SPENCE, J.:—This is an appeal from the judgment of Gibson, J. in the Exchequer Court of Canada pronounced on April 5, 1967 wherein he dismissed the appellant’s appeal against its 1960 assessment. The Minister had refused to permit the appellant, in computing its income, to deduct the sum of $191,466.50.
By indentures dated October 1, 1954 between a corporation known as Capital Management Corporation Limited and the Montreal Trust Company, the All Canadian Dividend Trust Fund and The All Canadian Compound Fund mutual fund Operations were established. These agreements designated the Capital Management Corporation as the manager of the trust funds and the Montreal Trust as the custodian of the assets thereof. Under that agreement, the Capital Management Corporation was entitled to a fee of not less than one-tenth of one per cent and not more than one-fifth of one per cent of the capital of the trust fund payable quarterly. There was no limitation on the period of time during which the Capital Management Corporation Limited was entitled to act as manager of the fund and receive the said fee although it might retire upon notice.
The appellant company was incorporated under the provisions of the British Columbia Companies Act on October 23, 1959. On October 31, 1959 the appellant entered into an agreement with Capital Management Corporation Limited, i.e., the existing manager under the trust deeds, whereby it purchased from the latter all its rights under the said trust deeds of October 1, 1954. The conveyance of such rights in the agreement of October 31, 1959 appears in paragraph 1 thereof as follows:
1. The Vendor hereby sells, transfers and assigns unto the Purchaser and the Purchaser hereby accepts the sale, transfer and assignment of all the vendor’s exclusive right and concession under the Indentures for and in consideration of the price of one million, nine hundred and thirteen thousand and sixty dollars ($1,913,060.00) payable upon the execution hereof.
Immediately prior to that agreement of sale between Capital Management Corporation Limited and the appellant, the former had entered into amending agreements with the Montreal Trust Company which agreements were approved by the unit holders in both the All Canadian Dividend Fund and the All Canadian Compound Fund. By the agreements which were made on October 16, 1959 the manager, 1.e., at that time the Capital Management Corporation Limited, was given the exclusive right and concession to manage all moneys and securities held by the trustees subject to the terms of the trust agreement for the period from October 16, 1959 to October 15, 1969. Also by those agreements the fees which the manager was to receive from the trustees were fixed at one-eighth of one.per cent of the capital, again payable quarterly. It is the contention of the appellant that it is entitled to claim a capital cost allowance of an amount equal to one-tenth of the purchase price of $1,913,060, as set out in paragraph 1 of the agreement quoted above. under the provisions of the Income Tax Act and Regulations.
Section 11(1) of the Income Tax Act provides :
11. (1) Notwithstanding paragraphs (a), (b) and (h) of subsection (1) of section 12, the following amounts may be deducted in computing the income of a taxpayer for the taxation year:
(a) such part of the capital cost to the taxpayer of property, or such amount in respect to the capital cost to the taxpayer of property, if any, as is allowed by regulation;
Section 1100(1) of the Income Tax Regulations provides:
(1) Under paragraph (a) of ‘subsection (1) of section 11 of the Act, there is hereby allowed to a taxpayer, in computing his income from a business or property, as the case may be, deductions for each taxation year equal to
Patent, Franchisé, Concession or Licence
(c) Such amount as he may claim in respect of property of
class 14 in Schedule B not exceeding the lesser of
(i) the aggregate of the amounts for the year obtained by apportioning the capital cost to him of each property over the life of the property remaining at the time the cost was incurred, or
(ii) the undepreciated capital cost to him as of the end of the taxation year (before making any deduction under this subsection for the taxation year) of property of the class ; ;
Class 14 of Schedule B reads: . ;
Property that is a patent, franchise, concession or licence for a limited period in. respect of property but not including (the exclusions are irrelevant).
The parties agree that Gibson, J. correctly stated that the . •,2! !2i.. stated ' that the determination of the issue as to whether the appellant is entitled to such capital costs deduction is dependent upon the answer to the question :
Are the rights or obligations obtained and assumed by the appellant pursuant to the agreement between it and the Capital Management Corporation Ltd. dated October 31st, 1959, "property that is a patent, franchise, concession or licence for a limited period in respect of property”?
Of course, such rights are not a patent SO the question narrows down to: whether they were à franchise, concession or licence, and also whether they were "‘in respect of property’’. -
Gibson, J. held that the rights which the appellant received from its predecessor under the said agreement were essentially the right to act as a managing agent for a set fee and that such right could not be described as a franchise, concession or licence in relation to property, and he therefore dismissed the appellant’s appeal from the assessment made by the Minister.
The appellant in its submission to Gibson, J. and to this Court emphasized that its rights under the trust agreements which it purchased on October 31, 1959 were much more than the rights to act as manager for a fee, in that it had the sole right to designate the brokers who could sell the units in the two funds and was entitled to an acquisition fee of 2% of the proceeds of the sale of any of those units. In addition, the broker or selling agent was entitled to a commission of 6% although sometimes less than 6% was paid as discounts were given for large purchases.
Under the trust agreements, the appellant was entitled, in the words of Article XVII, Section 5:
5. The Manager or any company in or with which it or its stockholders may be interested or affiliated or any officer or director of the Manager or of any such company may buy, sell, hold, own or deal in any of the certificates with the same rights as other holders thereof.
The appellant never did buy, sell, hold or deal in any of the certificates but it did purchase all the shares of an existing corporation known as General Mutual Funds Ltd. and that entity then sold a large number of units and obtained the 6% commission aforesaid. The appellant obtained the 2% acquisition fee on the units sold by General Mutual Funds Ltd. as well as on the units sold by a very large number of brokers all of whom it had chosen under its power in the trust deed. It is the appellant’s submission that these rights are, therefore, a "‘franchise, concession or licence’’ within the aforesaid Class 14 and Section 1100 of the Regulations.
