or first recipient through to their ulti
mate beneficiary in order to determine whether the
Canadian people have had value for their money.
The matter arises in this way. In February 1981,
Petro-Canada, a Crown corporation, announced
that it had reached an agreement with Petrofina
8 The case reveals that there were two sets of reasons for
judgment issued. The first, from which the above extract is
taken, is dated November 1, 1985, and appears to have been
delivered from the Bench on that day. As far as I can deter
mine, there then followed a further hearing, on November 12,
1985, whose purpose was to "discuss" the reasons for judgment,
following which the Judge indicated certain corrections and
amendments. Both parties then moved for judgment in accord
ance with their respective understanding of the Judge's reasons
and these motions were heard on December 4, 1985. Finally, on
December 6, 1985, the Judge issued amended reasons for
judgment which differ substantially from the original reasons;
in particular, they contain a number of new findings of fact.
Judgment itself was entered on December 6, 1985.
This method of proceeding is not to be recommended.
Having had the matter under advisement for more than seven
months, the Judge, if he was not ready to give his reasons in
final form on November 1, would have done better to have
waited until he was ready. The issue of what can only be
described as draft reasons subject to amplification and correc
tion in the light of invited comments from the parties to the
litigation does not, in my view, contribute to the proper and
orderly dispatch of judicial business.
* Editor's Note: The amended reasons for judgment are
published at [1985] 1 F.C. 719. The above extract appears at p.
724 thereof.
S.A. to purchase Petrofina Canada Inc., at a price
of $120 per share.'
Petro-Canada was incorporated by Act of Par
liament (S.C. 1974-75-76, c. 61). Its entire share
capital is held by the Minister of Energy, Mines
and Resources in trust for the Crown and is non
transferable. The Corporation is, for all purposes,
an agent of Her Majesty and may only exercise its
powers as such. The Auditor General is not the
auditor of Petro-Canada and the latter's books are,
in accordance with section 26 of the Act, audited
by an auditor appointed by the Governor in Coun
cil. Petro-Canada's capital budget is subject to the
approval of the Governor in Council.
The Petrofina acquisition was a massive finan
cial undertaking. The cost at the agreed price of
$120 per share was approximately 1.7 billion dol
lars. On the eve of the takeover announcement, the
Governor in Council had approved Petro-Canada's
supplementary capital budget permitting share
purchase investments to an amount of 1.5 billion
dollars.
Some time after the takeover had been
announced and the details of the acquisition made
public, Parliament was asked to approve the neces
sary funding to enable Petro-Canada to pay the
bill. This was done by the imposition of a special
charge on all Canadian petroleum consumption;
the proceeds of that charge were to be paid into a
special non-budgetary account known as the
Canadian Ownership Account (C.O.A.). While
the actual taxing statute creating the charge did
not come until some time later, the wording of
Vote 5c of the Appropriation Act No. 4, 1980-81
(S.C. 1980-81-82-83, c. 51), tells us all we need to
know for the purposes of this case:
9 As is so often the case in corporate takeovers, the actual
details of the transaction were vastly more complicated, involv
ing both share purchase and transfer of assets and the interposi
tion of subsidiary companies. While these complications may
well be a source of legitimate concern to anyone inquiring into
whether the Canadian people obtained value for money in the
takeover, they have no direct bearing on the issues in this case.
ENERGY, MINES AND RESOURCES
A—DEPARTMENT
ENERGY PROGRAM
5c Energy—Operating expenditures including payments, in the
current and subsequent fiscal years, in accordance with
such terms and conditions as may be prescribed by the
Governor in Council on the recommendation of the Minis
ter and the Minister of Finance, of such amounts as are
from time to time required for investment in shares,
debentures, bonds or other evidences of indebtedness of
Petro-Canada in order to increase Canadian public owner
ship of the oil and gas industry in Canada through the
share purchase of and property acquisition from Petrofina
Canada Inc., by Petro-Canada, (not to exceed 1.7 billion
dollars which includes the interim financing costs) for
which purpose there shall be established in the Accounts of
Canada a non-budgetary trust account to be known as the
Canadian Ownership Account:
a) to which shall be credited all amounts received as a
consequence of a Canadian Ownership special charge
for the purpose of increasing the Canadian Public
Ownership of the oil and gas industry in Canada; and
b) to which shall be charged any investment made
hereunder for the share purchase of and property
acquisition from Petrofina Canada Inc.
