Mahoney,
J.:—This
is
an
appeal
and
cross
appeal
from
a
decision
of
the
Trial
Division
dealing
with
the
appellant's
income
tax
assessments
for
its
taxation
years
1971
to
1974
inclusive.
Put
briefly,
the
appellant,
an
extruder
of
aluminum,
purchased
its
requirements
of
aluminum
billet
from
an
associated
Bermuda
corporation.
It
paid
that
corporation
the
price
that
had
been
paid
the
primary
supplier,
Alcan.
The
Bermuda
corporation
immediately
received
from
Alcan
a
percentage
discount
which
it
did
not
entirely
pass
on
to
the
appellant.
In
addition,
the
Bermuda
corporation
was
paid
by
Alcan
in
each
of
the
years
in
issue
a
“special
credit"
of
$100,000
(U.S.)
which
was
not
subject
of
the
assessments
in
issue.
In
a
reported
judgment,
[1986]
1
C.T.C.
219;
86
D.T.C.
6039,
the
learned
trial
judge
held
that
the
appellant’s
taxable
income
had
been
artificially
reduced
to
the
extent
of
80
per
cent
of
the
discount
retained
in
Bermuda
and,
to
that
extent,
sustained
the
corporation
income
tax
assessments
in
issue.
She
also
held
that
non-resident
tax
was
exigible
in
respect
of
the
benefit
conferred
on
the
Bermuda
affiliate
and,
to
that
extent,
sustained
the
withholding
tax
assessments
in
issue.
Further,
she
deprived
the
respondent
of
costs
because
"[t]he
defendant's
handling
of
its
case
at
trial
was
confused
and
disorganized".
The
gist
of
the
appeal
is
that
the
learned
trial
judge
made
such
numerous
egregious
errors
in
her
findings
of
fact
as
to
be
tantamount
to
error
in
law,
that
this
Court
ought
to
conclude
that
the
evidence
admits
only
of
the
conclusion
that
the
price
paid
the
Bermuda
affiliate
was
the
price
that
would
have
been
established
at
arm's
length
and
that,
therefore,
the
assessments
ought
entirely
to
be
set
aside.
In
addition
to
attacking
the
refusal
of
costs,
the
cross
appeal
asserts
error
of
law
in
the
determination
of
what
a
reasonable
arm's
length
price
would
have
been
and
in
the
failure
to
take
the
annual
special
credit
into
account.
The
learned
trial
judge
determined
that
the
arrangements
in
issue
were
not
a
sham
and
that
subsection
56(2)
of
the
Income
Tax
Act,
subsection
16(1)
as
the
Act
stood
in
1971,
was
not
applicable
in
the
circumstances.
56(2)
A
payment
or
transfer
of
property
made
pursuant
to
the
direction
of,
or
with
the
concurrence
of,
a
taxpayer
to
some
other
person
for
the
benefit
of
the
taxpayer
or
as
a
benefit
that
the
taxpayer
desired
to
have
conferred
on
the
other
person
shall
be
included
in
computing
the
taxpayer's
income
to
the
extent
that
it
would
be
if
the
payment
or
transfer
had
been
made
to
him.
Neither
determination
was
questioned
in
this
proceeding
but
I
should
not
wish
silence
to
be
taken
as
necessarily
acquiescence
in
the
latter.
The
Undisputed
Facts
Numerous
corporate
entities,
ownership
and
name
changes
and
reorganizations
over
time,
described
by
the
learned
trial
judge,
make
for
a
complicated
story
and,
in
my
view,
are
entirely
irrelevant
to
the
issues
here.
I
shall,
therefore,
simply
refer
to
the
United
Kingdom
parent
of
both
the
appellant
and
the
Bermuda
corporation
as
“Pillar”,
the
Bermuda
company
being
“Pillar
International”.
Likewise,
I
shall
refer
to
various
members
of
the
Alcan
Aluminium
Limited
family
of
companies
by
the
generic
term
“Alcan”.
At
all
material
times,
the
appellant
was
a
wholly
owned
subsidiary
of
Indal
Limited,
a
company
whose
shares
were
publicly
traded
on
Canadian
stock
exchanges.
Fifty-eight
per
cent
of
the
shares
of
Indal
Limited
were
owned
by
successive
holding
companies
themselves
wholly
owned
by
Pillar.
