Reed,
J.:—The
main
issue
in
this
case
concerns
the
extent
to
which
the
separate
corporate
identity
of
a
subsidiary
company
can
be
ignored.
This
question
is
sometimes
phrased
by
asking,
"when
do
the
courts
lift
the
corporate
veil”;
or
perhaps
more
appropriately
"when
will
a
subsidiary
company
be
held
to
be
the
agent
of
its
parent".
The
facts
which
raise
this
question
underpin
the
plaintiff's
claim
that
the
withholding
taxes
alleged
to
be
payable
by
it,
pursuant
to
Part
XIII
of
the
Income
Tax
Act,
are
not
so
payable.
The
defendant
requires
the
plaintiff
to
remit
withholding
taxes
in
respect
of
certain
interest
payments
made
by
the
plaintiff
to
the
Alberta
Gas
Ethylene
Company
Security
Corporation
(ASCO).
The
withholding
tax
was
assessed
pursuant
to
subsections
212(1)
and
215(6)
of
the
Income
Tax
Act:
212(1)
Every
non-resident
person
shall
pay
an
income
tax
of
25%
on
every
amount
that
a
person
resident
in
Canada
pays
or
credits,
or
is
deemed
by
Part
I
to
pay
or
credit,
to
him
as,
on
account
or
on
lieu
of
payment
of,
is
in
satisfaction
of
.
.
.
(b)
interest
.
.
.
215(6)
Where
a
person
has
failed
to
deduct
or
withhold
any
amount
as
required
by
this
section
from
an
amount
paid
or
credited
or
deemed
to
have
been
paid
or
credited
to
a
non-resident
person,
that
person
is
liable
to
pay
as
tax
under
this
Part
on
behalf
of
the
non-resident
person
the
whole
of
the
amount
that
should
have
been
deducted
or
withheld,
and
is
entitled
to
deduct
or
withhold
from
any
amount
paid
or
credited
by
him
to
the
non-resident
person
or
otherwise
recover
from
the
non-resident
person
any
amount
paid
by
him
as
tax
under
this
Part
on
behalf
thereof.
ASCO
is
a
non-resident
corporation
incorporated
in
the
state
of
Delaware.
Counsel
for
the
plaintiff
concedes
that
ASCO
does
not
carry
on
business
in
Canada
(in
the
sense
in
which
that
concept
is
used
in
income
tax
law).
The
funds
being
paid
by
the
plaintiff
to
ASCO,
from
which
the
defendant
requires
that
Part
XIII
taxes
be
withheld,
are
interest
payments
on
a
loan
from
ASCO
to
the
plaintiff.
ASCO
is
a
wholly
owned
subsidiary
of
the
plaintiff.
The
plaintiff,
an
Alberta
corporation,
is
a
wholly
owned
subsidiary
of
Nova
Corporation
of
Alberta.
In
the
mid
1970s,
Nova
decided
that
a
plant
should
be
constructed
near
Red
Deer
Alberta
to
manufacture
ethylene.
The
project
also
involved
the
construction
of
a
pipeline
for
the
distribution
of
the
gas.
The
plaintiff
(referred
to
in
the
evidence
as
AGEC)
was
created
in
order
to
construct
and
manage
this
project.
The
project
was
premised
on
an
agreement
by
Dow
Chemical
of
Canada
(Dow)
that
it
would
purchase
on
a
"cost
of
service
basis"
all
the
ethylene
which
would
be
produced
at
the
plant.
Under
that
agreement
Dow
was
to
pay
all
costs
of
constructing
the
plant,
all
operating
costs
(including
financing
charges)
as
well
as
a
small
percentage
profit
to
the
plaintiff.
Financing
was
needed
for
the
project.
The
initial
proposals
contemplated
that
such
financing
might
be
obtained,
by
way
of
ten-year
income
debentures,
from
a
consortium
of
Canada
banks.
