Bastin,
DJ
(judgment
delivered
from
the
Bench,
per
curiam):—This
is
an
appeal
from
a
decision
of
the
Trial
Division
dismissing
the
appeal
of
the
appellant
from
a
notice
of
reassessment
in
respect
of
the
1965
taxation
year.
The
appeal
involves
the
interpretation
of
section
64
of
the
Income
Tax
Act
and
specifically
the
interpretation
of
subsection
64(3),
reading
as
follows:
64.
(3)
Rights
or
things
transferred
to
beneficiaries.
Where
before
the
time
for
making
an
election
under
subsection
(2)
has
expired,
a
right
or
thing
to
which
that
subsection
would
otherwise
apply
has
been
transferred
or
distributed
to
beneficiaries
or
other
persons
beneficially
interested
in
the
estate
or
trust,
(a)
subsection
(2)
is
not
applicable
to
that
right
or
thing,
and
(b)
an
amount
received
by
one
of
the
beneficiaries
or
other
such
persons
upon
the
realization
or
disposition
of
the
right
or
thing
shall
be
included
in
computing
his
income
for
the
taxation
year
in
which
he
received
it.
The
essential
facts
are
that
the
appellant
is
the
executor
of
the
estate
of
John
Donald
Tory,
a
Toronto
lawyer,
who
computed
the
profits
from
his
practice
on
a
cash
received
basis.
He
died
on
August
27,
1965,
leaving
surviving
him
(inter
alia)
his
three
children,
Mary
Virginia
Denton,
John
Arnold
Tory
and
James
Maxwell
Tory.
At
his
death
he
had
accounts
receivable
of
$483,350.
Under
the
terms
of
his
will
Mrs
Denton
received
a
cash
legacy
of
$100,000
and
was
paid
$10,000
of
this.
On
February
8,
1966
she
made
an
agreement
with
the
appellant
by
which
the
accounts
receivable
of
$483,350
were
to
be
assigned
to
her
in
consideration
of
her
releasing
the
estate
from
its
liability
to
pay
her
$90,000,
the
balance
of
her
legacy,
and
paying
the
executor
the
sum
of
$380,000
in
Canadian
funds
within
one
year.
Mrs
Denton
left
Canada
on
February
11,
1966
to
join
her
husband
and
children
in
the
United
States
and
she
has
remained
a
non-resident
of
Canada
since
that
date.
She
collected
the
full
amount
of
the
accounts
receivable
assigned
to
her
and
on
February
16,
1967
she
paid
the
appellant
the
sum
of
$380,000.
The
appellant
did
not
include
these
accounts
receivable
in
the
income
tax
return
for
1965
of
the
estate
on
the
ground
that
the
right
to
receive
them
had
been
transferred
to
a
beneficiary
of
the
taxpayer
within
the
time
prescribed
by
subsection
64(2)
of
the
Income
Tax
Act.
On
June
1,
1966
the
respondent
assessed
tax
for
the
1965
taxation
year
on
the
basis
that
the
sum
of
$483,350
should
have
been
included
in
computing
the
taxpayer’s
income
for
1965.
The
appellant
duly
objected
to
the
assessment
and
on
August
7,
1968
the
respondent
reassessed
tax
for
1965
on
the
basis
that
the
amount
properly
included
pursuant
to
the
provisions
of
subsection
64(2)
of
the
Income
Tax
Act
for
1965
in
respect
of
these
accounts
receivable
was
$380,000.
The
appellant
then
commenced
the
appeal
which
came
before
the
Trial
Division
for
hearing.
The
learned
trial
judge
in
his
reasons
for
judgment
dated
June
25,
1971
held:
Section
64(3)
applies
to
transfers
or
distributions
of
the
right
or
thing
to
a
beneficiary
or
other
person
beneficially
interested
in
the
estate
or
trust
only
when
such
transfer
or
distribution
has
been
made
to
him
qua
beneficiary,
and
not
to
the
extent
that
he
has
acquired
it
as
a
purchaser
for
value.
Therefore,
had
Mrs.
Denton
been
a
legatee
of
an
amount
equal
to
or
in
excess
of
$483,350
and
had
accepted
the
accounts
in
satisfaction
of
this
legacy,
no
tax
would
have
been
collectable
from
the
estate
of
the
deceased
when
these
accounts
were
paid,
and
since
Mrs.
