DUMOULIN,
J.:—This
is
an
appeal
from
a
decision
of
the
Income
Tax
Appeal
Board
dated
July
2,
1959,
22
Tax
A.B.C.
260,
in
respect
of
the
income
tax
assessment
for
taxation
year
1953,
of
Golden
Arrow
Sprayers
Ltd.,
a
company
having
its
head
office
at
Calgary,
Province
of
Alberta.
The
appeal
was
allowed
to
the
extent
only
of
$1,000.
The
material
facts
giving
rise
to
this
litigation
offer
no
complexities.
Golden
Arrow
Sprayers
Limited,
incorporated
in
Alberta,
on
November
20,
1952
cf.
ex.
C),
replaced
to
all
intents
an
older
firm
operating
under
the
style
of
Golden
Arrow
Services
Ltd.,
which,
for
many
years,
had
manufactured
farm-chemical
sprayers
according
to
patent
rights,
the
property
of
one
John
EK.
Palmer,
its
president
and
manager.
With
a
view
to
expanding
their
field
of
business,
the
directors
of
Golden
Arrow
Services
Limited
decided
that
a
proper
method
of
raising
additional
capital
would
be
the
incorporation
of
another
company,
Golden
Arrow
Sprayers
Limited,
that
would
purchase
and
take
over
the
entire
assets
of
the
former
organization.
Arrangements
were
at
once
concluded
to
‘‘obtain
an
underwriting
on
250,000
shares
of
the
new
Company
at
$1
per
share,
less
25%
commission’’,
In
furtherance
of
the
aforementioned
decision,
original
subscribers
to
the
Memorandum
of
Association
met
on
November
21,
1952,
and
chose
as
first
directors,
John
E.
Palmer,
his
son,
Harry
E.
Palmer,
Harold
Milburn,
secretary
of
the
outgoing
Golden
Arrow
Services
Ltd.,
Harvey
Brown
and
Karl
F.
Zeise,
a
foreman
in
the
employ
of
the
above
company.
Exhibit
2
relates
the
minutes
of
this
initial
meeting.
A
further
meeting
of
the
newly
elected
board
of
Golden
Arrow
Sprayers
took
place,
the
same
day,
at
3
p.m.,
designating
John
E.
Palmer
as
president
of
the
company
(ex.
3).
At
3.30
p.m.,
again
on
November
21,
1952,
a
third
meeting
of
directors
occurred
approving
‘‘.
.
.
the
issue
and
allotment
of
200,000
shares
of
the
capital
stock
of
the
Company
in
consideration
of
the
use
of
the
Palmer
Patents.
Such
shares
to
be
issued
and
allotted
when
such
Company
received
a
certificate
to
commence
business
from
the
Registrar
of
Companies”
cf.
Statement
of
Facts,
paragraph
4
and
exhibit
5,
Section
2).
These
shares
were
to
be
placed
in
escrow
with
the
Montreal
Trust
Company
pending
the
issue
of
a
certificate
to
commence
business.
At
this
same
meeting,
the
sale
by
Golden
Arrow
Services
to
Golden
Arrow
Sprayers
of
all
its
assets
was
approved
as
against
an
allotment
by
purchaser
to
vendor
of
100,000
shares
fully
paid
up
and
non-assessable
of
the
purchaser’s
capital
stock
(cf.
exhibits
D,
4
and
A,
the
latter
dated
January
2,
1953).
A
subsequent
Return
of
Allotment
filed
with
the
Registrar
of
Companies
showed
“.
.
.
the
amount
.
.
.
treated
as
paid
up
in
cash
for
the
200,000
shares
was
$0.75
per
share,
or
$150,000”.
The
incipient
company,
having
obtained
the
requisite
certificate,
on
or
about
February
26,
1953,
the
aforesaid
200,000
shares
were
then
issued
and
allotted
to
J.
E.
Palmer.
For
its
1953
taxation
year
the
appellant
“.
.
.
claimed
a
capital
cost
allowance
in
respect
to
the
acquisition
of
the
right
to
use
the
said
patents
in
the
sum
of
$8,816.
This
capital
cost
allowance
was
disallowed
by
the
Minister
and
the
appellant
re-assessed
for
an
additional
sum
of
$3,921.43”.
This
much
for
the
facts;
now
as
to
the
conflict
of
law,
thus
occasioned,
it
is
succinctly
formulated
by
appellant
in
the
following
lines,
under
the
subtitle
‘‘Statement
of
Reasons
for
Objections”,
page
3:
“The
question
now
arises
as
to
the
amount
at
which
the
capital
cost
to
the
Company
of
the
licence
to
use
the
Palmer
Patents
should
be
fixed.
This
then
raises
the
question
of
whether
the
Company
and
Palmer
were
on
the
21st
day
of
November,
1952,
dealing
at
arm’s
length.”
It
seems
hardly
necessary
to
note
that
in
the
appellant’s
opinion
J.
E.
Palmer,
albeit
president
and
manager
of
the
purchasing
company,
was,
nevertheless,
dealing
at
arm’s
length
when
he
assigned
the
utilization
of
his
three
patents
to
Golden
Sprayers
at
a
‘‘price’’
of
two
hundred
thousand
shares.
Exhibit
4,
true
to
say,
mentioned
that:
‘‘Mr.
Palmer
wished
it
to
be
pointed
out
to
the
meeting
that
he
did
not
vote
in
respect
to
the
said
motion’’,
which
ratified
the
transaction
in
exhibit
5,
the
agreement
between
John
E.
Palmer,
Patentee,
and
Golden
Arrow
Sprayers
Ltd.,
Licensee,
allotting
shares
for
the
right
to
use
the
patents.
