Collier,
J:—This
is
an
appeal
from
the
Tax
Appeal
Board,
reported
[1969]
Tax
ABC
928.
There
is
another
appeal
from
the
Board
by
Harry
Richstone,
a
brother
of
the
present
appellant.
Harry
Richstone
died
during
the
intervening
period,
but
by
agreement
these
appeals
were
heard
together
because
the
facts
and
issues
are
the
same.
It
was
also
agreed
the
evidence
before
this
Court
would
be
the
transcript
of
the
oral
testimony
given
before
the
Board
and
the
documents
filed
as
exhibits
at
that
hearing.
The
respondent
reassessed
the
appellants
for
the
years
1964
and
1965
by
adding
to
their
incomes
for
those
years
certain
payments
made
to
them
by
certain
companies
in
which
they
once
had
an
alleged
interest.
The
question
is
whether
these
payments
are
caught
by
section
25
of
the
Income
Tax
Act,
RSC
1952,
c
148,
as
amended.
That
section
reads
as
follows:
25.
An
amount
received
by
one
person
from
another,
(a)
during
a
period
while
the
payee
was
an
officer
of,
or
in
the
employment
of,
the
payer,
or
(b)
on
account
or
in
lieu
of
payment
of,
or
in
satisfaction
of,
an
obligation
arising
out
of
an
agreement
made
by
the
payer
with
the
payee
immediately
prior
to,
during
or
immediately
after
a
period
that
the
payee
was
an
officer
of,
or
in
the
employment
of,
the
payer,
shall
be
deemed,
for
the
purpose
of
section
5,
to
be
remuneration
for
the
payee’s
services
rendered
as
an
officer
or
during
the
period
of
employment,
unless
it
is
established
that,
irrespective
of
when
the
agreement,
if
any,
under
which
the
amount
was
received
was
made
or
the
form
or
legal
effect
thereof,
it
cannot
reasonably
be
regarded
as
having
been
received
(i)
as
consideration
or
partial
consideration
for
accepting
the
office
or
entering
into
the
contract
of
employment,
(ii)
as
remuneration
or
partial
remuneration
for
services
as
an
officer
or
under
the
contract
of
employment,
or
(iii)
in
consideration
or
partial
consideration
for
covenant
with
reference
to
what
the
officer
or
employee
is,
or
is
not,
to
do
before
or
after
the
termination
of
the
employment.
To
be
more
precise,
the
issue
turns
on
whether
the
payments
received
fall
within
subparagraph
(iii).
The
Tax
Appeal
Board
confirmed
the
reassessments.
I
adopt
the
statement
of
facts
as
set
forth
in
the
reasons
for
judgment
of
the
Board,
as
reported
at
page
928
to
the
end
of
the
first
paragraph
on
page
940.
It
appears
a
somewhat
different
argument
was
advanced
by
the
appellants
in
this
Court
from
that
put
before
the
Board,
and
in
order
to
make
these
reasons
understandable,
I
find
it
necessary
to
summarize
the
essential
facts.
For
many
years
prior
to
1963
the
appellants
Harry
and
Louis
and
their
brothers
Saul
and
George
had
been
associated
in
a
bakery
business
carried
on
in
the
city
of
Montreal
under
the
name
Richstone
Bakeries
Incorporated.
The
Richstone
name
and
its
products
were
well
known.
The
bakery
had
originally
been
started
by
their
father
but
on
the
incorporation
in
1927
he
discontinued
his
interest.
The
sons
thereafter
had
equal
interests.
Around
1950
serious
disagreements
arose
among
the
brothers,
the
protagonists
being
George
and
to
some
extent
Saul
on
one
side,
and
Louis
and
Harry
on
the
other.
These
disputes
led
to
the
ousting
by
George
Richstone,
through
a
voting
trust
agreement,
of
Louis
as
a
director
and
officer
of
the
company,
and
the
termination
of
his
employment.
When
Harry
shortly
afterwards
attempted
to
intervene,
the
same
fate
befell
him.
Complicated
and
bitter
civil
litigation
by
Louis
and
Harry
ensued
which
was
ultimately
resolved
in
October
of
1953
by
an
agreement
which
purported
to
restore
Louis
and
Harry
to
their
original
positions
in
Richstone
Bakeries
Incorporated.
In
the
agreement
reference
is
also
made
to
Richstone
Realties
Inc,
Richstone
Sales
Inc
and
Richstone
Corporation
Ltd.
I
mention
these
other
companies
chiefly
because
of
the
use
of
the
name
Richstone
in
each
one;
the
evidence
indicates
each
brother
held
204
shares
in
Richstone
Bakeries
Inc,
88
shares
in
Richstone
Realties
Inc,
but
Louis
and
Harry
held
no
shares
in
the
remaining
two
companies.
