Canadian federalism case at bar: Beer battle bubbles toward Supreme Court
TORONTO — A court ruling that threw out a New Brunswick man’s $292.50 fine for buying cheaper beer in another province and taking it home has upended decades of legal thinking and strikes at the heart of Canadian federalism, the provincial government argues in a request to have the country’s highest court weigh in on the case.
The ruling and a refusal by the province’s Appeal Court to review the decision, the request states, could hamper government control over interprovincial trade and create nationwide confusion around the extent of provincial authority.
“The combined effect of these two decisions calls into question several judgments of this court beginning in 1921 as well as 150 years of constitutional compromise,” the New Brunswick government says in its memorandum of argument to the Supreme Court of Canada. “This is a decision of polarizing national interest.”
In October 2012, RCMP fined Gerard Comeau, of Tracadie-Sheila, N.B., for violating a New Brunswick liquor law as he returned from a regular beer run into Quebec with 14 cases of beer and three bottles of liquor. The law — related to federal anti-smuggling efforts implemented at the height of Prohibition — barred importing more than one bottle of wine or 12 pints of beer — about 19 regular bottles — from any other province.


