Jackett,
P.:—This
is
an
appeal
from
a
judgment
of
the
Income
Tax
Appeal
Board
which
was
set
down,
and
brought
on
for
hearing
before
me,
on
a
stated
case.
The
sole
question
that
I
have
to
decide
is
a
question
as
to
the
application
to
the
agreed
facts
of
subsection
(5d)
of
Section
139
of
the
Income
Tax
Act,
which
reads
in
part
as
follows:
139.
(5d)
For
the
purpose
of
subsection
(5a)
(b)
a
person
who
had
a
right
under
a
contract,
in
equity
or
otherwise,
either
immediately
or
in
the
future
and
either
absolutely
or
contingently,
to,
or
to
acquire,
shares
in
a
corporation,
or
to
control
the
voting
rights
of
shares
in
a
corporation,
shall,
except
where
the
contract
provided
that
the
right
is
not
exercisable
until
the
death
of
an
individual
designated
therein,
be
deemed
to
have
had
the
same
position
in
relation
to
the
control
of
the
corporation
as
if
he
owned
the
shares;
and
The
problem
may
be
explained
as
follows:
1.
The
individuals
concerned
are
William
Cohen,
his
son,
Harry
Cohen,
Harry
Cohen’s
wife,
Belle
Cohen,
and
Martin
Cohen,
the
son
of
Harry
and
Belle
Cohen.
2.
Throughout
the
appellant
company’s
taxation
year
1963
(12
months
ending
March
31,
1968),
its
issued
shares
were
held
as
follows:
William
|
10
|
Harry
|
9
|
Belle
|
1
|
and
during
the
same
period
all
the
issued
shares
of
another
company
that
I
may
refer
to
as
“Empire”
were
held
as
follows:
were
no
other
relevant
fact,
the
appellant
and
Empire
would
have
been
associated
companies
during
the
appellant’s
taxation
year
1963
for
the
purposes
of
Section
39
of
the
Income
Tax
Act,
by
virtue
of
subsection
(4)
of
that
section.
4.
The
other
fact,
which
the
appellant
says
is
relevant
and
the
respondent
says
is
not
relevant,
is
that,
on
February
16,
1962
ie,
before
the
commencement
of
the
appellant’s
1963
taxation
year)
William,
Harry
and
Belle
executed
a
document
which,
it
is
common
ground
for
the
purposes
of
this
appeal,
conferred
upon
Martin
‘‘a
right
under
a
contract
.
.
.
to
acquire*
all
the
shares
in
the
appellant
company
at
a
specified
price,
which
right
was
exercisable
at
Martin’s
option
until
December
31,
1964.
He
did
not
exercise
the
right
until
after
the
expiration
of
the
appellant’s
1963
taxation
year.
|
William
1
|
1290
|
|
Harry
|
3190
|
3.
|
In
these
circumstances,
it
is
common
ground
that,
if
there
|
5.
It
is
common
ground,
therefore,
that,
by
virtue
of
the
operation
of
paragraph
(b)
of
subsection
(5d)
of
Section
139
(supra)
(which
has
application
in
relation
to
this
problem
by
virtue
of
subsection
(4a)
of
Section
39),
Martin
must
be
deemed
to
have
had,
during
the
appellant
company’s
1963
taxation
year,
the
same
position
in
relation
to
the
control
of
the
appellant
company
as
if
he
had
owned,
during
that
taxation
year,
all
the
shares
of
the
appellant
company.
6.
Where
the
parties
part
company
is
that
the
appellant
says,
and
the
respondent
denies,
that
it
also
follows,
as
a
necessary
implication
of
paragraph
(b)
of
subsection
(5d),
that,
if
Martin
is
deemed
to
have
been
in
the
same
position
in
relation
to
the
control
of
the
appellant
as
if
he
owned
the
appellant’s
shares,
William,
Harry
and
Belle
must
be
deemed
to
have
been
in
the
same
position
in
relation
to
the
control
of
the
appellant
as
if
they
did
not
own
the
appellant’s
shares.
The
question
that
I
have
to
decide
is
therefore
a
question
as
to
the
effect
of
subsection
(5d)
of
Section
139,
which
may
be
put
in
general
terms
as
follows
:
If
a
person,
by
virtue
of
subsection
(5d),
is
“deemed”
to
have
had
during
a
certain
period
‘‘the
same
position
in
relation
to
.
.
.