This
agreement
also
set
out
the
duties
and
salaries
of
the
four
brothers.
Harmony
prevailed
until
1956
when
Louis
and
Harry
took
the
position
their
promised
restoration
as
directors
and
officers
had
not
been
carried
out.
The
acrimony
developed
to
the
point
that
by
1958
the
two
groups
of
brothers
ceased
speaking
to
each
other.
Communications
were
channelled
through
the
controller
of
the
company.
According
to
Louis,
he
and
Harry
were
stripped
of
all
their
powers
and
neither
did
any
actual
work
for
the
business
thereafter.
Louis
and
Harry
consulted
lawyers
and
criminal
proceedings
were
instituted
against
George
in
1958,
charging
common
law
conspiracy.
A
preliminary
inquiry
was
held
but
not
completed.
Attempts
were
made
by
their
advisers
to
have
the
brothers
somehow
resolve
their
differences
and
finally
on
May
10,
1963,
Louis
and
Harry
sent
to
George
the
following
offer:
We,
the
undersigned,
LOUIS
RICHSTONE
and
HARRY
RICHSTONE,
.
.
.
offer
to
sell
to
you
all
our
shares,
rights,
titles
and
interest
in
RICHSTONE
BAKERIES
INC,
RICHSTONE
REALTIES
LTD,
RICHSTONE
CORPORATION
LTD,
and
RICHSTONE
SALES
INC,
for
and
in
consideration
of
a
total
sale
price
of
Three
Hundred
Thousand
Dollars
($300,000.00),
payable
cash
upon
the
execution
of
the
necessary
documents.
This
offer
is
open
and
good
for
acceptance
until
the
7th
day
of
June,
1963,
at
5:00
PM,
in
default
of
which
it
shall
lapse
and
become
null
and
void
by
the
mere
efflux
of
time.
Louis
did
not
feel
the
sum
of
$300,000
represented
the
true
value
of
his
and
Harry’s
50%
interest;
he
estimated
the
true
value
to
be
at
least
half
a
million
dollars.
He
testified
his
brother
Harry
was
quite
ill:
his
own
wife
was
sick
and
for
her
health
reasons
they
were
going
to
move
from
Montreal
to
the
Maritimes;
neither
he
nor
Harry
intended
to
go
back
into
business.
The
object
of
the
offer
was
in
Louis’
view,
to
settle
the
whole
matter,
and
get
out.
George,
on
May
15,
1963,
sent
to
his
two
brothers
what
was
entitled
an
“Acceptance
of
Offer
to
Sell’.
This
document,
which
was
really
a
counter-offer,
had
quite
different
terms
and
was
refused
by
Louis
and
Harry.
It
provided
for
an
immediate
cash
payment
of
$50,000
and
a
balance
of
$100,000
payable
at
$10,000
per
year
for
10
years
for
the
shares
and
whatever
other
rights
Louis
and
Harry
had
in
the
four
Richstone
companies.
It
further
provided
that
Louis
and
Harry
agree
not
to
use
the
name
“Richstone”
in
any
form
of
bakery
business
in
Quebec
and
Ontario
for
25
years.
The
consideration
for
the
latter
agreements
was
to
be
an
additional
cash
payment
of
$50,000
and
a
balance
of
$100,000
payable
at
$10,000
a
year
for
10
years.
As
I
have
said,
this
counter-offer
was
refused.
On
June
4,
1963,
another
“Acceptance
of
Offer
to
Sell”
was
tendered
by
George
to
his
two
brothers.
As
the
Board
said
in
its
reasons
for
judgment,
this
is
a
crucial
document
in
respect
to
its
effect
on
the
tax
position
of
the
parties.
it
reads
as
follows:
I,
George
G
Richstone
and/or
my
nominees
(hereinafter
called
the
Purchaser),
do
hereby
accept
your
offer,
dated
May
10,
1963,
to
sell
to
me
all
your
shares,
rights,
title
and
interest
in
Richstone
Bakeries
Inc
and
Richstone
Realties
Inc,
and
all
your
alleged
rights,
title
and
interest
in
Richstone
Sales
Inc,
and
Richstone
Corporation
Ltd
(hereinafter
called
the
Companies),
the
whole
as
therein
contained
and
subject,
moreover,
to
the
following
terms,
clauses,
Stipulations
and
conditions,
namely:—
1.
