Couture,
C.J.T.C.:—The
appellant
at
the
material
time
was
the
sole
shareholder
and
director
of
a
corporation
known
as
Pamic
Investments
Limited,
(Pamic)
which
was
carrying
on
the
business
of
providing
bookkeeping,
accounting
and
other
related
office
services
to
its
clients.
She
was
also
an
employee
of
the
corporation.
At
the
hearing
she
acted
on
her
own
behalf
assisted
by
her
husband.
The
evidence
is
that
criminal
charges
were
laid
against
Pamic,
the
appellant
and
her
husband
under
the
Criminal
Code.
The
informations
were
not
filed
as
exhibits,
but
my
understanding
of
the
alleged
facts
upon
which
these
charges
were
preferred,
as
described
by
the
appellant,
is
that
Pamic
was
accused
of
having
overbilled
some
of
its
clients
in
accordance
with
a
plan
conceived
by
her
husband
and
in
which
he
participated.
Her
husband
was
not
a
shareholder
or
employee
of
Pamic,
but
was
the
manager
of
a
local
branch
of
a
bank.
The
appellant
retained
the
services
of
a
lawyer
to
defend
her
against
these
charges,
which
she
vehemently
denied
having
committed.
This
lawyer
also
represented
Pamic.
Her
husband
retained
a
different
lawyer.
It
took
several
months
to
finally
dispose
of
the
charges.
The
appellant
explained
that
immediately
before
the
trial
was
to
begin
the
Crown
prosecutor
offered
to
settle
the
matter
by
dropping
the
charges
against
her
and
the
corporation
if
the
husband
agreed
to
plead
guilty
to
conspiring
to
commit
less
serious
offences.
The
offer
was
accepted
by
all
the
defendants.
Mr.
Pellizzari
denied
any
wrongdoing
on
his
part
respecting
these
lesser
charges
and
explained
that
he
reluctantly
agreed
to
this
settlement
because
he
was
anxious
to
put
an
end
to
a
problem
that
had
ravaged
him
personally
and
financially
over
many
months
and
to
avoid
the
burden
of
a
long
and
costly
trial
which
he
could
ill
afford
at
the
time.
In
its
income
tax
returns
for
the
taxation
years
1979
and
1980,
Pamic
claimed
as
a
deduction
in
computing
its
income
the
legal
fees
paid
to
the
lawyer
who
had
acted
on
its
behalf
and
on
behalf
of
the
appellant
which
amounted
to
$15,000
in
aggregate,
$10,000
in
1979
and
$5,000
in
1980.
In
assessing
the
appellant
for
these
taxation
years,
the
respondent
added
to
her
income
the
legal
fees
paid
by
Pamic
for
legal
services
rendered
to
both
herself
and
the
corporation
as
“indirect
payments
from
Pamic
Investments
Ltd.
Re:
professional
services”
according
to
the
notation
on
forms
T7W-C
which
were
attached
to
the
notices
of
reassessment.
However,
in
its
reply
to
the
notice
of
appeal
the
respondent
invoked
inter
alia
the
provisions
of
paragraphs
8(1)(b),
15(1)(c),
18(1)(a),
18(1)(h)
and
60(o)
of
the
Act
claiming:
(a)
that
the
legal
fees
paid
by
Pamic
were
not
incurred
for
the
purpose
of
earning
or
producing
income
from
the
corporation's
business
or
property,
(b)
that
they
were
personal
and
living
expenses
of
the
appellant
and,
(c)
that
the
fees
did
not
qualify
for
a
deduction
under
paragraphs
8(1
)(b)
and
60(o)
of
the
Act,
(d)
that
a
benefit
in
the
amount
of
the
legal
expenses
had
been
conferred
on
the
appellant
who
was
a
shareholder
of
the
corporation.
The
appellant
submitted
that
the
fees
paid
by
Pamic
were
legitimate
disbursements
of
the
corporation
and
should
not
be
attributed
to
her
personally.
However,
she
added
that
if
the
Court
were
to
come
to
a
different
conclusion
then
they
should
be
allocated
between
the
corporation
and
herself,
and
only
the
portion
of
such
allocation
that
may
be
reasonably
considered
as
personal
should
be
added
to
her
income
for
the
taxation
years
under
appeal.
She
also
submitted
that
in
1979
and
1980
she
had
loans
receivable
from
the
corporation
and
that
she
should
be
permitted
to
offset
the
portion
of
the
fees
that
would
be
allocated
to
her
against
these
loans
by
reducing
them
accordingly.
The
evidence
clearly
established
that
the
charges
laid
against
the
appellant
were
in
her
capacity
as
an
officer
of
Pamic,
and
not
as
a
shareholder,
for
offences
she
allegedly
had
committed
personally
in
the
course
of
carrying
on
her
duties
as
an
employee
of
the
corporation.
