Walsh,
J:—This
case
deals
with
the
attempt
of
appellant
to
apply
section
85A
of
the
Income
Tax
Act,
RSC
1952,
c
148,
which
was
enacted
as
section
75A
in
1952-53,
c
40,
section
28,
substituted
in
1955,
c
54,
section
25,
with
subsection
(7)
added
in
1953-54
by
c
57,
subsection
21(2),
as
it
existed
in
the
taxation
year
1964
prior
to
the
further
substitution
of
1966-67,
c
47,
section
9.
Without
quoting
the
section
in
question
in
extenso,
it
can
be
said
that
in
1964
it
provided
in
paragraph
(1)(a)
as
follows:
85A.
(1)
Where
a
corporation
has
agreed
to
sell
or
issue
shares
of
the
corporation
or
of
a
corporation
with
which
it
does
not
deal
at
arm’s
length
to
an
employee
of
the
corporation
or
of
a
corporation
with
which
it
does
not
deal
at
arm’s
length,
(a)
if
the
employee
has
acquired
shares
under
the
agreement,
a
benefit
equal
to
the
amount
by
which
the
value
of
the
shares
at
the
time
he
acquired
them
exceeds
the
amount
paid
or
to
be
paid
to
the
corporation
therefor
by
him
shall
be
deemed
to
have
been
received
by
the
employee
by
virtue
of
his
employment
in
the
taxation
year
in
which
he
acquired
the
shares;
and
paragraphs
(2)(a)
and
(b)
provide
in
effect
that
when
an
employee
is
deemed
to
have
received
such
a
benefit
by
virtue
of
his
employment
in
a
taxation
year
he
may
elect
to
pay
the
tax
that
he
would
normally
pay
for
the
year
on
his
other
income
without
this
benefit
plus
the
amount
by
which
the
proportion
of
this
benefit
that
the
aggregate
of
his
taxes
for
the
three
preceding
years
bears
to
the
aggregate
of
his
income
for
those
years
exceeds
20%
of
the
amount
of
the
benefit
so
deemed
to
have
been
received.
in
the
case
of
the
present
taxpayer,
the
calculation
of
the
tax
to
be
paid
on
the
$99,800
which
the
stock
option
benefit
he
received
amounted
to
was
worked
out
by
adding
his
net
income
of
$10,970.71
for
1961,
$13,643.56
for
1962,
and
$18,550.18
for
1963
making
a
total
of
$43,164.45.
The
tax
paid
was
$1,997.75
in
1961,
$2,925.90
in
1962
and
$4,967.83
in
1963
making
a
total
of
$9,891.48
which
represents
22.91%
of
his
net
income
for
the
three
years
in
question.
Applying
this
tax
rate
to
$99,800
results
in
a
tax
of
$22,864.18
from
which
20%
of
the
$99,800
benefit
is
deducted
in
the
amount
of
$19,960
leaving
a
sum
of
$2,904.18
as
tax
adjustment
payable
on
this
stock
option
benefit
in
addition
to
his
normal
taxes
on
his
other
income
for
the
year.
The
background
of
his
business
operations
leading
to
his
receipt
of
this
benefit
can
be
set
out
as
follows.
In
January
1956
he
and
one
Hyman
Kamichik
incorporated
Highland
Knitting
Mills
Inc,
hereinafter
referred
to
as
“Highland”,
to
carry
on
the
business
of
manufacturing
and
distributing
knitted
clothing,
and
transferred
to
it
the
similar
business
which
they
had
formerly
carried
on
together
in
partnership.
They
were
the
principal
shareholders,
officers
and
most
valuable
employees
of
the
company
from
its
incorporation
to
the
death
of
Mr
Kamichik
in
1969.
The
company
was
very
successful
as
can
be
seen
from
its
increase
of
sales
from
$350,000
in
1956
to
$1,100,000
in
1964
and
$2,500,000
in
1968.
Some
time
in
September
1964
they
acquired
the
charter
of
a
company
known
as
Salbron
Investments
Limited
which
had
been
incorporated
under
a
Quebec
charter
on
December
2,
1963
but
which
had
never
commenced
operations.
Its
authorized
capital
consisted
at
the
time
of
9,900
5%
non-cumulative
non-voting
redeemable
preferred
shares
of
the
par
value
of
$10
each.
They
obtained
supplementary
letters
patent
dated
September
11,
1964
increasing
the
capital
by
creating
an
additional
11,000
5%
non-cumulative
non-voting
redeemable
preferred
shares
of
the
par
value
of
$10
each,
and
changing
the
name
of
the
company
to
Berkam
Investments
Limited,
hereinafter
referred
to
as
“Berkam”.
At
a
meeting
of
Highland
on
October
28,
1964
it
undertook
to
subscribe
for
94
common
shares
and
20,000
of
the
said
preferred
shares
of
Berkam
at
their
par
value
of
$10
a
share
and
to
pay
for
all
these
shares
so
subscribed
for,
as
well
as
for
the
six
common
shares
which
had
been
allotted
and
issued
to
the
three
original
applicants
for
incorporation.
The
company
borrowed
the
money
from
its
bank
to
pay
for
these
shares,
a
cheque
for
$201,000
being
issued
by
Highland
in
favour
of
Berkam,
which
cheque
was
dated
October
26,
1964
but
not
date-stamped
by
the
bank
until
December
4,
1964.
On
November
23,
1964
Highland
gave
an
option
to
each
of
Messrs
Bernstein
and
Kamichik
to
purchase
from
it
10,000
of
the
said
preferred
shares
for
the
price
of
$200
and
by
letters
dated
December
11,
1964
they
each
took
up
this
option
and
the
same
day
a
meeting
of
Berkam
approved
the
transfer
from
Highland
to
them
of
the
said
shares.
On
December
14,
1964
Berkam
approved
a
by-law
providing
for
the
redemption
and
cancellation
of
20,000
of
its
said
preferred
shares.
This
was
duly
approved
at
a
special
general
meeting
of
shareholders
the
same
date
and
supplementary
letters
patent
were
obtained
on
December
16,
1964
confirming
the
reduction
of
the
capital
of
Berkam
by
the
cancellation
of
the
said
shares
so
that
the
capital
would
thenceforth
consist
of
900
preferred
shares
and
100
common
shares
of
the
par
value
of
$10
each.
At
all
meetings
of
both
companies
from
the
time
Highland
acquired
the
shares
in
Berkam
it
was
Messrs
Kamichik
and
Bernstein
who
attended
and
formed
the
quorum
of
directors
or
shareholders,
as
the
case
might
be.