The
purchase
price
for
the
above
shares,
rights,
title
and
interest
in
all
the
said
four
(4)
Companies,
including
all
your
rights,
title
and
interest,
if
any,
with
respect
to
the
five
(5)
Common
shares
of
the
capital
stock
of
Richstone
Bakeries
Inc
presently
owned
by
and
registered
in
the
name
of
James
Richstone,
Bakery
Executive,
residing
at
9532
Cresta
Drive,
Los
Angeles,
California,
shall
be
the
sum
of
ONE
HUNDRED
FIFTY
THOUSAND
DOLLARS
($150,000.00),
payable
in
cash
at
the
time
of
the
signing
of
the
Deed
of
Sale;
2.
Your
approval
of
the
present
Acceptance
shall
comprise
the
immediate
termination
of
your
employment
with
Richstone
Bakeries
Inc
and
of
your
employment,
if
any,
with
all
the
remaining
Companies,
without
indemnity
or
the
necessity
of
any
further
notice
or
writing
whatsoever
and
ali
your
Salaries,
remuneration
and
other
benefits
of
any
kind
shall
cease
immediately
upon
the
execution
of
the
Deed
of
Sale
and
the
payment
of
the
aforesaid
sum
of
ONE
HUNDRED
FIFTY
THOUSAND
DOLLARS
($150,000.00);
3.
You
shall
undertake,
in
favour
of
the
Purchaser
and
the
Companies,
jointly
and
severally,
as
follows:—
(a)
Not
to
own,
operate
and/or
engage
in,
directly
or
indirectly,
the
business
of
manufacturing,
distributing
and/or
selling
bread,
rolls,
cakes,
pastry,
confectionery,
and/or
all
other
bakery
products,
or
a
business
of
the
same
or
similar
nature
as
that
carried
on
by
any
one
of
the
said
Companies
(except
Richstone
Realties
Inc)
or
any
other
business
related
or
allied
thereto,
either
as
principal,
director,
shareholder,
manager,
agent
or
employee,
during
a
period
of
Twenty-five
(25)
years
within
the
territory
comprising
the
Provinces
of
Quebec
and
Ontario;
and,
(b)
Furthermore,
you
shall
not
use
or
authorize
the
use
of,
directly
or
indirectly,
the
name
“Richstone”,
or
variation
thereof
in
appearance,
sound
or
otherwise,
or
a
word
or
words
or
representations
similar
thereto,
as
part
of
a
trade
or
corporate
name
for
the
purpose
of
owning,
operating
and/or
being
engaged
in
any
business
whatsoever,
in
any
of
the
capacities
and
during
the
same
period
of
time
and
within
the
same
territorial
areas,
the
whole
as
stipulated
herein
before
in
subparagraph
(a)
of
the
present
Clause
3;
4.
In
consideration
for
your
undertaking
contained
in
Clause
3
hereof,
I
warrant
that
the
said
Companies,
jointly
and
severally,
will
pay
you
the
additional
sum
of
ONE
HUNDRED
FIFTY
THOUSAND
DOLLARS
($150,000.00),
payable
in
and
by
TEN
(10)
equal,
annual
instalments
of
FIFTEEN
THOUSAND
DOLLARS
($15,000.00)
each,
the
first
whereof
to
become
due
and
payable
One
(1)
year
after
the
signing
of
the
Deed
of
Sale
and
the
unpaid
balance
at
any
time
to
bear
interest
at
the
rate
of
SIX
PERCENT
(6%)
per
annum,
payable
semi-annually;
however,
the
Companies
will
have
the
right
to
anticipate
payment
of
the
said
sum
of
$150,000
by
prepaying
the
whole
or
any
part
of
the
outstanding
balance,
at
any
given
time
and
without
indemnity,
provided
that
each
such
prepayment
shall
never
be
less
than
FIVE
THOUSAND
DOLLARS
$5,000.00);
The
payment
of
the
aforesaid
sum
of
$150,000.00,
or
such
balance
thereof
remaining
unpaid
at
any
time,
shall
be
properly
guaranteed
either
by
a
first
hypothec
on
immoveable
property
to
be
executed
before
a
notary
chosen
and
paid
for
by
the
said
Companies
or
by
a
surety
bond
issued
by
a
recognized
Bonding
Company,
whichever
the
Companies
herein
will
elect;
5.
In
the
event
of
your
violation
of
any
of
the
obligations
contained
in
the
Deed
of
Sale
to
be
signed
in
consequence
hereof,
I
and
the
said
Companies,
jointly
and
severally,
shall
be
entitled
to
claim,
as
liquidated
damages,
the
sum
of
ONE
HUNDRED
FIFTY
THOUSAND
DOLLARS
($150,000.00),
and
to
demand
forfeiture
of
any
sums
not
yet
paid
in
virtue
of
the
said
Deed
of
Sale,
the
whole
without
prejudice
to
the
rights
of
myself
and
the
Companies,
jointly
and
severally,
to
institute
injunction
or
other
proceedings,
with
or
without
damages,
to
enforce
the
provisions
violated;
6.