Denton
herself
was
not
taxable
in
Canada,
the
accounts
would
have
been
collected
without
payment
of
income
tax
on
them
by
anyone,
and
this
would
have
been
a
perfectly
proper
and
legitimate
application
of
Section
64(3)
of
the
Act.
I
cannot
interpret
this
section,
however,
as
applying
to
all
rights
or
things
which
may
be
transferred
or
distributed
by
way
of
a
sale
for
value
to
a
purchaser
who
also
happens
to
be
a
beneficiary
or
other
person
beneficially
interested
in
an
estate
or
trust
irrespective
of
how
small
his
benefit
or
beneficial
interest
in
same
may
be.
I
therefore
find
that
with
respect
to
the
rights
or
things
so
transferred
which
are
in
excess
of
the
amount
for
which
the
purchaser
is
a
beneficiary
or
person
beneficially
interested
in
the
estate
he
is
simply
a
purchaser
for
value
and
the
estate
or
trust
is
taxable
under
the
provisions
of
Section
64(2)
on
the
amounts
so
transferred.
The
appeal
is
therefore
dismissed,
with
costs.
To
interpret
the
words
of
a
statute,
regard
must
first
be
had
to
the
scheme
of
the
legislation.
The
object
of
section
64
was
to
provide
for
the
payment
of
income
tax
on
rights
or
things
owned
by
a
taxpayer
who
has
died
which,
when
realized
or
disposed
of,
would
have
been
included
in
computing
his
income.
The
intention
of
the
section
was
that
the
value
of
such
rights
or
things
would
be
taxed
either
in
the
hands
of
the
deceased’s
executor
or
administrator
or
in
the
hands
of
the
beneficiaries.
The
appellant
submits
that
the
word
“transferred”
is
to
be
interpreted
quite
apart
from
the
context
in
which
it
is
used
so
that
a
beneficiary
of
even
a
trivial
legacy
could
purchase
from
the
executor
rights
or
things
worth
any
amount.
Such
an
interpretation
is
not
justified.
What
must
be
considered
is
the
entire
clause:
“Where
.
.
.
a
right
or
thing
.
.
.
has
been
transferred
or
distributed
to
beneficiaries
or
other
persons
beneficially
interested
in
the
estate
or
trust
..
.”
The
words
“distributed
to
beneficiaries”
clearly
restrict
the
value
of
the
rights
or
things
to
be
conveyed
to
each
beneficiary
to
the
amount
of
the
bequest
to
which
he
is
entitled.
If
what
was
contemplated
by
Parliament
was
a
sale
of
accounts
receivable
or
similar
things
to
a
person
who
happened
to
be
a
beneficiary,
the
word
distributed
would
be
quite
inappropriate.
If
that
had
been
the
intention
the
word
“distributed”
would
not
have
been
inserted
in
the
clause.
In
the
case
at
bar,
the
assignment
to
Mrs
Denton
of
$90,000
of
the
accounts
receivable
was
a
distribution
pursuant
to
the
terms
of
the
will
but
the
assignment
of
the
balance
of
the
accounts
receivable
was,
in
fact,
a
sale
to
Mrs
Denton
for
valuable
consideration.
To
the
extent
of
$90,000,
the
assignment
was
made
in
satisfaction
of
the
balance
of
her
bequest.
The
word
“distributed”
is
used
to
cover
cases
where
the
conveyance
is
to
several
beneficiaries.
The
word
“transferred”
is
inserted
to
provide
for
a
case
where
the
conveyance
is
to
only
one
person.
The
meaning
of
“transferred”
in
this
clause
is
limited
by
its
association
with
the
word
“distributed”.
The
rule
is
expressed
in
the
phrase
noscuntur
a
sociis.
To
quote
from
Maxwell
on
Interpretation
of
Statutes,
12th
edition,
at
page
289:
Where
two
or
more
words
which
are
susceptible
of
analogous
meaning
are
coupled
together,
noscuntur
a
sociis.
They
are
understood
to
be
used
in
their
cognate
sense.
They
take,
as
it
were,
their
colour
from
each
other,
the
meaning
of
the
more
general
being
restricted
to
a
sense
analogous
to
that
of
the
less
general.
