1950 SUPREME COURT OF CANADA RULING

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In 1950 the Supreme Court of Canada deliberated on a petition by the Nova Scotia Government which would allow Nova Scotia to initiate tax collection in the area of Indirect Taxation (corporate taxation). In their ruling the Supreme Court denied Nova Scotia's request because Indirect Tax collection was identified as an Exclusive jurisdiction of the federal government in section 91 of the Constitution of Canada. The Supreme Court of Canada also ruled that the federal government's Tax Rental Agreements (personal income tax collection) between it and the provinces was illegal and it ordered the federal government to return personal income tax collection to the provinces by March 31st, 1962 when the Federal Tax Rental Agreements expired. This 1950 ruling carried exactly the same political and legal weight as the recent 2014 Supreme Court of Canada ruling regarding Senate Reform and cannot be ignored at the whim of any individual or organization. The federal government used the War Measures Act during World War I to illegally seize control and usurp the provinces exclusive Constitutional right to collect Personal Income Tax which was designed to pay hospital and education costs and provincial administration costs. The United States passed a similar illegal income tax law the very same year... The Supreme Court of Canada ordered the federal government to return personal income tax collection back to the provinces by March 31st 1962 when the Tax Rental Agreements between the federal government and the provinces EXPIRED. Every federal and ALL provincial governments in Canada with the exception of Quebec have been involved in illegal and criminal contempt of the Supreme Court of Canada and involved in BREACH OF TRUST, PUBLIC FRAUD, ECONOMIC CRIME AND EXTORTION SINCE MARCH 31ST 1962.

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