All
pending
litigation,
civil
or
criminal,
shall
be
declared
settled
out
of
court
concurrently
with
the
signing
of
the
Deed
of
Sale,
all
parties
concerned
paying
their
own
legal
costs;
7.
In
addition,
a
mutual
and
reciprocal
release
and
discharge
will
be
given
by
the
interested
parties,
namely
the
Vendors,
the
Purchaser
and
the
said
Companies,
for
all
claims,
demands,
rights
of
action,
costs
and
expenses,
arising
directly
or
indirectly
from
your
association
with
the
said
four
(4)
Companies
and/or
for
any
other
cause
or
reason
whatsoever;
8.
You
will
sign
all
such
documents
as
may
be
required
or
necessary
in
order
to
give
full
force
and
effect
to
the
spirit
and
intent
of
the
present
Acceptance
of
Offer,
either
at
the
time
of
the
Deed
of
Sale
or
subsequently
when
called
upon
so
to
do
and,
upon
your
failure
to
sign
when
requested,
I
or
any
person
appointed
by
me
will
have
express
authority
to
sign
such
documents
in
your
place
and
stead
and
with
equal
effect;
9.
The
Deed
of
Sale
and
all
other
legal
documents
for
its
completion
shall
be
prepared
by
Mtre
George
I
Harris,
QC,
and
shall
be
signed
by
the
parties
hereto
not
later
than
July
9th,
1963,
each
party
to
pay
his
own
legal
costs
throughout;
10.
All
your
obligations
herein,
in
the
said
Deed
of
Sale
and
all
other
documents
relating
thereto
shall
be
joint
and
several
and
indivisible;
the
breach
of
such
obligations
by
either
one
of
you
is
to
be
construed
as
a
breach
by
both
of
you
and,
consequently,
such
breach
shall
engage
the
responsibility
of
both,
jointly
and
severally
and
indivisibly;
11.
The
rights
and
obligations
arising
from
the
document
referred
to
in
Clause
10
herein
shall
enure
for
the
benefit
of
and
be
binding
upon
the
respective
heirs,
legatees,
executors,
administrators,
successors,
and
assigns
of
the
parties
hereto;
12.
The
present
Acceptance
of
Offer
to
Sell
is
open
for
your
approval
not
later
than
June
7th,
1963,
at
5:00
o’clock
pm
after
which
time
it
shall
be
considered
null
and
void
and
nonexistent.
Louis
and
Harry
approved
and
signed
this
document
on
June
6,
1963.
In
respect
to
the
remaining
facts
in
this
case,
I
adopt
the
findings
of
the
Board
which
are
as
follows:
Mr
Louis
Richstone
testified
that
it
had
never
been
suggested
to
him
that
there
was
a
difference
beween
the
$300,000
consideration
referred
to
by
the
two
vendors
in
their
original
“Offer
to
Sell”
of
May
10,
1963,
(Ex
A-15)
and
the
$300,000
which
made
up
the
total
consideration
in
the
“Acceptance
of
Offer
to
Sell”
(Ex
A-17)
which
was
not
only
the
final
document,
but
also
the
only
one
agreed
to
and
signed
by
all
of
the
parties.
The
witness
said:
“I
was
anxious
to
get
out;
as
a
matter
of
fact
I
was
willing
to
settle
for
less,
provided
I
could
get
cash,
and
get
out,
and
forget
about
the
whole
thing
because
we
were
anxious
to
get
away.”
The
witness
said
he
had
seen
the
first
document
(Ex
A-16)
which
George
Richstone
had
submitted
in
respect
of
their
original
offer
to
sell
(Ex
A-15)
and,
although
the
said
Exhibit
A-16
had
contained
restrictive
covenants
which
had
not
appeared
in
the
initial
offer
(Ex
A-15)
and
had
allocated
a
separate
amount
of
consideration
to
shares
and
rights
and
had
ascribed
another
specific
amount
as
consideration
in
respect
of
the
restrictive
covenants,
he
had
considered
it
as
nothing
more
than
a
matter
of
form
for
selling
the
shares
and
rights
“because
I
only
had
one
thing
in
mind—to
sell
our
shares
and
get
out”’.
The
principal
difference
between
the
proposition
contained
in
Exhibit
A-16,
which
was
never
accepted
by
the
appellants,
and
the
proposals
contained
in
Exhibit
A-17
which
were
accepted
by
all
the
parties,
consisted
of
the
provisions
for
payment.