Pillar
also
had
interests
in
aluminum
extruding
companies
in
other
countries,
notably
the
United
Kingdom
and
the
Federal
Republic
of
Germany.
In
1965,
Pillar
and
Alcan
entered
into
a
contract,
Ex.
P-1(114),
whereby
Pillar
agreed
that
its
subsidiaries
throughout
the
world
would
buy
not
less
than
50
per
cent
of
their
aluminum
billet
requirements
from
Alcan
if
there
was
"a
native
manufacturer"
in
the
country.
A
native
manufacturer
was
defined
as
one
not
controlled
by
non-residents
of
the
country.
For
Canada,
the
United
Kingdom
and
countries
without
a
native
manufacturer,
the
commitment
was
at
least
80
per
cent.
In
fact,
the
appellant
in
Canada
invariably
bought
its
entire
requirement
from
Alcan.
Actual
purchase
prices
were
subject
of
periodic
negotiation.
A
so-called
"competition
clause"
gave
Pillar
the
right
to
buy
elsewhere
if,
all
else
being
equal,
a
price
2
per
cent
lower
than
that
offered
by
Alcan
was
available
and
if
Alcan
refused
to
meet
that
lower
price.
The
agreement
also
provided
that
Alcan
would
annually
pay
Pillar,
in
sterling
in
London,
an
amount
equal
to
1
/2
per
cent
of
the
value
of
purchases
from
Alcan
by
all
its
subsidiaries
during
the
previous
year.
By
letter
agreement
dated
July
24,
1967,
Ex.
P-1
(115),
the
minimum
commitments
of
Pillar’s
Canadian,
United
Kingdom
and
German
subsidiaries
was
increased
to
100
per
cent.
The
letter
confirmed
in
vague,
but
evidently
satisfactory,
terms
Pillar’s
entitlement
to
additional
discounts
of
3
/2
per
cent
in
respect
of
the
purchases
by
those
subsidiaries.
After
July
1967,
Pillar
was
entitled
to
receive
from
Alcan,
in
London
in
sterling,
5
per
cent
of
the
value
of
the
appellant's
purchases
of
aluminum
billet.
In
mid-1969,
Pillar
acquired
a
dormant
Bermuda
corporation,
changed
its
name
to
Pillar
International
Services
Limited,
and
activated
it.
As
of
January
1,
1970,
the
1965
agreement
as
amended
was
replaced
by
an
agreement
between
Alcan
and
Pillar
International,
Ex.
P-1
(117).
It
bound
Alcan
to
sell
to
Pillar
International
stipulated
maximum
quantities
and
Pillar
International
to
buy
from
Alcan
stipulated
minimum
quantities
of
aluminum
billet
for
each
of
Canada,
the
United
Kingdom
and
Germany.
The
competition
clause
factor
was
reduced
to
1
per
cent.
The
prices
were
to
be
"Alcan's
published
list
prices
effectively
being
charged
to
all
other
customers
for
such
material
in
each
of
the
three
respective
countries".
It
provided
for
Alcan
to
repurchase
scrap
on
what
the
learned
trial
judge
termed
"a
no
profit
no
loss
basis”
and
also
With
respect
to
the
purchase
of
billet
under
these
new
arrangements
Alcan
will
pay
to
Pillar
International
a
minimum
discount
on
the
"gross"
value
of
such
purchases
of:
Canada
|
10%
|
U.K.
|
9%
|
Germany
|
8%
|
This
minimum
discount
will
be
paid
to
Pillar
International
monthly
contemporaneously
with
payment
for
the
metal
in
respect
of
which
the
discount
payment
is
due,
and
will
be
paid
to
Pillar
International
in
Bermuda
partly
in
Canadian
dollars,
sterling
and
Deutsche
marks
as
Pillar
International
may
direct
with
reasonable
notice
from
time
to
time.
The
minimum
discount
for
Canada
was
renegotiated
from
time
to
time.
During
the
years
in
issue,
it
ranged
between
3
per
cent
and
17.3
per
cent,
whereof
Pillar
International
retained
between
2.48
per
cent
and
5.34
per
cent,
Ex.
P-1
(109).
Between
40
per
cent
and
50
per
cent
of
the
billet
purchased
by
Pillar
International
was
resold
to
the
appellant.