.
control’?
of
a
corporation
‘‘as
if’’
he
owned
certain
shares
in
that
corporation,
does
it
follow
that
the
person
who
during
that
period
actually
owned
those
shares
is
“deemed”
to
have
had
during
that
period
“
the
same
position
in
relation
to
.
.
.
control
’
’
of
that
corporation
‘‘as
if
”
he
did
not
own
those
shares
?
As
I
understand
the
appellant’s
contention,
it
is
that,
while
subsection
(5(1)
does
not
expressly
deem
William,
Harry
and
Belle
to
have
been
in
the
same
position
in
the
appellant’s
1963
taxation
year
as
if
they
did
not
own
any
of
its
shares,
it
does
so
impliedly.
The
appellant
must
go
so
far
as
to
say
that,
when
subsection
(5(1)
expressly
enacts
that,
upon
certain
facts
being
established,
a
person
who
did
not
own
the
shares
is
to
be
deemed
to
be
in
the
same
position
as
if
he
did
own
them,
it
impliedly
enacts
that,
upon
the
same
circumstances
being
established,
the
person
who
did
own
the
shares
is
to
be
deemed
to
be
in
the
same
position
as
if
he
did
not
own
them.
Whether
or
not
such
an
inference
can
be
read
into
subsection
(5(1)
is
a
matter
of
interpretation,
which
must
be
considered
in
the
general
context
in
which
subsection
(5(1)
is
found.
Inasmuch
as
subsection
(dd)
is
an
interpretation
provision
that
may
have
operative
effect
in
several
different
parts
of
the
Act,
it
is
not
improper
to
consider
first,
in
general
terms
(and
without
in-
tendng
to
express
any
opinion
concerning
the
precise
effect
of
provisions
relating
to
other
problems),
the
background
of
the
Act
as
a
whole
in
so
far
as
the
concept
of
control
”
of
a
corporation
is
concerned.
There
are
at
least
three
different
groups
of
sections
in
which
it
may
become
relevant
to
reach
a
conclusion
as
to
whether
a
person
or
a
number
of
persons
‘‘control’’
a
corporation:
1.
provisions
where
the
legislative
intent
is
expressed
by
reference
to
“control”
of
a
corporation
or
to
a
corporation
being
“controlled”,
e.g.,
Section
27(5)
and
(5a),
Section
28(2)
and
Section
68
;
2.
provisions
where
the
legislative
intent
is
expressed
by
reference
to
persons
dealing
‘‘at
arm’s
length’’,
e.g.,
Section
11
(3e)
and
(15),
Section
17,
Section
18,
Section
20,
Section
79,
Section
85,
Section
85A
and
Section
137(3)
;
3.
Section
39,
in
which,
as
I
have
already
indicated,
we
find
a
definition,
for
the
purposes
of
that
section,
of
the
special
statutory
concept
of
one
corporation
being
‘‘associated’’
with
another.
In
so
far
as
the
simple
concept
of
“control”
of
a
corporation
is
concerned,
there
is
no
special
provision
in
the
statute,
as
far
as
I
am
aware,
to
guide
in
the
determination
of
what
is
intended.*
The
meaning
of
the
expression
has
now
been
determined,
however,
by
the
Supreme
Court
of
Canada
in
its
decision
in
M.N.R.
v.
Aaron’s
Ladies
Apparel
Limited,
[1967]
C.T.C.
50;
as
being,
in
effect,
ownership
of
shares
carrying
the
right
to
sufficient
votes
to
determine
the
election
of
the
board
of
directors.
On
the
other
hand,
there
are
quite
complicated
provisions
to
regulate
the
determination
of
a
question
as
to
whether
persons
are
or
were
dealing
‘‘at
arm’s
length’’.
In
so
far
as
relevant
to
the
present
purpose
these
may
be
summarized
as
follows:
In
addition
to
persons
who,
in
fact,
do
not
deal
at
arm’s
length
(Section
139(5)
(b)),
it
is
enacted
that
‘‘related
persons’’
must
be
‘‘deemed
not
to
deal
with
each
other
at
arm’s
length’?
(Section
139(5).);
and
the
statute
spells
out
what
it
means
by
“related
persons’’.
Individuals
connected
by
blood
relationship,
marriage
or
adoption
are
‘‘related
persons’’
(Section
139(5a)
(a)).
A
corporation
and
a
person
who
controls
it
are
‘‘related
persons’’
(Section
139(5a)
(b)
(i)
).