These
included
the
Bank
of
Nova
Scotia,
Bank
of
Montreal,
Canadian
Imperial
Bank
of
Commerce,
Toronto-
Dominion
Bank
and
the
Royal
Bank
of
Canada.
However,
the
banks
insisted
on
a
variable
rate
interest;
Dow
and
the
plaintiff
sought
a
longer
term,
fixed
rate
loan
arrangement,
to
match
their
obligations
with
respect
to
the
project.
Financing
was
then
sought
in
the
United
States.
It
was
arranged
that
from
$325,000,000
to
$375,750,000
U.S.
would
be
borrowed
for
a
23-year
period
at
a
fixed
rate
of
interest.
In
the
course
of
arranging
for
that
loan,
the
plaintiff
was
advised
that
it
could
obtain
a
more
beneficial
rate
of
interest
(25
basis
points)
if
the
borrowing
was
done
by
a
Delaware
corporation
rather
than
by
the
plaintiff
directly.
The
U.S.
lenders
were
insurance
companies
and
restrictions
existed
with
respect
to
the
issuing
of
non-domestic
loans.
These
restrictions
resulted
in
a
preferential
interest
rate
being
available
for
domestic
corporations.
ASCO
was
incorporated,
therefore,
for
the
purpose
of
obtaining
the
loan
from
the
U.S.
lenders.
The
financing
arrangements
which
were
put
in
place
were
ones
under
which
ASCO:
borrowed
the
funds
from
the
U.S.
lenders;
issued
promissory
notes
therefor;
deposited
the
borrowed
funds
with
the
Canadian
banks
and
obtained
certificates
of
deposit
thereon.
The
loan
from
the
U.S.
lenders
to
ASCO
was
secured
by:
the
assets
and
undertaking
of
the
plaintiff
(e.g.,
a
mortgage
on
the
assets
of
the
Red
Deer
project
as
well
as
a
floating
charge
on
the
plaintiff's
undertaking);
an
assignment
by
the
plaintiff
of
certain
of
the
payments
Dow
was
obligated
to
make
under
the
ethylene
purchase
agreement;
a
performance
guarantee
by
The
Dow
Chemical
Company
(the
United
States
parent
corporation
which
wholly
owns
Dow
Chemical
of
Canada)
of
Dow's
obligations
under
the
ethylene
purchase
agreement;
a
direct
guarantee
of
the
loan
by
The
Dow
Chemical
Company.
The
financing
arrangements
provided
that
once
ASCO
had
deposited
the
borrowed
funds
with
the
Canadian
banks,
the
banks
would
in
turn
loan
funds
to
the
plaintiff,
by
way
of
a
purchase
of
income
debentures.
The
principal
security
for
this
loan
was
the
certificates
of
deposits,
held
by
ASCO
on
the
borrowed
U.S.
funds,
which
funds
had
been
deposited
in
the
banks.
The
arrangements
put
in
place,
by
the
concurrent
execution
of
the
various
documents,
were
such
that
the
interest
received
monthly
by
ASCO
from
the
Canadian
banks,
on
the
certificates
of
deposit,
mirrored
"to
a
penny"
the
payment
of
principal
and
interest
owed
to
the
U.S.
lenders
on
the
loan.
These
payments
were
made
directly
by
the
Canadian
banks
to
the
paying
agent
in
New
York.
They
did
not
go,
as
an
actual
transfer,
to
ASCO
although,
of
course,
the
receipt
of
the
interest
and
the
payments
to
the
U.S.
lenders
are
properly
recorded
on
ASCO's
financial
statements.
The
loan
to
ASCO
from
the
U.S.
lenders
had
a
23-year
term.
The
loan
from
the
Canadian
banks
to
the
plaintiff,
by
way
of
the
income
debentures,
had
a
ten-year
term.
