Stone
J.A.:
The
central
issue
in
this
appeal
is
whether
the
appellant’s
“income”
for
the
taxation
years
under
review
must
include
“commissions”
which
the
respondent
contends
were
earned
and
received
by
the
appellant
while
acting
as
an
insurance
broker
from
its
Montréal
headquarters
in
arranging
insurance
with
insurers
in
the
United
States
(“U.S.
insurers”)
on
behalf
of
various
American
insureds
(“U.S.
insureds”).
The
learned
Tax
Court
Judge
determined
that
these
commissions
were
income
from
the
appellant’s
business
under
Part
I
of
the
Income
Tax
Act,
.S.C.
1970-71-72,
c.
63
(the
“Act”).
Factual
background
The
facts
of
this
case
are
summarized
in
the
reasons
for
judgment
of
the
Tax
Court
Judge
.
It
seems
to
me,
however,
that
it
is
not
so
much
the
facts
as
found
that
are
important,
but
whether
they
establish
as
a
matter
of
law
that
the
appellant
received
or
enjoyed
the
commissions
which
the
Minister
has
assessed
as
income
in
its
hands.
To
this
end
it
will
be
convenient
to
set
out
the
principal
facts
and
to
make
reference
briefly
to
the
relevant
supporting
evidence.
During
the
taxation
years
in
question
and
for
many
years
prior
thereto
the
appellant
conducted
most
of
its
insurance
brokerage
business
from
its
headquarters
in
Montréal.
It
had
no
office
or
place
of
business
in
the
United
States
and
was
not
licensed
to
act
as
an
insurance
broker
in
any
of
the
states
of
that
country.
The
appellant’s
business
largely
consisted
of
developing
and
negotiating
complex
insurance
packages
on
behalf
of
the
U.S.
insureds
on
a
subscription
or
layer
basis.
The
difference
between
a
subscription
and
a
layer
basis
is
explained
in
paragraph
5
of
the
appellant’s
written
argument:
On
a
so-called
“subscription”
basis,
the
Appellant
might
receive
terms,
for
example,
from
one
insurer
in
London
or
United
States
insurance
market
for
coverage
in
respect
of
20
percent
of
a
particular
liability
limit.
The
Appellant
would
then
go
into
the
London
and
United
States
markets
to
find
other
insurers
willing
to
write
the
remaining
80
percent
of
that
particular
limit.
On
a
so-called
“layer”
basis,
the
Appellant
would
interest
different
segments
of
the
London
and
United
States
insurance
markets
in
various
layers
of
insurance.
For
example,
one
insurer,
Or
a
group
of
insurers
on
the
subscription
basis,
might
quote
terms
for
a
first
layer
of
coverage
in
the
amount
of
$5
million.
A
second
insurer
or
a
group
of
insurers
might
quote
terms
for
a
second
layer
of
coverage
in
the
amount
of
$10
million
in
excess
of
$5
million,
and
so
on
up
to
the
desired
amount
of
coverage.
The
evidence
at
trial
indicates
that
the
appellant’s
role
was
that
of
a
so-
called
“middleman”
between
the
U.S.
insureds
and
the
insurers
with
a
view
to
arranging
coverage
of
insurance
risks
for
the
insured
on
the
best
obtainable
terms.
The
routine
practice,
it
appears,
was
for
the
appellant
to
obtain
several
different
sets
of
terms
from
potential
insurers
and
then
to
advise
the
U.S.
insureds
on
the
choice
of
one
of
them.
Upon
selecting
the
potential
insurer
whose
terms
were
found
acceptable,
the
U.S.
insured
instructed
the
appellant
to
communicate
its
choice
to
that
insurer.
As
the
appellant
-
not
being
a
licensed
broker
-
did
not
act
as
agent
for
any
of
the
U.S.
insurers,
the
particular
insurer
itself
bound
interim
coverage
which
was
confirmed
by
a
“memorandum
of
insurance”
from
the
appellant
to
that
insurer
.
The
actual
policy
was
issued
by
the
U.S.
insurer.
In
circumstances
that
did
not
involve
a
U.S.
insurer
who
was
prohibited
by
law
from
paying
a
commission
to
the
appellant,
the
appellant
as
broker
of
record
would
itself
bind
coverage
on
behalf
of
a
U.S.
insured,
and
issue
an
invoice
to
the
U.S.
insured
for
the
premium
payable.
Whenever
the
appellant
so
acted,
the
U.S.
insured
at
the
direction
of
the
appellant
remitted
the
premium
to
the
appellant’s
New
York
bank
account
where
it
was
held
until
the
appellant
was
required
to
remit
it
to
the
insurer.
The
appellant
then
invested
the
premium
in
short-term
certificates
of
deposit
and
retained
any
interest
earned
thereon
for
its
own
account.
The
premium
that
was
ultimately
remitted
to
the
insurer
by
the
appellant
was
net
of
the
appellant’s
commission.
During
the
taxation
years
in
issue,
a
number
of
U.S.
insurers
in
eleven
different
states
including
the
State
of
New
York
advised
the
appellant
that
relevant
state
insurance
laws
forbade
them
from
recognizing
it
as
a
broker
of
record
and
from
paying
it
a
commission
on
insurance
coverage
which
it
developed
and
negotiated
.
The
U.S.
insurers
took
this
position
because
the
appellant
did
not
hold
an
insurance
broker’s
licence
under
state
law.
Not
more
than
20%
of
the
insurance
coverage
was
placed
with
U.S.
insurers
who
refused
to
pay
a
commission
to
the
appellant.
In
these
circumstances,
the
appellant
considered
that
its
interest
would
be
best
served
if
it
referred
the
insurance
coverage
to
a
duly
licensed
U.S.
broker
to
formalize
the
coverage
with
an
insurer
and
be
paid
the
commission.
This
option
was
considered
preferable
to
either
obtaining
a
broker’s
licence
in
the
United
States
or
turning
away
insurance
from
those
U.S.
insurers
who
insisted
on
the
coverage
being
placed
by
a
licensed
broker.
The
appellant
selected
two
affiliated
U.S.
corporations,
Minet
International
Professional
Indemnity
Brokers
Inc.
(“MIPI”)
and
units
of
Bowes
&
Company
(“Bowes”),
to
act
as
broker
of
record
with
respect
to
the
insurance
coverage
in
question,
as
each
of
them
held
the
requisite
broker’s
li-
cence.
The
evidence
indicates
that
Bowes
was
a
wholesale
broker,
whose
expertise
lay
in
dealing
with
other
insurance
brokers.
MIPI
was
a
retail
broker
whose
business
was
different
from
that
of
the
appellant.
.
Neither
MIPI
nor
Bowes
owned
shares
in
the
appellant,
and
the
appellant
did
not
own
shares
in
either
MIPI
or
Bowes.
However,
all
three
companies
were
controlled
by
Minet
Holding
PLC,
a
United
Kingdom
corporation.
In
situations
where
the
appellant
brought
MIPI
and
Bowes
into
the
picture,
it
conducted
its
insurance
business
with
its
U.S.
insureds
and
insurers
(including
invoicing
the
insureds
for
premiums,
depositing
the
premiums
in
the
New
York
bank
account
and
investing
them
in
short-term
certificates
of
deposit),
in
much
the
same
way
as
it
regularly
conducted
its
insurance
business
with
other
U.S.
insureds
and
insurers.
The
departure
from
its
usual
practice
came
at
the
time
the
premium
had
to
be
remitted
to
the
U.S.
insurer.
Shortly
before
the
date
that
the
premium
was
due
to
be
remitted,
the
appellant
transferred
it
to
either
MIPI
or
Bowes.
The
appellant
again
kept
for
its
own
account
the
interest
earned
on
the
short-term
certificates
of
deposit.
The
U.S.
insurer
invoiced
either
MIPI
or
Bowes,
as
appropriate,
for
the
premium
due.
.
MIPI
or
Bowes,
as
the
case
may
be,
then
finalized
the
transaction
by
arranging
for
the
policy
to
be
issued
showing
one
of
them
as
the
broker
of
record.
They
then
remitted
the
premium
to
the
U.S.
insurer
net
of
the
agreed
commission.
Although
the
work
of
MIPI
and
Bowes
in
arranging
insurance
coverage
for
the
U.S.
insureds
was
slight
in
comparison
to
that
of
the
appellant,
there
was
evidence
at
trial
to
the
effect
that
they
performed
an
“absolutely
essential
service”
of
providing
the
brokerage
licence
and
provided
“the
vital
link
without
which
the
transaction
couldn’t
have
gone
ahead”.