Pillar
International
received
discounts
aggregating
$6,258,313
in
respect
of
billet
sales
to
the
appellant
in
the
latter’s
taxation
years
1971
to
1974
inclusive.
It
remitted
a
total
of
$3,614,004
to
the
appellant
and
retained
$2,644,309:
$653,370,
$599,763,
$452,187
and
$938,989
respectively
in
those
years.
The
corporation
tax
assessments
in
issue
reflect
those
amounts
as
do
the
withholding
tax
assessments
at
an
agreed
rate
of
10
per
cent
without
penalty
or
interest.
During
1970,
Pillar
International
was
administered
by
the
Bermuda
office
of
an
international
firm
of
chartered
accountants.
In
January
1971,
it
hired
its
first
full-time
employee
as
managing
director.
He
rented
1500
square
feet
of
office
space
and
engaged
a
secretary.
The
manner
in
which
the
arrangement
worked,
in
so
far
as
the
appellant
was
concerned,
was
described
as
follows
by
the
learned
trial
judge,
C.T.C.
221;
D.T.C.
6040;
When
ordering
billet,
which
occurred
on
a
weekly
basis,
the
plaintiff
sent
a
purchase
order
to
Pillar
International
in
Bermuda,
sending
a
copy
at
the
same
time
to
Alcan
Ingot.
On
receipt
of
the
purchase
order,
Pillar
International
masked
out
the
plaintiff's
letterhead,
replacing
it
with
its
own
(keeping
the
original
invoice
number),
and
forwarded
that
order
to
Alcan
Ingot.
Alcan
Ingot
acted
on
receipt
of
the
copy
which
had
been
received
from
the
plaintiff
but
the
official
order
was
the
one
received
from
Pillar
International.
Once
the
billet
had
been
delivered
by
Alcan
Ingot
to
the
plaintiff,
Alcan
Ingot
invoiced
Pillar
International
at
the
Alcan
list
price
and
Pillar
International
invoiced
the
plaintiff
at
the
same
price.
When
payment
was
subsequently
made,
on
what
was
called
settlement
day,
the
plaintiff
credited
Pillar
International’s
Bermuda
bank
with
the
invoiced
price,
Pillar
International
credited
Alcan
Ingot's
Montreal
bank
with
the
identical
sum
and
Alcan
Aluminum
Limited
of
Canada
paid
to
Pillar
Internationales
Bermuda
bank
(Butterfield)
which
had
an
account
in
a
Canadian
bank
in
Montreal,
a
discount
attributable
to
the
purchase
price.
This
discount
was
paid
partly
in
U.S.
dollars
and
partly
in
Canadian
dollars.
The
U.S.
dollars
were
forwarded
to
Bermuda
to
the
credit
of
Pillar
International’s
bank
account
there;
the
Canadian
dollars
were
forwarded
to
the
credit
of
the
plaintiff's
Canadian
bank
in
Toronto.
The
payment
by
the
plaintiff
to
Pillar
International,
by
Pillar
International
to
Alcan,
and
the
payment
of
the
related
discounts
all
took
place
simultaneously
on
the
same
day,
through
electronic
banking
facilities,
in
accordance
with
standing
instructions
filed
with
the
respective
banks.
A
similar
arrangement
(in
reverse)
prevailed
with
respect
to
scrap
returns.
The
learned
trial
judge
found,
C.T.C.
223;
D.T.C.
6042,
and
the
appellant
was
frank
in
admitting
that
The
evidence
is
clear
that
one
motivation,
at
least,
for
the
establishment
of
the
Bermuda
company
was
to
allow
Pillar
Holdings
(RTZ-Pillar)
to
establish
a
pool
of
capital
offshore
free
from
United
Kingdom
income
tax
and
exchange
controls.
The
agreement
between
Alcan
and
Pillar
International,
Ex.
P-1(117),
was
originally
expressed
to
run
to
the
end
of
1972.
By
a
further
letter
agreement,
dated
August
10,
1970,
Ex.
P-1(118),
in
consideration
of
its
extension
to
December
31,
1974,
and
of
increased
purchase
commitments,
Alcan
agreed,
inter
alia,
that
Pillar
International
will
receive
from
Alcan
Aluminum
a
special
credit
of
U.S.
$120,000
in
1970.
Special
credit
of
U.S.
$190,000
in
each
of
the
four
years
1971/74.