A
loan
agreement
between
ASCO
and
the
plaintiff,
dated
September
15,
1977,
which
was
signed
as
part
of
the
financing
arrangements,
provided
that
upon
expiry
of
the
ten-year
term,
or
upon
earlier
prepayment
by
the
plaintiff
to
the
Canadian
banks
of
the
amounts
owing
with
respect
to
the
income
debentures,
the
banks
would
pay
to
ASCO
a
corresponding
amount
of
money
and
the
certificates
of
deposits
relating
thereto
would
be
redeemed.
ASCO,
in
turn,
was
to
loan
the
exact
same
sum
of
money
directly
to
the
plaintiff.
On
May
28,
1987
the
plaintiff
prepaid
the
income
debentures
in
the
amount
of
$165,244,369.86.
The
Canadian
banks
repaid
the
certificates
of
deposit
and
ASCO,
in
turn,
made
a
loan
of
that
amount
to
the
plaintiff
as
had
been
agreed.
The
September
15,
1977
loan
agreement
provided
for
payments
of
principal
and
interest
by
the
plaintiff
to
ASCO
which
mirrored
the
payments
of
principal
and
interest
payable
by
ASCO
on
the
debt
to
the
U.S.
lenders.
Again,
payments
on
the
loan
were
made
directly
to
the
paying
agent
in
New
York,
not
to
ASCO.
It
is
the
interest
components
of
these
payments
from
the
plaintiff
to
ASCO
which
the
defendant
asserts
are
taxable.
It
should
be
noted
that
when
the
financing
arrangements
were
first
put
in
place
on
September
15,
1977,
interest
payments
of
this
kind,
from
the
plaintiff
to
ASCO,
would
not
have
been
taxable.
The
exemption
provided
for
in
subparagraph
212(1)(b)(vii)
of
the
Income
Tax
Act
would
have
applied.
That
subparagraph
exempts
from
Part
XIII
taxes:
(vii)
interest
payable
by
a
corporation
resident
in
Canada
to
a
person
with
whom
that
corporation
is
dealing
at
arm's
length
on
any
obligation
where
the
evidence
of
indebtedness
was
issued
by
that
corporation
after
June
23,
1975
and
before
1989
if,
under
the
terms
of
the
obligation
or
any
agreement
relating
thereto,
the
corporation
may
not,
under
any
circumstances,
be
obliged
to
pay
more
than
25%
of,
.
.
.
the
principal
amount
of
the
obligation,
within
5
years
from
the
date
of
issue
of
that
single
debt
issue
or
that
obligation,
as
the
case
may
be
.
.
.
ASCO
in
September
of
1977
would
have
been
considered
a
resident
Canadian
corporation.
At
that
time
it
was
possible
for
a
corporation
to
have
dual
residences
and
ASCO
would
have
had
such.
As
of
May
1985,
however
subsection
250(5)
of
the
Income
Tax
Act
was
added.
It
provided:
Notwithstanding
subsection
(4),
for
the
purposes
of
this
Act,
a
corporation,
other
than
a
prescribed
corporation,
shall
be
deemed
to
be
not
resident
in
Canada
at
any
time
if,
by
virtue
of
an
agreement
or
convention
between
the
Government
of
Canada
and
the
government
of
another
country
that
has
the
force
of
law
in
Canada,
it
would
at
that
time,
if
it
had
income
from
a
source
outside
Canada,
not
be
subject
to
tax
on
that
income
under
Part
I.
This
subsection,
when
read
together
with
the
Canada-U.S.
Income
Tax
Convention
(1980),
Article
IV,
made
ASCO
a
resident
of
the
United
States
(its
country
of
incorporation)
and
not
a
resident
of
Canada
(the
country
of
its
management
and
control).
See:
D.T.
Dalsin,
Canada-U.S.
Dual
Resident
Corporation:
Tax
Planning
Restricted,
(1986),
34
Can.
Tax
J.
621
for
a
discussion
of
this
change
in
the
law.