.
That
evidence
was
not
contradicted.
There
was
also
evidence
that
these
licensed
brokers
attended
to
some
details
in
particular
kinds
of
cases
and
were
shown
as
broker
of
record
on
the
insurance
policies
that
were
ultimately
issued.
It
is
not
disputed
that
MIPI
and
Bowes
reported
the
commissions
received
from
the
U.S.
insurers
in
their
respective
U.S.
tax
returns.
The
appellant
called
Thom
Rosenthal,
a
member
of
the
bar
of
the
State
of
New
York,
as
an
expert
witness
to
prove
as
a
fact
the
relevant
law
of
each
of
the
eleven
states
in
question.
Mr.
Rosenthal
was
accepted
by
the
Tax
Court
Judge
as
a
qualified
expert
on
the
relevant
laws
of
each
of
those
states.
He
was
cross-examined
by
the
respondent.
The
Tax
Court
Judge
referred
to
the
effect
of
Mr.
Rosenthal’s
evidence
at
page
4
of
his
reasons
for
judgment,
where
he
stated:
In
his
affidavit
Mr.
Rosenthal
concluded:
THAT
in
view
of
the
fact
that
the
Appellant
did
not
hold
a
New
York
broker’s
license
during
any
of
the
years
1985
through
1989
inclusive,
the
provisions
of
the
Insurance
Law
and
Penal
Law
discussed
above
operated
so
as
to
prohibit
the
payment
of
commissions
to
the
Appellant
by
an
insurer
providing
insurance
in
New
York
and
to
prohibit
the
sharing
of
any
portion
of
such
commissions
with
the
Appellant
paid
by
an
insurer
to
MIPI
or
to
any
other
New
York-licensed
broker;
THAT
in
consequence,
it
was
reasonable
for
U.S.
insurers
to
refuse
to
pay
commissions
to
the
Appellant
in
respect
of
insurance
in
New
York
and
for
MIPI
and
all
other
New
York-licensed
brokers
to
refuse
to
share
commissions
on
such
insurance
with
the
Appellant;
THAT
had
the
Appellant
initiated
an
action
in
the
courts
of
New
York
against
such
insurers
or
such
brokers
for
the
payment
of
the
commissions
or
portions
thereof
in
question,
it
would
have
been
unsuccessful
in
establishing
any
legal
entitlement
to
such
amounts;...
The
witness
testified
that
the
laws
of
the
remaining
states
were
to
the
same
general
effect.
No
evidence
to
the
contrary
was
adduced
at
trial.
The
judgment
below
The
Tax
Court
Judge
concluded
that
the
appellant
had
both
“earned”
and
“received”
the
commissions
and
had
“derived
all
of
the
fruits”
of
the
funds
collected
from
the
U.S.
insurers
in
the
form
of
interest.
It
was
significant
to
him
that
the
appellant,
MIPI
and
Bowes
were
“related
corporations”
within
the
meaning
of
the
Act.
In
his
view,
as
stated
at
page
17
of
his
reasons,
the
appellant
“has
acquiesced
in
the
commissions
it
earned
being
paid
to
Bowes
and
MIPI”
which
he
considered
to
be
different
“from
a
case
where,
because
of
a
legal
constraint,
no
commissions
at
all
are
paid.”
The
end
result,
in
his
opinion,
was
that
the
commissions
were
paid
to
related
corporations
and
that
they
accrued
to
the
beneficial
ownership
of
the
group,
i.e.
the
parent
company,
thereby
allowing
them
to
remain
“in
the
family”.
He
considered
that
the
appellant
was
“instrumental
in
agreeing
in
some
fashion
that
the
amounts
be
paid
to
Bowes
and
MIPI”,
and
that
this
indicated
“a
degree
of
control
or
dominion”
over
the
commissions.
It
was
significant
to
the
Tax
Court
Judge
that,
as
stated
at
pages
16-17
of
his
reasons:
Not
all
of
the
funds
received
by
the
Appellant
were
“impressed
with
a
trust”
in
favour
of
the
insurer.
The
portion
representing
the
brokerage
commission
was
not.
See
the
above
quotation
from
Exhibit
A-14.
The
amount
representing
the
brokerage
commission
belonged
to
the
Appellant,
10
Analysis
I,
like
my
colleague
Letourneau
J.A.,
agree
that
subsection
56(2)
of
the
Act
cannot
be
relied
upon
in
the
circumstances
of
this
case.
I
respectfully
adopt
what
my
colleague
has
written
on
this
aspect
of
the
dispute.
The
remaining
question
is
whether
the
commissions
in
issue
can
properly
be
regarded
as
the
appellant’s
income
in
the
taxation
years
in
question.
Section
3
of
the
Act
provides
that
the
“income
of
a
taxpayer
for
a
taxation
year
for
the
purposes
of
this
Part
is
his
income
for
the
year”,
determined
by
the
rules
therein
set
forth.
The
basic
rules
for
determining
income
from
a
business
appear
in
Part
1,
Division
B,
subdivision
b,
which
includes
subsection
9(1)
of
the
Act:
9
(1)
Subject
to
this
Part,
a
taxpayer’s
income
for
a
taxation
year
from
a
business
or
property
is
his
profit
therefrom
for
the
year.
As
the
Minister
conceded
at
trial,
we
are
not
here
concerned
with
tax
avoidance.
I!
It
seems
to
me
that
whether
an
amount
is
to
be
regarded
as
income
for
tax
purposes
in
any
given
situation
turns
most
heavily
on
the
evidence
in
a
particular
case.
While
the
question
under
consideration
has
yet
to
be
defini-
tively
answered
by
binding
authority
in
Canada,
the
decided
cases
do
offer
some
guidance
with
respect
to
whether
funds
actually
received
by
a
taxpayer
with
some
strings
attached
ought
properly
to
be
regarded
as
income
in
the
hands
of
that
taxpayer.
In
Dominion
Taxicab
Assn.
v.
Minister
of
National
Revenue,
[1954]
S.C.R.
82
(S.C.C.),
it
was
determined
that
the
deposits
received
from
the
association’s
members
were
not
profits
derived
from
its
business
and
as
such
subject
to
tax
under
section
4
of
the
Income
Tax
Act,
S.C.
1948,
c.
52,
because
the
deposits
had
not
become
the
property
of
the
association.
The
Court
had
regard
to
the
substance
rather
than
the
form
of
the
transactions.
In
the
words
of
Cartwright
J.,
for
the
majority,
at
page
86:
While
the
method
of
book-keeping
adopted
by
the
parties
is
not
conclusive
either
for
or
against
the
party
sought
to
be
charged
with
tax,
I
am
of
opinion
that
in
the
case
at
bar
the
appellant
rightly
treated
the
$40,500
as
a
deferred
liability
to
its
members,
and
that
unless
and
until
the
necessary
conditions
were
fulfilled
to
give
absolute
ownership
of
a
deposit
to
the
appellant
and
to
extinguish
its
liability
therefor
to
the
depositing
member,
such
deposit
could
not
properly
be
regarded
as
a
profit
from
the
appellant’s
business.
In
Minister
of
National
Revenue
v.
Atlantic
Engine
Rebuilders
Ltd.,
[1967]
S.C.R.
477
(S.C.C.),
the
issue
was
whether
a
refundable
cash
deposit
was
captured
as
income
under
section
4
of
the
Income
Tax
Act
R.S.C.
1952,
c.
148.
In
determining
that
it
was
not,
Cartwright
J.
stated
for
the
majority
at
pages
479-480:
In
Dominion
Taxicab
Association
v.
Minister
of
National
Revenue,
[1954]
S.C.R.
82
at
85,
2
D.L.R.
373,
it
was
said
in
the
judgment
of
the
majority
of
the
Court:
It
is
well
settled
that
in
considering
whether
a
particular
transaction
brings
a
party
within
the
terms
of
the
Income
Tax
Act
its
substance
rather
than
its
form
is
to
be
regarded.
The
question
of
substance
in
this
case
appears
to
me
to
be
whether
in
stating
what
its
profit
was
for
the
year
the
respondent
could
truthfully
have
included
the
sum
in
question.
To
me
there
seems
to
be
only
one
answer,
that
it
could
not.
It
knew
that
it
might
not
be
able
to
retain
any
part
of
that
sum
and
that
the
probabilities
were
that
96
per
cent
of
it
must
be
returned
to
the
deposits
in
the
near
future.