The
payment
should,
in
each
case,
be
made
on
the
last
day
of
the
calendar
year
to
which
the
particular
credit
relates.
It
is
the
$100,000
(U.S.)
paid
in
each
of
the
taxation
years
in
issue,
no
part
of
which
was
included
in
the
reassessments,
that
is
germane
to
the
cross
appeal.
Alcan
had
acquired
a
20
per
cent
interest
in
the
appellant
in
1962.
Pillar
acquired
an
80
per
cent
interest
in
1964
and
bought
out
Alcan
in
March
1968.
That
said,
there
is
no
dispute
that
Alcan,
at
all
material
times,
dealt
at
arm's
length
with
the
Pillar
group.
De
Facto
Arm's
Length
Transactions
The
appellant's
principal
position
was
that
the
price
paid
to
Pillar
International
for
billet
was,
in
fact,
the
price
that
would
have
been
paid
had
they
dealt
at
arm's
length.
The
learned
trial
judge
concluded
otherwise.
She
defined
the
approach,
C.T.C.
226;
D.T.C.
6043
ff.,
as
follows:
Considerable
evidence
was
led
to
try
and
establish
that
despite
Pillar
Holdings’
(RTZ-Pillar’s)
control
of
both
Indalex
and
Pillar
International,
the
prices
paid
by
Indalex
to
Pillar
for
aluminum
billet
were
really
the
result
of
arm's
length
type
negotiations.
Appellant's
counsel
acknowledged
that
that
was,
indeed,
its
thesis.
The
learned
trial
judge
concluded,
in
the
course
of
her
review
of
the
evidence,
While
I
accept
all
these
statements
as
true,
they
must
be
put
in
context.
In
context
it
is
simply
not
credible
to
conclude
that
anyone
other
than
RTZ-Pillar
(in
the
persons
of
Messrs.
Fredjohn
(later
Greenwood)
and
Paterson)
determined
the
price
to
be
paid
by
Indalex
to
Pillar
International.
That
conclusion
was
characterized
as
a
major
error
since,
it
was
said,
all
of
the
evidence
demonstrated
hard
bargaining
including
the
uncontradicted,
unimpugned
testimony
of
three
witnesses
who
had,
at
the
time
of
the
trial,
severed
all
connections
with
the
Pillar
group.
Counsel's
indignation
that
the
word
of
these
witnesses
was
not
accepted
at
face
value
seemed
to
me
not
entirely
unrelated
to
the
indignation
that
impelled
him
to
make
so
much
of
the
outside
directors
of
the
appellant's
immediate
parent.
It
is,
therefore,
perhaps
necessary
to
point
out
that
a
trial
judge
does
not
err
in
viewing
the
uncontradicted
evidence
of
respectable
participants
in
a
non-arm's
length
arrangement
having
income
tax
consequences
with
some
scepticism.
In
the
usual
absence
of
direct
contradictory
evidence,
it
is
entirely
proper
to
measure
the
outcome
of
a
non-arm's
length
transaction
against
evidence,
expert
or
otherwise,
as
to
the
value,
in
the
market
place,
of
that
outcome.
There
was
certainly
evidence
that,
on
occasion,
the
appellant
did
question
the
price
Pillar
International
had
agreed
to
pay
Alcan,
both
in
terms
of
whether
the
list
price
had,
in
fact,
been
increased
and
of
the
gross
discount
allowed
by
Alcan,
e.g.
Ex.
P-1(39);
(53)
and
(61);
Transcript,
Vol.
2,
s.
366;
Vol.
3.
p.
501;
Vol.
4,
p.
572;
Vol.
5,
p.
783
ff.
The
only
evidence
to
which
we
were
directed
that
suggests
that
Pillar
International's
discount
retention
was
subject
of
hard
bargaining
was
that
of
W.E.
Stracey,
who
had
not
severed
his
connection
with
the
group,
who
said,
for
example,
at
Transcript,
Vol.
2.
p.
269,
lines
27
to
30,
under
cross-examination,
Whether
you
use
the
words
bargain,
talk
or
negotiate
I
am
telling
you
under
oath
that
I
did
my
very
best
at
all
times
to
get
the
best
possible
price
I
could
from
Pillar
International.
The
learned
trial
judge's
doubts
as
to
Stracey's
credibility,
C.T.C.