The
meaning
of
both
the
words
“transferred”
and
“distributed”
is
also
coloured
by
their
conjunction
with
the
words
“beneficiaries
or
persons
beneficially
interested
in
the
estate
or
trust”.
The
value
of
the
rights
or
things
is
therefore
restricted
to
the
amount
of
the
inheritance
of
the
beneficiary.
If
he
acquires
more
than
that
he
takes
as
a
purchaser
for
value
and
the
estate
is
taxable
on
the
amount
so
transferred.
In
the
memorandum
of
fact
and
law,
the
appellant
points
out
that,
under
the
terms
of
the
testator’s
will,
Mrs
Denton
was
a
beneficiary
not
only
to
the
extent
of
the
legacy
of
$100,000
but
also
to
the
extent
of
her
immediate
interest
in
the
residue
of
the
estate
as
provided
in
the
course
of
a
company
reorganization
within
subsection
81(1)
so
as
to
impute
to
it
the
nature
of
a
dividend
and
render
him
eligible
for
a
dividend
tax
credit
under
section
38.
The
appellant
also
contended
that
since
he
had
not
received
payment
of
the
promissory
note
no
benefit,
to
that
extent,
had
been
received.
HELD
(per
curiam):
(1)
The
corporation’s
business
had
not
been
reorganized
within
subsection
81(1).
(2)
The
debt
of
$53,000
created
by
the
company
did
not
require
to
be
realized
in
cash
to
constitute
an
income
benefit.
(3)
The
extent
to
which,
if
at
all,
the
tenant’s
improvements
conferred
a
benefit
on
the
appellant
in
1965
and
1966
depended
on
the
extent
to
which
the
improvements
increased
the
value
of
the
appellant’s
reversionary
interest
and
this
depended
in
part
on
the
nature
of
the
lease.
Here
the
agreed
rental
was
based
on
the
agreed
price,
not
on
the
real
value
of
the
property,
and
the
low
rental
lease
was
a
factor
to
be
taken
into
account
in
determining
the
appellant’s
reversionary
interest.
Since,
however,
the
latter
factor
had
not
been
advanced
in
the
notice
of
appeal,
and
the
respondent
therefore
had
no
opportunity
to
consider
the
point,
counsel
should
be
heard
on
what
judgment
would
be
appropriate.
W
D
Goodman,
QC
and
F
E
Cappell
for
the
Appellant.
G
W
Ainslie,
QC
and
W
J
A
Hobson
for
the
Respondent.
Cases
referred
to:
R
W
S
Johnston
v
MNR,
[1948]
SCR
486;
[1948]
CTC
195;
3
DTC
1182;
King
v
Earl
Cadogan,
[1915]
3
KB
485;
St-Germain
v
MNR,
[1969]
SCR
471;
[1969]
CTC
194;
69
DTC
5086.
The
Chief
Justice—(per
curiam,
judgment
delivered
from
the
Bench):—This
is
an
appeal
from
a
judgment
of
the
Trial
Division
dismissing
with
costs
an
appeal
from
the
appellant’s
assessments
under
Part
I
of
the
Income
Tax
Act
for
the
1965
and
1966
taxation
years.
The
question,
in
respect
of
each
assessment
is
whether
the
assessment
was
in
error
in
so
far
as
it
included
an
amount
in
the
computation
of
the
appellant’s
income
for
that
taxation
year
by
virtue
of
subsection
8(1)
of
the
Income
Tax
Act,
which
reads
as
follows:
8.
(1)
Where,
in
a
taxation
year,
(a)
a
payment
has
been
made
by
a
corporation
to
a
shareholder
otherwise
than
pursuant
to
a
bona
fide
business
transaction,
(b)
funds
or
property
of
a
corporation
have
been
appropriated
in
any
manner
whatsoever
to,
or
for
the
benefit
of,
a
shareholder,
or
(c)
a
benefit
or
advantage
has
been
conferred
on
a
shareholder
by
a
corporation,
otherwise
than
(i)
on
the
reduction
of
capital,
the
redemption
of
shares
or
the
winding-
up,
discontinuance
or
reorganization
of
its
business,
(ii)
by
payment
of
a
stock
dividend,
or
(iii)
by
conferring
on
all
holders
of
common
shares
in
the
capital
of
the
corporation
a
right
to
buy
additional
common
shares
therein,
the
amount
or
value
thereof
shall
be
included
in
computing
the
income
of
the
shareholder
for
the
year.
