Locke,
J.
(concurred
in
by
Taschereau
and
Fauteux,
JJ.)
:—
These
appeals
were
taken
by
Army
and
Navy
Department
Stores
(Western)
Limited,
a
company
incorporated
under
the
Companies
Act
of
British
Columbia,
and
Army
and
Navy
Department
Stores
Limited,
a
company
incorporated
under
the
Companies
Act
of
Alberta,
from
judgments
delivered
by
the
late
Mr.
Justice
Archibald
in
the
Exchequer
Court,
and
were
heard
together.
The
facts
to
be
considered
are,
however,
not
identical
and
the
appeals
must
be
considered
separately.
The
British
Columbia
company,
which
I
will
refer
to
as
the
Western
Company
,carries
on
business
in
the
City
of
New
Westminster.
For
its
fiscal
year
ending
October
31st,
1949,
the
company
filed
a
return
showing
a
profit
of
$58,651.96
and
computed
its
tax
under
the
provisions
of
the
Income
Tax
Act
at
$17,055.15,
which
amount
was
paid.
By
an
assessment
dated
October
24th,
1950,
the
Minister
of
National
Revenue
assessed
the
company
a
tax
for
the
said
period
in
the
amount
of
$19,061.08.
The
dispute
is
as
to
its
liability
for
this
difference.
Section
36
of
The
1948
Income
Tax
Act
(11-12
Geo.
V,
e.
52),
as
amended
both
before
and
after
the
Western
company
made
its
return,
as
it
applied
to
income
for
the
year
1949,
reads
as
follows:
“36.
(1)
The
tax
payable
by
a
corporation
under
this
Part
upon
its
taxable
income
or
taxable
income
earned
in
Canada,
as
the
case
may
be,
(in
this
section
referred
to
as
the
‘amount
taxable’)
for
a
taxation
year
is,
except
where
otherwise
provided,
(a)
15%
of
the
amount
taxable
if
the
amount
taxable
does
not
exceed
$10,000.00,
and
(b)
$1,500.00
plus
38%
of
the
amount
by
which
the
amount
taxable
exceeds
$10,000.00
if
the
amount
taxable
exceeds
$10,000.00.
(2)
Where
two
or
more
corporations
are
related
to
each
other
in
a
taxation
year,
the
tax
payable
by
each
of
them
under
this
Part
for
the
year
is,
except
where
otherwise
provided
by
another
section,
38%
of
the
amount
taxable
for
the
taxation
year.
(3)
Notwithstanding
subsection
(2),
where
two
or
more
corporations
are
related
to
each
other,
the
tax
payable
by
such
one
of
them
as
may
be
agreed
by
them
or,
if
they
cannot
agree,
as
may
be
designated
by
the
Minister
shall
be
computed
under
subsection
(1).
(4)
For
the
purpose
of
this
section,
one
corporation
is
related
to
another
in
a
taxation
year
if,
at
any
time
in
the
year,
(a)
one
of
them
owned
directly
or
indirectly
70%
or
more
of
all
the
issued
common
shares
of
the
capital
stock
of
the
other,
or
(b)
70%
or
more
of
all
the
issued
common
shares
of
the
capital
stock
of
each
of
them
is
owned
directly
or
indirectly
by
(i)
one
person,
(ii)
two
or
more
persons
jointly,
or
(iii)
persons
not
dealing
with
each
other
at
arm’s
length
one
of
whom
owned
directly
or
indirectly
one
or
more
of
the
shares
of
the
capital
stock
of
each
of
the
corporations.
(This
section
is
applicable
to
the
1949
and
subsequent
taxation
years.)
(5)
When
two
corporations
are
related,
or
are
deemed
by
this
subsection
to
be
related,
to
the
same
corporation
at
the
same
time,
they
shall,
for
the
purpose
of
this
section,
be
deemed
to
be
related
to
each
other.”
Section
127
as
it
applied
to
that
period
read:
“For
the
purposes
of
this
Act,
(a)
a
corporation
and
a
person
or
one
of
several
persons
by
whom
it
is
directly
or
indirectly
controlled,
(b)
corporations
controlled
directly
or
indirectly
by
the
Same
person,
or
(c)
persons
connected
by
blood
relationship,
marriage
or
adoption,
shall,
without
extending
the
meaning
of
the
expression
‘
to
deal
with
each
other
at
arm’s
length’
be
deemed
not
to
deal
with
each
other
at
arm’s
length.’’
The
difference
between
the
amount
of
the
tax
of
the
Western
company
for
the
period
as
computed
by
it
and
the
amount
of
the
tax
assessed
was
due
to
the
fact
that
the
Minister
assessed
the
tax
under
subsection
(2)
of
Section
36,
while
the
company
claimed
that
the
tax
should
be
levied
under
the
provisions
of
subsection
(1).
The
company
gave
a
notice
of
objection
to
the
assessment
to
the
Minister
who
confirmed
the
assessment.
The
company
then
appealed
to
the
Income
Tax
Appeal
Board
and,
in
a
considered
judgment
delivered
by
Mr.
R.
8.
W.
Fordham,
Q.C.,
on
October
29,
1951,
for
the
Board,
the
appeal
was
dismissed.
There
is
no
record
of
the
proceedings
before
the
Board
before
us
and
we
are
not
informed
as
to
whether
or
not
evidence
was
given
by
the
appellant.