In
the
proposal
accepted,
the
entire
consideration
for
the
shares,
etc,
was
to
be
paid
in
cash
rather
than
only
one-third
in
cash
and
the
rest
on
terms;
and
the
consideration
for
the
restrictive
covenants
was
to
be
paid
in
ten
equal
instalments
of
$15,000
each
with
interest
at
6%
per
annum
rather
than
one-third
in
cash
with
the
balance
spread
over
ten
years
in
equal
annual
instalments
of
$10,000
each,
suggested
in
the
earlier
proposal.
On
June
6,
1963,
following
their
approval
of
George
Richstone’s
acceptance
of
their
offer
to
sell
(Ex
A-17),
Louis
Richstone
and
his
brother
Harry
entered
into
an
agreement
between
themselves
(Ex
A-20)
which
reads
in
part
as
follows:
“NOW
THEREFORE
THE
PARTIES
HERETO
AGREE
AS
FOLLOWS:
1)
The
parties
hereto
shall
share
the
purchase
price
arising
out
of
the
foregoing
and
be
responsible
for
any
liabilities
arising
out
of
the
foregoing,
such
as
legal
fees,
notarial
fees,
etc
on
the
following
basis:—
Louis
Richstone
|
66-2/3%
|
Harry
Richstone
|
33-1/3%
|
2)
This
agreement
shall
inure
for
the
benefit
of
and
be
binding
upon
the
respective
heirs,
legatees,
executors,
administrators,
successors
and
assigns
of
the
parties
hereto.”
On
June
28,
1963,
the
three
Richstone
brothers
reduced
their
negotiations
to
a
formal
Notarial
Deed
of
Sale
passed
before
Notary
Harry
Kolber,
in
which
Louis
and
Harry
Richstone
are
referred
to
as
the
Vendors
and
George
G
Richstone
as
the
Individual
Purchaser,
while
Richstone
Bakeries
Inc,
Richstone
Sales
Inc,
and
Richstone
Corporation
Ltd
are
referred
to
as
the
Company
Purchasers
and
as
being
represented
by
their
president,
George
G
Richstone.
This
document
sets
out
that
the
parties
thereto
have
agreed,
in
part,
as
follows:
“FIRST:
The
Vendors
do
hereby
sell
.
.
.
unto
the
Individual
Purchaser
.
.
.
the
following
assets,
namely:—
a)
All
the
Vendors’
common
and
preferred
shares
in
the
capital
stock
of
Richstone
Bakeries
Inc
and
Richstone
Realties
inc,
and
all
their
other
rights,
title
and
interest
in
and
to
both
the
said
Companies;
b)
All
the
Vendors’
alleged
rights,
title
and
interest
in
and
to
Richstone
Sales
Inc
and
Richstone
Corporation
Ltd;
c)
All
the
Vendors’
rights,
title
and
interest,
if
any,
with
respect
to
the
FIVE
(5)
common
shares
in
the
capital
stock
of
Richstone
Bakeries
Inc
presently
owned
by
and
registered
in
the
name
of
James
Richstone
.
.
.
SECOND:
The
consideration
for
the
sale
of
the
assets
described
...
is
the
total
price
and
sum
of
ONE
HUNDRED
AND
FIFTY
THOUSAND
DOLLARS
.
.
.
payable
by
the
Individual
Purchaser
unto
the
Vendors
in
cash,
which
amount
the
Vendors
do
hereby
acknowledge
to
have
received
in
full
at
the
execution
of
the
present
Saie
.
.
.