J
F
Kennedy
Ford
Sales
Limited
(hereinafter
referred
to
as
“the
appellant’s
company”),
a
company
all
of
whose
shares
belonged
to
the
appellant,
operated,
at
all
relevant
times,
a
business
as
a
car
dealer.
In
1965,
pursuant
to
a
pre-arranged
plan,
(a)
the
appellant’s
company
acquired
a
property
with
an
old
building
on
it
at
a
net
cost
of
approximately
$159,000;*
(b)
the
appellant’s
company
made
the
changes
to
that
property
deemed
expedient
by
the
appellant
to
convert
it
into
premises
appropriate
for
the
car
dealer
business
at
an
overall
cost
of
approximately
$185,000
(with
the
result
that
the
company
spent
approximately
$344,000
in
1965
to
acquire
premises
deemed
by
the
appellant
to
be
suitable
for
the
car
dealer
business);
(c)
the
appellant’s
company
sold
the
property
as
so
improved
to
the
appellant
at
a
net
cost
of
approximately
$259,000,
a
small
amount
of
which
was
paid
in
cash
and
the
balance
of
which
was
paid
by
the
appellant
assuming
payment
of
mortgages
in
a
total
amount
of
$311,000
and
receiving
from
his
company
a
promissory
note
in
the
sum
of
$53,000;
and
(d)
the
appellant
leased
the
premises
back
to
his
company
for
a
minimum
term
of
four
and
a
half
years
at
a
monthly
rental
of
$1,935,
which
was
calculated
to
give
the
appellant
a
9%
annual
return
on
his
investment
of
$259,000.
In
1966
the
appellant’s
company
spent
some
$42,000
on
an
addition
to
the
building
on
the
property
in
question.
The
assessment
for
the
1965
taxation
year
was
based
on
the
assumption
that
the
appellant’s
company
transferred
to
the
appellant
in
that
year
a
property
worth
approximately
$344,000
for
a
consideration
of
approximately
$259,000
and
thereby
conferred
on
the
appellant
a
benefit
of
the
kind
contemplated
by
subsection
8(1)
in
an
amount
of
approximately
$85,000.
The
assessment
for
the
1966
taxation
year
was
based
on
the
assumption
that
the
expenditure
of
some
$42,000
made
by
the
appellant’s
company
in
improving
the
appellant’s
property
conferred
on
the
appellant
a
benefit
of
the
kind
contemplated
by
subsection
8(1)
in
an
equivalent
amount.
The
appellant,
by
his
pleading
in
the
Trial
Division,
attacked
the
two
assessments
on
two
main
fronts.
He
contended
that,
in
fact,
no
benefit
had
been
conferred
on
him
by
his
company
in
the
years
in
question,
and,
alternatively,
if
there
were
benefits,
he
disputed
the
amounts.
Secondly,
he
said
that,
if
a
benefit
had
been
conferred
on
him
by
his
company
in
1965,
it
was
conferred
“on
.
.
.
the
.
.
.
reorganization
of
its
business”
so
as
to
be
excluded
from
subsection
8(1)
by
paragraph
(i)
thereof
with
the
result
that
it
was
taxable,
if
at
all,
by
being
deemed
to
be
a
dividend
in
a
limited
amount
by
virtue
of
subsection
81(1),
which
would
result
in
a
more
favourable
tax
position
for
the
appellant.
With
regard
to
the
latter
point,
I
agree
with
the
learned
trial
judge
that
there
was
no
reorganization
of
the
appellant’s
company’s
business
within
the
meaning
of
subsections
8(1)
and
81(1)
when
the
only
change,
as
far
as
its
business
was
concerned,
was
that,
after
the
transactions
in
question,
it
“operated
the
same
business
from
the
same
premises
which
were
rented
by
it
rather
than
being
owned
by
it”.
With
reference
to
the
question
as
to
what
benefit,
if
any,
was
conferred,
the
two
taxation
years
must
be
considered
separately.
A
preliminary
point
should
be
mentioned
in
connection
with
1965.