The
Minister
of
National
Revenue,
in
notifying
the
company
that
he
had
confirmed
the
assessment,
had
stated
that
the
assessment
rested
on
the
ground
that
the
taxpayer
and
the
Army
and
Navy
Department
Stores
Limited
were
related
companies,
within
the
meaning
of
subsection
(4)
of
Section
36:
the
company
referred
to
was
apparently
the
Alberta
company,
one
of
the
appellants
in
these
proceedings.
The
judgment
of
the
Tax
Appeal
Board
found
that
one
half
of
the
shares
of
the
Western
company
was
owned
by
the
Alberta
company
and
that
the
other
half,
less
two
shares,
was
owned
by
a
Saskatchewan
company
of
the
same
name.
The
shareholdings
in
the
Alberta
and
Saskatchewan
companies
were
found
to
be
as
follows:
Alberta
company
|
Saskatchewan
company
|
H.
R.
Cohen
|
50,000
shares
|
H.
R.
Cohen
|
100,000
shares
|
S.
J.
Cohen
|
10,000
shares
|
S.
J.
Cohen
|
100,000
shares
|
S.
D.
Leshgold
|
40,000
shares
|
J.
W.
Cohen
|
50,000
shares
|
As
to
the
remaining
shares
in
the
Western
company,
it
was
found
that
H.
R.
Cohen
was
the
owner
of
one
and
that
the
remaining
share
was
owned
by
a
stranger.
After
finding
that
H.
KR.
Cohen
and
$.
J.
Cohen
were
brothers
and
Leshgold
their
brother-in-law
and
that
J.
W.
Cohen
(a
son
of
S.
J.
Cohen)
was
a
blood
relation
of
the
two
first
named,
the
reasons
for
judgment
proceeded
:
4
While
the
said
2,500
shares
of
the
appellant
company’s
stock
are
owned
by
the
Alberta
company
as
such,
and
not
by
the
individual
shareholders
of
the
latter,
I
find
it
difficult
to
escape
the
conclusion
that
there
was
at
least
indirect
control
of
the
appellant
company
by
H.
R.
Cohen,
S.
J.
Cohen
and
S.
D.
Leshgold.
Bearing
in
mind
the
far-reaching
words
found
in
Section
36(4)
(b),
‘owned
directly
or
indirectly’,
it
does
not,
I
think,
conflict
with
the
effect
of
Salomon
v.
Salomon,
[1897]
A.C.
22,
to
hold
that
these
three
holders
[sic]
of
the
Alberta
company
were
in
a
position
to
exercise
full,
even
if
indirect,
control
over
the
activities
of
the
appellant
company
by
virtue
of
their
substantial
holdings
in
the
former.
In
the
case
of
H.
R.
Cohen,
his
voting
power
was
augmented
by
his
two-fifths
interest
in
the
Saskatchewan
company’s
shares.
It
is
significant
too
that
he
was
also
not
at
arm’s
length
with
its
two
other
shareholders,
they
being
closely
related
to
him.
The
Minister’s
decision
did
not
show
which
of
the
two
prairie
province
companies
was
deemed
related
to
the
appellant
company.
It
matters
little,
however,
as
both
companies’
shares
were
held
mostly
by
the
Cohens,
and
the
shareholdings
of
each
company
in
the
appellant
company’s
stock
were
about
equal,
as
indicated
above.’?
It
is
apparent
from
the
reasons
delivered
that
there
was
no
evidence
before
the
Tax
Appeal
Board
that
the
two
shares
in
the
Western
company
to
which
reference
was
made
were
the
property
of
the
Saskatchewan
company,
as
was
shown
in
the
evidence
taken
before
Archibald,
J.
It
was
there
shown
by
the
evidence
of
the
secretary
of
the
Saskatchewan
company
that
it
was
the
owner
of
2,500
of
the
shares
of
the
Western
company
but
held
a
certificate
for
2,498
shares
only,
one
share
having
been
issued
to
H.
R.
Cohen
and
one
to
S.
D.
Leshgold,
in
order
to
qualify
them
as
directors.
The
transfer
form
on
the
back
of
these
two
certificates
had
been
signed
by
Cohen
and
Leshgold
respectively
and
it
was
shown
that
the
shares
were
held
by
the
solicitors
for
the
Saskatchewan
company
on
its
behalf.
There
was
no
contradiction
of
this
evidence.
Mr.
Justice
Archibald,
who
disposed
of
the
appeal
of
the
Alberta
company
at
the
same
time
as
he
dismissed
the
appeal
of
the
Western
company,
did
not
mention
the
fact
that
it
had
been
proven
that
the
ownership
of
the
shares
was
divided
equally
between
the
Alberta
and
the
Saskatchewan
companies
and
I
think
it
is
clear
that
he
did
not
consider
the
effect
that
this
had
upon
the
issue
in
the
appeal.
His
reasons
merely
stated
that
he
dismissed
the
appeal
of
the
Western
company
for
the
reasons
given
in
his
decision
on
the
appeal
of
the
Alberta
company.
The
issue
in
that
appeal,
however,
was
different.
Upon
the
undisputed
evidence
the
facts
accordingly
are
that
during
the
taxation
period
in
question
the
5,000
issued
shares
of
the
Western
company
were
owned
one
half
by
the
Alberta
and
one
half
by
the
Saskatchewan
company.
The
Western
company
was
entitled
to
be
taxed
under
the
terms
of
subsection
(1)
of
Section
36,
unless
it
lost
that
benefit
by
reason
of
being
‘‘related’’
to
one
of
the
other
companies,
as
that
expression
is
defined
by
subsection
(4)
of
Section
36.