The
circumstance
that
the
respondent
became
the
legal
owner
of
the
moneys
deposited
with
it
and
that
they
did
not
constitute
a
trust
fund
in
its
hands
appears
to
me
to
be
irrelevant;
the
same
may
be
said
of
moneys
deposited
by
a
customer
in
a
Bank
which
form
part
of
the
Bank’s
assets
but
not
of
its
profits.
To
treat
these
deposits
as
if
they
were
ordinary
trading
receipts
of
the
respondent
would
be
to
disregard
all
the
realities
of
the
situation.
The
grounds
upon
which
Thurlow
J.
based
his
decision
appear
to
me
to
be
supported
by
the
reasoning
of
the
majority
in
this
Court
in
Dominion
Taxicab
Asso-
ciation
v.
Minister
of
National
Revenue,
supra,
at
p.
85,
where
it
is
stated
that
as
each
deposit
was
received
by
the
Association
and
became
a
part
of
its
assets
there
arose
a
corresponding
contingent
liability
equal
in
amount.
This
was
one
of
the
grounds
on
which
it
was
held
that
the
deposits
formed
no
part
of
the
profits
of
the
Association.
Since
that
decision
there
has
been
no
substantial
change
in
the
wording
of
the
sections
of
the
Income
Tax
Act
on
which
the
appellant
relies.
What
appears
to
me
to
be
decisive
is
the
fact
that
there
is
no
basis,
having
regard
to
the
realities
of
the
situation,
on
which
these
deposits
can
properly
be
treated
as
ordinary
trading
receipts
of
the
respondent
which
it
was
entitled
to
include
in
calculating
its
profits
for
the
year.
Two
decisions
of
the
Exchequer
Court
of
Canada
are
also
deserving
of
mention.
In
Robertson
Ltd.
v.
Minister
of
National
Revenue,
[1944]
Ex.
C.R.
170
(Can.
Ex.
Ct.),
Thorson
P.,
at
page
182-83,
adopted
the
following
test
for
determining
whether
an
amount
received
by
a
taxpayer
has
the
quality
of
income:
Is
his
right
to
it
absolute
and
under
no
restriction,
contractual
or
otherwise,
as
to
its
disposition,
use
or
enjoyment?
To
put
it
in
another
way,
can
an
amount
in
a
taxpayer’s
hands
be
regarded
as
an
item
of
profit
or
gain
from
his
business,
as
long
as
he
holds
it
subject
to
specific
and
unfulfilled
conditions
and
his
right
to
retain
it
and
apply
it
to
his
own
use
has
not
yet
accrued,
and
may
never
accrue?
Thorson
P.
applied
the
same
test
in
Canadian
Fruit
Distributors
Ltd.
v.
Minister
of
National
Revenue,
[1954]
Ex.
C.R.
551
(Can.
Ex.
Ct.),
at
pages
559-560.
The
appellant
relies
on
certain
decisions
of
American
courts
in
support
of
its
submission
that
the
commissions
in
question
are
not
to
be
regarded
as
income
in
its
hands.
These
are
Commissioner
of
Internal
Revenue
v.
First
Security
Bank
of
Utah,
N.A.,
405
U.S.
394
(U.S.
Sup.
Ct.
1971)
(1972);
Proctor
&
Gamble
Co.
v.
Commissioner
of
Internal
Revenue,
961
F.2d
1255
(U.S.
6th
Cir.
1992);
and
Tower
Loan
of
Mississippi,
Inc.
v.
Commissioner
of
Internal
Revenue,
71
T.C.M.
2581
(U.S.
T.C.
1996).
I
respectfully
agree
with
the
Tax
Court
Judge
that
these
cases
are
“distinguishable”
not
only,
in
my
view,
because
the
factual
situations
differed
but
also
because
the
laws
under
which
they
were
decided
also
differed.
At
the
same
time
it
is
appropriate,
in
my
view,
to
have
some
regard
to
such
decisions,
particularly
to
a
decision
of
the
United
States
Supreme
Court,
to
determine
whether
they
contain
any
principle
or
other
guidance
that
might
assist
this
Court
in
the
present
matter.
As
was
made
clear
by
Rinfret,
J.
in
Equitable
Life
Assurance
Society
of
the
United
States
v.
Larocque,
[1942]
S.C.R.
205
(S.C.C.),
at
page
239,
although
decisions
of
the
United
States
Supreme
Court
are
not
binding
in
this
country,
“they
are,
it
need
hardly
be
stated,
entitled
to
the
greatest
respect.”
Each
of
the
American
cases
relied
on
by
the
appellant
were
concerned
with
the
construction
of
a
section
of
the
Internal
Revenue
Code
of
the
United
States
which
authorized
the
income
tax
authorities
to
allocate
the
gross
income
of
two
or
more
business
entities
owned
or
controlled
by
the
same
entity
if
such
was
thought
necessary
in
order
to
reflect
the
true
income
of
each
of
them.
The
common
feature
of
each
case
was
that
either
a
federal,
state
or
foreign
law
expressly
prohibited
certain
payments
to
be
made
to
the
member
of
the
group
whose
income
the
authorities
sought
to
allocate
to
others
in
the
group.
The
courts
each
concluded
that
as
the
law
prohibited
the
payments
no
control
could
be
exercised
within
the
contemplation
of
the
section,
and
there
could
accordingly
be
no
allocation.
In
First
Security,
supra,
Powell,
J.
for
the
majority,
enunciated
the
following
principle
at
page
403:
We
know
of
no
decision
of
this
Court
wherein
a
person
has
been
found
to
have
taxable
income
that
he
did
not
receive
and
that
he
was
prohibited
from
receiving.
In
cases
dealing
with
the
concept
of
income,
it
has
been
assumed
that
the
person
to
whom
the
income
was
attributed
could
have
received
it.
The
underlying
assumption
always
has
been
that
in
order
to
be
taxed
for
income,
a
taxpayer
must
have
complete
dominion
over
it.
“The
income
that
is
subject
to
a
man’s
unfettered
command
and
that
he
is
free
to
enjoy
at
his
own
option
may
be
taxed
to
him
as
his
income,
whether
he
sees
fit
to
enjoy
it
or
not.”
Corliss
v.
Bowers,
281
U.S.
376,
378
(1930).
I
have
already
referred
to
the
grounds
upon
which
the
Tax
Court
Judge
decided
that
the
commissions
should
be
regarded
as
income
in
the
hands
of
the
appellant.
One
of
these
is
deserving
of
comment
at
the
outset.
It
was
his
view
that
the
commissions
were
“not
impressed
with
a
trust”
because
an
agreement
between
the
appellant
and
a
Canadian
insurance
company,
Exhibit
A-14,
expressly
provided
that
“[a]
11
premiums
collected
on
behalf
of
the
Company,
less
the
Broker’s
commission
belong
to
the
Company
and
must
be
held
in
trust
in
a
Bank
or
Trust
Company”.
That
finding
was
plainly
based
on
a
mistaken
view
of
the
evidence.
The
exhibit
relied
upon
had
no
bearing
whatever
on
the
legal
relationship
between
the
appellant
and
any
of
the
U.S.
insurers.
It
set
out
the
terms
of
a
contract
between
the
appellant
and
a
Canadian
insurer.
Indeed
the
respondent
concedes
at
paragraph
16
of
her
written
argument
that
this
agreement
“was
irrelevant
to
the
issues”
because
it
did
not
concern
the
appellant’s
U.S.
business.
In
my
view,
Exhibit
A-14
is
not
evidence
that
the
commissions
in
question
were
received
with
the
premiums,
or
that
the
commissions
belonged
to
the
appellant,
or
that
the
premiums
were
not
held
in
trust.
The
record
does
not
contain
any
clear
evidence
of
the
appellant’s
precise
relationship
with
the
U.S.
insurers.
While
there
is
no
evidence
in
the
form
of
express
agreements
between
the
appellant
and
U.S.
insurers
that
the
premiums
were
to
be
held
by
the
appellant
in
trust,
it
is
evident
that
the
appellant
viewed
the
premiums
as
trust
funds
for
the
U.S.
insurers.
The
record
indicates
that
no
part
of
the
premiums
were
the
appellant’s
own
funds.
The
appellant
accepted
that
it
was
under
an
obligation
to
pay
the
full
amounts
of
premium
to
the
U.S.
insurers,
either
directly
according
to
its
ordinary
practice
or
through
the
intermediacy
of
either
MIPI
or
Bowes.