As
has
already
been
indicated,
the
assessment
was
based
on
the
assumption
that
the
appellant
purchased
a
property
worth
$344,000
from
his
own
company
for
$259,000
and
that
payment
of
the
price
was
effected
by
the
appellant
assuming
mortgages
in
the
sum
of
$311,000
and
being
given
back
a
promissory
note
for
$53,000.
The
appellant
says
that,
even
if
these
factual
assumptions
are
all
correct,
to
the
extent
of
the
amount
of
$53,000
the
benefit
has
not
been
“conferred”
until
the
money
is
in
fact
paid
and
none
of
it
was
paid
in
1965.
In
support
of
this
contention,
the
appellant
relies
on
authorities
regarding
the
question
as
to
when
amounts
such
as
dividends,
interest
and
rent
become
“income”
for
purposes
of
income
tax
legislation.
In
my
opinion,
the
question
involved
in
that
sort
of
case
is
not
the
same
as
the
problem
under
subsection
8(1).
In
the
case
of
“income”,
it
is
assumed,
in
the
absence
of
special
provision,
that
Parliament
intends
the
tax
to
attach
when
the
amount
is
paid
and
not
when
the
liability
is
created.
(The
courts
naturally
react
against
taxation
before
the
income
amount
is
in
the
taxpayer’s
possession.)
Here,
the
question
is
when
a
“benefit”
has
been
“conferred”
within
the
meaning
of
those
words
in
subsection
8(1).
In
my
view,
when
a
debt
is
created
from
a
company
to
a
shareholder
for
no
consideration
or
inadequate
consideration,
a
benefit
is
conferred.
(The
amount
of
the
benefit
may
be
a
question
for
valuation
depending
on
the
nature
of
the
company.)
On
the
other
hand,
when
a
debt
is
paid,
assuming
it
was
well
secured,
no
benefit
is
conferred
because
the
creditor
has
merely
received
that
to
which
he
is
entitled.
I
am
therefore
of
the
opinion
that
the
$53,000
promissory
note
must
be
taken
into
account
for
the
purposes
of
subsection
8(1)
in
the
year
in
which
it
created
an
indebtedness
from
the
company
to
the
appellant,
namely,
1965.
The
question
of
benefit
or
no
benefit
in
the
1965
taxation
year
is,
in
my
view,
primarily
a
question
of
fact
in
connection
with
which
the
onus
of
proof
was
on
the
appellant.
This
is
so,
in
the
first
place,
because
the
assessment
was
made
on
the
assumption
that
a
benefit
in
the
stated
amount
was
conferred
on
the
appellant
by
his
company
and,
as
a
matter
of
law,
the
onus
is
on
the
appellant
to
demolish
such
an
assumed
fact.*
It
is
also
so
because,
on
the
facts
of
this
case,
the
appellant
was
in
the
position
of
having,
in
1965,
caused
his
company
(a)
to
expend
an
amount
of
some
$344,000
on
the
acquisition
of
premises
for
its
business,
and
(b)
to
sell
those
same
premises
to
himself
for
some
$259,000,
and,
in
my
view,
it
is
to
be
assumed,
in
the
absence
of
evidence
to
the
contrary,
that
an
experienced
businessman
such
as
the
appellant
does
not
make
business
expenditures
that
are
not
calculated
to
produce
results
at
least
equal
in
value
to
the
amounts
expended.
The
appellant
attempted
to
meet
the
onus
of
showing
that
there
was
no
benefit
in
1965
by
leading
the
evidence
of
an
expert
to
show
that
the
market
value
of
the
property
when
transferred
by
the
appellant’s
company
to
the
appellant
was
less
than
the
$259,000
paid
by
the
appellant
for
the
property.
As
I
understand
this
evidence,
it
was
based
on
the
view
that
the
property
would
only
have
value
as
a
car
dealer’s
premises
in
the
short
term
and
that,
in
the
long
run,
the
highest
and
best
use
of
the
property
would
be
for
some
quite
different
purpose
so
that
none
of
the
money
expended
by
the
appellant’s
company
on
improvements
that
were
peculiar
to
a
car
dealer’s
business
would
have
had
any
beneficial
effect
on
the
market
value
of
the
property.
The
learned
trial
judge
rejected
the
view,
on
which
the
appellant’s
factual
case
was
based,
that
the
long
run
highest
and
best
use
of
the
property
was
for
something
other
than
as
premises
for
a
car
dealer’s
business.