Neither
the
decision
of
the
Minister
nor
of
the
Tax
Appeal
Board
nor
of
Archibald,
J.
mentioned
to
which
corporation
the
Western
company
was
related
but,
if
I
understand
correctly
the
argument
addressed
to
us
on
behalf
of
the
Minister,
the
Crown’s
position
is
that
it
was
related
to
both
the
Alberta
and
the
Saskatchewan
companies.
Since,
however,
neither
the
Alberta
nor
the
Saskatchewan
company
owned
70%
of
all
the
issued
common
shares
of
the
capital
stock
of
the
western
company,
paragraph
(a)
of
subsection
(4)
cannot
apply.
As
to
paragraph
(b)
it
is
not
suggested
that
70%
of
the
issued
common
shares
was
owned
by
one
person
or
by
two
or
more
persons
Jointly,
so
that
if
the
Western
company
is
to
be
deprived
of
the
benefit
of
subsection
(1)
it
must
be
under
the
terms
of
subparagraph
(iii)
of
paragraph
(b).
The
expression
‘‘persons’’
includes
corporations
under
the
definition
of
that
term
in
Section
127(1)
(ab)
of
the
Act
.
If
it
be
assumed
that
the
Alberta
and
the
Saskatchewan
companies
are
persons
not
dealing
with
each
other
at
arm’s
length,
there
still
remains
the
fact
that
while
each
owned
half
of
the
shares
of
the
Western
company
the
Alberta
company
did
not
own
any
of
the
shares
of
the
Saskatchewan
company
nor
did
the
Saskatchewan
company
own
any
shares
in
the
Alberta
company.
Accordingly,
subparagraph
(iii)
has
no
application.
With
respect,
the
reasons
for
the
judgment
of
the
Tax
Appeal
Board
do
not
appear
to
me
to
touch
the
question
to
be
decided.
In
my
opinion,
the
Western
company
was
entitled
to
be
taxed
under
the
provisions
of
subsection
(1)
of
Section
36.
The
appeal
of
the
Alberta
company
raises
a
quite
different
issue.
As
had
been
shown
above,
H.
R.
Cohen
and
his
brother-
in-law
Leshgold
owned
90,000
of
the
100,000
issued
shares
of
the
Alberta
company
and
H.
R.
Cohen
owned
100,000
of
the
shares
of
the
Saskatchewan
company.
In
addition
to
this,
S.
J.
Cohen,
a
shareholder
of
the
Alberta
company,
was
the
owner
of
100,000
shares
of
the
Saskatchewan
company
and
his
son
J.
W.
Cohen
50,000
shares.
If,
therefore,
the
Cohens
and
Leshgold
were
persons
not
dealing
with
each
other
at
arm’s
length,
the
conditions
of
subparagraph
(iii)
are
complied
with
and
the
two
corporations
are
to
be
deemed
related.
For
the
appellant
it
is
said
that
the
expression
‘
‘blood
relationship”
is
so
vague
and
uncertain
as
to
be
incapable
of
interpretation.
In
support
of
this
contention,
the
cases
on
the
construction
of
the
words
4
relatives
”
or
relations
’
’
in
matters
involving
the
interpretation
of
wills
such
as
Ross
v.
Ross
(1893),
25
S.C.R.
307,
In
re
Lanyon,
[1927]
2
Ch.
264,
and
Sifton
v.
Sifton,
[1938]
A.C.
656,
are
relied
upon.
In
In
re
Lanyon,
the
testator
by
his
will
provided
that
his
trustees
should
stand
possessed
of
his
residuary
estate
upon
trust
to
pay
the
income
to
his
son
for
his
life
and
on
his
decease
upon
trust
to
pay
the
capital
to
his
children
or
grandchildren
or
equally
between
them
if
more
than
one,
provided
that
his
son
did
not
marry
a
‘‘relation
by
blood’’.
It
was
contended
that
the
condition
was
void
for
uncertainty.
Russell,
J.
by
whom
the
matter
was
decided,
considered
that
the
meaning
of
“blood
relationship’’
was
clear
and
that
it
described
the
relationship
existing
between
two
or
more
persons
who
stand
in
lawful
descent
from
a
common
ancestor.
He
did
not
consider
the
provision
in
the
will
void
for
uncertainty
but
held
it
to
be
ineffective
as
being
contrary
to
public
policy
as
being
a
restraint
upon
marriage.
In
Sift
on’s
case,
Lord
Romer
who
delivered
the
judgment
of
the
Judicial
Committee,
after
referring
to
the
meaning
attributed
to
the
expression
‘‘blood
relation’’
by
Russell,
J.,
said
that,
in
their
Lordships’
opinion,
the
condition
might
have
been
held
to
be
void
for
uncertainty
as,
if
the
testator
did
not
intend
by
the
use
of
the
expression
to
include
the
whole
human
race,
he
had
failed
to
specify
the
number
of
generations
in
which
no
common
ancestor
of
the
spouses
was
to
be
found.
I
do
not
think
that
these
decisions
are
of
assistance
in
determining
the
present
matter.
The
fact
that
there
would
undoubtedly
be
difficulty
in
determining
the
scope
of
the
expression
in
some
circumstances
does
not
render
the
words
meaningless.
The
question
here
to
be
determined
is
whether
H.
R.
Cohen,
S.
J.
Cohen
and
J.
W.
Cohen
are
connected
by
blood
relationship.
The
three
men
are
shown
by
the
evidence
to
be
descended
from
a
common
ancestor,
the
father
of
H.
R.
and
8.
J.
Cohen.