and
which
amount
shall
be
distributed
between
the
Vendors
in
the
manner
that
they
themselves
shall
determine;
THIRD:
The
Vendors
do,
in
addition
to
the
foregoing,
sell,
transfer,
convey,
make
over
and
assign,
unto
the
Individual
Purchaser
and
the
Company
Purchasers,
jointly
and
severally,
the
following
assets,
namely:—
a)
All
the
Vendors’
rights,
title
and
interest
to
own,
operate
and/or
engage
in,
directly
or
indirectly,
the
business
of
manufacturing,
distributing
and/or
selling
bread,
rolls,
cakes,
pastry,
confectionery
and/or
other
bakery
products,
or
a
business
of
the
same
or
similar
nature
as
that
carried
on
by
any
one
of
the
Company
Purchasers
(except
Richstone
Realties
Inc)
or
any
other
business
related
or
allied
thereto,
either
as
principal,
director,
shareholder,
manager,
agent
or
employee
during
the
period
of
TWENTY-FIVE
(25)
years
from
the
date
hereof
and
terminating
on
the
Twenty-Eighth
day
of
June,
Nineteen
Hundred
and
Eighty-Eight
and
within
the
territory
comprising
the
Provinces
of
Quebec
and
Ontario;
and,
b)
All
the
Vendors’
rights,
title
and
interest
to
use
or
authorize
the
use
of,
directly
or
indirectly,
the
name
‘Richstone’,
or
any
variation
thereof
in
appearance,
sound
or
otherwise,
or
a
word
or
words
or
representations
similar
thereto,
as
part
of
a
trade
or
corporate
name
for
the
pur-
pose
of
owning,
operating
and/or
being
engaged
in
any
business
whatsoever,
either
as
principal,
director,
shareholder,
manager,
agent
or
employee
during
the
period
of
TWENTY-FIVE
(25)
years
from
the
date
hereof
and
terminating
on
the
Twenty-Eighth
day
of
June,
Nineteen
Hundred
and
Eighty-Eight
and
within
the
territory
comprising
the
Provinces
of
Quebec
and
Ontario;
FOURTH:
The
consideration
for
the
sale
of
the
assets,
described
in
Clause
Third
(a)
and
Third
(b)
hereinabove,
is
the
total
price
and
sum
of
ONE
HUNDRED
AND
FIFTY
THOUSAND
DOLLARS
($150,000.00),
which
the
Individual
Purchaser
and
the
Company
Purchasers
oblige
themselves,
jointly
and
severally,
to
pay
unto
the
Vendors,
and
which
amount
shall
be
distributed
between
the
Vendors
in
the
manner
that
they
themselves
shall
determine,
in
and
by
TEN
(10)
equal,
consecutive
and
annual
instalments
of
FIFTEEN
THOUSAND
DOLLARS
($15,000.00)
each,
the
first
whereof
to
become
due
and
payable
ONE
(1)
year
from
the
date
hereof
and
to
continue
annually
thereafter
until
the
28th
day
of
June,
1973
.
.
The
Deed
is
elaborate
in
its
provisions
and
stipulates,
among
other
things,
for
prepayment
of
the
said
instalments,
the
immediate
transfer
of
title
to
assets
sold,
and
a
warranty
as
io
title
of
the
said
assets.
In
Clause
Seventh,
there
appears
the
following
agreement:
“As
further
consideration
for
the
price
and
sum
provided
in
Clause
Fourth
herein,
the
Vendors
do
hereby
expressly
covenant
and
undertake,
in
favour
of
the
Individual
Purchaser
and
the
Company
Purchasers,
jointly
and
severally:—
a)
Not
to
own,
operate
and/or
engage
in,
directly
or
indirectly,
any
of
the
businesses
set
out
in
the
above
Clause
Third
(a),
in
any
of
the
capacities,
during
the
period
of
time
and
within
the
territorial
area,
as
more
fully
stipulated
in
the
said
Clause
Third
(a);
and,
b)
Not
to
use
or
authorize
the
use
of,
directly
or
indirectly,
the
name
‘Richstone’,
as
more
fully
defined
and
described
in
Clause
Third
(b)
hereof,
for
the
purposes,
in
the
capacities,
during
the
same
period
of
time
and
within
the
same
territorial
area
as
stipulated
in
the
said
Clause
Third
(b).”
On
the
same
day
as
the
Notarial
Deed
was
executed,
and
concurrently
therewith,
ie,
on
June
28th,
1963,
Louis
and
Harry
Richstone
each
signed
and
delivered
to
Richstone
Bakeries
Inc
and
the
directors
thereof
a
notice
of
resignation
reading
as
follows:
“I
hereby
tender
my
resignation
as
Director
and/or
Officer
of
Richstone
Bakeries
Inc,
to
take
effect
immediately
upon
acceptance
by
the
Board.”
Also
produced
and
filed
at
the
hearing
were
copies
of
transfers
from
Louis
and
Harry
Richstone
respectively
to
George
G
Richstone,
each
for
204
shares
of
common
stock
of
Richstone
Bakeries
Inc.
By
way
of
date,
these
transfers
bear
only
the
year
“1963”
but
the
witness
Louis
Richstone
said
these
transfers
were
also
signed
contemporaneously
with
the
execution
of
the
Notarial
Deed
and
their
respective
resignations
on
June
28,
1963.
The
first
of
the
ten
equal
consecutive
annual
instalments
of
$15,000
to
be
made
under
the
terms
of
the
said
Deed
of
Sale
(Ex
A-18)
fell
due
and
was
paid
on
June
28,
1964,
together
with
interest
on
the
outstanding
balance
calculated
at
6%
per
annum,
and
was
not
declared
as
income
by
either
appellant.