In
my
view,
there
was
evidence
on
which
he
could
so
decide
and
it
has
not
been
established
that
this
Court
should
interfere
with
that
finding.
The
fact
that
an
experienced
businessman
spent
$344,000
on
the
property
in
1965
as
a
car
dealer’s
premises
is
very
strong
evidence
that
it
had
a
value
for
that
purpose
in
that
year
equal
to
at
least
that
amount.
This
is
supported
by
the
fact
that
three
years
later
the
property
was
resold
for
use
for
the
same
purpose
at
a
higher
amount
to
a
large
automobile
manufacturer.
No
evidence
was
led
to
show
that,
in
fact,
there
had
been
any
indication
that
the
property
was
losing
its
value
for
that
purpose.
I
would
not
myself
have
been
inclined
to
accept
the
evidence
on
which
the
Court
was
asked
to
reach
a
conclusion
that
such
property
in
1965
should
be
valued
as
though
there
was
no
demand
for
it
as
a
car
dealer’s
place
of
business.
There
were
inherent
weaknesses
in
that
evidence,
which
need
not
be
specified,
that
in
my
view
give
it
substantially
less
weight
than
the
facts
of
actual
successful
use
of
the
property.
I
am
further
of
the
view
that
the
appellant
did
not
establish
that
the
property,
at
the
time
of
its
transfer
to
him
in
1965,
had
a
market
value
that
was
less
than
the
$344,000
expended
by
his
company
to
acquire
it
and
make
it
suitable
for
its
car
dealer’s
business.
That
is
not,
however,
the
end
of
the
matter.
Where
a
tenant
improves
the
leased
premises,
the
extent
to
which,
if
at
all,
the
improvement
confers
a
benefit
on
the
landlord
will
depend
on
the
extent
to
which
the
improvement
increases
the
value
of
his
reversionary
interest
and
that,
in
turn,
will
depend
on
the
term
and
conditions
of
the
lease
and
on
the
nature
of
the
improvement.
If
there
is
a
long
term
lease,
it
may
be
that
no
benefit
will
de
conferred
at
all.
Compare
King
v
Earl
Cadogan,
[1915]
3
KB
485
(CA).
If
the
lease
is
a
monthly
tenancy,
the
result
may
be
a
benefit
equal
to
the
amount
by
which
the
value
of
the
property
was
improved.
Compare
St-Germain
v
MNR,
[1969]
SCR
471;
[1969]
CTC
194;
69
DTC
5086.
Similarly,
where
property
that
has
been
improved
by
the
owner
is
sold
at
an
undervalue
under
a
“lease-back”
arrangement,
the
benefit
may
not
be
equivalent
to
the
amount
by
which
the
consideration
is
less
than
market
value
if
the
terms
of
the
lease
that
has
been
arranged
as
part
of
the
transaction
are
not
based
on
market
value.
Here,
it
would
appear
that
the
rent
payable
by
the
appellant’s
company
to
the
appellant
is
fixed,
for
a
minimum
of
four
and
a
half
years,
on
the
basis
of
the
consideration
given
by
the
appellant
for
the
property
and
not
on
market
value.
It
would
seem,
therefore,
that
there
is
a
factor
here
that
should
have
been
taken
into
account
in
determining
the
amount
of
the
benefit
for
1965,
and
that
that
factor
was
not
taken
into
account.
The
difficulty
about
this
aspect
of
the
matter
is
that,
while
the
notice
of
appeal
did
indicate
that
the
appellant
challenged
the
amounts
of
the
benefits
as
assessed,
no
indication
was
given
that
the
appellant
intended
to
challenge
the
amounts
on
the
basis
that
the
Minister
had
computed
them
without
taking
account
of
the
effect
of
a
low
rental
lease
on
the
value
of
the
appellant’s
reversionary
interest.
Furthermore,
aS
appears
from
the
opening
statement
at
the
trial
and
a
reading
of
the
whole
transcript
of
the
proceedings
at
trial,
this
question
was
not
one
in
respect
of
which
either
party
led
evidence.
In
fact,
it
would
seem
clear
that
the
trial
was
conducted
on
the
basis
that
the
issues
were
restricted
to
the
other
matters
to
which
reference
has
been
made
and
this
question
of
the
effect
of
a
low
rental
lease
only
came
out
incidentally
in
the
course
of
cross-examination
of
the
last
witness.