As
a
result
of
this
series
of
transactions
appellant
received
the
sum
of
$100,000
on
redemption
of
his
said
preferred
shares
for
which
he
had
paid
$200
or
a
benefit
of
$99,800.
Appellant
relies
on
the
terms
of
the
agreement
giving
him
(and
the
same
agreement
was
made
with
Mr
Kamichik)
the
right
to
buy
the
said
shares
from
Highland
for
$200,
which
sets
out
that
he
is
an
employee
of
the
company
and
“the
latter
desires
to
confer
a
benefit
upon
him
in
respect
of
and
by
virtue
of
his
employment”,
and
in
the
next
paragraph
states:
...
in
consideration
of
such
employment
the
Company
hereby
grants
unto
Bernstein
the
exclusive
right
to
purchase
from
the
Company
10,000
5%
Non-
Cumulative
Non-Voting
Redeemable
Preferred
Shares
of
the
par
value
of
$10
each
of
the
capital
stock
of
BERKAM
INVESTMENTS
LIMITED
for
the
sum
of
$200,
during
the
period
and
upon
and
subject
to
the
terms
and
conditions
hereinafter
respectively
specified
and
set
forth,
namely:—
1.
Bernstein’s
rights
hereunder
may
be
exercised
in
the
manner
hereinafter
specified,
at
any
time
during
two
(2)
years
from
the
date
hereof
provided
that
at
the
time
of
the
exercise
of
such
rights
Bernstein
is
in
the
employ
of
the
Company.
The
original
assessment
of
June
28,
1965
assessed
appellant’s
1964
tax
in
the
amount
estimated
by
him
on
the
basis
of
the
election
he
made
under
section
85A
but
by
notice
of
reassessment
dated
June
25,
1969
he
was
reassessed
by
being
denied
the
right
to
apply
the
provisions
of
section
85A
so
that
the
sum
of
$99,800
was
added
to
his
income
for
the
1964
taxation
year.
He
objected
to
the
reassessment
which
was
confirmed
and
in
due
course
instituted
the
present
appeal.
Respondent
contends
that
appellant
and
Mr
Kamichik
did
not
receive
the
benefit
in
consideration
of
their
employment
but
rather
as
shareholders
of
Highland,
that
this
was
a
scheme
for
appropriation
by
the
shareholders
of
Highland’s
funds
or
for
distribution
to
the
shareholders
of
most
of
the
accumulated
surplus
of
Highland
which,
as
of
January
1,
1964,
stood
at
$209,022.94,
for
the
sole
purpose
of
diminishing
the
amount
of
income
tax
payable.
Respondent
relies
on
subsection
(7)
of
section
85A
of
the
Act
which
reads
as
follows:
85A.
(7)
This
section
does
not
apply
if
the
benefit
conferred
by
the
agreement
was
not
received
in
respect
of,
in
the
course
of
or
by
virtue
of
the
employment.
and
on
paragraph
8(1
)((c)
which
reads:
8.
(1)
Where,
in
a
taxation
year,
(c)
a
benefit
or
advantage
has
been
conferred
on
a
shareholder
by
a
corporation
otherwise
than
(i)
on
the
reduction
of
capital,
the
redemption
of
shares
or
the
winding-
up,
discontinuance
or
reorganization
of
its
business,
(il)
by
payment
of
a
stock
dividend,
or
(iii)
by
conferring
on
all
holders
of
common
shares
in
the
capital
of
the
corporation
a
right
to
buy
additional
common
shares
therein,
the
amount
or
value
thereof
shall
be
included
in
computing
the
income
of
the
shareholder
for
the
year.
Alternatively,
respondent
submits
that
the
benefit
conferred
on
the
appellant
was
received
in
his
capacity
as
a
shareholder
on
account
or
in
lieu
of
payment
of
or
in
satisfaction
of
dividends
within
the
meaning
of
subparagraph
6(1)(a)(i)
of
the
Act
which
reads:
6.
(1)
Without
restricting
the
generality
of
section
3,
there
shall
be
included
In
computing
the
income
of
a
taxpayer
for
a
taxation
year
(a)
amounts
received
in
the
year
as,
on
account
or
in
lieu
of
payment
of,
or
in
satisfaction
of
(i)
dividends,
Respondent
further
submits
that
the
result
of
the
interdependent
and
interconnected
transactions
referred
to
was
that
Highland
and/or
Berkam
conferred
on
the
appellant
a
benefit
of
$99,800
which
by
virtue
of
the
provisions
of
subsection
(2)
of
section
137
of
the
Income
Tax
Act
was
required
to
be
included
in
the
computation
of
appellant’s
income.
Subsection
137(2)
reads
as
follows:
137.
(2)
Where
the
result
of
one
or
more
sales,
exchanges,
declarations
of
trust,
or
other
transactions
of
any
kind
whatsoever
is
that
a
person
confers
a
benefit
on
a
taxpayer,
that
person
shall
be
deemed
to
have
made
a
payment
to
the
taxpayer
equal
to
the
amount
of
the
benefit
conferred
notwithstanding
the
form
or
legal
effect
of
the
transactions
or
that
one
or
more
other
persons
were
also
parties
thereto;
and,
whether
or
not
there
was
an
intention
to
avoid
or
evade
taxes
under
this
Act,
the
payment
shall,
depending
upon
the
circumstances,
be
(a)
included
in
computing
the
taxpayer’s
income
for
the
purpose
of
Part
I,
(b)
deemed
to
be
a
payment
to
a
non-resident
person
to
which
Part
lll
applies,
or
(c)
deemed
to
be
a
disposition
by
way
of
gift
to
which
Part
IV
applies.
Finally,
respondent
submits
that
the
transactions
referred
to
were
part
of
a
reorganization
of
the
business
of
Highland
whereby
property
of
Highland
was
distributed
or
otherwise
appropriated
to
or
for
the
benefit
of
appellant
at
a
time
when
Highland
had
undistributed
income
on
hand,
which
should
therefore
be
included
in
appellant’s
income
by
virtue
of
subsection
81(1)
of
the
Income
Tax
Act
which
reads
as
follows:
81.
(1)
Where
funds
or
property
of
a
corporation
have,
at
a
time
when
the
corporation
had
undistributed
income
on
hand,
been
distributed
or
otherwise
appropriated
in
any
manner
whatsoever
to
or
for
the
benefit
of
one
or
more
of
its
shareholders
on
the
winding-up,
discontinuance
or
reorganization
of
its
business,
a
dividend
shall
be
deemed
to
have
been
received
at
that
time
by
each
shareholder
equal
to
the
lesser
of
(a)
the
amount
or
value
of
the
funds
or
property
so
distributed
or
appropriated
to
him,
or
(b)
his
portion
of
the
undistributed
income
then
on
hand.