So
are
a
corporation
and
members
of
certain
kinds
of
groups
by
which
it
is
controlled
(Section
139(5a)
(b)
(ii))
and
a
corporation
and
certain
persons
having
a
specified
relationship
to
those
by
whom
it
is
controlled
(Section
139
(5a)
(b)
(iii)
).
Similarly,
two
corporations
controlled
by
the
same
person
or
group
of
persons
or
controlled
in
other
specified
ways
are
‘‘related
persons’’
(Section
139(5a)
(c)).
Subsection
(5d)
of
Section
139,
the
provision
that
I
must
interpret,
was
enacted,
in
the
first
instance
(Section
31
of
1953-4,
3.
57),
as
part
of
the
set
of
provisions
to
which
I
have
referred
concerning
the
effect
to
be
given
to
the
concept
of
persons
not
dealing
at
arm’s
length;
and
it
is
convenient,
at
this
point,
to
consider
the
question
that
I
have
to
decide
as
it
would
have
had
to
be
decided
if
it
had
arisen
immediately
after
subsection
(5d)
was
enacted
in
its
original
form.
For
that
purpose,
I
here
set
out
sufficient
of
the
provisions
then
added
to
Section
139
to
make
it
possible
to
consider
what
was
intended
by
Parliament
at
that
time.
(5)
For
the
purposes
of
this
Act,
(a)
related
persons
shall
be
deemed
not
to
deal
with
each
other
at
arm’s
length;
and
(b)
it
is
a
question
of
fact
whether
persons
not
related
to
each
other
were
at
a
particular
time
dealing
with
each
other
at
arm’s
length.
(5a)
For
the
purpose
of
subsection
(5),
(5c)
and
this
subsection,
“related
persons”,
or
persons
related
to
each
other,
are
(a)
individuals
connected
by
blood
relationship,
marriage
or
adoption
;
(b)
a
corporation
and
(i)
a
person
who
controls
the
corporation,
if
it
is
controlled
by
one
person,
(ii)
a
person
who
is
a
member
of
a
related
group
that
controls
the
corporation,
or
(iii)
any
person
related
to
a
person
described
in
subparagraph
(i)
or
(ii)
;
(c)
any
two
corporations
(i)
if
they
are
controlled
by
the
same
person
or
group
of
persons,
(ii)
if
each
of
the
corporations
is
controlled
by
one
person
and
the
person
who
controls
one
of
the
corporations
is
related
to
the
person
who
controls
the
other
corporation,
(iii)
if
one
of
the
corporations
is
controlled
by
one
person
and
that
person
is
related
to
any
member
of
a
related
group
that
controls
the
other
corporation,
(iv)
if
one
of
the
corporations
is
controlled
by
one
person
and
that
person
is
related
to
each
member
of
an
unrelated
group
that
controls
the
other
corporation,
(v)
if
any
member
of
a
related
group
that
controls
one
of
the
corporations
is
related
to
each
member
of
an
unrelated
group
that
controls
the
other
corporation,
or
(vi)
if
each
member
of
an
unrelated
group
that
controls
one
of
the
corporations
is
related
to
at
least
one
member
of
an
unrelated
group
that
controls
the
other
corporation.
(5d)
For
the
purpose
of
subsection
(5a)
(a)
where
a
related
group
is
in
a
position
to
control
a
corporation,
it
shall
be
deemed
to
be
a
related
group
that
controls
the
corporation
whether
or
not
it
is
part
of
a
larger
group
by
whom
the
corporation
is
in
fact
controlled;
and
(b)
a
person
who
had
a
right
under
a
contract,
in
equity
or
otherwise,
either
immediately
or
in
the
future
and
either
immediately
or
in
the
future
and
either
absolutely
or
contingently,
to,
or
to
acquire,
shares
in
a
corporation,
or
to
control
the
voting
rights
of
shares
in
a
corporation,
shall
be
deemed
to
have
had
the
same
position
in
relation
to
the
control
of
the
corporation
as
if
he
owned
the
shares.