Accepting
the
meaning
attributed
to
the
expression
by
Russell,
J.,
which
I
think
to
be
the
correct
one,
these
men
are
connected
by
blood
relationship.
This
does
not,
however,
dispose
of
the
matter
since,
while
the
three
Cohens
owned
all
of
the
shares
in
the
Saskatchewan
company,
Leshgold
owned
40%
of
the
shares
in
the
Alberta
company.
Leshgold
is
married
to
a
sister
of
H.
R.
and
8S.
J.
Cohen
and
the
question
is,
therefore,
whether
he
is
‘‘connected
by
marriage”
with
them,
within
the
meaning
of
the
subparagraph.
The
matter
is
to
be
considered
without
reference
to
the
amendment
made
to
Section
127
by
Section
31
of
chapter
29
of
the
Statutes
of
1952,
by
which
the
expression
was
defined.
Without
overlooking
the
necessity
for
clarity
in
the
language
of
a
taxing
statute,
I
am
of
the
opinion
that
this
language
is
sufficiently
clear.
One
of
the
meanings
assigned
to
the
word
‘‘connection’’
in
the
New
Oxford
Dictionary
is
:
relationship
by
family
ties
as
marriage
or
distant
consanguinity,
and
a
second:
a
person
who
is
connected
with
others
by
ties
of
any
kind,
especially
a
relative
by
marriage
or
distant
consanguinity.
In
Webster’s
New
International
Dictionary,
the
word
is
similarly
defined.
In
this
sense,
which
I
think
to
be
the
natural
and
ordinary
meaning
of
the
expression,
Leshgold
and
the
Cohen
brothers
were
connections
and
so
‘‘connected
by
marriage’’,
within
the
meaning
of
Section
127(5)(c).
As
Leshgold
and
H.
R.
Cohen
between
them
owned
90%
of
the
shares
of
the
Alberta
company,
the
conditions
of
Section
36(4)
(b)
(iii)
were
complied
with
and
the
Alberta
and
Saskatchewan
companies
were
‘‘related’’
to
each
other,
within
the
meaning
of
Section
36(3).
It
is
stated
in
the
factum
of
the
appellant
that
the
Minister
of
National
Revenue
had
of
his
own
motion
and
without
consulting
the
Alberta
and
Saskatchewan
companies
designated
the
latter
as
the
corporation
to
be
taxed
under
subsection
(1)
of
Section
36.
Subsection
(3)
provides
that
when
two
or
more
corporations
are
related
to
each
other
the
tax
payable
by
such
one
of
them
as
may
be
agreed
by
them
shall
be
computed
under
subsection
(1)
and
that
it
is
only
where
they
cannot
agree
that
the
company
to
be
so
taxed
may
be
designated
by
the
Minister.
We
have
no
record
of
the
proceedings
before
us
in
which
the
Minister
is
said
to
have
made
this
direction.
In
the
absence
of
any
evidence
on
the
point,
I
think
we
cannot
be
asked
to
assume
that
the
Minister
acted
without
evidence
satisfactory
to
him
that
the
parties
could
no
agree
which
should
receive
this
benefit,
if
only
one
was
entitled
to
it.
In
the
result,
the
appeal
of
the
Western
company
should
be
allowed
with
costs
throughout
and
judgment
entered
declaring
that,
for
the
taxation
period
in
question,
that
company
was
entitled
to
be
taxed
under
the
provisions
of
subsection
(1)
of
Section
36.
The
appeal
of
the
Alberta
company
should
be
dismissed
with
costs.
Estey,
J.:—There
are
here
two
appeals,
one
by
Army
&
Navy
Department
Store
Limited,
an
Alberta
company
(hereinafter
referred
to
as
the
Alberta
Corporation)
and
the
Army
&
Navy
Dept.
Store
(Western)
Limited,
a
British
Columbia
company
(hereinafter
referred
to
as
the
Western
Corporation).
These
companies,
for
the
taxation
years
1949
and
1950,
along
with
the
Army
&
Navy
Department
Store
Limited,
a
Saskatchewan
company
(hereinafter
referred
to
as
the
Saskatchewan
Corporation),
were
taxed
as
related
corporations.
The
first
two
corporations
were
taxed
under
Section
36(2)
of
the
Income
Tax
Act
(S.C.
1948,
11-12
Geo.
VI,
ec.
52),
while
the
Minister
designated
that
the
Saskatchewan
Corporation
should
be
taxed
under
Section
36(3).
All
of
the
corporations
filed
their
returns
as
unrelated
or
independent
corporations.
It
is
agreed
that
the
shares
in
these
corporations
are
held
as
follows:
(1)
The
Saskatchewan
Corporation—the
shareholders
are—
40%
to
S.
J.
Cohen
20%
to
J.
W.
Cohen
(his
son)
40%
to
H.
R.
Cohen
(a
brother
of
S.
J.
Cohen).
(2)
The
Alberta
Corporation—the
shareholders
are—
50%
to
H.
R.
Cohen
10%
to
S.
J.
Cohen
(his
brother)
40%
to
S.
G.
Leshgold
(brother-in-law
of
H.
R.
Cohen
and
S.
J.
Cohen).
(3)
The
Western
Corporation
has
5,000
shares
to
the
value
of
$10.00
each,
divided
as
follows:
to
the
Alberta
Corporation
2,000
shares
to
the
Saskatchewan
Corporation
—2,498
shares
to
H.
R.
Cohen
|
|
1
share
|
to
J.
F.
Bolecon
|
_*
|
1
share
|
The
shares
in
the
name
of
H.