and to further provide that no investment shall be made
pursuant hereto in excess of the amount of the balance to
the credit of the account, and to provide a further amount
of . . .. .... . ... 5,382,000
The reading of this text makes it clear that what
had been authorized is an investment in Petro-
Canada in order to allow the latter to acquire the
shares and assets of Petrofina. In other words,
Petro-Canada is the chosen vehicle for achieving
the canadianisation policy evidenced by the
Petrofina takeover.
The Auditor General conceives it to be within
his field of responsibility
... to ascertain whether due regard to economy has been
demonstrated and value for money achieved in the $1.7 billion
acquisition of Petrofina Canada Inc. 10
Pursuant to subsection 14(1) of the Auditor
General Act," the Auditor General has requested
1 ° Paragraph 9.197, Report of the Auditor General for the
year ended March 31, 1983. Case, p. 121.
11 14. (1) Notwithstanding subsections (2) and (3), in order
to fulfil his responsibilities as the auditor of the accounts of
Canada, the Auditor General may rely on the report of the duly
appointed auditor of a Crown corporation or of any subsidiary
of a Crown corporation.
information from the auditor of Petro-Canada.
The reply indicated that the latter's mandate does
not extend to a value-for-money audit and that
accordingly the information was not available.
(Letter from Peat Marwick, August 4, 1983. Case,
pages 861 to 867.)
A request to Petro-Canada, pursuant to subsec
tion 14(2) of the Auditor General Act,'Z for pre-
and post-acquisition evaluation of the shares and
assets acquired from Petrofina was met by a
refusal.
A request pursuant to subsection 14(3) of the
Auditor General Act" was then made to the Gov
ernor in Council, asking that the latter direct
Petro-Canada to furnish the required information.
That request also was denied.
Finally, a written request was addressed to each
of the defendants for the following information:
• Copies of any analysis and/or evaluation reports pertaining to
the acquisition of Petrofina Canada Inc.
• Copies of any presentations, documents, memoranda you
considered in forming your recommendations relating to the
acquisition of Petrofina Canada Inc. using funds from the
Canadian Ownership Account.
" - 14....
(2) The Auditor General may request a Crown corporation
to obtain and furnish to him such information and explanations
from its present or former directors, officers, employees, agents
and auditors or those of any of its subsidiaries as are, in his
opinion, necessary to enable him to fulfil his responsibilities as
the auditor of the accounts of Canada.
' 3 14. ...
(3) If, in the opinion of the Auditor General, a Crown
corporation, in response to a request made under subsection
(2), fails to provide any or sufficient information or explana
tions, he may so advise the Governor in Council, who may
thereupon direct the officers of the corporation to furnish the
Auditor General with such information and explanations and to
give him access to those records, documents, books, accounts
and vouchers of the corporation or any of its subsidiaries access
to which is, in the opinion of the Auditor General, necessary for
him to fulfil his responsibilities as the auditor of the accounts of
Canada.
• Copies of any evaluations of the Petrofina Canada Inc.
acquisition and of the assets acquired which were undertaken
subsequent to the acquisition. [Case, page 128.]
Access was refused on the grounds that the docu
ments in question constituted confidences of the
Queen's Privy Council for Canada.