Generally
speaking,
it
may
be
said,
that
the
effect
of
a
determination
that
a
corporation
does
not
deal
at
arm’s
length
with
some
other
person
is
that
either
that
corporation
or
someone
else
is
denied
an
advantage
that
it
or
he
would
otherwise
have
in
the
computation
of
the
tax
payable
under
the
Act
(e.g.,
it
is
not
permitted
to
deduct
capital
cost
allowance
computed
on
the
actual
cost
to
it
of
its
depreciable
assets—Section
20(4)),
or
it
is
required
to
compute
its
profits
on
a
higher
basis
than
is
reflected
by
its
actual
transactions
(e.g.,
on
the
basis
of
fair
market
value—Section
17).*
While
it
is
impossible
to
generalize
with
any
degree
of
precision,
it
is
probably
not
too
inaccurate
to
say
that,
where
special
rules
are
made
for
situations
where
persons
are
not
dealing
at
arm’s
length,
the
legislative
purpose
is
to
guard
against
tax
avoidance,
which
tax
avoidance
would
put
some
persons
in
a
specially
favoured
position
with
a
resultant
unfairness
to
taxpayers
not
in
a
position
to
make
similar
arrangements.!
(The
attempt
to
formulate
the
legislative
purpose
for
this
kind
of
provision
is
necessary
in
order
to
test
the
appellant’s
contention
that
there
is
an
inference
in
subsection
(5d)
of
Section
139
that
is
not
expressed
therein.
)
Having
regard
to
the
general
scheme
of
the
provisions
in
which
the
concept
of
not
dealing
at
arm’s
length
was
employed,
as
I
understand
it,
and
to
the
expressed
legislative
intent
that
the
non-arm’s
length
concept
extends
not
only
to
any
case
where
parties
were
not,
in
fact,
dealing
at
arm’s
length
(Subsection
(5)
(b)
)
but
also
to
a
variety
of
arbitrarily
defined
circumstances
where
the
parties
might,
in
fact,
be
dealing
at
arm’s
length,
it
seems
improbable
that
Parliament
intended
that
paragraph
(b)
of
subsection
(5d)
would
have
the
unexpressed
effect
of
artificially
deeming
a
person
to
have
ceased
to
control
a
company
whose
issued
shares
all
belonged
to
him
merely
because
he
had
granted
an
option
to
someone
else
to
buy
such
shares,
To
test
the
question
further,
it
seems
to
me
to
be
appropriate
to
consider
the
application
of
the
concept
of
an
arm’s
length
transaction,
for
the
purpose
of
subsection
(4)
of
Section
20,
where
a
corporation
bought
depreciable
property
from
(a)
the
owner
of
all
its
shares
at
a
time
when
he
had
not
granted
a
right
to
any
other
person
in
respect
of
such
shares,
(b)
the
owner
of
all
its
shares
after
he
had
granted
an
option
to
another
person
to
buy
the
shares
and
before
such
option
had
been
exercised,
or
(c)
a
person
having
an
option
to
buy
all
its
shares.
Clearly
the
corporation
and
the
owner
of
its
shares,
in
case
No.
(a),
are
related
persons
by
virtue
of
subsection
(5a)
(b)
(i)
and,
therefore,
are
deemed
‘‘not
to
deal
with
each
other
at
arm’s
length’’
by
subsection
(5)
(a).
Similarly,
it
is
clear
that
in
case
No.
(c),
the
person
who
had
an
option
is
deemed,
by
subsection
(5(1)
(b),
to
have
had
the
same
position
in
relation
to
the
control
of
the
corporation
as
if
he
owned
the
shares
and
he
and
the
corporation
are,
therefore,
related
persons
by
virtue
of
subsection
(5a)
(b)
(i)
and
are
deemed
not
to
deal
with
each
other
at
arm’s
length
by
subsection
(5)
(a).
This
result
clearly
follows
even
if
the
vendor
merely
has
an
option
to
acquire
the
shares
that
he
may
never
be
able
to
exercise
(n.b.
the
words
in
subsection
(5(1)
(b)
‘‘a
right
.
.
.
either
absolutely
or
contingently’’).
Parliament
seems
to
have
adopted
the
policy,
at
least
in
this
case,
that,
if
a
person
is
but
in
a
position
where
he
is
entitled,
even
contingently,
to
acquire
control,
the
same
disadvantages
arise
as
if
he
actually
had
control.
That
being
so,
it
seems
quite
consistent
that
Parlia-
ment
deliberately
stopped
where
it
did
in
subsection
(5d)
(b),
it
having
been
intended
that,
where
a
situation
existed
(1)
where
one
person
in
fact
had
control,
and
(ii)
where
another
person
had
a
right
to
acquire
control,
each
of
them
should
be
‘‘deemed’’
not
to
deal
with
the
corporation
at
arm’s
length.