Despite
the
fact
that
ASCO
is
no
longer
under
the
Act
a
resident
of
Canada,
counsel
for
the
plaintiff
argues
that
the
plaintiff
should
not
be
required
to
withhold
the
taxes
on
payment
of
the
interest
to
ASCO.
It
is
argued
that:
ASCO
has
no
existence
independent
of
the
plaintiff;
ASCO
is
"a
straw
man”,
“a
shell
company",
no
more
than
a
borrowing
arm
of
the
plaintiff.
Counsel
contends
that
one
should
“lift
the
corporate
veil”
and
look
at
the
substance
of
the
loan
transaction
in
question;
that
when
this
is
done,
it
becomes
obvious,
that
ASCO
is
doing
nothing
more
than
carrying
on
the
business
of
the
plaintiff.
Alternatively,
it
is
argued
that
ASCO
is
an
agent,
a
mere
nominee
of
the
plaintiff.
If
one
accepts
either
of
these
analyses
then,
it
is
argued,
the
payments
of
interest,
with
respect
to
the
loan,
should
be
treated
as
being
made
by
the
plaintiff,
not
to
ASCO,
but
to
the
U.S.
lenders
from
whom
the
funds
were
borrowed.
As
such,
the
interest
payments
would
be
exempt
from
withholding
tax
pursuant
to
subparagraph
212(1)(b)(vii)
of
the
Income
Tax
Act,
because
those
lenders
unlike
ASCO
are
arm's
length
entities.
The
facts
underlying
this
argument
are
as
follows:
ASCO
had
no
business
premises
of
its
own,
no
employees;
its
officers
and
directors
are
the
nominees
of
the
plaintiff
as
well
as
being
officers
and
directors
of
that
company;
ASCO
had
no
stationery,
no
telephone,
no
bank
account.
As
noted,
ASCO
did
not
and
does
not
itself
actually
deal
with
the
moneys
paid
to
it
as
interest
nor
with
the
amounts
remitted
to
the
U.S.
lenders.
These
amounts
were
remitted
directly,
first
by
the
Canadian
banks
and
then
by
the
plaintiff,
to
the
New
York
paying
agent.
ASCO
is
obligated
not
to
incur
any
indebtedness
other
than
that
permitted
by
the
September
15,
1977
agreements
(section
7.05
of
the
Deed
of
Trust
and
Mortgage,
the
parties
to
which
are
the
plaintiff,
ASCO,
the
National
Trust
Company
and
the
Morgan
Guarantee
Trust
Company
of
New
York
and
section
13.16
of
the
Income
Debenture
Purchase
Agreement
between
the
plaintiff
and
the
Canadian
banks).
ASCO
is
obligated
not
to
engage
in
any
business
activity
or
make
any
investments
other
than
those
required
under
the
September
1977
financing
documents
(section
7.05
of
the
Deed
of
Trust,
supra,
and
section
16.9
of
the
Income
Debenture
Purchase
Agreement,
supra).
The
scheme
is
set
up
so
that
ASCO
cannot
make
a
net
profit.
As
counsel
stated:
“its
financial
statements
are
a
wash”.
ASCO
has
no
assets
other
than
the
certificates
of
deposits
and
a
minimal
amount
of
what
might
be
called
"petty
cash”.
Counsel
for
the
plaintiff
cites
in
support
of
his
argument:
Smith,
Stone
and
Knight,
Ltd.
v.
Lord
Mayor,
Aldermen
and
Citizens
of
the
City
of
Birmingham,
[1939]
4
All
E.R.
116
(K.B.);
City
of
Toronto
v.
Famous
Players
Canadian
Corporation
Ltd.,
[1936]
S.C.R.
141
affirming
[1935]
3
D.L.R.
327
(O.C.A.);
Aluminum
Company
of
Canada
Limited
v.
Corporation
of
the
City
of
Toronto,
[1944]
S.C.R.
267;
[1944]
C.T.C.