This
undoubtedly
explains
why
the
significance
of
the
matter
was
not
brought
home
to
the
learned
trial
judge.
In
these
circumstances,
there
must
be
room
for
doubt
that
it
is
open
to
this
Court
to
deal
with
the
matter
at
this
stage.
Certainly,
the
matter
should
not
be
dealt
with
at
the
appeal
stage
in
a
manner
that
does
not
ensure
that
the
respondent
has
full
opportunity
to
bring
forward
any
thing
that
may
be
necessary
to
put
the
matter
in
proper
perspective.
My
own
view,
however,
is
that,
whenever
it
appears
that
there
is
a
matter
that
has
not
been
properly
raised
at
an
appropriate
stage
but
that
must
be
taken
into
account
in
order
to
avoid
substantial
injustice,
a
way
should
be
found
to
take
account
of
it
if
at
all
possible
without
real
danger
of
injustice
to
the
opposing
side.
Whether
some
such
method
of
disposing
of
the
1965
appeal
can
be
found
is
a
matter
on
which
the
Court
should
have
assistance
from
counsel.
lt
would
not,
however,
be
amiss
to
express
a
tentative
view
on
how
the
adjustment
to
the
1965
benefit
should
be
made
assuming
that
there
are
no
relevant
circumstances
other
than
those
that
we
have
presently
in
mind.
Put
simply,
the
situation
was
that,
if
the
property
had
been
transferred
to
the
appellant
without
the
obligation
to
lease
it
back
at
an
agreed
rent,
the
appellant
could
have
negotiated
a
lease
at
a
rental
based
on
market
value
instead
of
on
$259,000,
so
that
each
rental
payment
would
have
been
the
stipulated
monthly
rental
payment
plus
an
additional
amount.
The
depreciating
effect
of
the
actual
lease
on
the
value
of
the
appellant’s
interest
in
the
property
was,
therefore,
in
respect
of
each
rental
payment
provided
for,
the
present
value,
as
of
the
date
of
the
purchase
in
1965,
of
that
additional
amount.
Such
present
value
would
have
to
be
computed
in
respect
of
each
rental
payment
provided
for
and
the
respective
results
added
up
to
find
the
amount
by
which
the
benefit
assessed
should
be
reduced.
With
reference
to
the
1966
assessment,
in
my
view
the
improvement
made
by
the
appellant’s
company
to
his
property
was
a
benefit
conferred
on
the
appellant
by
the
company
that
year.
See
St-Germain
v
MNR
(supra).
However,
having
regard
to
the
fact
that
there
were
at
least
three
and
a
half
years
left
in
the
lease
of
the
property
at
the
fixed
rent
and
not
a
mere
month
to
month
tenancy
as
in
the
St-Germain
case,
in
my
view,
the
amount
of
the
benefit
was
not
the
equivalent
of
the
amount
spent
on
the
improvement.
As
in
the
case
of
the
1965
benefit,
there
is
a
factor
here
that
should
have
been
taken
into
account
and
that
was
not
taken
into
account.
(No
evidence
was
led
to
show
that
the
market
value
of
the
property
was
not
increased
by
the
amount
of
the
expenditure.)
In
the
absence
of
circumstances
that
I
do
not
have
in
mind,
I
should
have
thought
that
the
amount
of
that
factor
might
be
an
amount
computed
in
the
manner
that
I
have
indicated
in
reference
to
the
1965
benefit.
What
has
to
be
kept
in
mind,
as
it
seems
to
me,
is
that,
if
it
had
been
a
monthly
tenancy,
the
appellant
could
have
made
a
quick
adjustment
in
rent
to
take
into
account
the
added
value
of
the
premises.
As
I
see
it,
therefore,
the
relevant
amount
is
the
present
value,
as
of
the
time
that
the
1966
improvement
was
completed,
of
the
respective
amounts
that
he
would
have
been
able
to
add
to
the
rental
payments
covered
by
the
lease
but
could
not
add
because
of
the
existence
of
the
lease.
I
am
of
opinion
that
we
should
hear
counsel
on
what
judgment
is
appropriate
as
well
as
on
costs.