What
I
think
emerges
from
the
record
is
that
until
the
point
in
time
at
which
the
premium
was
due
to
be
transmitted
to
a
U.S.
insurer
who
was
prohibited
by
law
from
paying
a
commission
to
the
appellant,
the
appellant
conducted
its
dealings
with
a
U.S.
insured
and
U.S.
insurer
in
much
the
same
way
that
it
did
with
any
other
U.S.
insured
and
U.S.
insurer.
The
appellant’s
practice
was
to
invoice
the
U.S.
insureds
soon
after
the
U.S.
insurers
bound
coverage,
with
a
view
to
receiving
the
premium
funds
and
investing
them
in
short-term
certificates
of
deposit
in
order
to
earn
interest
income,
which
the
appellant
retained
and
reported
to
the
Minister.
The
usual
practice
was
to
deduct
a
previously
agreed
to
rate
of
commission
from
the
premium
and
remit
the
net
amount
to
the
U.S.
insurer.
When
the
above
mentioned
point
in
time
was
about
to
be
reached,
the
appellant
departed
from
this
practice
by
remitting
the
full
premium
to
either
MIPI
or
Bowes
and
retaining
no
portion
on
account
of
commission
for
itself.
The
evidence
is,
I
think,
tolerably
clear
that
in
situations
where
state
law
did
not
prohibit
the
payment
of
a
commission
to
the
appellant,
the
appellant
considered
the
commission
to
be
earned
when
the
appellant
invoiced
the
U.S.
insured
for
the
premium
payable
to
the
U.S.
insurer.
Although
the
evidence
is
not
entirely
clear
it
would
also
seem
that
some
sort
of
understanding
or
industry
practice
was
in
play
between
the
appellant
and
the
U.S.
insurers
by
which
the
appellant
was
entitled
to
deduct
the
commission
out
of
the
premium
it
had
collected.
Some
insight
into
industry
practice
prevailing
in
the
United
Kingdom
and
elsewhere
with
respect
to
payment
of
remuneration
to
a
broker
or
agent
by
an
insurer,
may
be
gathered
from
H.
Cockerell
and
G.
Shaw,
Insurance
Broking
and
Agency:
The
Law
and
the
Practice
(London:
Witherby
&
Co.
Ltd.,
1979)
at
pages
106-07,
where
they
state:
Insurance
brokers
and
agents
are
almost
always
rewarded
not
by
their
clients
but
by
the
receipt
of
commission
or
brokerage
from
the
insurers
with
whom
they
place
the
client’s
insurances.
This
apparent
anomaly
has
met
a
great
deal
of
criticism
in
the
past
but
its
beginnings
are
almost
coeval
with
the
birth
of
insurance.
It
has
always
been
thus
and
the
international
aspect
of
much
business
flowing
into
the
U.K.
broker
market
would
be
imperilled
were
a
change
made.
Thus,
an
American
broker
who
wishes
to
have
a
large
risk
placed
in
the
London
market
naturally
seeks
a
proportion
of
the
resultant
brokerage
as
a
reward
for
his
introduction.
Since
U.S.,
Canadian
and
almost
all
other
insurance
intermediaries
are
paid
on
the
U.K.
basis
very
considerable
difficulties
would
arise
on
a
change
to
a
fee
system....
It
follows
that
the
consideration
necessary
to
form
a
binding
contract
between
the
insured
and
the
broker
or
agent
is
the
acceptance
by
the
former
that
a
percentage,
generally
of
the
premium
but
occasionally
of
the
sum
insured
or
annuity
consideration,
will
be
paid
by
the
third
parties
to
that
contract,
the
various
insurers
with
whom
the
business
is
or
will
be
placed.
It
would
seem
a
fair
inference,
as
the
respondent
argued,
that
an
agreement
of
some
sort
existed
between
the
appellant
and
each
of
the
U.S.
insurers
that
governed
their
relationship.
The
appellant
apparently
acted
for
the
U.S.
insureds
in
arranging
coverage
on
the
basis
that
the
insurers
would
pay
the
commission,
the
rate
of
which
was
apparently
factored
into
the
premium
charged.
The
U.S.
insureds,
it
appears,
were
under
no
obligation
to
pay
a
commission.
Presumably,
payment
of
the
commission
was
a
matter
entirely
between
the
appellant
and
the
U.S.
insurers.
Thus
two
separate
contractual
relationships
seem
to
have
existed
between
the
parties
involved
-
one
between
the
appellant
and
the
U.S.
insured,
and
the
other
between
the
appellant
and
the
U.S.
insurer.
Edmund
Davies,
L.J.
commented
on
the
existence
of
these
relationships
in
Wilson
v.
Avec
Audio-Visual
Equipment
Ltd.,
[1974]
1
Lloyd’s
Rep.
81
(Eng.
C.A.),
at
page
82:
The
plaintiff
was
undoubtedly
authorized
to
act
on
behalf
of
the
would-be
assured,
the
defendants,
in
securing
insurance
cover
for
them
-
an
unpaid
agent,
because
(as
is
commonly
known)
in
such
circumstances
insurance
brokers
such
as
the
plaintiff
get
their
remuneration
by
way
of
commission
from
the
insurance
company
with
whom
they
do
business.
There
are
really
two
contracts
in
existence
in
such
cases
as
the
present.
An
insurance
broker
has
a
contract
(one
would
expect
it
to
be
in
writing,
though
no
written
contract
was
here
produced)
between
him
and
the
insurance
company,
securing
for
him
the
payment
of
commission
on
such
business
as
was
procured
to
the
advantage
of
the
insurance
company
through
the
broker’s
instrumentality.
There
is
also
the
contract
between
the
plaintiff
broker
and
the
defendants
whereby
the
plaintiff
is
authorized
to
act
as
the
agent
of
the
defendants
in
arranging
insurance
cover
for
them.
In
my
view,
the
receipt
of
the
premiums
simpliciter
does
not
in
itself
determine
that
the
appellant
received
commissions
so
as
to
render
them
taxable
as
income
in
its
hands.
The
premiums
paid
by
the
U.S.
insureds
were
clearly
not
destined
to
the
appellant
but
rather
to
the
U.S.
insurers.
They
represented
the
consideration
in
exchange
for
which
the
U.S.
insurers
agreed
to
underwrite
the
risks
of
the
U.S.
insureds.
In
the
circumstances
of
this
case
they
could
never,
in
my
view,
be
regarded
as
the
appellant’s
own
funds.
It
is
true,
of
course,
that
the
appellant
customarily
deducted
its
commissions
from
the
premium
collected,
and
that
MIPI
and
Bowes
did
likewise.
It
is
also
true
that
the
appellant
normally
remitted
the
balance
of
the
premiums
to
the
U.S.
insurer.
That
practice,
however,
was
not
available
to
the
appellant
in
this
case
because
the
U.S.
insurers
were
by
law
prohibited
from
paying
any
commission
to
the
appellant.
This
central
fact
was
proven
by
the
testimony
of
expert
witness
Thorn
Rosenthal.
Having
regard
to
that
fact,
I
do
not
see
how
it
can
be
said
that
by
merely
receiving
and
holding
the
premiums
for
a
time
and
earning
interest
thereon
the
appellant
also
received
the
commissions
from
the
U.S.
insurers.
If
I
am
correct
in
the
foregoing
analysis,
I
do
not
see
how
as
the
Tax
Court
Judge
stated
the
appellant
“received”
the
commissions
or
acquiesced
in
their
payment
to
MIPI
and
Bowes
so
as
to
keep
them
“in
the
family”,
or
that
the
appellant
exercised
a
“degree
of
control
and
dominion”
over
them.
The
three
companies
were
entirely
distinct
legal
entities.
The
U.S.
state
laws
simply
prohibited
U.S.
insurers
from
paying
commissions
to
an
unlicensed
broker
like
the
appellant.
In
my
view,
therefore,
the
appellant
could
not
and
never
did
become
the
owner
of
or
have
any
absolute
right
to
the
commissions.
Accordingly,
the
commissions
did
not
constitute
income
from
its
business.
The
relevant
foreign
laws
prevented
that
from
occurring.
As
we
have
seen,
the
case
law
both
in
Canada
and
the
United
States
strongly
suggests
that
an
amount
is
not
to
be
regarded
as
the
income
of
a
taxpayer
where
he
or
she
has
no
absolute
ownership
or
dominion
over
it.
This,
it
seems
to
me,
is
the
situation
in
the
case
at
bar.