R.
Cohen
and
J.
F.
Bolecon
in
the
Western
Corporation
are
director’s
qualifying
shares.
Section
36
reads
in
part
as
follows:
4
‘36.
(1)
The
tax
payable
by
a
corporation
under
this
Part
upon
its
taxable
income
or
taxable
income
earned
in
Canada,
as
the
case
may
be,
(in
this
section
referred
to
as
the
‘amount
taxable’)
for
a
taxation
year
is,
except
where
otherwise
provided,
(a)
15%
of
the
amount
taxable
if
the
amount
taxable
does
not
exceed
$10,000.00,
and
(b)
$1,500.00
plus
38%
of
the
amount
by
which
the
amount
taxable
exceeds
$10,000.00,
if
the
amount
taxable
exceeds
$10,000.00.
(2)
Where
two
or
more
corporations
are
related
to
each
other
in
a
taxation
year,
the
tax
payable
by
each
of
them
under
this
Part
for
the
year
is,
except
where
otherwise
provided
by
another
section,
38%
of
the
amount
taxable
for
the
taxation
year.
(3)
Notwithstanding
subsection
(2),
where
two
or
more
corporations
are
related
to
each
other,
the
tax
payable
by
such
one
of
them
as
may
be
agreed
by
them
or,
if
they
cannot
agree,
as
may
be
designated
by
the
Minister
shall
be
computed
under
subsection
(1).
.
.
.
”’
The
term
‘‘related
corporations’’
is
defined
in
Section
36(4),
as
amended
in
1951
and
made
applicable
to
1949
and
subsequent
taxation
years,
as
follows:
44
36.
(4)
For
the
purpose
of
this
section,
one
corporation
is
related
to
another
in
a
taxation
year
if,
at
any
time
in
the
year,
(a)
one
of
them
owned
directly
or
indirectly
70%
or
more
of
all
the
issued
common
shares
of
the
capital
stock
of
the
other,
or
(b)
70%
or
more
of
all
the
issued
common
shares
of
the
capital
stock
of
each
of
them
is
owned
directly
or
indirectly
by
(i)
one
person,
(ii)
two
or
more
persons
jointly,
or
(iii)
persons
not
dealing
with
each
other
at
arm’s
length
one
of
whom
owned
directly
or
indirectly
one
or
more
of
the
shares
of
the
capital
stock
of
each
of
the
corporations.’’
The
phrase
44
arm’s
length’’
is
defined
in
Section
127(5)
as
follows
:
44
127.
(5)
For
the
purposes
of
this
Act,
(a)
a
corporation
and
a
person
or
one
of
several
persons
by
whom
it
is
directly
or
indirectly
controlled,
(b)
corporations
controlled
directly
or
indirectly
by
the
Same
person,
or
(c)
persons
connected
by
blood
relationship,
marriage
or
adoption,
shall,
without
extending
the
meaning
of
the
expression
‘to
deal
with
each
other
at
arm’s
length’,
be
deemed
not
to
deal
with
each
other
at
arm’s
length.’’
The
appellants
submit
that
as
the
word
relationship
”
or
44
related”
is
not
defined
in
the
statute
at
any
time
relevant
hereto
(it
is
defined
subsequently,
S.C.
1952,
ce.
29,
Section
31,
subsection
(2))
that
it
ought
to
be
construed
as
meaning
the
next
of
kin
who
would
take
in
the
event
of
intestacy.
In
their
submission
appellants’
counsel
adopted
the
statement
of
Chief
Justice
Strong
in
Ross
v.
Ross
(1894),
25
S.C.R.
307
at
330
:
‘‘the
word
‘relations’
standing
alone
must
be
restricted
to
some
particular
class
for
if
it
were
to
be
construed
generally
as
meaning
all
relations
it
would
be
impossible
ever
to
carry
out
the
directions
of
the
Will.
The
line,
therefore,
must
be
drawn
somewhere
and
can
only
be
drawn
so
as
to
exclude
all
persons
whom
the
law
in
the
case
of
an
intestacy
recognize
as
the
proper
class
among
whom
to
divide
the
property
of
a
deceased
person
who
dies
intestate,
namely
his
heirs.
’
’
In
support
of
this
contention
he
invokes
the
rule
that
where
certain
words
have
received
a
judicial
interpretation
Parliament,
in
subsequently
adopting
or
using
such
words
without
any
indication
to
the
contrary,
may
be
taken
to
have
intended
that
they
be
used
as
so
interpreted
in
the
courts.
Barlow
v.
Teal
(1885),
15
Q.B.D.
403.
The
respondent
points
out
that
the
statement
of
Chief
Justice
Strong
was
in
relation
to
the
interpretation
of
a
will
and
that,
while
Parliament,
in
legislating
in
respect
to
the
same
or
similar
matters,
might
so
intend,
it
does
not
apply
where,
as
here,
the
subject
matter
of
the
legislation
is
in
relation
to
income
tax,
a
subject
entirely
different
from
that
of
wills.
It
1s,
however,
unnecessary
to
decide
this
issue.
Even
if
we
assume
that
the
word
‘‘relationship’’
means
next
of
kin,
these
corporations
are,
within
the
meaning
of
the
statute,
related.
It
will
be
observed
that
under
Section
36(4)
(b)
(iii)
there
are
two
requirements:
(a)
at
least
70%
of
the
issued
common
shares
in
each
of
the
corporations
shall
be
owned
directly
or
indirectly
by
persons
not
dealing
with
each
other
at
arm’s
length;
and
(b)
one
of
the
persons
must
own
at
least
one
or
more
of
the
shares
of
the
capital
stock
in
each
of
the
corporations.