226;
D.T.C.
6044;
were
peculiarly
within
her
competence
to
entertain.
She
said,
inter
alia,
Mr.
Stracey's
evidence
was
often
very
evasive.
On
more
than
one
occasion
he
refused
to
answer
simple
questions
to
which
he
would
obviously
know
the
answer.
In
my
opinion,
the
learned
trial
judge
did
not
err
in
rejecting
the
appellant's
contention
that
the
price
paid
for
aluminum
billet
by
the
appellant
to
Pillar
International
was
the
price
that
would
have
been
established
by
arm's
length
negotiations.
Neither
did
she
err
in
her
conclusion,
C.T.C.
230;
D.T.C.
6046;
that
.
.
.
it
is
clear
that
the
arrangements
existing
in
the
present
case
had
a
great
deal
of
artificiality
about
them
and
I
would
hold
that
the
purchasing
by
Indalex
from
Pillar
International
and
by
Pillar
International
from
Alcan
Ingot
were
artificial
transactions.
Subsection
137(1)
of
the
Income
Tax
Act,
as
it
applied
to
the
1971
taxation
year,
and
subsection
245(1),
as
the
Act
applied
to
the
subsequent
years,
were
identical.
In
computing
income
for
the
purposes
of
this
Act,
no
deduction
may
be
made
in
respect
of
a
disbursement
or
expense
made
or
incurred
in
respect
of
a
transaction
or
operation
that,
if
allowed,
would
unduly
or
artificially
reduce
the
income.
The
learned
trial
judge,
correctly,
held
that
provision
to
apply
and
that
the
remaining
issue
was
whether
the
artificial
transactions
had
unduly
reduced
the
appellant's
income.
At
this
point,
the
issue
on
the
appeal
and
the
principal
issue
on
the
cross
appeal
merge.
Undue
Reduction
of
Income
In
considering
whether
the
arrangement
had
unduly
reduced
the
appellant's
income,
the
learned
trial
judge
considered
that
section
67,
paragraph
69(1)(a)
and
subsection
69(2)
of
the
Act,
as
they
stood
in
1972
through
1974,
applied.
These
had
their
counterparts
in
subsections
12(2),
17(1)
and
17(3)
of
the
earlier
legislation.
There
are
minor
differences.
Nothing
turns
on
them.
There
is
no
reason
to
recite
both.
67.
In
computing
income,
no
deduction
shall
be
made
in
respect
of
an
outlay
or
expense
in
respect
of
which
any
amount
is
otherwise
deductible
under
this
Act,
except
to
the
extent
that
the
outlay
or
expense
was
reasonable
in
the
circumstances.
69(1)
Except
as
expressly
otherwise
provided
in
this
Act,
(a)
where
a
taxpayer
has
acquired
anything
from
a
person
with
whom
he
was
not
dealing
at
arm's
length
at
an
amount
in
excess
of
the
fair
market
value
thereof
at
the
time
he
so
acquired
it,
he
shall
be
deemed
to
have
acquired
it
at
that
fair
market
value;
(2)
Where
a
taxpayer
carrying
on
business
in
Canada
has
paid
or
agreed
to
pay,
to
a
non-resident
person
with
whom
he
was
not
dealing
at
arm's
length
as
price,
rental,
royalty
or
other
payment
for
or
for
the
use
or
reproduction
of
any
property,
or
as
consideration
for
the
carriage
of
goods
or
passengers
or
for
other
services,
an
amount
greater
than
the
amount
(in
this
subsection
referred
to
as
"the
reasonable
amount")
that
would
have
been
reasonable
in
the
circumstances
if
the
nonresident
person
and
the
taxpayer
had
been
dealing
at
arm's
length,
the
reasonable
amount
shall,
for
the
purpose
of
computing
the
taxpayer's
income
from
the
business,
be
deemed
to
have
been
the
amount
that
was
paid
or
is
payable
therefor.
The
learned
trial
judge
correctly
determined
that
the
issues
whether,
and,
if
so,
to
what
extent
the
appellant's
income
had
been
unduly
reduced
turned
on
the
reasonableness
of
the
price
the
appellant
paid
Pillar
International
for
billet.
She
also,
correctly
on
the
evidence,
C.T.C.
230
ff.;
D.T.C.
6047,
found
that
the
market
price
of
billet
in
North
America
depended
on
North
American
conditions
and,
C.T.C.