155;
Dominion
Bridge
Company
Limited
v.
The
Queen,
[1975]
C.T.C
263;
75
D.T.C.
5150
(F.C.T.D.);
affirmed
[1977]
C.T.C.
554;
77
D.T.C.
5367;
The
Queen
v.
Mer
Ban
Capital
Corporation
Limited
et
al.,
[1985]
C.T.C.
1;
85
D.T.C.
5014
(F.C.T.D.).
The
Smith
case,
cited
by
counsel
for
the
plaintiff,
sets
out
six
criteria
which
have
been
used
in
cases
when
determining
whether
to
disregard
the
separate
legal
entity
of
a
subsidiary
corporation
and
depart
from
the
principle
set
out
in
Salomon
v.
Salomon
&
Co.,
Salomon
&
Co.
v.
Salomon,
[1897]
A.C.
22
(H.L.).
Those
six
criteria
are:
whether
the
profits
of
the
subsidiary
are
treated
as
the
profits
of
the
parent;
whether
the
persons
conducting
the
business
of
the
subsidiary
were
appointed
by
the
parent
company;
whether
the
parent
was
the
head
and
brains
of
the
subsidiary;
whether
the
parent
governed
the
adventure
(of
the
subsidiary);
whether
the
subsidiary
made
its
profits
by
its
own
skill
and
direction,
or
by
that
of
its
parent;
whether
the
parent
was
in
effectual
and
constant
control
of
the
subsidiary.
(There
is
obviously
some
redundancy
in
this
list.)
While
not
a
tax
case,
the
Smith
case
purported
to
draw
the
six
criteria
from
revenue
cases.
I
have
difficulty
with
counsel's
argument.
As
I
read
the
jurisprudence,
it
does
not
establish
that
it
is
sufficient
to
consider
the
six
criteria
and
when
they
are
all
met
(as
they
are
in
the
present
case)
to
ignore
the
separate
legal
existence
of
the
subsidiary
company.
One
has
to
ask
for
what
purpose
and
in
what
context
is
the
subsidiary
being
ignored.
What
is
more,
I
do
not
intepret
the
jurisprudence
as
ignoring
the
existence
of
subsidiary
corporations
per
se.
Rather,
it
seems
to
me
that
the
jurisprudence
proceeds
on
the
basis
that
in
certain
circumstances,
consequences
will
be
drawn
despite
the
legal
existence
of
separate
subsidiary
corporations.
Thus,
in
cases
where
business
expenses
or
business
losses
are
being
determined,
it
has
been
held
that
despite
the
existence
of
a
separate
subsidiary
corporation,
losses
incurred
by
the
subsidiary
may,
in
certain
circumstances,
properly
be
characterized
as
losses
of
the
parent.
The
Smith
case
dealt
with
a
claim
to
compensation
for
expropriated
property.
The
business
in
question
was
run
by
the
parent
although
the
business
assets
(including
a
tenancy
of
the
premises
being
expropriated)
technically
belonged
to
the
subsidiary.
On
the
facts
of
that
case
it
was
held
that
the
parent
could
appropriately
claim
compensation
for
the
losses
which
would
arise
as
a
result
of
the
expropriation
of
the
business
because
the
subsidiary,
to
the
extent
that
it
had
any
independent
legal
existence
at
all,
was
the
agent
of
the
parent.
The
Mer
Ban
case
dealt
with
the
proper
characterization
of
business
losses.
The
parent
company
claimed
as
a
business
expense
an
amount
of
money
which
it
had
paid
to
honour
a
guarantee
it
had
given
with
respect
to
a
bank
loan
made
to
a
corporation
twice
removed
in
the
corporate
chain
from
it.
Mr.
Justice
Joyal
looked
at
the
associated
group
of
companies
in
question
and
concluded
that,
on
the
facts,
the
whole
enterprise
was
the
parents'.