The present proceedings followed. After some
technical amendments which need not concern us
here, they take the form of an action for a declara
tion that the Auditor General has the right to free
access to:
(i) All analysis and/or evaluation reports pertaining to the
acquisition of Petrofina Canada Inc. prepared for, or received
by or considered by, the Defendants in the exercise of their
respective individual or joint statutory responsibilities;
(ii) All presentations, documents or memoranda relating to the
use of funds from the accounts of Canada (in particular from
the Canadian Ownership Account) for the acquisition of
Petrofina Canada Inc. that were prepared for, or received for or
considered by, the Defendants in the exercise of their respective
joint or individual statutory responsibilities with respect to the
acquisition of Petrofina Canada Inc.;
(iii) All evaluations of the Petrofina Canada Inc. acquisition
and/or the assets acquired that were undertaken subsequent to
the acquisition, prepared for, or received by, or considered by,
the Defendants in the exercise of their respective individual or
joint statutory responsibilities;
(iv) To provide the Plaintiff with information, and reports and
explanation contained in the documents set out in (a)(i). [Case,
pages 24-25.]
There would appear to be no doubt that the
documents in question exist and can and will be
made available if so ordered. A certificate of the
Clerk of the Privy Council purportedly issued in
accordance with section 36.3 of the Canada Evi
dence Act (R.S.C. 1970, c. E-10, as amended by
S.C. 1980-81-82-83, c. 111, s. 4) states that com
pliance with the order sought
... would require the Respondents to this application to pro
duce to the Auditor General the documents listed in Schedule
"A" hereto. I have personally examined and have carefully
considered each of those documents, and the information set
out therein are confidences of the Ministry of the Right Hon
ourable Pierre Trudeau, being memoranda to Cabinet, memo
randa to Cabinet Committee, Cabinet agenda, Cabinet Com
mittee agenda, Cabinet minutes, Cabinet Committee minutes,
records of Cabinet decisions, records of Cabinet Committee
decisions, draft legislation, correspondence between ministers of
the Crown, records of discussion between ministers of the
Crown, or briefing notes for ministers of the Crown with
respect to matters under consideration by the Cabinet. [Case,
page 72.]
The only question therefore is whether the Audi
tor General has the right to demand to see the
documents and to enforce that right, in the event
of refusal, through the courts. The most conve
nient starting point for an examination of that
question is to look at the role played by the
Auditor General in the complex interplay of rela
tionships which forms the structure of the modern-
day government of Canada.
Although of fairly recent creation when com
pared with many more traditional posts, the Audi
tor General is a high officer of State. In form he is
appointed by the Governor in Council for a non
renewable term of ten years. He is paid a salary
equal to that of the Chief Justice of the Federal
Court and is removable only upon joint address of
both Houses of Parliament. In substance and in
fact, he is regarded as the principal watchdog over
government spending and his annual reports, with
their doleful litanies of moneys wasted and
resources dissipated, are eagerly read and widely
distributed.
The role of the Auditor General has evolved
substantially over time and, as with many of our
institutions of Government, has tended to run
beyond (although not, of course, against) the
strictly legal framework in which it is set. That
framework has itself been fairly recently revised in
the Auditor General Act which came into force
August 1, 1977. ' 4 It is the interpretation of that
statute which lies at the heart of the present
litigation. It is important, however, that the Court,
when addressing that interpretative task, have in
mind not only the statute itself but also the evolu-
tive history of the Auditor General's office.
That history can be conveniently summarized as
a progression from a financial audit to a compre
hensive audit; from an attestation of proper book
keeping practices to an examination of whether
value has been had for money spent. 15 It can be
seen most clearly from a comparison of the statu
tory framework before and after the adoption of
the 1977 statute. That statute was itself, however,
a catch-up exercise and an attempt to capture in
legal terms the role of the Auditor General as it
then existed. Since that role has continued to
evolve and since, as will be seen, nothing in the
language of the 1977 statute requires it to be given
a narrow reading, care must be taken to avoid
freezing the function as though it had not con
tinued to develop.
14 The statute itself was the result of a conflict between the
sixth Auditor General, Maxwell Henderson, and the Govern
ment of the day over the right of the Auditor General to
investigate and report on "non-productive" payments—in other
words, value for money. In due course, an independent commit
tee of professionals (the Wilson Committee) was set up. Its
report in March 1975 strongly favoured the concept of a
comprehensive audit; the 1977 Act was in large measure the
translation of that report into law by Parliament. See Report of
the Independent Review Committee on the Office of the Audi
tor General of Canada. Ottawa, March 1975. Information
Canada Catalogue No. FA7-I975; see also Sinclair, Sonja.