After
several
conferences
between
counsel
and
the
Court
the
following
agreement
was
reached
so
as
to
eliminate
what
would
apparently
have
been
lengthy
and
repetitive
evidence:
The
parties,
by
their
respective
counsel,
hereby
agree
that
the
following
evidence
would
be
given
as
to
facts
by
Nathan
Bernstein,
Emilien
Tanguay,
Marcel
Leduc
and
Françoise
Paquette
all
employees
of
Highland
Knitting
Mills
if
they
had
given
evidence:
a)
such
agreement
is
made
for
the
purpose
of
this
appeal
only
and
may
not
be
used
against
either
party
on
any
other
occasion
or
by
any
other
party;
and
b)
the
parties
reserve
their
right
to
object
to
the
relevancy
of
any
of
the
facts
hereby
admitted.
1.
Messrs
Kamichik
and
Bernstein
were
bona
fide
employees
of
Highland
Knitting
Mills
Inc
(Highland)
during
the
period
1956-1969
and
were
during
this
period
officers,
directors
and
sole
shareholders
of
the
company.
2.
Mr
Bernstein
has
continued
to
the
present
day
to
be
a
bona
fide
employee
of
Highland.
3.
During
the
period
1956-1969
Messrs
Bernstein
and
Kamichik,
being
officers,
employees,
directors
and
shareholders
of
Highland,
performed
their
duties
in
an
exceptional
manner.
Specifically,
they
worked
extraordinary
hours,
that
is,
approximately
ten
hours
a
day,
six
days
a
week,
fifty
weeks
a
year
in
the
case
of
Mr
Kamichik
and
approximately
fifteen
hours
a
day,
six
days
a
week,
fifty
weeks
a
year
in
the
case
of
Mr
Bernstein.
4.
Messrs
Kamichik
and
Bernstein
worked
substantially
longer
hours
than
the
other
“key”
employees
of
Highland.
5.
The
contribution
made
by
Messrs
Kamichik
and
Bernstein
as
outlined
above
was
substantially
greater
than
the
contribution
made
by
the
other
“key”
employees.
6.
The
duties
performed
by
Messrs
Kamichik
and
Bernstein,
as
outlined
above,
were
essential
to
the
welfare
and
growth
of
the
business
of
Highland.
In
view
of
the
agreement
it
was
only
necessary
to
hear
one
witness,
Stanley
Rosen,
CA,
Highland’s
auditor
since
1960.
He
testified
that
Mr
Kamichik’s
work
was
primarily
on
the
financial
side
of
the
business
while
Mr
Bernstein
was
the
salesman,
stylist
and
production
expert.
Both
worked
extremely
hard
in
building
up
the
business
and
for
salaries
which
he
considered
were
grossly
inadequate.
The
business
grew
very
rapidly,
sales
increasing
from
$403,245
in
1960
to
$1,538,785
in
1965
and
gross
profits
from
$70,881
in
1960
to
$388,087
in
1965
with
net
profit
before
income
taxes
increasing
from
$13,651
in
1960
to
$197,978
in
1965.
The
business
continued
to
expand
thereafter
until
1969
when
control
of
it
was
sold
by
Messrs
Bernstein
and
Kamichik
to
Kambern
Diversified
Industries
Limited
as
a
result
of
which
the
outstanding
loans
of
Highland
payable
to
Mr
Bernstein
and
the
estate
of
Mr
Kamichik
in
the
amount
of
$71,676.28
and
$73,481.85
respectively
were
paid
in
October
1969.
Mr
Bernstein
continued
to
remain
in
the
company’s
employ
as
president
and
to
devote
his
full
time
and
attention
to
the
business
whose
sales
had
by
1969
grown
to
$2,387,328
on
which
the
gross
profit
was
$744,441
and
the
net
profit
before
taxes
$424,624.
This
period
does
not
directly
concern
the
present
case
save
to
the
extent
that
it
shows
the
continued
progress
of
the
business
in
the
years
fol-
lowing
1964.
According
to
Mr
Rosen’s
evidence,
during
the
period
from
1956
to
1962
their
salaries
had
only
been
in
the
nature
of
$8,000
to
$10,000
each.
Mr
Bernstein
received
a
salary
of
$17,450
in
1963,
however,
and
$35,000
in
1964
in
which
year
Mr
Kamichik’s
salary
was
$18,000.
Although
the
company
had
123
employees
in
1964,
three
of
whom
were
long-term
employees
who
had
been
with
the
business
since
the
late
1940’s
before
it
was
incorporated,
Mr
Rosen
felt
that
the
entire
growth
of
the
company
was
due
to
the
exceptionally
hard
work
and
successful
management
of
Messrs
Bernstein
and
Kamichik
and
when
it
became
apparent
in
1962
and
1963
that
the
net
profits
were
accelerating
rapidly
he
urged
them
to
take
more
money
out
of
it,
which
he
considered
should
include
compensation
for
their
past
services.
A
pension
plan
was
established
in
1965
for
Messrs
Bernstein
and
Kamichik
only
and
large
sums
paid
for
their
past
services
pensions.
He
conceded
on
cross-examination
that
taking
the
company’s
taxation
and
the
personal
tax
of
Messrs
Bernstein
and
Kamichik
together,
the
tax
burden
would
be
less
onerous
by
using
the
stock
option
plan
which
was
adopted
than
by
paying
them
increased
salaries
or
dividends.
He
did
not
consider
it
bad
administration
of
the
company
on
their
part
to
have
the
company
incur
a
loss
of
$199,600
in
1964
by
selling
them
for
$400
shares
of
Berkam
for
which*it
had
paid
$200,000
although
this
loss
on
investment
reduced
the
earned
surplus
account
which
stood
at
$148,817.49
on
January
1,
1964
to
$9,422.94
by
December
31,
1964
despite
the
addition
to
earned
surplus
of
net
profit
of
$60,205.45
for
the
year
1964.
He
considered
that
the
benefit
was
justified
to
motivate
them
to
continue
to
make
the
company
prosper,
and
the
company’s
ability
to
easily
overcome
this
loss
was
shown
by
its
continued
prosperity
in
the
succeeding
years.
Messrs
Bernstein
and
Kamichik
each
had
$40,000
invested
in
the
company’s
capital
stock,
$25,000
being
in
$1
par
value
preferred
shares
and
$15,000
in
$1
par
value
common
shares,
the
preferred
shares
carrying
a
5%
non-cumulative
dividend
which
dividend
was
only
paid
once,
in
1962,
in
which
year
a
dividend
of
250
a
share
was
also
paid
on
the
common
stock
making
total
dividend
payments
of
$2,500
on
the
preferred
stock
and
$7,500
on
the
common
stock
in
that
year
which
they
shared
equally.