It
would
appear
that
under
the
terms
of
this
section
the
Saskatchewan
and
Alberta
Corporations
are
related.
In
the
Saskatchewan
Corporation
H.
R.
Cohen
and
S.
J.
Cohen
own
80%
of
the
shares
of
stock.
These
parties,
H.
R.
Cohen
and
S.
J.
Cohen,
are
brothers
and
the
former
having
no
children
his
brother,
S.
J.
Cohen,
would
come
within
those
who
would
take
if
the
former
died
intestate.
In
the
Alberta
Corporation
H.
R.
Cohen
and
his
brother-in-law
S.
J.
Leshgold
own
90%
of
the
stock
and
S.
J.
Cohen
owns
10%.
In
other
words,
the
shares
of
the
Alberta
and
Saskatchewan
Corporations
are
owned
by
persons
who
are
‘‘connected
by
blood
relationship
or
marriage’’
within
the
meaning
of
Section
127(5)(c).
The
further
requirement
of
Section
36(4)
(b)
(iii)
is
found
in
the
fact
that
H.
R.
Cohen
owns
‘‘one
or
more
of
the
shares
of
the
capital
stock
of
each
of
the
corporations.’’
It
follows
that
the
Alberta
and
Saskatchewan
Corporations
are
related
within
the
meaning
of
Section
36(4)
(b)
(iii).
In
the
Western
Corporation
the
shares
are
held
as
follows
:
The
issue
is
again
whether
this
Western
Corporation
is
related
to
the
Alberta
and
Saskatchewan
Corporations
and
in
particular
whether
70%
or
more
of
all
the
issued
common
shares
of
capital
stock
of
each
of
these
corporations
is
‘‘owned
directly
or
indirectly
by
.
.
.
persons
not
dealing
with
each
other
at
arm’s
length
one
of
whom
owned
directly
or
indirectly
one
or
more
of
the
shares
of
the
capital
stock
of
each
of
the
corporations’?
within
the
meaning
of
Section
36(4)
(b)
(111).
Alberta
Corporation
|
2,500
shares
|
Saskatchewan
Corporation
|
2,498
shares
|
H.
R.
Cohen
|
1
share
|
J.
F.
Boleson
|
1
share
|
We
are
not
here
concerned
with
the
fact
that
a
corporation
is
a
distinct
and
separate
legal
entity
nor
with
any
question
of
corporate
capacity
or
power.
The
issue
here
raised
is
that
of
direct
or
indirect
ownership
of
the
shares
in
the
Western
Corporation.
That
the
Alberta
and
Saskatchewan
Corporations
own
all
the
shares
in
the
Western
Corporation
does
not
necessarily
conclude
the
matter
in
determining
whether
these
corporations
are
related
within
the
meaning
of
the
statute.
These
corporations
are
artificial
bodies
that
act
as
directed
by
individuals.
H.
R.
and
S.
J.
Cohen
and
8S.
G.
Leshgold
are
owners
of
all
the
shares
in
the
Alberta
Corporation
and
all
but
20%
(owned
by
J.
W.
Cohen,
a
son
of
S.
J.
Cohen)
in
the
Saskatchewan
Corporation.
While
the
appellants
emphasize
that
Section
36(4)
(b)
(iii)
deals
with
ownership
of
shares,
it
should
be
observed
that
it
is
ownership
“directly
or
indirectly’’
on
the
part
of
persons
not
dealing
at
arm’s
length.
The
dictionary
defines
‘‘indirectly’’
as
circuitous
or
roundabout.
Parliament,
by
the
inclusion
of
the
word
‘‘indirectly’’
in
this
context,
evidenced
a
clear
intention
that
the
share
position
of
a
corporation
should
be
so
far
examined
as
to
ascertain
who,
in
fact,
are
the
owners
who
effectually
exercise
the
powers
of
ownership.
It
is
a
provision
in
respect
of
which
the
language
of
Wills,
J.
is
appropriate
:
(&
.
.
.
especially
in
revenue
matters,
it
seems
to
me
that
one
ought
to
look
at
the
substance,
and
not
merely
at
matters
of
machinery
and
form;’’
The
St.
Lows
Breweries
Limited
v.
Apthorpe
(1899),
79
L.T.
551
at
555.
When
one
examines
this
situation
as
suggested
by
Wills,
J.,
the
conclusion
cannot
be
avoided
that,
while
directly
the
Saskatchewan
and
Alberta
Corporations
own
the
Western
Corporation,
H.
R.
and
8.
J.
Cohen
and
8.
G.
Leshgold
are
the
indirect
owners
of
70%
or
more
of
all
the
issued
common
shares
of
the
capital
stock
and
are
persons
not
dealing
at
arm’s
length
within
the
meaning
of
Section
36(4)
(b)
(iii).
It
would
seem
that
Parliament,
by
the
inclusion
of
the
word
“indirectly”
in
Section
36(4)
(b)
(iii)
intended
to
provide
for
just
such
situations
as
here
created
by
the
three
parties
H.
R.
and
S.
J.
Cohen
and
S.
G.
Leshgold.
Then
the
other
requirement
of
Section
36(4)
(b)
is
satisfied
by
the
fact
that
H.
KR.
Cohen
owns
at
least
one
share
in
each
of
these
corporations.
The
evidence
discloses
that
his
share
in
the
Western
Corporation
is
held
in
trust
for
the
Saskatchewan
Corporation.