I
would
allow
the
appeal
with
costs,
set
aside
the
judgment
of
the
Tax
Court
of
Canada
and
remit
the
matter
to
the
Minister
for
reconsideration
and
reassessment
on
the
basis
that
the
commissions
in
question
are
not
income
from
the
appellant’s
business
and,
therefore,
are
not
taxable
as
such
in
the
appellant’s
hands.
Létourneau
J.A.:
I
have
had
the
benefit
of
reading
the
reasons
written
by
my
colleague,
Mr.
Justice
Stone,
and
unfortunately
I
am
unable
to
share
his
views
and
characterization
of
the
events
leading
to
this
case.
I
will
summarize
the
facts
that
are
necessary
for
a
proper
understanding
of
my
position
in
legally
assessing
the
nature
of
the
involvement
of
the
Appellant
in
the
process
generating
the
commissions
that
the
Respondent
seeks
to
tax.
Facts
and
Issues
The
Tax
Court
of
Canada
dismissed
with
costs
an
appeal
from
the
reassessments
made
by
the
Minister
of
National
Revenue
(Ministry)
under
Part
I
of
the
Income
Tax
Act
(Act)
in
respect
of
the
Appellant’s
1985-1989
taxation
years.
The
Minister
had
reassessed
the
Appellant
by
including
in
the
computation
of
its
income
for
those
years
amounts
generated
by
the
Appellant
as
brokerage
or
commissions.
These
commissions
totalling
$7,065,641.00,
paid
by
U.S.
insurers,
were
in
the
end
received
by
two
American
companies,
Bowes
Holdings
Inc.
(Bowes)
and
Minet
International
Professional
Indemnity
Brokers
Inc.
(MIPI),
which
were
owned
by
the
Appellant’s
parent
corporation,
Minet
Holdings,
PLC
of
the
United
Kingdom
(Minet
U.K.).
They
were
remitted
to
the
two
U.S.
Minet
U.K.-
owned
subsidiaries
because
the
Appellant
alleges
it
was
not
entitled
to
receive
them
under
the
laws
of
several
U.S.
States
as
it
did
not
hold
a
broker’s
license
in
these
States.
The
Appellant
corporation
is
licensed
to
carry
on
an
insurance
brokerage
business
throughout
Canada,
but
not
in
any
of
the
States
of
the
U.S.
As
a
result
of
its
expertise
in
negotiating
sophisticated
insurance
coverage
in
both
the
London
and
U.S.
markets,
the
Appellant
attracted
many
large
U.S.based
corporate
clients.
In
most
cases,
the
Appellant
would
itself
bind
coverage
on
behalf
of
U.S.
insured,
after
which
it
would
issue
an
invoice
to
the
U.S.
insured
for
the
premiums
due
under
the
relevant
insurance
policy.
The
U.S.
insured
would
then
transfer
the
premiums
to
a
New
York
bank
account
established
by
the
Appellant.
The
Appellant
would
collect
and
hold
premiums
on
behalf
of
the
insurers.
The
Appellant
would
then
invest
the
premiums
in
short-term
certificates
of
deposit
until
it
was
required
to
remit
the
premiums
to
the
insurers.
The
Appellant
would
then
remit
the
premiums
to
the
insurers
net
of
the
commission
it
was
owed
and
net
of
any
interest
income
earned
on
the
premiums
when
they
were
invested.
However,
due
to
the
fact
that
the
Appellant
was
not
licensed
to
conduct
an
insurance
brokerage
business
in
the
U.S.,
some
U.S.
insurers
declined
to
pay
commissions
to
it
as
they
feared
that
such
payments
would
contravene
State
insurance
statutes
prohibiting
the
payment
of
commissions
to
unlicensed
brokers.
These
statutes
prohibited
the
payment
of
commissions
to
a
broker
not
licensed
in
the
State
where
the
risk
was
situated.
In
such
situations
which
amounted
to
19
or
20%
of
its
business,
the
Appellant
would
have
either
Bowes
or
MIPI,
two
U.S.
corporations
which
were
owned
by
the
same
parent
corporation
as
the
Appellant
(Minet
U.K.),
act
as
the
broker
of
record
as
they
would
be
entitled
to
accept
the
commissions
the
Appellant
could
not.
The
Appellant
selected
these
two
corporations
because
they
were
not
competitors
due
to
the
fact
that
they
were
controlled
by
the
same
parent
as
the
Appellant.
Bowes
and
MIPI
would
not
attempt
to
take
business
from
the
Appellant.
The
Appellant
was
also
able
to
retain
control
over
the
brokerage
function
in
a
manner
which
would
be
impossible
if
an
unrelated
company
acted
as
the
broker
of
record.
Bowes
and
MIPI
performed
nothing
more
than
what
was
legally
beyond
the
Appellant’s
ability
to
do
in
the
U.S.
States
in
question:
act
as
broker
of
record,
secure
binding
of
the
desired
coverage,
send
the
premiums
to
the
insurers,
effect
certain
filings,
and,
of
course,
receive
the
commissions
the
Appellant
could
not
keep.
Neither
Bowes
nor
MIPI
had
the
expertise
to
arrange
the
insurance
coverage
on
which
they
were
asked
to
act
as
the
broker
of
record.
In
the
intercompany
accounts
of
the
Minet
U.K.
group,
the
Appellant,
and
not
Bowes
and
MIPI,
was
shown
as
having
earned
the
commissions
in
question.
Finally,
by
having
Bowes
and
MIPI
act
as
the
broker
of
record
in
these
transactions,
the
Appellant
was
able
to
continue
to
collect
the
interest
on
the
premiums
payable
by
the
U.S.
insured
as
these
related
companies
did
not
object
to
this
practice.
In
these
circumstances,
U.S.
insured
still
deposited
the
amounts
owed
in
the
Appellant’s
account
and
the
Appellant
continued
its
practice
of
investing
them
in
short-term
securities
from
which
it
retained
the
interest
payments.
When
it
came
time
to
remit
the
payments
to
U.S.
insurers,
the
Appellant
kept
only
the
interest
and
remitted
the
premiums
to
either
MIPI
or
Bowes.
These
corporations
then
remitted
the
premiums
to
the
U.S.
insurers
net
of
the
commissions
which
they
retained
for
acting
as
the
broker
of
record.
MIPI
and
Bowes
kept
these
commissions
as
they
were
prohibited
by
law
from
sharing
or
rebating
them
to
an
unlicensed
broker
such
as
the
Appellant.
MIPI
and
Bowes
included
the
commissions
they
received
in
this
manner
in
the
computation
of
their
income
for
U.S.
income
tax.
The
Applicant
included
the
interest
payments
it
received
from
these
commissions
in
computing
its
income
in
the
taxation
years
in
question.
It
did
not
include
the
commissions
it
remitted
to
Bowes
and
MIPI.
However,
it
included
as
deductions
all
the
expenses
incurred
in
arranging
the
coverage
even
when
Bowes
or
MIPI
acted
as
the
broker
of
record.
On
September
10,
1992,
the
Minister
reassessed
the
Appellant
by
adding
to
its
Part
I
income,
as
additional
commission
income
from
1985
to
1989,
the
same
commissions
which
the
Appellant
had
remitted
to
Bowes
and
MIPI.
The
Appellant
appealed
unsuccessfully
to
the
Tax
Court
of
Canada.
The
issue
before
us
is
whether
the
commissions
paid
to
the
two
U.S.
Minet
U.K.-owned
subsidiaries,
who
did
very
little
but
still
necessary
work
of
a
processing
nature,
are
income
in
the
hands
of
the
Appellant,
also
a
Minet
U.K.-owned
subsidiary,
who
performed
in
Canada
virtually
all
the
brokerage
work
and
deducted
all
related
expenses,
but
did
not
retain
these
commissions
which
were
included
in
the
premiums
it
received
from
the
insureds.
In
other
words,
this
case
calls
for
a
characterization
at
law
of
the
monies,
i.e.,
premiums
including
commissions,
in
the
hands
of
the
Appellant
until
they
were
transferred
to
the
two
U.S.
subsidiaries.
I
hasten
to
add
immediately
that
there
was
nothing
improper
in
the
Appellant’s
conduct
of
its
business.
Such
conduct,
by
the
admission
of
the
Respondent
,
involved
no
scheme
or
attempt
to
avoid
the
payment
of
taxes
or
to
divert
income
from
Canada
into
some
other
jurisdiction.
The
Appellant,
whose
knowledge
and
expertise
in
the
field
of
insurance
as
well
as
access
to
the
European
and
London
markets
were
solicited
by
U.S.
clients,
was
confronted
with
stringent
statutory
regulations
in
the
various
States
of
the
U.S.
in
which
its
clients
were
based.