"Value-for-money auditing: after ninety-nine years of contro
versy, an idea whose time has come". Optimum, 10, 1 (1979) at
pp. 39-46; and Hartle, Douglas G., "The Role of the Auditor
General of Canada" Canadian Tax Journal, 23, 3 (May-June
1975) at pp. 193-204.
15 The "three elements" of the modern comprehensive audit
are well described in Standards for Audit Of Governmental
Organizations, Programs, Activities, And Functions, United
States General Accounting Office, 1981 Revision (U.S. Gov
ernment Printing Office stock no. 020-000-00205-1), at p. 3:
I. Financial and compliance—determines (a) whether the
financial statements of an audited entity present fairly the
(Continued on next page)
Prior to 1977, the statutory basis for the Audi
tor General's authority lay in Part VII of the
Financial Administration Act (R.S.C. 1970, c.
F-10). The essentially financial nature of the audit
which he was charged with performing appears
clearly from sections 58 and 60:
58. The Auditor General shall examine in such manner as he
may deem necessary the accounts relating to the Consolidated
Revenue Fund and to public property and shall ascertain
whether in his opinion
(a) the accounts have been faithfully and properly kept;
(b) all public money has been fully accounted for, and the
rules and procedures applied are sufficient to secure an
effective check on the assessment, collection and proper
allocation of the revenue;
(e) money has been expended for the purposes for which it
was appropriated by Parliament, and the expenditures have
been made as authorized; and
(d) essential records are maintained and the rules and proce
dures applied are sufficient to safeguard and control public
property.
60. The Auditor General shall examine and certify in accord
ance with the outcome of his examinations the several state
ments required by section 55 to be included in the Public
Accounts, and any other statement that the Minister may
present for audit certificate.
The words used are wholly compatible with the
traditional auditing function of examining books of
account and certifying financial statements.
There was, however, another side to the Auditor
General's duties. He was charged with making an
annual report to the House of Commons. While
that duty may once have been viewed as something
(Continued from previous page)
financial position and the results of financial operations in
accordance with generally accepted accounting principles
and (b) whether the entity has complied with laws and
regulations that may have a material effect upon the finan
cial statements.
2. Economy and efficiency—determines (a) whether the entity
is managing and utilizing its resources (such as personnel,
property, space) economically and efficiently, (b) the causes
of inefficiencies or uneconomical practices, and (c) whether
the entity has complied with laws and regulations concerning
matters of economy and efficiency.
3. Program results—determines (a) whether the desired results
or benefits established by the legislature or other authorizing
body are being achieved and (b) whether the agency has
considered alternatives that might yield desired results at a
lower cost.
of a formality, rather like the auditor's report to
shareholders in a private sector corporation, it led
directly to the growth and dramatic change in the
Auditor General's role. Subsection 61(1) of the
Financial Administration Act shows at once both
the limitations and the potential for growth of the
reporting function:
61. (1) The Auditor General shall report annually to the
House of Commons the results of his examinations and shall
call attention to every case in which he has observed that
(a) any officer or employee has wilfully or negligently omit
ted to collect or receive any money belonging to Canada,
(b) any public money was not duly accounted for and paid
into the Consolidated Revenue Fund,
(c) any appropriation was exceeded or was applied to a
purpose or in a manner not authorized by Parliament,
(d) an expenditure was not authorized or was not properly
vouched or certified,
(e) there has been a deficiency or loss through the fraud,
default or mistake of any person, or
(/) a special warrant authorized the payment of any money,
and to any other case that the Auditor General considers
should be brought to the notice of the House of Commons.
While paragraphs (a) to (f) inclusive seem to
point to a purely financial audit (albeit an extend
ed one, since paragraph (c) mandated an inquiry
into the "purpose" for which money had been or
should have been spent), the final words of the
subsection were viewed by auditors general as
allowing a far ranging inquiry into the economy,
efficiency and effectiveness of government opera
tions; in a word, a comprehensive audit.