It
is
described
in
the
evidence
as
a
share
given
to
him
in
order
that
he
might
serve
in
the
capacity
as
a
director
and,
therefore,
one
who
must
act
at
the
instance
of
the
Saskatchewan
Corporation,
which,
in
fact,
means
that
he
will
act
at
the
instance
of
himself
and
8S.
J.
Cohen
who
own
80%
of
that
corporation.
The
fact
that
he
has
not
the
beneficial
interest
in
that
one
share
is
not,
under
the
circumstances
of
this
case,
sufficient
to
take
him
out
of
the
provisions
of
Section
36(4)
(b)
(iii).
All
of
these
corporations
filed
their
income
tax
returns
as
if
they
were
unrelated
or
independent
corporations
and
the
Minister
has
designated
the
Saskatchewan
Corporation
as
the
one
that
might
be
taxed
under
Section
36(3),
which
provides:
‘
1
36.
(3)
Notwithstanding
subsection
(2),
where
two
or
more
corporations
are
related
to
each
other,
the
tax
payable
by
such
one
of
them
as
may
be
agreed
by
them
or,
if
they
cannot
agree,
as
may
be
designated
by
the
Minister
shall
be
computed
under
subsection
(1).”
It
is
here
contended
that,
inasmuch
as
there
is
no
evidence
that
the
parties
could
not
agree,
the
Minister
had
no
authority
to
make
such
a
designation.
Such
an
issue
might
well
be
raised
by
the
Saskatchewan
Corporation,
which,
however,
has
not
taken
an
appeal
from
the
Minister’s
decision.
It
cannot
appropriately
be
raised
by
either
of
the
appellants
in
the
appeals
here
taken,
particularly
as
it
is
not
contended
that
either
of
these
appellants
(Alberta
and
Western
Corporations)
should
have
been
so
designated.
The
appeals
should
be
dismissed.
CARTWRIGHT,
J.:—These
appeals
were
argued
together.
The
facts
out
of
which
they
arise
and
the
relevant
statutory
provisions
are
fully
set
out
in
the
reasons
of
other
members
of
the
Court
and
I
shall
repeat
them
only
so
far
as
may
be
necessary
to
indicate
the
reasons
for
the
conclusion
at
which
I
have
arrived.
For
the
reasons
given
by
my
brother
Locke
I
agree
that
the
appeal
of
the
Alberta
Company
should
be
dismissed.
Turning
to
the
appeal
of
the
Western
Company,
the
question
is
whether
it
is
related
to
either
the
Alberta
Company
or
the
Saskatchewan
Company.
The
notion
of
one
company
being
related
to
another
is
the
creation
of
statute
and
whether
or
not
the
appellant
is
so
related
must
be
ascertained
by
applying
the
words
of
the
statute
to
the
facts.
To
establish
the
relationship
it
must
appear
that
two
conditions
co-existed
during
the
taxation
year,
(a)
that
as
to
both
the
appellant
company
and
the
company
to
which
it
is
said
to
be
related
70%
or
more
of
all
its
issued
common
shares
was
owned
directly
or
indirectly
by
persons
not
dealing
with
each
other
at
arm’s
length,
and
(b)
that
one
of
such
persons
owned
directly
or
indirectly
one
or
more
of
the
shares
of
each
of
the
companies.
Dealing
first
with
condition
(a),
I
agree,
for
the
reasons
stated
by
my
brother
Locke,
that
it
is
established
in
the
case
of
both
the
Alberta
Company
and
the
Saskatchewan
Company
that
70%
or
more
of
its
issued
common
shares
was
owned
directly
by
persons
not
dealing
with
each
other
at
arm’s
length
{viz,
in
the
Alberta
Company
by
H.
R.
Cohen,
8S.
J.
Cohen
and
8.
D.
Lesh-
gold
and
in
the
Saskatchewan
Company
by
H.
R.
Cohen,
8.
J.
Cohen
and
J.
W.
Cohen).
Can
the
same
be
said
of
the
appellant
company?
For
the
respondent
two
alternative
submissions
are
made.
First,
it
is
said
that
the
Alberta
Company
and
the
Saskatchewan
Company
own
more
than
70%
of
all
the
issued
shares
of
the
appellant
company
and
that
they
are
persons
not
dealing
with
each
other
at
arm’s
length
as
they
are
both
controlled
by
the
same
two
individuals,
H.
R.
Cohen
and
S.
J.
Cohen,
whose
total
holdings
amount
to
60%
of
the
issued
shares
of
the
Alberta
Company
and
80%
of
the
issued
shares
of
the
Saskatchewan
Company.
If
the
statute
were
silent
as
to
the
circumstances
in
which
corporations
shall
be
deemed
not
to
deal
with
each
other
at
arm’s
length
this
submission
would
have
great
force,
but
when
Section
127
by
clause
(b)
provides
that
corporations
controlled
directly
or
indirectly
by
the
same
person
shall
be
deemed
not
to
deal
with
each
other
at
arm’s
length
it
appears
to
me
to
negative
the
view
that
corporations
are
to
be
deemed
not
to
deal
with
each
other
at
arm’s
length
when
controlled
not
by
the
same
person
but
by
the
same
group
of
persons.
Expressio
unius
exclusio
alterius.
When
the
wording
of
clause
(b)
of
Section
127
is
contrasted
with
that
of
clause
(a)
it
seems
to
me
impossible
to
read
the
word
1
‘person”
in
clause
(b)
as
including
the
plural.