232;
D.T.C.
p.
6048,
that
the
best
arm's
length
comparable
prices
were
those
established
from
time
to
time
between
Alcan
and
Pillar
International
for
billet
delivered
to
the
appellant.
The
leaned
trial
judge
then
considered
the
adjustments
that
ought
to
be
made
to
that
price
as
a
result
of
the
intervention
of
Pillar
International.
She
rejected
the
argument
that
the
discount
retention
was
somehow
legitimized
and
validated
because
it
was
a
mere
continuation
of
the
pre-1970
arrangement.
She
also
refused
to
find
that
any
part
of
the
retention
had
been
established
to
be
a
fair
return
on
capital
employed
by
Pillar
International
in
benefitting
the
appellant.
I
certainly
cannot
disagree
with
those
conclusions.
The
legitimacy
of
the
pre-1970
arrangement
from
the
point
of
view
of
Canadian
income
tax
law
had
not,
on
this
record,
been
established.
The
manner
in
which
payments
were
in
fact
handled
required
the
commitment
of
little,
if
any,
capital
by
Pillar
International
for
the
appellant's
account.
The
argument
accepted,
upon
which
the
learned
trial
judge
concluded
that
a
one
per
cent
differential
was
justified,
was
based
on
the
conclusion
that
Pillar
International's
global
purchasing
power
permitted
it
to
obtain
from
Alcan
a
price
that
much
better
than
the
appellant
could
have
obtained
in
direct
negotiation
with
Alcan.
The
appellant
had
argued
that
there
were
several
ways
in
which
the
appellant
derived
economic
benefit
from
its
arrangement
with
Pillar
International,
which
she
described,
at
C.T.C.
235
ff.;
D.T.C.
6050:
.
.
.
These
were
enumerated
as
the
possibility
of
metal
switches
with
other
members
of
the
Pillar
extruder
group
(if
Indalex
should
under-estimate
or
over-estimate
its
billet
requirements);
the
extension
of
the
billet
purchase
contracts
by
Alcan
in
December
4,
1973
in
tight
market
conditions;
refusal
in
1974
to
allow
Alcan
to
call
force
majeure
because
of
a
strike
at
Arvida,
Quebec
on
the
ground
that
the
contract
for
billet
was
with
Alcan
Aluminum
Ltd.
and
not
with
Alcan
Aluminum
of
Canada
Ltd;
discount
payments
on
billet
upcharges
as
well
as
on
the
base
metal
price;
90
days
credit
terms,
instead
of
the
30
days
prevailing
in
the
North
American
market;
excellent
scrap
return
terms;
simultaneous
settlement
of
invoice
payments
and
discounts;
regular
efforts
by
Pillar
to
prevent
or
defer
price
increases
or
increases
in
scrap
tolling
charge
or
reduction
in
the
credit
terms
(see
P-1-105).
The
learned
trial
judge
rejected
the
notion
that
the
appellant
derived
any
significant
value
from
"the
first
three
alleged
benefits"
(metal
switches;
continuation
of
supply
and
no
force
majeure).
As
to
the
others
she
went
on
:
What
then
of
the
remaining
advantages
(discount
terms;
credit
terms;
scrap
return
terms;
times
of
payment).
In
my
view
in
order
to
conclude
as
counsel
suggests,
I
have
to
find:
(1)
that
these
advantages
or
ones
of
an
economic
equivalent
nature
are
ones
which
Indalex
could
not
have
obtained
for
itself
without
the
interposition
of
Pillar
International
(RTZ-Pillar);
and
(2)
that
as
a
matter
of
quantum
they
are
worth
the
additional
amount
paid
by
Indalex
to
Pillar
International
over
what
Pillar
International
paid
Alcan.
That
is,
the
question
becomes
whether
the
plaintiff
negotiating
on
his
own
could
have
obtained
[from
Alcan]
the
price
in
the
same
range
as
that
which
Alcan
charged
Pillar
International
or
whether
the
plaintiff
could
only
have
obtained
[from
Alcan]
the
price
similar
to
that
which
it
paid
Pillar
International.
I
have
added
[from
Alcan]
as
I
think
it
clear
that
is
what
the
learned
trial
judge
had
in
mind
since
she
was
considering
what,
if
any,
adjustment
ought
to
be
made
to
the
best
comparable
arm's
length
price:
that
charged
Pillar
International
by
Alcan.