Berkam,
although
incorporated
as
an
investment
company,
never
did
any
business.
Mr
Rosen
further
testified
that
Highland’s
acquisition
of
shares
in
Berkam
was
not
the
result
of
a
“daylight”
loan
which
he
defined
as
one
incurred
and
repaid
the
same
day.
Highland
had
a
good
line
of
credit
with
the
bank
and
in
1964
it
amounted
to
$250,000.
After
the
borrowing
to
buy
the
shares
of
Berkam,
Highland
only
owed
the
bank
$213,000,
as
it
normally
has
only
a
small
bank
loan
outstanding
during
December
when
most
of
its
receipts
come
in.
Although
its
cheque
to
Berkam
in
the
amount
of
$201,000
in
payment
of
the
shares
subscribed
for
is
dated
October
26,
1964,
it
was
only
date-stamped
by
the
bank
on
December
4,
1964,
but
this
is
of
no
great
significance
save
for
the
fact
that
interest
on
this
increase
in
its
outstanding
bank
loan
would
only
run
from
that
date.
The
loan
was
repaid
to
the
bank
on
January
8,
1965
on
the
same
date
that
Messrs
Bernstein
and
Kamichik
loaned
$200,000
to
the
company,
taking
its
promissory
notes
for
same
in
the
amount
of
$100,000
each.
Although
these
notes
bore
interest
at
6%,
Mr
Rosen
testified
that
this
interest
was
waived
by
Messrs
Bernstein
and
Kamichik.
In
laying
great
stress
on
the
value
of
services
rendered
to
Highland
by
Messrs
Bernstein
and
Kamichik
compared
to
the
remuneration
they
had
received
from
it
in
the
years
preceding
1964,
appellant
contends
that
the
benefit
conferred
on
them
was
“received
in
respect
of,
in
the
course
of
or
by
virtue
of
the
employment”
and
hence
the
exclusion
in
subsection
85A(7)
(supra)
does
not
apply.
While
conceding
that
the
end
result
of
the
method
adopted
was
that
most
of
Highland’s
surplus
which
had
been
accumulated
to
the
end
of
1964
was
distributed
to
Messrs
Bernstein
and
Kamichik,
reliance
was
placed
on
the
well-
established
principle
in
tax
law
that
a
taxpayer
is
not
obliged
to
so
arrange
his
affairs
as
to
attract
maximum
taxation
and
that,
provided
he
can
bring
himself
squarely
within
the
provisions
of
sections
of
the
taxing
statute
and
regulations
which’
have
the
result
of
minimizing
his
taxation,
he
is
entitled
to
do
so.
It
was
further
contended
that
subsection
137(2)
dealing
with
tax
evasion
cannot
take
effect
so
as
to
negate
the
provisions
of
another
section
of
the
Act
which
the
taxpayer
is
entitled
to
use,
even
if
the
consequence
of
this
use
is
to
reduce
his
tax
liability.
While
some
of
the
jurisprudence
to
which
I
was
referred
by
counsel
for
both
parties
was
helpful,
there
does
not
appear
to
be
any
case
which
is
directly
in
point.
Counsel
for
appellant
referred
to
paragraph
8
of
Tax
Interpretation
Bulletin
IT-23
of
August
6,
1971
issued
by
the
Department
of
National
Revenue
which
would,
of
course,
not
be
binding
on
the
Court,
as
authority
for
the
proposition
that
an
option
under
section
85A
may
be
conferred
on
a
person
who
is
at
the
same
time
an
employee
and
a
shareholder.
I
would
have
assumed
this
to
be
the
case
in
any
event
since
paragraph
139
(1)(la)
of
the
Act
states:
139.
(1)
In
this
Act,
(la)
“employee”
includes
officer;
and,
while
an
officer
is
not
necessarily
a
director
and
hence
a
shareholder,
he
usually
is.
I
do
not
believe
that
respondent’s
argument
goes
so
far
as
to
contend
that
section
85A
can
only
be
applied
to
an
employee
who
does
not
also
happen
to
own
some
shares
in
the
corporation,
but
the
contention
is
that
the
benefit
must
have
been
conferred
on
him
“in
respect
of,
in
the
course
of
or
by
virtue
of
the
employment”
and
not
in
his
capacity
as
a
shareholder
of
the
corporation.
The
difficulty
in
the
present
case
arises
from
the
fact
that
Messrs
Bernstein
and
Kamichik
were
not
merely
minor
shareholders
of
Highland
but
that
between
them
they
owned
or
controlled
all
of
its
shares
and
could
direct
and
govern
the
conduct
of
the
corporation
as
they
saw
fit.
I
am
not
unmindful
of
the
fact
that
the
corporation
has
an
existence
separate
and
apart
from
its
shareholders
and
that
in
the
present
case
Highland,
at
least,
was
an
actively
operating
corporation
and
not
a
sham
or
simulacrum,
nor
am
I
unmindful
of
the
jurisprudence
which
has
held
that
a
corporation
cannot
be
considered
as
an
agent
of
its
shareholders
nor
are
the
shareholders
owners
of
the
property
of
the
corporation.*
With
respect
to
Berkam,
however,
although
it
filed
the
necessary
annual
returns
and
continued
to
do
so
in
the
years
following
1964,
ownership
of
it
was
clearly
acquired
by
Messrs
Bernstein
and
Kamichik
for
the
purpose
of
completing
the
carrying
out
of
this
scheme,
the
end
result
of
which
was
to
greatly
diminish
their
income
tax
liability
for
the
year
in
question,
and
it
has
never
at
any
time
been
used
for
any
other
purpose
or
carried
on
any
business
whatsoever.
However,
it
was
Highland
which
conferred
the
benefit
on
them
and
not
Berkam,
the
benefit
consisting
of
their
being
given
the
right
to
purchase
from
it
shares
of
Berkam
worth
$200,000
for
$400,
Berkam
being
merely
the
vehicle
by
which
the
cash
benefit
of
this
transaction
eventually
found
its
way
into
their
hands.
Appellant
invokes
the
case
of
Montreal
Trust
Co,
Executors
of
Estate
of
Chesley
Arthur
Crosbie
v
MNR,
[1966]
CTC
648;
66
DTC
5424,
which
case,
however,
did
not
depend
on
an
interpretation
of
section
85A
of
the
Income
Tax
Act
but
was
an
estate
tax
case.
In
it
a
corporation
controlled
by
the
deceased
gave
two
of
its
employees,
one
of
whom
was
related
by
blood
relationship
to
the
deceased,
the
right
to
buy
shares
of
its
capital
stock
at
a
substantial
discount
in
recognition
of
“long
and
faithful
service
.
