A law by which Parliament gave all its lawmaking authority to another body would be bad merely because it would fail to pass the test last mentioned." (1) , (2) at 121, 820 I think that the correct legal position has been compre hensively summed up by Lord Haldane in In re the Initiative and Referendum Act(3): "No doubt a body, with a power of legislation on the subjects entrusted to it so ample as that enjoyed by a Provincial Legislature in Canada, could, while preserving its own capacity intact, seek the assistance of subordinate agencies, as has been done when in Hodge vs The Queen, the Legislature of Ontario was held entitled to entrust to a Board of Commissioners authority to enact regulations relat ing to taverns; but it does not follow that it can create and endow with its own capacity a new legislative power not created by the Act to which it owes its own existence.