He
concluded
that
in
reality
the
parent
was
primarily
liable
for
the
debt
owed
regardless
of
the
fact
that
it
had
been
described
as
a
guarantor
and
regardless
of
the
legal
interposition
of
two
corporate
entities.
In
the
Dominion
Bridge
case,
Mr.
Justice
Décary
refused
to
allow
a
taxpayer
to
claim
certain
expenses
relating
to
a
subsidiary
because
he
found
the
subsidiary
to
be
a
sham
(decision
affirmed
by
the
Federal
Court
of
Appeal,
supra).
Mr.
Justice
Décary
determined
that
the
subsidiary
in
question
had
been
created
offshore
(Bahama
Islands)
to
resell
offshore
steel
to
the
Canadian
parent
at
95
per
cent
of
the
domestic
(i.e.,
North
American)
price,
thereby
permitting
the
parent
to
effect
an
overall
saving
in
costs
while
leaving
profits
in
the
subsidiary
which
could
then
be
repatriated
tax
free
by
way
of
dividends.
The
Minister
assessed
the
profits
of
the
subsidiary
as
being
those
of
the
parent.
The
other
two
cases
cited
by
counsel
for
the
plaintiff,
the
Famous
Players
case
and
the
Aluminum
Company
case,
deal
with
the
determination
of
income
for
the
purpose
of
assessing
municipal
business
taxes.
I
do
not
think
they
add
anything
to
the
analysis
required
in
this
case.
The
facts
before
me
do
not
involve
entitlement
to
compensation
on
expropriation,
the
proper
characterization
of
business
profits,
business
expenses
or
business
losses
for
tax
purposes.
More
importantly
however,
in
the
jurisprudence
cited
the
focus
is
on
the
characterization
of
the
losses,
expenses
or
profits
of
the
parent
as
such,
not
on
the
existence
of
the
subsidiary
corporation
per
se.
The
argument
put
to
me,
in
this
case,
is
qualitatively
different.
It
is
the
very
existence
of
the
corporation
which
I
am
being
asked
to
ignore.
I
am
not
being
asked
to
“lift
the
corporate"
veil,
I
am
being
asked
to
deny
that
it
exists.
I
do
not
think
the
present
fact
situation
falls
within
the
jurisprudence
cited.
Perhaps
my
difficulty
in
accepting
counsel's
argument
can
best
be
illustrated
by
reference
to
his
agency
argument.
Indeed,
I
note
that
Welling,
Corporate
Law
in
Canada
(1984)
at
139-40,
is
of
the
opinion
that
all
"corporate
veil”
cases
are
best
analyzed
in
terms
of
agency
or
partnership
analyses:
It
seems
clear
that
nearly
all
conclusions
reached
in
cases
where
judges
have
"pierced
the
corporate
veil”
could
probably
have
been
reached
through
an
agency,
partnership
or
similarly
legitimate
analysis.
Had
these
analyses
been
used
consistently
over
the
past
50
years,
we
should
now
have
some
clear
precedents
establishing
the
dividing
line
between
Salomon's
case,
whose
conclusion
and
reasoning
are
now
irrefutable,
and
cases
like
Wallersteiner
v.
Moir
[[1974]
1
W.L.R.
991
(C.A.)]
and
D.H.N.
Food
Distributors
Ltd.
v.
Tower
Hamlets
London
Borough
Council;
Bronze
Investments
v.
Same
[[1976]
1
W.L.R.
852
(C.A.)],
whose
raw
conclusions
make
sense,
but
whose
reasoning
make
distinguishing
Salomon
a
difficult
proposition.
In
any
event,
an
agent
cannot
accomplish
on
behalf
of
a
principal
that
which
the
principal
itself
could
not
legally
accomplish:
Denison
Mines
Limited
v.
M.N.R.,
[1971]
F.C.
295;
[1971]
C.T.C.
640,
affirmed
[1972]
F.C.
1324;
[1972]
C.T.C.