.
.
and
as
a
further
incentive
to
continue
to
render
such
service”.
When
the
deceased
died
within
three
years
the
Minister
added
the
value
of
the
benefit
back
to
his
estate
as
being
in
the
nature
of
a
gift
or
a
disposition
for
partial
consideration.
The
Court
ruled
that
the
benefit
was
conferred
upon
a
relative
as
an
employee
of
the
company
for
legitimate
business
reasons
and
not
as
a
blood
relation
of
the
deceased.
In
rendering
judgment,
however,
Jackett,
P,
as
he
then
was,
made
reference
to
section
85A,
stating
at
page
655
[5428]:
One
further
point
needs
to
be
developed
in
considering
the
neat
point
that
has
to
be
decided
on
this
appeal.
In
my
view,
what
was
done
here
falls
into
a
not
uncommon
category
of
business
transactions,
namely,
payments
made
in
the
ordinary
course
of
business
without
legal
liability.
A
business
is
operated
to
make
a
profit.
No
disbursement
is
a
proper
business
disbursement
unless
it
is
made
directly
or
indirectly
to
attain
that
end.
Generally
speaking,
business
payments
are
made
pursuant
to
contracts
whereby
the
businessman
receives
a
quid
pro
quo
for
that
payment—eg,
contracts
for
services,
purchase
contracts,
construction
contracts,
etc.
Nevertheless,
good
business
can
dictate,
depending
on
the
circumstances,
disbursements
over
and
above
the
amounts
legally
owing
for
what
the
business
man
has
received
or
is
to
receive.
A
special
payment
to
a
good
contractor
in
unforeseen
difficulties
so
that
he
will
be
available
for
future
work,
is
one
example.
Bonuses
to
employees
over
and
above
any
requirement
of
the
contracts
of
employment,
so
as
to
maintain
their
goodwill
and
keep
employee
morale
high
is
another.
Still
another
is
the
very
type
of
benefit
conferred
on
senior
executives
that
we
find
in
this
appeal.
That
it
is
a
very
common
type
of
benefit
conferred
on
senior
executives
is
evidenced
by
the
special
provision
made
in
section
85A
of
the
Income
Tax
Act
for
their
income
tax
treatment.
In
the
preceding
paragraph,
however,
a
conclusion
of
fact
on
which
this
statement
is
based
is
set
out
as
follows:
There
is
no
suggestion
that
the
transaction
was
a
mere
subterfuge
for
conferring
a
benefit
on
Andrew
C
Crosbie
as
a
blood
relation
of
the
deceased
and
there
is
no
suggestion
that
any
part
of
the
amount
of
the
benefit
is
for
anything
other
than
the
benefit
that
“legitimate
business
reasons”
dictated
that
it
was
in
the
commercial
interest
of
the
company
that
it
should
confer
on
this
employee.
This
aspect
of
the
case
is
underlined
by
the
otherwise
irrelevant
fact
that
a
similar
arrangement
was
made
for
a
fellow
employee
on
very
similar
terms
at
the
same
time.
The
facts
in
that
case
are
evidently
quite
different
from
the
present
where,
despite
the
great
stress
laid
by
appellant’s
counsel
in
argument
of
the
value
to
a
corporation
of
offering
stock
option
benefits
to
senior
employees
in
lieu
of
increases
in
salary
in
order
to
retain
their
services
and
prevent
their
leaving
to
work
for
a
competitor,
it
was
quite
evident
that
neither
Mr
Bernstein
nor
Mr
Kamichik
had
any
such
thought
or
intention.
The
business
was,
in
fact,
theirs,
had
been
founded
by
them
long
before
they
incorporated,
and
they
were
for
all
practical
purposes
the
only
shareholders
of
Highland.
It
might
perhaps
be
contended
that
the
stock
option
benefit
was
conferred
on
them
as
a
reward
for
past
services,
but
certainly
it
was
not
required
as
an
incentive
to
maintain
their
goodwill
and
continued
devotion
to
the
company’s
service.
Looked
at
in
this
light
it
cannot
be
compared
with
stock
option
benefit
plans
which
are
frequently
given
to
senior
executives
of
large
corporations
in
the
interests
of
encouraging
them
and
retaining
their
services.
It
is
not
without
significance
that
three
other
employees
who
had
been
with
the
business
since
the
late
1940’s,
and
while
admittedly
not
as
valuable
to
Highland
as
Messrs
Bernstein
and
Kamichik,
were
only
receiving
$7,000
to
$8,000
in
1964,
were
not
given
the
opportunity
to
participate
to
even
a
very
limited
extent
in
the
stock
option
benefit
nor
were
they
included
in
the
company’s
pension
plan
established
in
1965.
It
is
also
not
without
significance
that
in
1954,
the
very
year
in
which
the
stock
option
benefit
was
conferred
on
appellant
(and
on
Mr
Kamichik
with
whom
we
are
not
here
concerned)
his
salary
had
been
increased
to
$35,000
from
the
$17,450
he
had
received
in
1963
and
$8,000
in
1962,
so
it
can
hardly
be
successfully
contended
that
the
stock
option
benefit
was
necessary
“for
legitimate
business
reasons”
to
reward
him
for
his
exceptionally
hard
work
and
ability
and
to
retain
his
interest
in
continuing
on
the
same
basis
in
the
company’s
service.
Appellant
also
referred
to
the
Tax
Appeal
Board
judgment
in
the
case
of
Gordon
G
Smith
v
MNR,
[1969]
Tax
ABC
217;
69
DTC
192,
which
permitted
the
application
of
section
85A
to
a
share
option
benefit
conferred
on
appellant
by
a
company
in
which
he
and
his
wife
owned
the
controlling
interest.
The
case
seems
to
have
been
decided,
however,
on
the
basis
that
it
was
not
necessary
to
have
a
formal
written
agreement
between
the
company
and
appellant
respecting
the
issue
of
the
shares
to
him,
a
mere
verbal
agreement
being
sufficient,
and-no
consideration
seems
to
have
been
given
to
the
possible
application
of
subsection
85A(7)
nor
did
the
Minister
invoke
the
provisions
of
subsection
137(2).
Appellant
also
referred
to
the
case
of
Stanley
Marsland
and
Florence
L
Marsland
v
MNR,
[1970]
Tax
ABC
49;
70
DTC
1047,
in
which
appellants,
husband
and
wife,
were
assessed
for
gift
tax
as
the
result
of
the
issuance
to
their
son
at
a
substantial
discount
of
shares
in
a
corporation
of
which
they
owned
47
of
the
50
issued
shares,
the
son
owning
the
other
three.