While
the
Alberta
Company
and
the
Saskatchewan
Company
may
well
be
said
to
be
controlled
by
the
same
persons
they
are
not
controlled
by
the
same
person
and
in
my
opinion
they
cannot
on
this
ground
be
deemed
for
the
purposes
of
the
Act
not
to
deal
with
each
other
at
arm’s
length.
Secondly,
and
alternatively,
it
is
said
that
more
than
70%
of
the
shares
of
the
Western
Company
while
owned
directly
by
the
Alberta
Company
and
the
Saskatchewan
Company
are
owned
indirectly
by
the
shareholders
of
the
two
last
mentioned
companies
H.
R.
Cohen,
8S.
J.
Cohen,
8.
D.
Leshgold
and
J.
W.
Cohen
who,
as
shown
in
the
reasons
of
my
brother
Locke,
are
persons
not
dealing
with
each
other
at
arm’s
length.
With
the
greatest
respect
for
those
who
hold
the
contrary
view,
I
do
not
think
that
shareholders,
either
individually
or
collectively,
have
any
ownership
direct
or
indirect
in
the
property
of
the
company
in
which
they
hold
shares.
In
Macaura
v.
Northern
Assurance
Company
[1925]
A.C.
619,
at
page
626,
Lord
Buckmaster
said
:
“.
.
.
Now,
no
shareholder
has
any
right
to
any
item
of
property
owned
by
the
company,
for
he
has
no
legal
or
equitable
interest
therein.
He
is
entitled
to
a
share
in
the
profits
while
the
company
continues
to
carry
on
business
and
a
share
in
the
distribution
of
the
surplus
assets
when
the
company
is
wound
up.”
and
at
page
633
of
the
same
report,
Lord
Wrenbury
points
out
that
even
a
shareholder
who
holds
all
the
shares
in
a
corporation
“has
no
property
legal
or
equitable
in
the
assets
of
the
corporation”.
In
Salomon
v.
Salomon,
[1897]
A.C.
22,
Lord
Macnaghten
says
at
page
51
:
“
.
.
.
the
company
is
not
in
law
the
agent
of
the
subscribers
or
trustee
for
them.”
In
my
respectful
opinion
these
passages
correctly
state
the
law.
For
these
reasons
I
am
of
opinion
that
the
existence
of
condition
(a)
mentioned
above
has
not
been
established
in
regard
to
the
Western
Company
and
this
is
sufficient
to
dispose
of
the
appeal
in
its
favour;
I
wish,
however,
to
say
a
few
words
as
to
condition
(b).
If
the
argument
of
the
respondent,
that
all
the
shares
of
the
Western
Company
were
owned
indirectly
by
the
three
Cohens
and
Leshgold,
had
prevailed,
it
might
have
been
said
that
H.
R.
Cohen
and
S.
J.
Cohen,
who
admittedly
own
directly
shares
in
both
the
Alberta
and
Saskatchewan
Companies,
fulfilled
the
requirement
of
Section
36(4)
(b)
(iii)
by
owning
indirectly
one
or
more
of
the
shares
of
the
Western
Company,
although
there
would
have
been
manifest
difficulty
in
identifying
any
share
or
shares
of
the
last
mentioned
company
as
being
owned
by
either
of
them.
However,
this
point
was
not
pressed
by
the
respondent
who
relied
on
the
fact
that
one
share
of
the
Western
Company
was
registered
in
the
name
of
H.
R.
Cohen.
If,
then,
the
Alberta
Company
and
the
Saskatchewan
Company
are
regarded,
as
I
think
they
must
be,
as
the
owners
of
at
least
4998
of
the
5000
issued
shares
of
the
Western
Company
but,
contrary
to
the
view
I
have
expressed
above,
should
be
deemed
to
be
persons
not
dealing
with
each
other
at
arm’s
length,
then
I
would
agree
with
my
brother
Locke
that
it
has
been
shown
that
H.
R.
Cohen
did
not
own
any
share
of
the
capital
stock
of
the
Western
Company.
It
is
argued
for
the
respondent
that
even
if
the
Saskatchewan
Company
is
the
beneficial
owner
of
the
share
registered
in
the
name
of
H.
R.
Cohen,
the
latter
is
its
“direct
owner’’
but
in
my
view
on
the
evidence
he
had
no
ownership
either
direct
or
indirect
in
this
share.
The
Companies
Act
of
British
Columbia,
R.S.B.C.
1948,
chapter
58,
does
not
require
that
a
director
shall
be
the
owner
in
his
own
right
of
a
share
in
the
company
but
only
that
his
qualification
shall
be
‘‘the
holding
of
at
least
one
share
in
the
company”
and
by
Section
90
a
certificate
is
made
only
prima
facie
evidence
of
title.
In
the
case
at
bar
the
evidence
establishes
that
the
share
registered
in
H.
R.
Cohen’s
name
was
the
sole
property
of
the
Saskatchewan
Company.
Mr.
Cohen
could
not
even
have
given
title
by
estoppel
to
a
purchaser
in
good
faith
and
without
notice
as
he
did
not
have
the
certificate
in
his
possession
but
had
endorsed
it
and
delivered
it
to
the
solicitor
of
the
Saskatchewan
Company
to
hold
for
it
and
not
for
him.
I
conclude
therefore
that
the
existence
of
condition
(b),
mentioned
above,
was
negatived.
For
the
above
reasons
I
would
dispose
of
both
appeals
as
proposed
by
my
brother
Locke.
Appeal
allowed
in
part.