It
follows
that,
in
my
case
No.
(b)
(supra),
subsection
(4)
of
Section
20
would
operate
in
the
case
of
a
purchase
by
a
corporation
of
depreciable
property
from
a
shareholder
who
had
granted
an
option
in
respect
of
its
shares
to
someone
else
as
well
as
in
the
case
of
a
purchase
from
a
shareholder
who
had
not
granted
any
such
option.
My
conclusion
is
that
I
cannot
infer,
in
the
context
of
this
legislation,
from
the
fact
that
Parliament
cast
the
net
of
this
class
of
legislation
so
as
to
embrace
a
somewhat
dubious*
class
of
ease,
that
it
meant
to
withdraw
its
application
from
the
obvious*
case
of
the
corporation
and
the
person
actually
owning
its
shares.
I
come
now
to
Section
39
of
the
Income
Tax
Act
and
its
special
statutory
concept
of
‘‘associated’’
companies.
That
concept
is
part
of
a
scheme
for
ensuring
that
the
lower
corporate
tax
rate
of
18
per
cent
provided
for
by
that
section
is
allowed
on
only
one
amount
of
$35,000
where
there
are
a
number
of
companies
associated”
with
each
other
within
that
statutory
concept,
and
is
not
allowed
on
$35,000
for
each
of
such
companies.
As
I
have
already
indicated,
the
present
case
arises
out
of
a
dispute
as
to
whether
the
appellant
is
associated
with
Empire
for
the
purpose
of
Section
39.
Prior
to
1960,
the
definition
of
“associated”
company
in
Section
39
made
use
of
the
‘‘arm’s
length’’
concept.
Any
reference
to
that
concept
was,
however,
dropped
when
Section
39
was
amended
in
1960.
The
following
provisions
were,
at
that
time,
enacted
as
part
of
Section
39
(Section
11
of
chapter
43
of
1960)
:
89.
(4)
For
the
purpose
of
this
section,
one
corporation
is
associated
with
another
in
a
taxation
year
if,
at
any
time
in
the
year,
(a)
one
of
the
corporations
controlled
the
other,
(b)
both
of
the
corporations
were
controlled
by
the
same
person
or
group
of
persons,
(c)
each
of
the
corporations
was
controlled
by
one
person
and
the
person
who
controlled
one
of
the
corporations
was
related
to
the
person
who
controlled
the
other,
and
one
of
those
persons
owned
directly
or
indirectly
one
or
more
shares
of
the
capital
stock
of
each
of
the
corporations,
(d)
one
of
the
corporations
was
controlled
by
one
person
and
that
person
was
related
to
each
member
of
a
group
of
persons
that
controlled
the
other
corporation,
and
one
of
those
persons
owned
directly
or
indirectly
one
or
more
shares
of
the
capital
stock
of
each
of
the
corporations,
or
(e)
each
of
the
corporations
was
controlled
by
a
related
group
and
each
of
the
members
of
one
of
the
related
groups
was
related
to
all
of
the
members
of
the
other
related
group,
and
one
of
the
members
of
one
of
the
related
groups
owned
directly
or
indirectly
one
or
more
shares
of
the
capital
stock
of
each
of
the
corporations.
(4a)
For
the
purpose
of
subsection
(4),
(a)
one
person
is
related
to
another
person
if
they
are
“related
persons”
or
persons
related
to
each
other
within
the
meaning
of
subsection
(5a)
of
section
139;
(b)
“related
group”
has
the
meaning
given
that
expression
in
subsection
(5c)
of
section
139;
and
(c)
subsection
(5d)
of
section
139
is
applicable
mutatis
mutandis.
In
my
view,
the
meaning
to
be
given
to
subsection
(5d)
of
Section
139
must
be
determined
in
the
light
of
the
context
in
which
it
was
when
it
was
first
enacted
;
and,
when
it
was
incorporated
by
cross
reference
in
Section
39,
its
meaning
for
the
purpose
of
that
section
was
precisely
the
same,
subject
only
to
necessary
verbal
variations,
as
it
had
previously
been.
Changes
have
been
made
in
subsection
(5d)
since
that
time,
but,
in
my
view,
they
do
not
affect
the
question
that
I
have
to
decide.