This,
to
me,
is
consistent
with
the
respective
functions
of
each
distinct
personality
within
the
corporate
structure.
It
is
not
the
responsibility
and
duty
of
a
shareholder,
in
his
or
her
capacity
as
a
shareholder,
to
perform
the
duties
which
are
related
to
the
daily
operations
of
a
corporation
in
its
income-earning
process.
These
duties
are
the
sole
responsibilities
of
its
officer
and
employees
under
the
authority
and
guidance
of
its
board
of
directors.
The
appellant
was
therefore
charged
as
an
officer
or
employee
of
the
corporation
because
of
her
alleged
personal
involvement
in
the
commission
of
these
offences.
In
so
far
as
Pamic
was
concerned
it
was
also
charged
in
its
corporate
Capacity
and
had
to
defend
itself,
and
in
so
doing
incurred
legal
fees
on
its
own
behalf
as
a
separate
legal
entity.
Its
share
of
the
fees,
under
such
circumstances,
cannot
be
attributed
to
the
appellant.
Legal
services
had
been
rendered
to
Pamic
independently
from
the
services
rendered
to
the
appellant
and
it
was
its
sole
responsibility
to
assume
them.
Whether
these
fees
were
deductible
by
Pamic,
as
suggested
by
counsel
for
the
respondent,
is
not
germane
to
the
present
appeal.
The
question
that
the
Court
has
to
decide
is
whether
the
legal
fees
paid
under
the
circumstances
described
above
were
personal
expenses
of
the
appellant
and
if
they
were,
whether
the
payment
of
these
fees
gave
rise
to
a
benefit
having
been
conferred
upon
her
as
a
shareholder
of
the
corporation
within
the
meaning
of
the
provisions
of
paragraph
15(1
)(c)
of
the
Act
or
as
an
officer
or
employee
as
income
from
employment
within
the
meaning
of
sections
5
and
6.
If
a
taxpayer
is
a
shareholder
and
officer
of
a
corporation
and
he
or
she
receives
a
benefit
or
advantage
from
the
corporation
this
is
not,
of
itself,
conclusive
of
the
fact
that
the
benefit
or
advantage
was
conferred
on
the
taxpayer
in
his
capacity
of
shareholder.
In
other
words,
it
does
not
follow
that
in
such
a
situation
the
provisions
of
subsection
15(1)
automatically
apply.
It
must
first
be
ascertained
whether
the
advantage
or
benefit,
assuming
that
the
amount
in
question
was
in
the
nature
of
an
advantage
or
benefit,
was
conferred
on
the
taxpayer
in
his
or
her
capacity
as
a
shareholder
or
an
employee
of
the
corporation.
Once
this
determination
is
made
then
the
application
of
paragraph
15(1)(c)
or
sections
5
and
6
of
the
Act
must
be
considered.
If
the
advantage
or
benefit
was
conferred
on
the
taxpayer
as
an
employee
again
it
must
be
established
whether
it
was
in
the
nature
of
income
from
an
office
or
employment
within
the
meaning
of
the
provisions
of
subsection
5(1)
and
subsection
6(1)
and
following.
Cattanach,
J.,
in
Minister
of
National
Revenue
v.
Pillsbury
Holdings
Ltd.,
[1964]
C.T.C.
294;
64
D.T.C.
5184,
held
that
a
waiver
and
forgiveness
of
interest
by
a
subsidiary
corporation
to
its
corporate
shareholder
did
not
on
the
facts
before
him
constitute
an
advantage
or
benefit
conferred
on
the
taxpayer
in
its
capacity
as
a
shareholder.
He
said
at
303
(D.T.C.
5188):
In
effect,
the
Minister
takes
the
position
that
waiver
of
interest
payable
by
a
borrower
who
happens
to
be
a
shareholder
of
the
lender
is
the
conferring
of
a
benefit
within
paragraph
(c)
regardless
of
the
circumstances
surrounding
the
waiver.
In
my
view,
the
mere
fact
of
waiver,
even
if
legally
effective
to
cancel
the
debt,
is
not
sufficient
of
itself
to
bring
the
transaction
within
paragraph
(c).
To
come
within
that
paragraph,
it
must
be
an
arrangement
or
device
whereby
a
corporation
confers
a
benefit
or
advantage
on
a
shareholder
qua
shareholder.
I
have
reached
the
conclusion
on
the
evidence
that
the
reason
for
the
payment
of
the
legal
fees
by
Pamic
on
behalf
of
the
appellant
was
because
she
was
an
officer
of
the
corporation,
not
because
she
was
a
shareholder.
This
eliminates
subsection
15(1),
but
does
not
dispose
of
the
appeal.
Consideration
must
now
be
given
to
the
possible
application
of
subsection
5(1),
that
is
whether
such
payment
constituted
income
from
employment.