Resort
to
brokers
of
record
to
finalize
the
transaction
on
behalf
of
its
clients
and
payments
of
the
earned
commissions
to
affiliates
were
steps
taken
by
the
Appellant
to
ensure
compliance
with
the
U.S.
regulations
where
needed
without
jeopardizing
the
goodwill
of
its
business.
The
Decision
Under
Appeal
The
learned
Tax
Court
Judge
concluded
that
these
commissions
ought
to
be
included
in
computing
the
Appellant’s
income.
This
conclusion
was
based
on
the
following
findings,
some
of
which
the
Appellant
challenges
on
appeal:
(1)
The
Appellant,
not
Bowes
or
MIPI,
earned
the
commissions;
(2)
The
Appellant
in
all
cases
received
the
full
amounts
from
the
insureds,
i.e.,
not
only
the
amount
destined
to
be
the
brokerage
commission
but
also
the
amount
intended
to
be
remitted
to
the
insurer
as
premium.
It
invested
all
of
the
monies
in
term
deposits
and
collected
the
income
thereon.
This
was
either
the
custom
or
in
certain
cases
was
provided
for
by
specific
arrangements
with
insurers.
Neither
the
insurer
nor
Bowes
and
MIPI,
in
those
cases
where
they
were
involved,
objected
to
this.
The
Appellant
received
the
total
funds
and
while
the
funds
remained
in
its
hands
the
Appellant
derived
all
of
the
fruits
therefrom,
in
the
form
of
interest
on
the
term
deposit
investments;
(3)
Not
all
of
the
funds
received
by
the
Appellant
were
“impressed
with
a
trust”
in
favour
of
the
insurer.
The
portion
representing
the
brokerage
commission
was
not.
(See
the
quotation
from
Exhibit
A-14
on
the
next
page.)
The
amount
representing
the
brokerage
commission
belonged
to
the
Appellant;
(4)
Bowes
and
MIPI
and
the
Appellant
are
related
corporations
within
the
meaning
of
the
Act.
In
substance,
the
Appellant
has
acquiesced
in
the
commissions
it
earned
being
paid
to
Bowes
and
MIPI.
That
clearly
differs
from
a
case
where,
because
of
a
legal
constraint,
no
commissions
at
all
are
paid;
(5)
The
commissions
were
paid
to
related
corporations
with
the
result
that
the
commissions
earned
in
some
form
or
other
by
the
Appellant
accrued
to
the
beneficial
owner
of
the
group,
i.e.,
the
parent
com-
pany.
As
counsel
for
the
Respondent
points
out,
the
money
“remained
in
the
family”.
Although,
after
the
funds
left
the
Appellant
and
were
not
returned
to
the
Appellant,
the
Appellant
was
certainly
instrumental
in
agreeing
in
some
fashion
that
the
amounts
be
paid
to
Bowes
and
MIPI.
The
acquiescence
or
instructions
from
the
Appellant
as
to
where
the
brokerage
commissions
were
to
be
paid
certainly
indicates
a
degree
of
control
or
dominion
over
those
funds;
(6)
The
Appellant,
although
not
actually
retaining
the
brokerage
commissions,
benefited
in
two
ways.
Future
business
and
good
business
relationships
and
contacts
were
maintained.
Moreover,
as
mentioned
above,
the
Appellant
and/or
its
officers
or
employees
were
recognized
by
the
parent
as
being
responsible
for
earning
the
commissions.
Exhibit
A-14
to
which
the
learned
judge
referred
in
his
third
finding
is
a
copy
of
a
sample
of
a
brokerage
agreement
between
the
Appellant
and
a
Canadian
insurance
company
(Wellington
Guarantee).
Section
I
of
that
agreement
deals
with
the
collection
of
premiums
and
reads:
1.
Premium
Collection
The
Broker
is
responsible
for
all
premium
collection
for
the
Company.
If
the
Broker
cannot
collect
a
premium
due
the
Company,
the
Broker
must
notify
the
branch
office
of
the
Company
nearest
the
Broker
in
writing
before
the
premium
due
date.
All
premiums
collected
on
behalf
of
the
Company,
less
the
Broker's
commission,
belong
to
the
Company
and
must
be
held
in
trust
in
a
Bank
or
Trust
Company.
Interest
on
the
Trust
Funds
is
the
property
of
the
Broker.
[emphasis
added]
Ruling
on
the
Appellant’s
objection
to
the
application
of
subsection
56(2)
of
the
Act
Before
I
address
the
main
issue,
I
ought
to
dispose
of
an
objection
taken
under
reserve
and
made
by
counsel
for
the
Appellant
to
an
attempt
by
the
Respondent
to
justify
the
dismissal
of
the
appeal
on
the
basis
of
subsection
56(2)
of
the
Act.
Subsection
56(2)
provides
that
payments
made
to
some
other
person
at
the
direction
or
with
the
concurrence
of
the
taxpayer
are
to
be
included
in
a
taxpayer’s
income
where
such
payments
are
for
the
benefit
of
the
taxpayer
or
as
a
benefit
that
the
taxpayer
desires
to
have
conferred
on
that
other
person.
This
provision
has
been
known
as
a
tax-avoidance
provision
but
our
Court
has
decided
that
the
generality
of
its
terms
is
such
that
its
application
is
not
confined
to
clear
cases
of
tax-avoidance
.
It
should
be
mentioned
that
subsection
56(2)
was
not
the
basis
of
the
reassessment
of
the
Appellant’s
income
for
the
years
in
question.
Nor
was
its
application
to
the
facts
of
this
case
argued
and
pleaded
before
the
learned
Tax
Court
Judge.
The
Respondent
made
its
bed
totally
outside
the
ambit
of
subsection
56(2)
when
it
reassessed
the
Appellant,
but
now
feels
that
a
resort
to
it
is
needed
for
better
comfort.
It
submits
that
all
the
facts
are
on
the
record
and
can
justify
this
late
application
by
us
of
the
subsection.
It
is
true
that
there
are
authorities
on
the
books
to
support
the
position
of
the
Respondent,
one
of
the
latest
being
the
decision
of
the
Supreme
Court
of
Canada
in
Athey
v.
Leonati>.
The
following
excerpt
from
the
decision
at
pages
58-59,
I
believe,
summarizes
well
the
governing
principle:
The
general
rule
is
that
an
appellant
may
not
raise
a
point
that
was
not
pleaded,
or
argued
in
the
trial
court,
unless
all
the
relevant
evidence
is
in
the
record:
John
Sopinka
and
Mark
A.
Gelowitz,
The
conduct
of
an
Appeal
(1993),
at
p.
51.
In
this
case,
all
relevant
evidence
was
part
of
the
record.
In
fact,
all
the
requisite
findings
of
fact
had
been
made.
The
point
raised
by
the
appellant
was
purely
a
question
of
law.
52
Most
importantly,
the
respondents
did
not
suffer
prejudice,
since
they
would
not
have
proceeded
any
differently
even
if
the
appellant
had
expressly
relied
on
McGhee
v.
National
Coal
Board
and
Bonnington
Castings
v.
Wardlaw,
supra,
from
the
very
beginning.
The
defence
theory
was
that
the
disc
herniation
was
not
causally
related
in
any
way
to
the
injuries
suffered
in
the
motor
vehicle
accidents.
The
respondents
could
not
have
made
any
more
emphatic
defence
than
this.
This
was
a
case
where
“had
the
question
been
raised
at
the
proper
time,
no
further
light
could
have
been
thrown
upon
it”:
Lamb
v.
Kincaid
(1907),
38
S.C.R.
516,
at
p.
539,
per
Duff,
J.
(as
he
then
was).
Given
that
the
appellant’s
arguments
raised
an
issue
of
law
which
did
not
require
any
further
evidence
(or
indeed
any
further
findings
of
fact)
and
which
would
not
have
caused
any
prejudice
to
the
respondents,
it
was
an
error
for
the
Court
of
Appeal
to
refuse
to
consider
the
argument.
It
is
clear
that
the
overriding
consideration
remains
the
lack
of
prejudice
to
the
other
party
evidenced
by
the
fact
that
all
relevant
evidence
or
material
facts
necessary
to
the
application
of
the
legal
provision
are
on
the
record.
However,
the
Appellant
submits,
rightly
so
in
my
view,
that
such
is
not
the
case
in
the
present
instance.
It
was
never
alerted
to
the
possible
application
of
subsection
56(2).