As indicated, the 1977 statute clearly reflects
this development in the role of the Auditor Gener
al. The financial auditing and attesting function is,
of course, retained. Section 6 reproduces the sub
stance of the former section 60:
6. The Auditor General shall examine the several financial
statements required by section 55 of the Financial Administra
tion Act to be included in the Public Accounts, and any other
statement that the Minister of Finance may present for audit
and shall express his opinion as to whether they present fairly
information in accordance with stated accounting policies of
the federal government and on a basis consistent with that of
the preceding year together with any reservations he may have.
This section is, however, preceded by a general
statement of the duties and functions of the Audi
tor General in a new section 5:
5. The Auditor General is the auditor of the accounts of
Canada, including those relating to the Consolidated Revenue
Fund and as such shall make such examinations and inquiries
as he considers necessary to enable him to report as required by
this Act.
While a part of this text draws on the opening
words of the former section 58, it differs in a most
important respect by linking the Auditor General's
examinations (to which are added inquiries) not to
the accounts being audited but to the report which
he is to make to the House of Commons. The
scope of that report is also greatly expanded from
what was found in the former subsection 61(1).
The key text is in subsections 7(1) and 7(2):
7. (I) The Auditor General shall report annually to the
House of Commons
(a) on the work of his office; and
(b) on whether, in carrying on the work of his office, he
received all the information and explanations he required.
(2) Each report of the Auditor General under subsection (1)
shall call attention to anything that he considers to be of
significance and of a nature that should be brought to the
attention of the House of Commons, including any cases in
which he has observed that
(a) accounts have not been faithfully and properly main
tained or public money has not been fully accounted for or
paid, where so required by law, into the Consolidated Reve
nue Fund;
(b) essential records have not been maintained or the rules
and procedures applied have been insufficient to safeguard
and control public property, to secure an effective check on
the assessment, collection and proper allocation of the reve
nue and to ensure that expenditures have been made only as
authorized;
(c) money has been expended other than for purposes for
which it was appropriated by Parliament;
(d) money has been expended without due regard to economy
or efficiency; or
(e) satisfactory procedures have not been established to
measure and report the effectiveness of programs, where
such procedures could appropriately and reasonably be
implemented.
Three significant points emerge from a reading
of this text:
I. The paragraphs of the former section 58
relating to the Auditor General's examination of
accounts and the former subsection 61(1) relating
to his report to the House have been consolidated;
examination and report now cover the same
ground.
2. The non -limitative nature of the enumerated
paragraphs of former subsection 61(1) has been
retained and reinforced; the Auditor General is to
call attention to anything he considers significant,
including the listed items.
3. Paragraphs (d) and (e) give specific authority
to inquire into matters of economy, efficiency and
effectiveness, the classic vocabulary of comprehen
sive auditing or value for money.
In the light of this analysis, I turn to the ques
tion of whether the responsibility of the Auditor
General does indeed extend, as he asserts, into
inquiring whether due regard to economy has been
demonstrated and value for money achieved in the
Petrofina acquisition. In my view, the answer is an
unequivocal "yes".
In the first place, I would note that even a
narrow view of the Auditor General's function
must include the duty of determining if money has
been spent for the purposes for which it was
appropriated by Parliament (see Auditor General
Act, paragraph 7(2)(c)). If, of course, the purpose
of Vote 5c was only to authorize an investment of
1.7 billion dollars in shares, debentures, bonds or
other evidences of indebtedness of Petro-Canada,
then the Auditor General's inquiry could not go
beyond a determination that such investment was
in fact made. This, however, would require one to
ignore most of the language of Vote 5c. I cannot
regard as mere superfluous window dressing the
fact that Parliament, in authorizing an investment
in Petro-Canada, did so
... in order to increase Canadian public ownership of the oil
and gas industry in Canada through the share purchase of and
property acquisition from Petrofina Canada Inc., by Petro-
Canada .... [Emphasis added.]