The
finding
was
to
the
effect
that
it
was
clearly
a
benefit
conferred
on
an
employee
by
virtue
of
paragraph
85A(1)(a)
so
that
tax
should
be
calculated
in
accordance
with
the
provisions
of
subsection
85A(2)
and
that
subsection
137(2)
could
not
be
applied.
The
reasoning
in
the
judgment
was
to
the
effect
that,
since
under
section
85A
such
a
payment
is
deemed
to
be
income
and
under
section
137(2)
it
can
either
be
included
in
computing
taxpayer’s
income
under
paragraph
(a)
or
deemed
to
be
a
disposition
by
way
of
gift
under
paragraph
(c)
and
since
the
recipient,
the
son,
was
prepared
to
pay
whatever
tax
was
payable
by
subsection
85A(2),
it
should
not
be
treated
as
a
gift.
Again
in
this
case
there
was
no
discussion
of
subsection
85A(7)
and
as
already
pointed
out
the
question
was
not
one
of
income
tax
but
rather
of
gift
tax
which
is
not
the
issue
in
the
case
before
me.
Furthermore,
the
appellant’s
son
was
only
a
minority
shareholder
of
the
corporation
although
he
had
been
for
some
time
its
most
valued
employee,
his
father
having
retired
some
time
previously.
It
is
clearly
distinguishable
from
the
present
case
therefore.
Appellant
also
relies
on
the
case
of
MNR
v
Pillsbury
Holdings
Limited,
[1964]
CTC
294;
64
DTC
5184,
in
which
the
respondent
company
borrowed
a
large
sum
of
money
from
two
of
its
subsidiaries.
Subsequently
interest
was
waived
on
the
loan.
The
contention
was
that
this
was
the
conferral
of
a
benefit
by
the
subsidiary
corporations
on
the
parent
corporation,
being
a
shareholder.
In
refusing
to
apply
paragraph
8(1
)(c)
of
the
Act
(supra),
Cattanach,
J,
in
rendering
judgment,
found
that
the
benefit
or
advantage
was
not
conferred
on
the
parent
company
qua
shareholder
and
in
so
finding
he
states
at
page
303
[5189]:
The
Minister
does
not
allege
that
he
assumed,
in
making
the
assessments,
that
the
waiver
was
an
arrangement
or
device
adopted
by
the
corporation
to
confer
a
benefit
or
advantage
on
the
respondent
as
a
shareholder.
There
was
no
onus
on
the
respondent
to
disprove
that
fact,
which
is
essential
to
its
being
taxable,
unless
the
Minister
assumed
that
fact
when
assessing.
It
may
be
that
the
Minister’s
appeal
should
be
dismissed
on
that
ground.
In
the
present
case
there
is
a
clear
invoking
of
the
provisions
of
paragraph
8(1)(c)
and
subsection
137(2)
by
respondent.
The
significance
of
this
is
emphasized
when
Cattanach,
J
states
again
at
page
303
[5189]:
I
have
more
difficulty,
as
far
as
the
first
round
of
waivers
is
concerned,
inasmuch
as
it
does
seem
improbable
that
the
lender
would
have
cancelled
the
interest
outright,
instead
of
merely
giving
time
for
payment,
on
a
claim
by
the
borrower
that
it
was
in
difficulties,
were
it
not
for
the
fact
that
the
borrower
owned
practically
all
the
shares
in
the
lender
corporation.
However,
there
was
no
allegation
that
the
waiver
was
anything
other
than
what
it
purported
to
be,
that
is,
a
lender
granting
relief
to
a
borrower
in
difficulties.
Had
the
transactions
been
attacked
in
the
Notice
of
Appeal
and
at
the
trial
as
being
a
device
or
arrangement
for
conferring
a
benefit
on
the
respondent
qua
shareholder,
it
might
well
have
been
difficult
for
the
respondent
to
have
resisted
the
attack.
However
no
such
attack
was
made
and
the
assessments
cannot
therefore
stand.
I
believe
that
two
of
respondent’s
contentions
can
readily
be
disposed
of.
In
support
of
its
contention
that
the
benefit
should
be
treated
as
a
dividend
under
the
provisions
of
subparagraph
6(1)(a)(i)
of
the
Act
(supra)
respondent
relies
on
the
case
of
R
A
Hill
and
Others
v
Permanent
Trustee
Company
of
New
South
Wales,
Limited,
and
Others,
[1930]
AC
720
at
731,
in
which
it
is
stated:
A
limited
company
not
in
liquidation
can
make
no
payment
by
way
of
return
of
capital
to
its
shareholders
except
as
a
step
in
an
authorized
reduction
of
capital.
Any
other
payment
made
by
it
by
means
of
which
it
parts
with
moneys
to
its
shareholders
must
and
can
only
be
made
by
way
of
dividing
profits.
Whether
the
payment
is
called
“dividend”
or
“bonus,”
or
any
other
name,
it
still
must
remain
a
payment
on
division
of
profits.
This
case
was
referred
to
in
the
Exchequer
Court
in
the
case
of
Northern
Securities
Company
v
His
Majesty
the
King,
[1935]
Ex
CR
156,
where,
after
quoting
this
passage,
Maclean,
P
stated
at
pages
160-61:
This
means
that
any
distribution
of
money,
except
on
a
reduction
of
capital,
by
which
assets
are
released
to
the
shareholders,
can
only
be
a
distribution
of
profits,
by
whatever
method
it
is
made.
Another
finding
to
the
same
effect
was
made
in
the
case
of
Hilliard
C
McConkey
v
MNR,
[1937]
Ex
CR
209;
[1935-37]
CTC
24;
1
DTC
394.
None
of
these
cases
has
any
application
to
the
present
situation,
however,
unless
it
is
concluded
that
the
benefit
was
conferred
on
Messrs
Bernstein
and
Kamichik
qua
shareholders
and
not
qua
employees,
as
otherwise
section
85A,
which
was
not
of
course
an
issue
in
the
R
A
Hill
case
(supra)
in
Britain,
nor
in
existence
at
the
time
of
the
two
Canadian
judgments,
does
provide
an
alternative
method
of
distributing
surplus
by
interest
means.
In
any
event,
even
if
the
conclusion
were
reached
that
this
was
a
benefit
conferred
on
Messrs
Bernstein
and
Kamichik
qua
shareholders,
I
believe
it
would
be
paragraph
8(1)((c)
which
should
apply
to
it
rather
than
subparagraph
6(1)(a)(i).
Subparagraph
6(1)(a)(i)
merely
uses
the
word
“dividends”
and
the
word
“dividend”
is
defined
in
paragraph
139(1)(k)
as
follows:
139.