In
dealing
with
this
aspect
of
the
assessment,
I
am
satisfied
that
the
amount
of
the
$15,000
paid
by
the
corporation
over
two
taxation
years
must
be
allocated
between
the
two
taxpayers
since
each
one
of
them
was
charged
and
legal
services
were
rendered
to
each
one
of
them
accordingly.
They
each
must
assume
their
respective
share
of
these
fees.
Taking
into
account
all
the
circumstances
of
this
case
and
especially
the
fact
that
the
charges
against
both
the
appellant
and
Pamic
were
eventually
withdrawn
by
the
Crown,
I
consider
that
a
just
and
equitable
allocation
of
these
fees
would
be
to
divide
them
equally
between
the
two
taxpayers.
The
next
question
to
be
answered
is
whether
an
amount
of
$5,000
paid
by
Pamic
in
1979
and
$2,500
paid
in
1980
on
behalf
of
the
appellant
constituted
income
from
employment
to
her
for
the
said
taxation
years.
Paragraph
6(1)(a)
of
the
Act
reads:
6(1)
There
shall
be
included
in
computing
the
income
of
a
taxpayer
for
a
taxation
year
as
income
from
an
office
or
employment
such
of
the
following
amounts
as
are
applicable:
(a)
the
value
of
the
board,
lodging
and
other
benefits
of
any
kind
whatever
received
and
enjoyed
by
him
in
the
year
in
respect
of,
in
the
course
of,
or
by
virtue
of
an
office
or
employment,
except
any
benefit
.
.
.
The
phrase
“benefits
of
any
kind
whatever”
is
of
such
broad
and
sweeping
scope
that
it
is
difficult
to
envisage
the
kind
of
benefit
that
could
be
bestowed
on
an
employee
by
an
employer
which
could
escape
from
the
reach
of
these
words,
except
of
course
those
benefits
which
are
specifically
exempted
by
the
legislation.
In
Cutmore
et
al.
v.
M.N.R.,
[1986]
1
C.T.C.
2230;
86
D.T.C.
1146
Christie,
A.C.J.
of
this
Court
had
to
consider
the
meaning
of
the
provisions
of
paragraph
6(1)(a)
in
a
situation
where
a
corporation
as
a
matter
of
business
policy
required
its
executive
employees
to
have
their
personal
income
tax
returns
prepared
by
a
professional
income
tax
specialist.
The
fees
for
these
services
were
paid
by
the
corporation.
Relying
on
the
decision
of
the
Supreme
Court
of
Canada
in
The
Queen
v.
Savage,
[1983]
C.T.C.
393;
83
D.T.C.
5409
he
held
that
the
payment
by
the
corporation
of
these
professional
fees
constituted
a
taxable
benefit
to
the
executive
under
the
provisions
of
paragraph
6(1)(a),
even
though
it
was
conferred
on
the
executive
in
circumstances
under
which
he
had
no
discretion
over
whether
he
should
avail
himself
of
these
professional
services.
In
the
present
situation
the
appellant
was
defending
herself
against
charges
of
alleged
criminal
acts
committed
by
her
while
employed
by
the
corporation.
The
fact
that
the
charges
were
eventually
withdrawn
does
not
alter
her
involvement
as
the
person
directly
affected
by
this
whole
affair
and
as
the
person
who
was
seeking
to
vindicate
herself
from
those
accusations.
The
legal
fees
paid
by
Pamic
were
in
my
opinion
her
personal
expenses
and
their
payment
by
the
corporation
did
constitute
a
benefit
to
her
and
therefore
must
be
included
in
her
income
pursuant
to
paragraph
6(1)(a).
Her
request
that
she
be
permitted
to
offset
the
amounts
of
$5,000
in
1979
and
$2,500
in
1980
against
her
loans
receivable
from
the
corporation
which
were
then
outstanding
cannot
be
granted.
It
is
not
legally
feasible,
in
my
opinion,
to
allow
in
1986
a
retroactive
deduction
of
these
fees
against
the
loans
that
were
outstanding
in
1979
and
1980
in
the
books
of
the
corporation.
Its
fiscal
years
have
been
closed,
and
they
reflected
at
the
time
its
financial
position
as
it
legally
existed
then.
I
know
of
no
procedure
that
could
permit
the
appellant
to
adjust
some
of
the
accounts
recorded
in
the
financial
statements
for
1979
and
1980
in
order
to
give
effect
to
her
submission.
Finally
in
the
light
of
my
comments
with
respect
to
these
fees,
I
cannot
see
any
possible
application
of
the
provisions
of
subsection
56(2)
invoked
on
the
forms
T7W-C
as
the
basis
of
the
assessments.
It
provides:
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.
For
the
above
reasons
the
appeal
is
allowed
and
the
assessments
are
referred
back
to
the
respondent
for
reconsideration
and
reassessment
in
accordance
with
these
reasons.
The
appellant
is
entitled
to
her
costs
on
a
party-party
basis.
Appeal
allowed
in
part.