The respondent submits that those words, ‘‘franchise, concession or licence in respect of the property’’ must be interpreted in the sense used by ordinary businessmen on this continent. Counsel for the respondent agrees that the words extend not only to certain kinds of privileges or monopolies conferred by virtue of statutory enactment but may also extend to rights created by contract between private parties. The respondent, however, submits that the English authorities dealing with similar words when used in contracts in reference to property are not helpful in interpreting the words used in income tax legislation on this continent. Counsel for the respondent, therefore, cites American dictionaries, and, particularly Webster’s International Dictionary f 3rd edition, which, at p. 902, defines ‘ ‘franchise” as
3 a: a right or privilege conferred by grant from a sovereign or a government and vested in an individual or group; specif : a right to do business conferred by a government—see FRANCHISE TAX b: a constitutional or statutory right or privilege; esp: the right to vote—usu. used with the c(l) : the right granted to an individual or group to market a company’s goods or services in a particular territory (2) : the territory involved in such a right d: a contract for public works or public services granted by a government to an individual or company e(l) : the right of membership granted by certain professional sports leagues (2) : such membership itself (8): a team and the professional organization operating it having such membership f: the right to present, broadcast, or televise the events put on by a sports league or organization . . .
And at p. 470, where " concession” is defined as:
a. a grant of land or other property esp. from a government in return for services rendered or proposed or for a particular use; specif: a tract granted to a foreign power in a Chinese treaty port or other trading center and permitted rights or extraterritoriality and local self-government b: a usu. exclusive right to undertake and profit by a specified activity [a — to build a canal] [conflicting —s in the oil fields] c: a lease of premises or a portion of premises for a particular purpose, esp. for some purpose supplementary to another activity (as the storing of wraps of patrons of a theatre) or for providing entertainment; often: the premises covered by such a concession or the activities for which it is granted [it was reported that some of the —s at the fair were not honest] . . .
And at p. 1304, where ""licence” 1 defined as :
38 a(l) : a right or permission granted in accordance with law by a competent authority to engage in some business or occupation, to do some act, or to engage in some transaction which but for such licence would be unlawful [a — to sell liquor] [a marriage —] [a — to practice medicine] (2) : a document evidencing a licence granted . . .
There seems to have been only one decision i in courts in Canada which has any direct application to the present situation: The Investors Group v. M.N.R., [1965] 2- Ex. C.R. 520; [1965] C.T.C, 192, where Jackett, P. considered a like, appeal and expressed the view that the words " franchise, concession or licence” in the statute were used to refer to some right, privilege or monopoly that enables the concessionaire or franchise holder to carry on his business or that facilitates the carrying on of his business and that they were not used to refer to a contract under which a person was entitled to remuneration for the performance of specific services, Gibson, J. adopted this view in dismissing the appellant’s appeal. Counsel for the appellant submits that the present case should be distinguished from The Investors Group v. M.N.R. on the ground that in that case all the taxpayer obtained under the agreement was a power to procure and recommend salesmen with a duty to finance their expenditures and that there was nothing to show that such power was an exclusive power. It is true that in the report of the case in 35 Tax A.B.C. 413, Mr. St-Onge dealt with those circumstances but I did not find that the learned President in considering the appeal in the Exchequer Court placed any reliance whatsoever upon them. On the other hand, he based his decision solely on a consideration of the proper interpretation to be given to the words franchise, concession or licence’’ in business practice on this continent.
Counsel for the respondent submits that the appellant in relying on the power which it alleges it had to deal with the units and advancing that power as one reason in interpreting its rights as a franchise, is misconstruing the power granted to it in the two trust deeds. Counsel for the respondent points out that the trust deeds themselves carefully distinguished between shares and certificates for shares, so in the trust deed setting up the All Canadian Dividend Fund it is provided in Article IV, paragraph 2, "‘shares may be purchased by or through persons authorized by the manager’’, and in paragraph 38, "‘upon receipt of the purchase price of a share or shares by the trustee, the trustee shall issue to each such purchaser of such share or shares a certificate representing the number of shares purchased by him’’, while in Article XVII, paragraph 5, it is provided:
5. The Manager or any company in or with which it or its stockholders may be interested or affiliated or any officer or director of the Manager or of any such company may buy, sell, hold, own or deal in any of the certificates with the same rights as other holders thereof. (The italics are my own.)
And by Article XVI, paragraph 2, the same exact right is given to the trustee. I am in agreement with this submission of counsel for the respondent that the power given to the manager and, as I have said, also to the trustee, to deal in certificates is not a power by which it may purchase shares from treasury, but merely a power permitting it to buy and sell on the market certificates for such shares once they have been issued, a power which, of course, is a very frequent one in contracts appointing trustees of a fund or managing agents of a fund when those trustees or managing agents are in the business of dealing in securities and holding investments. Once this interpretation is accepted then the position of the appellant is reduced to that of a managing agent with a right to designate selling agents and to obtain a 2% acquisition fee on sales of all shares by such agents. It is difficult to distinguish between that position and the position of the appellant in The Investors Group v. M.N.R., and I have already expressed my agreement with the view of the learned President in that decision.
This is sufficient to dispose of the appeal. I, therefore, find it unnecessary to refer to another submission made by counsel for the respondent, i. e., that whether the rights of the appellant are or are not a franchise, concession or licence’’ they are not "‘in respect of property’’. I prefer to express no opinion on that submission.
For these reasons, I would dismiss the appeal with costs.