(1)
In
this
Act,
(k)
“dividend”
does
not
include
a
stock
dividend;
There
was
no
meeting
of
directors
at
which
any
dividend
was
declared
and
the
elaborate
scheme
which
was
adopted
to
eventually
get
cash
from
the
company’s
surplus
into
the
hands
of
Messrs
Bernstein
and
Kamichik
could
hardly
be
considered
as
the
payment
of
a
dividend.
If
it
were
to
be
considered
as
a
dividend
at
all,
and
I
do
not
so
find,
it
would
be
more
in
the
nature
of
a
stock
dividend
dealt
with
in
subparagraph
8(1
)(c)(ii).
However,
some
consideration,
however
slight,
was
paid
for
the
stock
and
surely
in
a
normal
stock
dividend
no
consideration
would
be
paid
for
same
and,
moreover,
it
was
not
stock
of
Highland
which
was
distributed
to
them
but
stock
of
Berkam
which
was
sold
at
a
discount.
If
it
is
found,
therefore,
that
the
transaction
resulted
in
a
benefit
or
advantage
being
conferred
on
a
shareholder
qua
shareholder
within
the
meaning
of
paragraph
8(1
)(c)
of
the
Act,
the
exceptions
in
subparagraphs
(i),
(ii)
and
(iii)
of
paragraph
(c)
would
not
apply
since
it
would
not
be
an
advantage
or
benefit
conferred
either
“on
the
reduction
of
capital,
redemption
of
shares
or
winding-up,
discontinuance
or
re-
organization
of
the
business”,
the
“payment
of
a
stock
dividend”,
or
“by
conferring
on
all
holders
of
common
shares
in
the
capital
of
the
corporation
the
right
to
buy
additional
common
shares
therein”,
as
what
was
conferred
was
not
a
right
to
buy
additional
shares
of
Highland
but
rather
the
sale
by
Highland
to
Messrs
Bernstein
and
Kamichik
of
the
shares
which
Highland
owned
in
Berkam.
The
amount
or
value
of
the
benefit
would
therefore
be
included
in
computing
appellant’s
income
for
the
year.
I
believe
also
that
respondent’s
contention
that
the
benefit
should
be
taxed
under
the
provisions
of
subsection
81(1)
of
the
Act
must
fail
since
it
only
applies
“on
the
winding-up,
discontinuance
or
reorganization”
of
the
corporation’s
business
and
there
was
no
reorganization
whatsoever
of
Highland’s
capital
structure
or
business,
the
reorganization
having
taken
place
with
respect
to
Berkam.
As
I
have
already
concluded
that
the
benefit
was
conferred
not
by
Berkam
but
by
Highland,
this
section
can
have
no
application.
This
brings
us
to
the
main
question
in
issue,
namely
whether
the
benefit
was
not
received
“in
respect
of,
in
the
course
of
or
by
virtue
of
the
employment”
of
appellant
within
the
meaning
of
subsection
85A(7)
in
which
event
the
application
of
section
85A
can
have
no
effect.
Appellant
contends
that
subsection
85A(1)
is
intended
to
apply
to
a
transaction
such
as
that
in
issue
in
the
present
case
in
that
Highland
sold
shares
of
Berkam,
a
corporation
with
which
it
did
not
deal
at
arm’s
length,
he
and
Mr
Kamichik
being
employees
of
Highland,
and
that
the
benefit
must
be
deemed
to
have
been
received
by
them
by
virtue
of
their
employment
in
accordance
with
paragraph
85A(1)(a)
and
the
tax
calculated
in
accordance
with
subsection
85A(2).
He
points
out
that
there
is
no
requirement
in
the
section
that
the
same
benefit
be
extended
to
all
employees
and
that
there
is
no
limitation
on
the
amount
of
the
benefit
which
can
be
so
given.
Certain
indicia
point
to
the
fact,
however,
that
the
benefit
was
not
conferred
on
them
by
virtue
of
their
employment.
Although
they
worked
unequal
time
in
the
course
of
their
employment
by
the
company
and
in
the
years
1963
and
1964,
in
any
event,
Mr
Bernstein
received
substantially
higher
salary
than
Mr
Kamichik,
at
all
times
each
owned
50%
of
the
company’s
shares
and
had
the
same
investment
in
the
company,
and
the
benefit
was
conferred
on
them
equally.
It
was
not
merely
a
relatively
small
benefit
which
was
conferred
on
them
but
one
which
absorbed
practically
all
of
the
company’s
earned
surplus
at
the
end
of
1964.
It
was
not
offered
to
any
other
employee,
even
three
others
with
long
service.
It
was
not
beneficial
to
the
company
tax-wise
but,
on
the
contrary,
was
detrimental
in
that
had
it
been
paid
by
way
of
a
bonus
or
increase
in
salary,
this
would
have
been
a
deductible
expense
to
the
company
in
its
tax
return.
In
its
consequences
it
amounted
to
a
distribution
of
Highland’s
profits,
which
profits
are
normally
only
distributed
to
shareholders
as
such
and
not
to
employees
unless
by
virtue
of
some
profit-sharing
plan.
Finally,
the
amounts
received
were,
after
the
redemption
of
the
shares,
immediately
loaned
back
to
Highland
by
appellant
and
Mr
Kamichik,
and
it
would
be
most
unusual
for
employees
as
such
to
immediately
loan
back
to
the
company
a
benefit
received
from
it.
When
one
looks
at
the
intent
of
section
85A,
it
was
evidently
designed
to
enable
a
corporation
to
afford
its
employees
(or
its
senior
employees
if
it
desires
to
restrict
the
offer
to
them)
an
opportunity
to
acquire
shares
of
its
stock
or
of
the
stock
of
a
controlled
subsidiary
on
terms
which
confer
a
benefit
on
them
in
order
to
reward
their
services
and
retain
a
personal
interest
by
them
in
the
company’s
progress
without
their
being
obliged
to
pay
regular
tax
rates
on
the
amount
of
this
benefit.
It
can
hardly
have
been
intended
to
be
used
as
a
means
of
compensating
an
employee
or
employees,
who
may
have
been
underpaid
for
some
years,
by
conferring
on
them
a
benefit
in
a
subsequent
year
at
a
very
advantageous
tax
rate,
in
an
amount
sufficient
to
compensate
them
for
all
the
alleged
underpayment
of
salary
which
they
have
suffered
in
preceding
years,
when,
had
they
been
paid
the
salary
to
which
they
claim
to
have
been
entitled
in
those
years,
they
would
have
had
to
pay
tax
on
it
each
year
at
the
regular
tax
rate.