It would seem to me to follow that an inquiry into
whether the money was spent for the purposes for
which it was voted may properly look beyond the
investment in Petro-Canada to the share purchase
and property acquisition by Petro-Canada in
Petrofina.
But there is more. Vote 5c is an authority to
spend amounts required for investment in Petro-
Canada to increase Canadian ownership of the oil
and gas industry through the Petrofina acquisition,
such amounts
... not to exceed 1.7 billion dollars which includes the interim
financing costs ....
The mention of financing costs is significant.
There are no financing costs attached to the
investment by the Government of Canada in
Petro-Canada. There were very significant financ
ing costs to Petro-Canada in connection with its
share and asset purchase from Petrofina. Thus it
follows, as a simple matter of statutory interpreta
tion, that the amounts "required for investment in
... Petro-Canada" are the amounts required by
Petro-Canada for the share purchase and property
acquisition including financing costs. That being
so, an audit of the spending made pursuant to the
authority of Vote 5c must properly inquire into
what amounts were so required for that purpose.
That inquiry, in a comprehensive audit of the
type mandated by Parliament, clearly extends to
determining whether value for money was
obtained, not only when the Canadian people
invested 1.7 billion dollars in Petro-Canada but
also when Petro-Canada turned those same dollars
around and used them to purchase the shares and
assets of Petrofina.
It is no answer to the Auditor General's claim to
say that the decision to purchase Petrofina was
purely political, with political motives and justifi
cation, and subject therefore to political accounta
bility only. It may well be that the decision was
political but it is surely the Auditor General's job
to tell, and Parliament's right to know, the eco
nomic cost of the political decision. The Auditor
General neither has nor claims the right to ques
tion the wisdom of the decision to increase Canadi-
an ownership in the oil and gas industry through
the purchase of shares and assets from Petrofina.
If, however, the implementation of that decision
involved buying shares and assets at a premium
over their market value, then the Auditor General
can and should say what that premium was so as
to permit others to make the political judgment as
to whether it was worth paying.
I turn next to the question of the Auditor Gener
al's right to require to see the documents bearing
on the valuation of the Petrofina shares and assets
both before and after their acquisition by Petro-
Canada. Here again the answer depends upon a
reading of the Auditor General Act in its historical
perspective.
The development of the statutory provisions
relating to the Auditor General's duty to examine
and report has been paralleled in those sections
dealing with his right of access to information. In
Part VII of the Financial Administration Act, the
relevant texts were subsections 57(1),(2) and (3)
and section 64.
57. (1) Notwithstanding any Act, the Auditor General is
entitled to free access at all convenient times to all files,
documents and other records relating to the accounts of every
department, and he is also entitled to require and receive from
members of the public service of Canada such information,
reports and explanations as he may deem necessary for the
proper performance of his duties.
(2) The Auditor General may station in any department any
person employed in his office to enable him more effectively to
carry out his duties, and the department shall provide the
necessary office accommodation for any officer so stationed.
(3) The Auditor General shall require every person employed
in his office who is to examine the accounts of a department
pursuant to this Act to comply with any security requirements
applicable to, and to take any oath of secrecy required to be
taken by persons employed in that department.
64. The Auditor General may examine any person on oath on
any matter pertaining to any account subject to audit by him
and for the purposes of any such examination the Auditor
General may exercise all the powers of a commissioner under
Part I of the Inquiries Act.
As can be readily seen, the emphasis in these
texts is upon access to the accounts which are the
subject matter of the Auditor General's examina
tion. The same texts reappear in the 1977 statute
but consolidated into one section under the head
ing "ACCESS TO IN FORMATION" and with impor
tant changes, notably in subsection (1).
ACCESS TO INFORMATION
13. (1) Except as provided by any other Act of Parliament
that expressly refers to this subsection, the Auditor General is
entitled to free access at all convenient times to information
that relates to the fulfilment of his responsibilities and he is also
entitled to require and receive from members of the public
service of Canada such information, reports and explanations
as he deems necessary for that purpose.