Harry
I
Grossman,
the
comptroller
as
well
as
a
director
of
Richstone
Bakeries
Inc,
testified
that
Louis
and
Harry
Richstone
were
on
the
bakery
payroll
until
June
29,
1963,
the
date
on
which
the
last
salary
cheques
were
issued
in
their
names
and
forwarded
with
a
covering
letter
to
their
then
solicitor,
Murray
Lappin,
Esquire,
QC.
George
G
Richstone
appeared
under
subpoena
as
a
witness
for
the
respondent
and
gave
evidence
that
for
some
time
prior
to
the
final
settlement
effected
in
1963
there
had
been
“an
actual
feud
or
a
vendetta”
between
the
two
appellants
and
himself,
both
in
business
and
socially.
He
added:
“As
a
matter
of
fact,
they
left
in
1963
and
prior
to
that,
five
years
prior
to
that,
we
were
not
even
on
speaking
terms
.
.
.
although
they
were
at
that
time
directors
and
officers
of
the
company
plus
shareholders
and
also
employees.”
All
communications
between
the
parties
were
carried
on
through
the
comptroller
of
the
bakery
company,
who
was
a
distant
relative
and
had
remained
on
speaking
terms
with
both
factions.
The
witness
George
Richstone
testified
that,
within
the
five
years
or
more
during
which
the
criminal
proceedings
were
pending,
there
had
been
a
series
of
attempts
to
establish
a
basis
of
settlement
between
the
parties.
The
consideration
first
demanded
had
been
$600,000
which
was
finally
reduced
to
$300,000
to
be
divided
into
$150,000
to
be
paid
by
the
witness
for
the
appellants’
shares
and
$150,000
to
be
paid
by
Richstone
Bakeries
Inc
et
al
in
respect
of
the
restrictive
covenants
which
had
been
inserted
to
prevent
the
appellants
from
establishing
themselves
in
the
bakery,
pastry-making
or
confectionery
business
in
competition
with
Richstone
Bakeries
Inc
or
using
the
name
“Richstone”
in
connection
with
any
business
similar
to
any
of
those
carried
on
by
the
bakery
company
and
the
other
two
subsidiaries.
According
to
the
witness
they
had
attempted
something
of
this
nature
in
1950
and
1951
when
the
earlier
civil
litigation
was
proceeding
by
cutting
prices
and
using
the
name
“Richstone”
to
compete
with
the
business
from
which
Louis
had
been
ejected.
George
Richstone
rejected
any
suggestion
that
the
restrictive
covenants
were
an
afterthought
which
was
unnecessary
or
that
they
were
not
made
with
any
serious
purpose
in
mind.
In
fact
he
insisted
strongly
to
the
contrary
and
said
the
payments
to
be
made
in
respect
thereof
by
the
company
purchasers
were
deliberately
spread
over
a
ten-
year
period
with
the
intention
of
subjecting
them
to
deduction
as
business
expenses
made
to
protect
the
income
of
the
bakery
business
and
have
in
fact
been
so
claimed.
The
respondent
relies
on
clauses
3
and
4
of
exhibit
17
and
clauses
fourth
and
seventh
of
exhibit
18,
as
well
as
the
evidence
of
George
Richstone
that
Louis
and
Harry,
between
1950
and
1951,
had
been
competitors
and
had
used
the
Richstone
name.
Counsel
for
the
respondent
submits
the
payments
in
question
fall
squarely
within
paragraph
25(b)
of
the
Aci,
that
is,
these
were
amounts
received
“on
account
.
.
.
of
an
obligation
arising
out
of
an
agreement
made
by
the
payer
with
the
payee
.
.
.
during
or
immediately
after
a
period
that
the
payee
was
an
officer
of,
or
in
the
employment
of,
the
payee
.
.
.”,
and
further
must
reasonably
be
regarded
as
“.
.
.
having
been
received
.
.
.
in
consideration
or
partial
consideration
.
.
.”
for
the
covenants
not
to
compete.*
The
appellant,
on
the
other
hand,
asserts
that
on
the
true
construction
of
the
material
documents,
particularly
the
notarial
deed,
the
transaction
in
question
was
fundamentally
a
sale
of
assets:
the
shares
and
whatever
other
interests
Louis
and
Harry
had
in
the
four
companies,
their
rights
to
carry
on
a
bakery
business
for
25
years,
and
their
rights
to
the
use
of
the
name
Richstone
in
any
business
(see
clauses
first,
second,
third
and
fourth
of
the
notarial
deed)
for
25
years.
I
have
no
doubt
that
clauses
first
and
second
deal
with
a
sale
of
assets.
