In 1971, the Canadian Grain Commission replaced the
Board of Grain Commissioners for Canada, which was created in 1912 by the Conservative government of
Robert Borden. Even then it was colloquially known as the "Canadian grain commission". The 1912 legislation provided "that all owners and operators of
elevators, warehouses and
mills and certain traders in grain, shall be licensed; for supervision of the handling and storage of grain in and out of elevators, etc.; and prohibits persons operating or interested in a terminal elevator from buying or selling grain. It contains, also, provisions for inspection and grading." In 1925, the power of the Federal government to enact a tax policy whereby 'if at the end of any crop year in any terminal elevator "the total surplus of grain is found in excess of one-quarter of one per cent of the gross amount of the grain received in the elevator during the crop year" such surplus shall be sold for the benefit of the Board' was denied by the
Anglin Court of the SCC. They ruled that the federal government had encroached into provincial jurisdiction. In 1975, a private
rapeseed elevator was declared by the
Laskin court to be a "grain elevator" and thus under the control of the CGC and CWB. In 1980, the defendant corporation in a case of illicentious sale of grain contended in front of the Laskin court that its employee, the manager of a grain elevator, could not be compelled to testify against it by virtue of an extension of the
right to silence. It failed and a
trial de novo was ordered. The court held,
grosso modo, that the employee was not bound to the body corporate to such an extent, and the doctrines about
self-incrimination did not apply. ==Building==