(2) In order to carry out his duties more effectively, the
Auditor General may station in any department any person
employed in his office, and the department shall provide the
necessary office accommodation for any person so stationed.
(3) The Auditor General shall require every person employed
in his office who is to examine the accounts of a department or
of a Crown corporation pursuant to this Act to comply with any
security requirements applicable to, and to take any oath of
secrecy required to be taken by, persons employed in that
department or Crown corporation.
(4) The Auditor General may examine any person on oath on
any matter pertaining to any account subject to audit by him
and for the purposes of any such examination the Auditor
General may exercise all the powers of a commissioner under
Part I of the Inquiries Act.
A comparison of the former subsection 57(1)
with the new subsection 13(1) reveals the
following:
1. The primacy provision has gone from a "not-
withstanding" to an "except as provided". The
former text arguably would not prevail against any
non-statutory rule of law; there can be no doubt
that the new text is intended to override both
statute and common law rules to the contrary.
2. The old primacy provision left open the possi
bility of its being overridden by implication by
some subsequent statutory text. The new provision,
inspired it would seem by section 2 of the Canadi-
an Bill of Rights (R.S.C. 1970, Appendix III),
makes it manifest that only a specific override can
prevail.
3. The former text limited the entitlement to
access to the accounts of departments; the new text
extends it to all information relating to the fulfil
ment of the Auditor General's responsibilities.
4`. The right to require and receive information
from public servants has been made subject to the
same condition as the right to access to other
sources of information. In each case the test is
whether the information sought relates to the ful
filment of the Auditor General's responsibilities.
Since they are clearly two distinct rights, separat
ed in the English text by the conjunctive phrase
"and he is also entitled to" and in the French text
by a semi-colon, it may be safely asserted that the
first extends to information in the possession of
persons other than civil servants ("members of the
public service of Canada"), who are exclusively
the subject of the second.
Unless subsection 13(1) is meaningless verbiage,
the primacy it decrees must have some scope for
practical application. If the only "remedy" avail
able to the Auditor General to enforce the right
created by subsection 13 (1) is through the exercise
of his power as commissioner under subsection
13(4), then the latter power must itself enjoy the
primacy which would, of course, include primacy
over section 36.3 of the Canada Evidence Act.
Thus if, as appellants urged, subsection 13(4) is
the only means that the Auditor General has of
enforcing his right of access to information, the
argument becomes no more than a procedural
quibble: surely it can make no difference at bottom
whether the Trial Division is called upon to
enforce a subpoena issued by the Auditor General
pursuant to his powers under subsection 13(4) or,
as has in fact happened, to declare that the right to
access exists.
For my part, however, I can see no basis in
principle upon which the Auditor General's right
of access under subsection 13(1) should be limited
by the procedural remedy of subsection 13(4). The
scope of the first so vastly exceeds that of the
second that any such limitation would, in truth,
amount to a denial of the right itself.
By the same token, 1 am unable to accept the
appellants' subsidiary argument that, in the event
of denial of access, the Auditor General's only
remedy is to make an unfavourable report to Par
liament under paragraph 7(1)(b). The statute
speaks in terms of entitlement, a legal term pecu
liarly apt to describe a legal right for which there
must be a legal remedy. A declaration of the kind
sought here is singularly appropriate as a remedy.
If I had any doubt on the matter (and I have not),
I would apply to the Auditor General Act the same
sort of broad and purposive interpretation as was
given by the Supreme Court to the Ombudsman
Act (R.S.B.C. 1979, c. 306) in British Columbia
Development Corporation et al. v. Friedmann,
Ombudsman et a1.,[1984] 2 S.C.R. 447.
Only a few further comments are required.
In their written memoranda and during the
argument of the appeal, the parties dealt exhaus
tively and at length with the questions of Crown
privilege and the constitutional convention of
Cabinet confidentiality. It is perhaps desirable
therefore that I should deal briefly with them, if
only for the purpose of indicating that I do not
think that the present appeal requires us to make
any definitive pronouncement on either subject.