I
have
set
out
the
reasons
for
my
conclusion
in
my
own
words
and
at
some
length
out
of
deference
to
the
submission
of
counsel
for
the
appellant
that
the
question
that
I
have
to
decide
is
quite
different
in
principle
from
that
which
my
brother
Noël
had
to
decide
in
Yardley
Plastics
of
Canada
Limited
v.
M.N.R.,
[1966]
C.T.C.
215.
While
the
problem
that
arose
in
that
case
had
to
do
with
a
similar
contention
concerning
the
effect
of
paragraph
(a)
of
subsection
(5d)
rather
than
paragraph
(b)
thereof,
in
my
view,
the
two
paragraphs
cannot
be
given
a
different
effect,
as
far
as
the
present
problem
is
concerned.
I
therefore
apply,
as
I
think
I
ought,
the
conclusion
expressed
in
the
following
sentence
in
Noël,
J.’s
judgment
:
The
appellant
has
not,
however,
succeeded
in
this
regard
because
although
Section
139
(5d)
and
its
subsections
directly
affect
Section
39(4)
in
extending
the
meaning
of
control
therein,
they
do
not
restrict
its
meaning.
I
am,
moreover,
in
complete
agreement
with
that
conclusion,
which
is
expressed
by
Noël
J.
much
more
succinctly
than
I
have
found
it
possible
to
do.
The
appeal
is
dismissed
with
costs.
APPENDIX
After
the
above
reasons
were
prepared,
counsel
for
the
appellant
filed
written
submissions
with
regard
to
Yardley
Plastics
of
Canada,
Limited
v.
M.N.R.,
in
which
the
following
passage
appears
:
The
depths
of
absurdity
reached
by
any
other
construction
are
well
illustrated
by
the
example
adduced
at
the
hearing
by
Mr.
Mogan,
counsel
for
the
respondent.
Suppose
Eatons
had
a
wholly-
owned
subsidiary,
all
of
the
shares
of
which
were
optioned
to
Simpsons.
Suppose
further
that
the
total
number
of
shares
issued
and
outstanding
are
one
hundred
shares.
Under
the
construction
which
Mr.
Mogan
advanced,
Eatons,
Simpsons
and
the
subsidiary
would
all
be
associated
with
each
other.
Under
the
construction
for
which
I
argued,
Simpsons
and
the
subsidiary
would
alone
be
associated.
Eatons
would
not
be
associated
with
the
subsidiary
or
with
Simpsons.
If
the
artificial
concept
of
ownership
dictated
by
Section
139
(5d)
(b)
is
not
exclusive
it
would
necessarily
follow
that
none
of
the
companies
would
be
associated!
If
Simpsons,
because
of
its
option,
is
deemed
to
have
had
the
same
position
in
relationship
to
control
of
the
corporation
as
if
it
owned
a
hundred
shares
and
if,
notwithstanding
the
foregoing,
Eatons
is
regarded
as
being
still
the
owner
of
a
hundred
shares,
then
the
subsidiary
is
not
associated
with
Eatons
and
it
is
not
associated
with
Simpsons.
If
you
add
to
the
artificial
deemed-to-be
shareholdings
of
Simpsons
the
one
hundred
shares
actually
owned
by
Eatons,
there
emerges
a
company
in
which,
in
relation
to
control,
Eatons
and
Simpsons
each
own
or
is
deemed
to
own
one
hundred
shares.
As
the
number
of
Shares
balance
each
other
and
neither
of
the
two
companies
in
relationship
to
control
has
more
than
fifty
per
cent
of
the
total
share
issue
and
deemed
to
be
share
issue,
there
will
be
no
association,
and
the
formerly
associated
subsidiary
would
become
disassociated
from
anybody
by
the
option
itself.
In
my
view,
this
reductio
ad
absurdum
argument
is
based
upon
an
incorrect
reading
of
subsection
(5d).
That
subsection
applies
when
the
question
arises
as
to
whether
the
owner
of
a
“right”
controlled
the
corporation
and
it
directs
that
he
should
be
deemed
to
have
had
the
same
position
in
relation
to
control
of
the
corporation
‘‘as
if”
he
owned
‘‘the
shares’’.
When
the
question
arises
as
to
whether
the
real
owner
of
the
shares
controlled
the
corporation,
there
is
no
occasion
to
apply
the
deeming
provision
in
subsection
(5d).
There
is
no
possible
justification
for
reading
the
provision
as
deeming
the
existence
of
two
sets
of
shares
in
place
of
the
one
set
that
actually
existed.