It
was
not
told
specifically
the
assumptions
upon
which
the
Minister
would
have
based
his
reassessment
under
that
subsection.
Consequently,
it
never
explored
the
matter
on
discovery.
It
did
not
examine
or
cross-examine
witnesses
with
that
perspective
in
mind.
It
did
not
introduce
evidence
to
establish,
for
example,
that
it
did
not
either
in
fact
or
in
law
desire
to
confer
benefits
on
its
affiliated
subsidiaries
or
benefit
itself
from
such
payments
to
these
subsidiaries.
Counsel
for
the
Respondent
argued
that
he
could
not
see
what
additional
evidence
could
have
been
adduced
on
the
matter.
He
may
be
right.
The
Appellant
might
or
might
not
have
been
able
to
establish
a
factual
base
to
prevent
the
application
of
subsection
56(2).
I
do
not
know,
but
it
is
certainly
not
for
us
to
speculate
at
this
late
stage
as
to
what
the
Appellant’s
conduct
could
or
might
have
been
had
the
issue
been
properly
raised
at
the
outset
and
debated
in
the
pleadings.
With
due
respect,
speculation
as
to
whether
sufficient
additional
and
probative
evidence
could
have
been
adduced
or
not
is
not
the
proper
issue
now
confronting
us.
The
real
issue
is
one
of
fairness
to
the
taxpayer,
especially
as
the
burden
is
on
him
to
disprove,
on
a
balance
of
probabilities,
the
assumptions
upon
which
the
Minister
normally
proceeds
to
reassess
under
subsection
56(2)
.
The
Appellant
was
deprived
of
such
opportunity
throughout
the
process
and
particularly
at
the
evidentiary
stage.
In
my
view,
the
Respondent
is
seeking
through
the
application
of
subsection
56(2)
not
the
mere
addition
of
blankets
or
pillows
to
improve
the
comfort
of
its
bed,
but
in
fact
a
change
in
the
structure
of
the
bed
itself.
It
would
be
unfair
to
the
Appellant
to
now
allow
such
a
change.
Therefore,
I
would
maintain
the
objection
and
rule
that
subsection
56(2)
cannot
be
applied
in
the
circumstances
of
this
case.
Analysis
and
Decision
Whether
the
Appellant
earned
and
received
the
commissions
The
learned
Tax
Court
Judge
found
that
the
Appellant
earned
the
commissions
in
dispute.
I
think
such
a
finding
was
not
only
entirely
supported
by
the
evidence,
but
also
legally
sound.
There
is
no
dispute,
as
the
evidence
reveals,
that
all
the
negotiating
work
was
done
by
the
Appellant
who
alone
had
the
required
knowledge
and
expertise
and
that
MIPI
and
Bowes,
because
they
were
licensed
brokers
in
the
U.S.,
acted
as
brokers
of
record
for
the
purpose
of
legally
collecting
from
the
insurers
the
income
generated
by
the
work
and
expertise
of
the
Appellant.
In
his
testimony,
Mr.
Middleton,
the
principal
officer
of
the
Appellant,
recognized
in
the
following
terms
the
modest
contribution
of
MIPI
and
Bowes
;
We
do
not
and
have
never
denied
the
amount
of
actual
work
that
would
be
undertaken
by
the
entities
was
modest
and
so
they
couldn’t
claim
that
they
had
in
fact
produced
to
the
Minet
Group
a
piece
of
business
of
their
own
volition
which
had
generated
this
sort
of
level
of
income.
Indeed,
when
acting
as
brokers
of
record,
MIPI
and
Bowes
internally
received,
as
management
accounting
allocation,
a
modest
fee
of
$5,000
per
transaction
by
the
Minet
Group
to
reflect
the
limited
extent
of
the
work
they
had
done
The
substantial
commissions
generated
by
the
work
of
the
Appellant
were
earned
when
the
Appellant
invoiced
its
clients
for
payment
of
the
pre-
mium.
This
was
confirmed
by
the
principal
officer
of
the
Appellant
in
his
testimony
:
Q
So,
I
suppose
on
an
accrual
basis,
as
soon
as
the
Appellant
invoices
its
client,
the
commission
is
considered
as
earned
even
though
not
yet
received?
A.
Yes,
that
is
the
case...
Q
Then,
when
the
placing
of
the
risk
is
complete,
an
invoice
is
then
issued
to
the
client?
A.
Yes.
Q.
Reflecting
the
period
for
the
firm
order
that
was
given?
A.
Correct.
Q.
At
this
point
the
Appellant
recognizes
the
commission
as
earned?
A.
The
applicable
commissions
are
recognized
as
earned
at
that
point,
yes.
The
U.S.
insureds
were
invoiced
by
the
Appellant
out
of
the
Montreal
office
and
they
were
instructed
to,
and
did,
deposit
the
funds
in
the
Appellant’s
bank
account
in
New
York
.
A
copy
of
the
client
invoice
was
sent
every
time
to
the
Appellant’s
accounts
department
.
Payment
of
the
commissions
by
insurers
was
effected
by
the
Appellant
or,
in
some
cases,
its
affiliated
subsidiaries
retaining
a
portion
of
the
gross
premium
received
by
the
Appellant
from
the
insureds
.
This
brief
review
of
the
evidence
shows
factually
that
the
commissions
were
payable
and
effectively
paid
for
the
work
done
by
the
Appellant,
that
it
is
the
Appellant
who
collected
them
by
invoicing
the
insureds
and
collecting
the
premiums
on
behalf
of
the
insurers
and
that
they
were
put
in
the
Appellant’s
bank
account.
In
William
Wrigley
Jr.
Co.
v.
Manitoba
(Provincial
Treasurer))^
,
Taschereau
J.
stated:
Primarily,
to
“earn”
income
or
profit
is,
I
should
say,
to
expend
the
effort
or
exertion
which
creates
the
value
to
be
exchanged.
According
to
the
Shorter
Oxford
English
Dictionary,
to
“earn”
means
to
obtain
or
deserve
as
the
reward
of
labour
.
There
is
no
doubt
that,
in
fact,
the
Appellant,
to
use
the
expression
of
Taschereau
J.,
has
expended
the
effort
or
exertion
which
created
the
value
to
be
exchanged.
However,
counsel
for
the
Appellant
very
ably,
and,
in
my
view,
rightly
so,
submitted
that
the
earning
of
income
requires
at
law
that
the
reward
of
labour
be
either
received
or
receivable.
I
accept
the
Appellant’s
submission
that,
in
the
present
instance,
the
commissions
were
not
“receivables”
under
section
9
of
the
Act
because
the
Appellant
did
not
have
a
clearly
legal,
though
not
necessarily
immediate,
right
to
receive
them
.
The
fact
is
that
the
U.S.
insurers
were
prohibited
by
statute
from
paying
the
commissions
to
an
unlicensed
broker.
The
Appellant
has
also
referred
us
to
some
decisions
of
U.S.
courts
and
in
particular
to
this
excerpt
of
the
U.S.
Supreme
Court
in
Commissioner
of
Internal
Revenue
v.
First
Security
Bank
of
Utah,
N.A.^:
We
know
of
no
decision
of
this
Court
wherein
a
person
has
been
found
to
have
taxable
income
that
he
did
not
receive
and
that
he
was
prohibited
from
receiving.
I
stress
that
the
Appellant
who
was
operating
its
business
in
Canada
was
not
prohibited
in
Canada
from
receiving
these
commissions.
In
any
event,
it
is
accepted
law
both
in
U.S.
and
Canadian
law
that
monies
illegally
received
by
a
taxpayer
are
nonetheless
taxable
income
in
that
taxpayer’s
hands
.
The
question
then
is:
were
the
commissions
effectively
received
by
the
Appellant,
whether
illegally
or
not?
Counsel
for
the
Appellant
contends
that
the
commissions
were
never
received
by
the
Appellant
because
the
Appellant
held
the
premiums
it
received
from
the
insureds
in
trust
for
the
insurers.
The
Appellant
filed
three
documents
in
support
of
its
claim
that
the
monies
were
held
in
trust:
a
sample
of
a
Broker’s
Agreement
,
a
Producer’s
Agreement
and
an
Agency
Agreement
.
I
need
say
at
the
outset
that
none
of
these
agreements
are
relevant
to
the
Appellant’s
business.
The
first
one
involves
an
agreement
with
a
Canadian
insurer
while
the
Appellant
was
dealing
with
U.S.-based
insurers.