Clauses
third
and
fourth
describe
the
rights
(to
engage
in
bakery
businesses
and
to
the
Richstone
name)
being
sold
as
a
sale
of
assets,
and
I
am
prepared
to
accept
that
description.
If
the
notarial
deed
ended
there,
any
payments
received
pursuant
to
clause
fourth,
in
my
opinion,
could
not
be
reasonably
regarded
as
having
been
received
in
consideration
for
an
agreement
not
to
compete.
There
remains
the
problem
as
to
the
meaning
or
effect
of
clause
seventh
having
regard
to
subparagraph
25(b)(iii)
of
the
Act.
As
I
understood
them,
the
appellant’s
contentions
were
as
follows:
(1)
The
covenant
not
to
compete
nor
to
use
the
name
Richstone
is
a
mere
appendage
to
what
is
really
a
sale
of
assets.
(2)
The
total
consideration
of
$300,000
could
only
refer
to
the
sale
of
those
assets
because
the
value
of
the
shares
alone
far
exceeded
that
amount.
(3)
The
covenant
not
to
compete
is
unenforceable
in
law
and
therefore
must
be
disregarded.
(4)
There
was
no
intention
on
the
part
of
Louis
or
Harry
ever
to
go
into
business
again,
and
from
their
side
of
the
matter,
no
consideration
or
payments
were
received
in
respect
to
the
covenant
not
to
compete.
(5)
There
were
five
“payers”
according
to
the
notarial
deed,
and
Louis
and
Harry
were
certainly
never
employees
of
four
of
them,
and
were
not
at
the
material
times
“employees”
of
Richstone
Bakeries
Inc.
I
shall
deal
with
these
contentions
in
the
order
I
have
set
them
out.
(1)
I
cannot
regard
the
covenant
not
to
compete
as
a
mere
appendage.
The
evidence
is
uncontradicted
that
George
Richstone
stipulated
for
it
because
of
the
competition
which,
in
fact,
took
place
in
1950
and
1951.
The
covenant
had
value
to
him,
and
while
Louis
and
Harry
may
have
thought
it
valueless
to
them
they
nevertheless
agreed
to
it.
In
my
view
the
agreement
reached
covered
more
than
a
sale
of
assets.
The
notarial
deed,
by
clause
seventh,
expressly
supports
this
view.
(2)
The
evidence
as
to
the
value
of
the
interest
of
Louis
and
Harry
in
Richstone
Bakeries
Inc
and
the
other
companies
is,
to
my
mind,
unsatisfactory
and
it
is
impossible
to
come
to
any
firm
conclusion
as
to
overall
value.
There
is
no
doubt
Louis
felt
the
value
of
his
and
his
brother’s
interest
far
exceeded
$300,000;
on
the
other
hand,
George
felt
it
was
too
much.
The
other
evidence
in
respect
to
values
is,
as
I
have
said,
unsatisfactory.
(3)
I
will
accept,
without
deciding,
that
the
covenant
not
to
compete
would
probably
be
held
to
be
unenforceable
if
it
were
the
subject
of
litigation
in
the
Province
of
Quebec.
That,
however,
does
not
solve
the
problem
for
the
purposes
of
the
section
of
the
Income
Tax
Act
in
question.
The
covenant
is
a
subsisting
one:
no
one
has
yet
challenged
it
and
until
that
is
done
it
is
binding
on
the
parties.
(4)
I
do
not
think
the
future
intention
of
Louis
and
Harry
not
to
enter
business
again
is
relevant.
In
my
opinion,
one
cannot
go
behind
the
express
words
in
clause
seventh.
To
put
the
matter
another
way,
I
do
not
think
it
would
be
any
defence
by
Louis
if
he
violated
this
clause
to
say
it
was
not
binding
on
him
because
at
the
time
he
signed
the
agreement
he
had
no
intention
to
violate
it.
(5)
It
is
established
that
Louis
and
Harry
were
never
employees
of
the
other
payers
under
the
notarial
deed,
other
than
Richstone
Bakeries
Inc.
In
my
view,
the
conclusion
from
the
evidence
is
irresistible
that
Louis
and
Harry
were
employees
(within
section
25)
of
Richstone
Bakeries
Inc
until
the
end
of
June
1963.
They
were
paid
up
until
the
end
of
that
month
by
that
company.
It
is
true
they
had
not
done
any
work
for
several
years
but
they
nevertheless
had
been
paid
as
employees
right
up
to
the
date
I
have
just
mentioned.
In
my
view,
the
decision
of
the
Tax
Appeal
Board
was
correct
as
was
the
reassessment
made
by
the
respondent.
The
appeal
is
therefore
dismissed
with
costs.