521
(F.C.A.).
The
plaintiff
itself
could
not
have
obtained
the
loan
which
ASCO
obtained
from
the
U.S.
lenders.
The
plaintiff
would
have
had
to
pay
a
higher
interest
rate.
In
such
circumstances
ASCO
cannot
be
said
to
be
merely
the
agent
of
the
plaintiff
vis-à-vis
the
U.S.
lenders.
For
the
same
reason
ASCO's
business
vis-à-vis
the
U.S.
lenders
cannot
be
said
to
be
merely
the
business
of
the
plaintiff.
Accordingly,
I
think
it
would
be
incorrect
to
ignore
the
existence
of
ASCO
for
Part
XIII
taxes
and
find
as
a
fact
that
the
loan
in
question
was
between
the
plaintiff
and
the
U.S.
lenders
directly.
Counsel
for
the
defendant
argues
that
ASCO,
while
a
passive
company,
is
not
a
sham;
that
the
plaintiff
having
set
up
the
corporation
cannot
now
be
allowed
to
treat
it
as
a
ghost
or
as
non-existent
(see
The
Queen
v.
Curd's
Products
Company
Limited,
[1985]
2
C.T.C.
85
(F.C.A.)
at
94;
85
D.T.C.
5314
at
5321).
Counsel
argues
that
accepting
the
plaintiff's
argument
with
respect
to
the
lifting
of
the
corporate
veil
would
create
a
loophole
in
Part
XIII
of
the
Income
Tax
Act.
The
plaintiff's
argument
that
ASCO
is
“a
sham",
cannot
succeed.
In
the
first
place
ASCO
was
not
constructed
to
create
a
false
impression.
It,
therefore,
would
not
fall
within
the
concept
of
sham
as
set
out
in
Stubart
Investments
Limited
v.
The
Queen,
[1984]
1S.C.R.
536;
[1984]
C.T.C.
294.
Secondly,
the
decision
of
the
Federal
Court
of
Appeal
in
Massey
Ferguson
Limited
v.
The
Queen,
[1977]
1
F.C.
760;
[1977]
C.T.C.
6
is
directly
on
point.
At
pages
771-2
(C.T.C.
16),
Mr.
Justice
Urie
in
writing
for
the
Court
said:
.
.
.
The
condition
necessary
to
find
a
transaction
to
be
a
sham,
namely
not
in
fact
to
have
created
the
legal
rights
and
obligations
which
appear
to
have
been
created,
thus
was
not
present,
with
the
result
that
the
learned
Trial
Judge
erred,
in
my
view,
in
finding
that
it
was
a
sham.
The
legal
rights
and
obligations
having
been
created
and
the
bona
tides
of
Perkins
need
for
the
money
advanced
not
having
been
challenged
the
loan
to
Verity
by
the
Appellant
took
it
outside
the
purview
of
section
19(1).
As
I
see
it,
reading
this
conclusion
is
not
inconsistent
with
the
decision
of
this
Court
in
Minister
of
National
Revenue
v.
Anthony
Thomas
Leon
[76
D.T.C.
6299],
Court
No.
A-232-74.
In
that
case
it
was
held
that
there
was
no
bona
fide
business
purpose,
merely
a
tax
purpose
for
the
interposition
of
the
management
company
In
the
present
case,
not
only
was
there
no
deception
or
false
impression
sought
to
be
created
but
ASCO
was
set
up
for
and
did
actually
serve
a
valid
business
purpose:
to
obtain
a
lower
rate
of
interest
from
the
U.S.
lenders.
ASCO
is
not
a
sham.
Nor
can
it
be
said
to
be
merely
the
agent
of
the
plaintiff
in
so
far
as
the
loan
transaction
is
concerned.
For
the
reasons
given
the
plaintiff's
claim
is
dismissed.
The
defendant
shall
have
her
costs
of
the
action.
Claim
dismissed.