The
second
refers
to
an
insurer
that
was
not
involved
in
any
of
the
business
dealings
that
the
Appellant
has
chosen
to
file
as
examples.
In
addition,
there
is
no
evidence
before
us
that
it
was
a
sample
of
a
relevant
agreement
with
a
U.S.
insurer.
The
third
relates
to
the
kind
of
agreements
signed
by
MIPI
in
the
course
of
its
own
business.
In
fact,
the
Appellant
has
filed
no
copies
of
the
agreements
that
they
would
have
had
with
their
U.S.
clients
if
ever
they
had
anything
of
the
kind
in
writing.
In
my
view,
the
answer
to
the
question
whether
the
Appellant
effectively
received
the
commissions
is
to
be
found
primarily
in
the
testimony
of
the
principal
officer
of
the
Appellant
and
the
correspondance
of
the
Appellant
with
its
affiliated
subsidiaries
although
these
samples
of
agreements
also
assist
in
shedding
some
light
on
the
status
of
the
commissions
paid
for
the
work
done
by
the
Appellant.
It
is
clear
from
the
testimony
of
the
principal
officer
of
the
Appellant
that
the
Appellant’s
bank
account
in
New
York
was
not
a
trust
account,
but
that,
in
order
to
retain
the
trust
of
their
clients,
the
Appellant
operated
it
as
such
to
ensure
that
the
balance
of
the
account
would
at
all
times
be
sufficient
to
reimburse
insurers
of
their
premiums
:
Q.
Has
the
balance
of
the
account
plus
the
term
deposits
ever
to
your
knowledge
dipped
below
the
total
amount
of
premiums
that
were
due
to
insurers?
A.
I’ll
say
not
to
my
knowledge.
I
would
almost
certainly
say
absolutely
not
because
that
would
have
been
a
major
issue
as
far
as
we
were
concerned.
We
would
have
been
out
of
trust.
Q.
To
your
knowledge
then
the
bank
account
was
indeed
and
in
fact
operated
as
a
trust
account?
A.
It
wasn’t
a
trust
account
in
the
sense
there
was
a
trust
deed
but
we
certainly
—
for
all
intents
and
purposes
it
was
operated
as
and
treated
as
a
trust
account.
The
Appellant
took
the
monies
received
from
the
insureds
out
of
their
bank
account
and
reinvested
them
in
certificates
of
deposit
until
the
amount
of
the
premiums,
net
of
the
commissions,
were
due
to
the
insurers,
at
which
time
the
amounts
so
invested
were
deposited
back
by
the
Appellant
into
its
bank
account.
It
kept
the
substantial
amount
of
interests
thus
produced
($971,208
in
1985,
$949,343
in
1986,
$707,894
in
1987,
$502,770
in
1988
and
$856,836
in
1989).
At
least
in
those
cases
where
the
U.S.
insurers
did
not
require
that
the
commissions
be
assigned
to
a
U.S.
licensed
broker
of
record,
the
Appellant
used
part
of
the
commissions
earned
to
cover
its
operating
expenses.
The
principal
officer
of
the
Appellant
described
in
the
following
terms
the
control
it
assumed
over
the
premiums
and
commissions
received
from
the
insureds
Q.
How
does
it
do
that,
just
mechanically?
A.
As
far
as
our
U.S.
business
was
concerned,
the
money
would
go
into
Marine
Midland
Bank.
We
would
only
withdraw
from
Marine
Midland
Bank,
apart
from
the
purposes
of
investing
the
money
in
short-term
instruments
as
I
mentioned
before,
we
would
only
withdraw
from
that
bank
account
monies
needed
to
pay
the
insurers
and
monies
representing
our
own
earned
commissions
that
we
would
then
bring
back
into
Canada
to
cover
our
operating
expenses.
Q.The
term
deposits
were
taken
from
this
account
and
deposited
back
into
that
account?
A.
That
is
correct.
Q.
That’s
the
arrangement
you
had
with
Marine
Midland
Bank?
A.
That
is
so.
Obviously,
the
sums
received
by
the
Appellants,
especially
the
commissions
which
formed
part
of
the
gross
premiums
received
by
the
Appellant,
were
not
legally
held
in
trust.
Although
not
relevant
to
the
facts
of
this
case,
the
Broker’s
agreement
filed
by
the
Appellant
and
to
which
the
Tax
Court
judge
referred
nonetheless
confirms
that
the
broker’s
commissions,
which
are
part
of
the
premiums
collected
on
behalf
of
the
insurers,
are
not
held
in
trust
for
the
obvious
reason
that
these
commissions
have
been
earned
by
and
belong
to
the
Appellant
from
the
date
of
their
invoices
to
the
insureds.
To
put
it
another
way,
funds
which
belonged
to
the
Appellant
were
not
and
cannot
be
impressed
with
a
trust
for
another.
Clearly,
the
Appellant,
in
fact
and
at
law,
earned
the
commissions
paid
by
the
insurers
and
received
them
as
evidenced
both
by
the
fact
that
they
were
paid
at
its
request
in
its
bank
account
and
by
the
measure
of
control
it
exerted
over
and
the
benefits
it
obtained
from
these
sums.
Whether
the
commissions
received
by
the
Appellant
were
income
in
its
hands
Monies
received
or
receipts
are
not
income
in
a
taxpayer’s
hands
until
and
unless
the
taxpayer’s
“right
to
them
is
absolute
and
under
no
restriction,
contractual
or
otherwise,
as
to
their
disposition,
use
or
enjoyment”
.
Relying
upon
such
precedent,
counsel
for
the
Appellant
submitted
that
the
commissions
did
not
have
for
the
Appellant
the
character
of
income
because
the
Appellant
merely
had
temporary
custody
of
these
commissions
which
were
remitted
to
MIPI
and
Bowes
who
acted
as
brokers
of
record.
He
also
claimed
that
the
Appellant
did
not
have
over
these
sums
the
possession,
dominion
or
control
necessary
to
constitute
receipt.
As
I
have
mentioned
earlier,
the
Appellant
exercised
a
substantial
amount
of
control
over
the
commissions
it
generated,
earned
and
received
for
its
work.
Evidence
of
further
control
by
the
Appellant
over
these
commissions
can
be
found
in
the
letters
of
remittance
of
these
sums
to
its
affiliated
subsidiaries.
In
these
letters,
the
Appellant
would,
for
example,
instruct
Bowes
and
Company
Inc.
of
Chicago,
who
acted
as
the
broker
of
record,
to
keep
a
very
small
percentage
(1
or
2%)
of
the
commissions
and
give
the
balance
of
the
commissions
to
Bowes
and
Associates
who
had
no
involvement
in
the
business
transaction
.
Furthermore,
in
its
financial
statements
produced
in
conformity
with
the
Canada
Business
Corporations
Act,
the
Appellant
described
as
income
in
its
hands
from
the
time
the
client
was
invoiced
the
commissions
earned:
The
commissions
earned
are
recognized
as
income
when
the
client
is
invoiced,
which
is
generally
at
the
inception
date
of
the
policies
.
It
is
a
mistatement
of
the
facts
and
the
law
for
the
Appellant
to
now
assert,
as
it
does,
that
it
merely
acted
as
an
agent
of
MIPI
and
Bowes
in
producing
and
earning
these
commissions.
In
my
view,
the
evidence
clearly
reveals
that
the
Appellant
was
the
principal
and
that
MIPI
and
Bowes
acted
as
mere
conduits
in
collecting
the
income
earned
by
the
Appellant
in
these
instances
where
it
was
believed
that
U.S.
law
prohibited
payment
to
the
Appellant.
As
the
principal
officer
of
the
Appellant
recognized
in
his
testimony,
it
is
the
Appellant’s
expertise
which
was
the
foundation
of
the
whole
business
and
it
is
this
business
which
earned
the
income.
The
Appellant
earned
and
received
the
commissions
and,
as
the
facts
reveal,
assigned
them
to
Bowes
or
MIPI
in
order
to
show
the
compliance
with
U.S.
State
insurance
regulations
required
by
some,
but
not
all,
of
the
U.S.
insurers
with
whom
the
Appellant
did
business.
In
my
view,
the
findings
of
fact
of
the
Tax
Court
Judge
were
amply
supported
by
the
evidence
and
he
made
no
error
of
law
when
he
came
to
the
conclusion
that
the
commissions
totalling
$7,065,641
were
income
in
the
hands
of
the
Appellant.
For
these
reasons,
I
would
dismiss
the
appeal
with
costs.
Appeal
allowed.