Neither
could
it
have
been
intended
that
it
should
be
used
as
a
means
of
transferring
nearly
all
of
the
company’s
earned
surplus
to
shareholders
who,
between
them,
own
or
control
all
the
shares
of
the
company’s
stock
at
the
same
advantageous
tax
rate,
whereas
had
it
been
paid
to
them
by
way
of
increased
salary,
bonus,
regular
dividend
(which
would
have
been
subject
to
the
dividend
credit)
or
even
by
use
of
section
105,
the
taxes
payable
would
have
been
substantially
higher.*
In
the
case
of
Conn
Stafford
Smythe,
Conn
Smythe
and
Clarence
H
Day
v
MNR,
[1967]
CTC
498;
67
DTC
5334,
Gibson,
J
considered
the
application
of
subsection
137(2)
to
the
involved
transaction
involved
in
that
case
at
some
length.
He
concluded
that
there
was
no
business
reason
for
entering
into
the
various
transactions
and
that
the
result
of
the
series
of
transactions
was
that
the
company
conferred
a
benefit
on
the
appellants
qua
shareholders,
which
benefit,
because
of
subsection
137(2),
is
deemed
to
be
a
payment
which
must
be
included
in
computing
the
taxpayer’s
income.
The
assessor
had
included
it
as
a
deemed
dividend
under
subsection
81(2)
of
the
Act,
but
Gibson,
J
concluded,
as
I
have
concluded
in
the
present
case,
that
there
was
no
winding-up,
discontinuance
or
reorganization
of
the
business
and
as
a
consequence
he
would
have
assessed
the
benefit
as
income
received
by
the
appellant
within
the
purview
of
subsection
8(1)
of
the
Act.
This
judgment
was
upheld
in
the
Supreme
Court
([1970]
SCR
64;
[1969]
CTC
558;
69
DTC
5361),
but
in
that
Court
it
was
found
that
the
case
was
plainly
covered
by
subsection
81(1)
of
the
Act
and
that
it
was
therefore
unnecessary
to
express
any
opinion
on
the
scope
of
subsection
137(2).
In
the
case
of
Wilbour
Lee
Craddock
and
Stanley
Curtis
Atkinson
v
MNR,
[1968]
CTC
379;
68
DTC
5254,
Gibson,
J
went
into
further
detail
as
to
his
understanding
of
the
application
of
subsection
137(2)
of
the
Act
to
a
surplus
stripping
operation
having
no
legitimate
business
purpose
and
resulting
in
a
benefit
being
conferred
on
the
appellants.
In
rendering
judgment
he
states
at
page
386
[5258]:
When
the
circumstances
of
the
inter-related
transactions
are
such
that
it
is
correct
to
include
such
“benefit”
“‘in
computing
the
taxpayer’s
income
for
the
purpose
of
Part
I’’,
then
the
total
of
it
is
included
in
such
taxpayer’s
income
as
one
of
the
sources
of
such
taxpayer’s
income
within
the
meaning
of
Section
3
of
the
Act
in
the
same
manner
as
if
Section
137(2)
was
in
one
of
the
series
of
sections
in
Part
I
such
as
Section
6,
Section
8(1),
Section
16(1)
and
Section
81(1).
But
Section
137(2)
of
the
Act
in
any
such
case
is
not
dependent
upon
for
its
efficacy
on
or
connected
with
any
other
section
or
sections
in
Part
I,
such
as
Sections
6,
8(1),
16(1)
and
81(1)
and
therefore
none
of
these
latter
sections
are
relevant
in
the
adjudication
of
any
case
in
which
Section
137(2)
is
applicable.
On
this
basis,
subsection
137(2)
may
not
even
have
to
be
linked
with
another
section
in
order
to
be
applied,
but
since,
in
the
present
case,
I
have
concluded
that
it
would
also
come
within
paragraph
8(1
)(c),
it
is
not
necessary
to
conclude
that
the
transaction
would
be
taxable
by
the
provisions
of
subsection
137(2)
alone.
I
am
satisfied
on
the
facts
before
me
that
the
series
of
transactions
commencing
with
the
acquisition
of
Berkam
by
Highland,
the
reorganization
of
its
capital
structure
to
provide
for
additional
preferred
shares,
the
purchase
of
these
shares
at
their
par
value
by
Highland,
the
subsequent
sale
of
these
shares
for
a
nominal
price
by
Highland
to
appellant
and
Mr
Kamichik,
the
subsequent
supplementary
letters
patent
of
Berkam
resulting
in
the
cancellation
and
redemption
of
its
preferred
shares
and
payment
of
the
par
value
of
them
to
appellant
and
Mr
Kamichik,
and
the
immediate
loan
by
them
to
Highland
of
the
amounts
so
received
to
enable
Highland
to
repay
the
bank
indebtedness
it
had
incurred
for
the
purchase
of
these
shares
in
the
first
place,
were
all
carried
out
in
order
to
confer
a
benefit
on
appellant
and
Mr
Kamichik
within
the
meaning
of
subsection
137(2)
of
the
Act
with
the
intention
of
diminishing
the
taxes
payable
by
them
under
the
Act
and
that
the
benefit
received
should
therefore
be
included
in
computing
the
taxpayer’s
income
for
the
purpose
of
Part
I.
Paragraph
8(1
)(c)
in
Part
I
applies
in
that
the
benefit
or
advantage
was
conferred
on
them
as
shareholders
of
Highland.
This
finding
depends
on
the
facts
of
this
case,
which
should
not
be
construed
as
holding
that
section
85A
cannot
properly
be
applied
to
an
employee
who
is
also
a
shareholder,
but
is
based
on
the
fact
that
in
the
present
case
appellant
and
Mr
Kamichik
were
the
sole
shareholders
as
well
as
being
bona
fide
employees
and
that
in
their
capacity
as
sole
shareholders
of
Highland
they
caused
it
to
so
act
as
to
confer
a
benefit
on
them
which,
although
stated
to
be
conferred
by
virtue
of
their
employment,
was
in
actual
fact
received
by
them
in
consequence
of
their
being
able
as
sole
shareholders
of
the
company
to
so
control
its
actions
as
to
cause
this
benefit
to
be
paid.
It
was
not,
therefore,
received
by
virtue
of
their
employment
within
the
meaning
of
subsection
85A(7)
but
rather
by
virtue
of
their
being
shareholders
of
the
company
with
the
result
that
section
85A
cannot
be
used
in
the
case
of
appellant
as
an
exception
preventing
the
application
of
subsection
137(2)
and
paragraph
8(1)(c)
of
the
Act.
The
appeal
is
therefore
dismissed
with
costs.