With respect to the doctrine of Crown, or offi
cial privilege, I would note, first of all, that it is
simply a rule of evidence and does not constitute a
constitutional limitation upon legislative powers.
Indeed, both Parliament and provincial legisla
tures have passed legislation dealing with the sub
ject in recent years. Accordingly, while there may
be some question as to whether the recent amend
ments to the Canada Evidence Act (of which
section 36.3 is one) constitute a complete codifica
tion of the subject or whether there remains some
residue of the common law still in effect, there can
be no question that, as far as the federal Crown
and its agencies are concerned, the Parliament of
Canada can make such rules as it chooses with
respect to Crown privilege. In my view, there is
simply no room for doubt that the words of subsec
tion 13(1) of the Auditor General Act are strong
enough to override any privilege, whether based in
statute or in common law. Accordingly, it does not
seem to me to be necessary for us to add to the
already abundant jurisprudence which has strug
gled with defining the limits of the privilege.
The convention of confidentiality, whereby the
members of one administration are prohibited
from seeing (and a fortiori from disclosing) the
confidences of a previous administration of a dif
ferent political stripe, is another matter. The Trial
Judge found that such convention exists. I am not
entirely sure that he was right. 16 But I do not think
that it is necessary to express a definitive opinion
on the point. The convention, if it exists, is no
more than that. Convention, by definition, must
give way before an express text of law. While I
would agree that it is a sound principle of statutory
interpretation not to find that a well established
convention has been abrogated by an ambiguous
text, I can find nothing in the words of subsection
13(1) of the Auditor General Act which is in the
least ambiguous in this regard. Indeed, by the very
nature of his functions, the Auditor General is
inquiring into events after they have taken place,
sometimes many years later. It is quite simply
unthinkable that his inquiries could be frustrated
by a change of government.
There is one point remaining. In paragraph 2 of
his formal order, the Trial Judge granted a decla
ration of the Auditor General's right to free access
to the information contained in certain specified
categories of documents; these categories corre
spond reasonably to what had originally been
claimed by the Auditor General by letter to the
appellants and by his subsequent proceedings in
the Trial Division.
Paragraph 1 of the Trial Judge's formal order is,
however, another matter. It reads as follows [at
page 752]:
I. IT IS HEREBY DECLARED THAT the plaintiff is entitled
pursuant to subsection 13(1) of the Auditor General Act to
have access to information, including information contained in
documents that are confidences of the Queen's Privy Council,
that relates to matters of public expenditure and that comes
within the scope of the Auditor General's responsibilities as set
out in the Auditor General Act, as the plaintiff deems neces
sary for the purpose of carrying out these responsibilities
including the audit of the financial statements required by
section 55 of the Financial Administration Act, R.S.C. 1970, c.
6 One recalls the famous "Munsinger" case, when Prime
Minister Pearson appears to have had ready access to some
confidential papers of the previous Diefenbaker administration.
See, in particular, pp. 51-54 of Report of the Commission of
Inquiry Into Matters Relating to One Gerda Munsinger.
Ottawa, September 1966. Queen's Printer Catalogue No.
Z1-1966/2.
F-I0, and to permit the Plaintiff to report to Parliament,
including whether any money has been expended without due
regard to economy or efficiency. [Case, p. 3267.]
In my view, this declaration is far in excess of
what was asked for and should not, in any event,
be granted. It, in effect, gives the Auditor General
carte blanche, with the authority of a binding
declaration from the Court, to have access to all
and every document as he alone deems necessary.
While it is, of course, true that, in the first
instance, it will always be the Auditor General
who must decide what is or is not necessary for
him to carry out his functions under the law, it is
equally true that, in any case where his judgment
on the point is questioned, the matter will have to
be determined by a court of law. That is precisely
what has happened in the present case and if, in
some future case, some problem arises as to what
is properly within the Auditor General's scope of
inquiry, it will have to be resolved in the same way.
I would therefore strike out paragraph 1 of the
Trial Judge's order. Subject only to this, I would
dismiss the appeal with costs.
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