The
omission
of
those
words
was
the
basis
for
some
spurious
argument
before
us,
the
appellant
insisting
that
she
should
have
stated
the
issue
in
terms
of
“from
Pillar
International"
rather
than
"from
Alcan".
Such
a
statement
of
the
question
would
only
make
sense
if
the
learned
trial
judge
had
not
already
rejected
the
appellant's
argument
that
the
price
paid
Pillar
International
was
that
which
would
have
been
reached
if
negotiated
at
arm's
length.
It
is
that
statement
of
the
issue
which
the
respondent
challenges
in
the
cross
appeal.
After
considering
the
evidence,
C.T.C.
237;
D.T.C.
6051,
the
learned
trial
judge
found
.
.
.
that
a
1%
or
less
differential
was
the
additional
discount
obtained
by
Pillar
International
over
what
the
plaintiff
could
have
negotiated
on
its
own
[from
Alcan].
The
plaintiff
has
not
proven
that
the
amounts
it
paid
for
billet
was
a
reasonable
price
in
the
circumstances
[to
Pillar
International].
I
have
again,
perhaps
pedantically
but
because
of
quibbling
argument,
identified
the
undoubted
entities
to
whom
express
reference
was
omitted.
In
my
opinion,
the
learned
trial
judge
erred
in
law
in
resolving
the
issue
on
the
apparent
assumption
that
Pillar
International
was
entitled
to
the
benefit
of
the
better
price
obtained
from
Alcan
because
of
greater
bargaining
power.
That
greater
bargaining
power
was
exclusively
due
to
the
pooling
of
the
purchasing
power
of
a
number
of
members
of
the
Pillar
group
to
which
the
appellant
was
an
important
contributor.
There
was
no
evidence
whatsoever
that
Pillar
International
itself
contributed
an
iota
of
that
pooled
purchasing
power.
On
the
contrary,
it
bought
no
billet
for
its
own
account.
Where
non-arm's
length
parties
combine
to
obtain
an
advantage
from
an
outsider
not
available
to
them
individually,
any
allocation
of
the
advantage
among
them
except
on
a
pro
rata
basis
has
to
be
justified.
Nothing
in
the
evidence
or
in
the
findings
of
fact
by
the
learned
trial
judge
support
the
allocation
of
any
part
of
that
advantage
to
Pillar
International.
The
question
was
not
whether
the
appellant
could
itself
have
negotiated
as
good
a
price
directly
with
Alcan
but
whether
or
not
the
withholding
of
any
part
of
the
benefit
of
the
entire
discount
allowed
in
respect
of
sales
to
it
unduly
reduced
its
income.
Conclusion
The
appellant
had
the
burden
of
proof.
It
did
not
claim
any
part
of
the
discount
retention
as
reimbursement
to
Pillar
International
of
a
share
of
the
actual
cost
of
administering
the
arrangement.
The
learned
trial
judge
was
right
in
rejecting
its
principal
argument
that
the
price
paid
Pillar
International
by
the
appellant
was
the
price
that
would
have
been
paid
if
it
had
been
established
at
arm's
length.
She
was
also
right
in
rejecting
the
propositions
that
the
discount
retention
was
in
any
way
justified
by
either
the
pre-1970
arrangements
or
by
the
capital
employed
by
Pillar
International.
Had
she
asked
herself
the
right
question,
she
would
also
have
rejected
the
proposition
that
any
part
of
it
could
be
sustained
by
Pillar
International's
global
purchasing
power.
In
the
result
the
appeal
should
be
dismissed
with
costs
and
the
cross
appeal
as
to
the
reassessments
allowed
with
costs.
That
being
the
result,
it
is
unnecessary
to
deal
with
the
issue
of
the
“special
credit".
We
did
not
hear
argument
from
the
appellant
on
the
cross
appeal
as
to
costs
being
of
the
view
that
no
error
in
principle
in
the
exercise
of
her
discretion
on
the
part
of
the
trial
judge
had
been
demonstrated.
I
would
dismiss
it
without
costs.
The
judgment
of
the
Trial
Division
should
be
set
aside
and
the
reassessments
in
issue
restored.
Appeal
dismissed.
Cross
appeal
allowed
in
part.