The
respondent’s
basic
argument
appears
in
subsections
(a),
(b),
(c)
and
(d)
of
paragraph
9
of
its
“Reply
to
Notice
of
Appeal”;
it
reads:
“9.
.
.
.
(a)
.
.
.
the
Appellant
in
calculating
this
income
claimed
as
a
deduction
for
capital
cost
allowance
the
sum
of
$8,816.00
in
respect
of
the
licence
which
it
had
obtained
by
the
agreement
dated
the
21st
day
of
November,
A.D.
1952
with
John
E.
Palmer
to
use
certain
patents,
(b)
.
.
.
the
Appellant
at
the
time
it
acquired
the
licence
from
John
EK.
Palmer
was
not
dealing
at
arm’s
length
with
John
E.
Palmer,
and,
(c)
that
John
E.
Palmer
was
the
original
owner
of
the
patents,
(d)
that
the
capital
cost
of
the
patents
to
John
EK.
Palmer
was
nothing,
.
.
.
A
brief
oral
evidence
was
adduced
on
appellant’s
behalf,
consisting
of
Messrs.
John
E.
Palmer’s
and
Harold
Milburn’s
testimonies.
Palmer
substantiated
the
averments
of
the
Statement
of
Facts,
and
declared
that
he
‘‘had
not
given
nor
promised
to
give
any
of
his
shares
to
the
other
directors
of
Golden
Arrow
Spravers
Ltd.’’.
He
also
agreed
holding
presently
in
his
own
right
253,000
shares
of
this
latter
company,
thereby
becoming
its
controlling
shareholder.
Mr.
Harold
Milburn,
it
will
be
remembered,
was
the
secretary
of
the
elder
organization
before
assuming
a
directorship
in
the
younger
one.
On
November
21,
1952,
he
attended
the
3.30
p.m.
meeting
“when
200,000
shares
of
the
new
concern
were
granted
to
J.
Hi.
Palmer,
an
allotment
that
encountered
no
difficulty
whatever’’.
According
to
this
witness
‘‘the
life
of
Golden
Arrow
Sprayers
Ltd.,
was
dependent
upon
the
use
of
Palmer’s
patents,
and
therefore,
it
seemed
reasonable
to
extend
adequate
pecuniary
appreciation
to
the
patentee’’.
Thus
summarized,
the
case
raises,
in
my
mind,
a
threefold
question
:
1.
Was
the
right
to
use
Palmer’s
patents,
acquired
by
the
appellant
on
November
21,
1952,
a
‘‘depreciable
property’’,
as
foreseen
in
Section
20(2)
of
The
1948
Income
Tax
Act
(11-12
Geo.
VI,
c.
52)?
2.
Was
John
E.
Palmer
dealing
at
arm’s
length
with
appellant
company
when
he
concluded
the
deals
aforecited
?
3.
Should
the
first
query
receive
an
affirmative
answer,
and
the
second,
a
negative
one,
in
that
event,
what
would
be
the
capital
cost
to
the
taxpayer,
i.e.,
Golden
Sprayers,
of
the
depreciable
property
thus
obtained?
Section
127(1)
(af)
opposite
the
expression
“property”
sets
forth
that
it
“means
property
of
any
kind
whatsoever
whether
real
or
personal
or
corporeal
and,
without
restricting
the
generality
of
the
foregoing
includes
a
right
of
any
kind
whatsoever,
a
share
or
a
chose
in
action”.
It
may
be
held
beyond
doubt
that
a
title
to
the
use
of
Mr.
Palmer’s
patents
assuredly
fits
into
the
unrestricted
category
of
“a
right
of
any
kind
whatsoever’’.
Moreover,
such
right,
directly
related
to
patents,
is
essentially
depreciable
property,
being
coextensive
to
the
17
year
duration
of
the
patents
themeslves
(cf.
Patent
Act,
R.S.C.
1952,
c.
203,
s.
49).
The
second
point
unquestionably
is
the
pivotal
one.
Section
127(5)
(a),
text
of
1948,
though
not
purporting
to
define
restrictively
‘‘arm’s
length”
enacts
that:
“127.(5)
For
the
purpose
of
this
Act,
(a)
a
corporation
and
a
person
or
one
of
several
persons
by
whom
it
is
directly
or
indirectly
controlled,
(b)
.
.
.
(e)
.
.
.
shall
without
extending
the
meaning
of
the
expression
‘to
deal
with
each
other
at
arm’s
length’,
be
deemed
not
to
deal
with
each
other
at
arm’s
length.”
Reverting
to
the
admitted
facts
we
see
that
appellant’s
executive
body
had
J.
E.
Palmer
for
chairman
of
the
board
and
manager,
his
son,
Harry,
and
two
of
the
old
company’s
employees,
Harold
Milburn
and
Karl
Zeise,
as
co-directors,
one
being
the
secretary,
the
other
a
foreman
of
Golden
Arrow
Services.
Palmer,
senior,
to
all
material
intents,
owned
the
merging
company
and
could
dictate
to
the
nascent
one
any
terms
or
conditions
he
wished
to
impose
both
as
patentee
and
through
his
ascendancy
over
his
son
and
associates
or,
should
I
say,
his
employees.
Out
of
five
directors,
this
man
could
control
four,
himself
included.
At
all
events,
J.
E.
Palmer
undisputably
was
‘‘one
of
several
persons
by
whom
it
(the
appellant
corporation)
is
directly
or
indirectly
controlled”,
and
therefore
cannot
be
deemed
to
have
dealt
at
arm’s
length
with
Golden
Arrow
Sprayers
Ltd.,
in
matters
pertaining
to
this
appeal.
Two
precedents,
among
many,
bear
out
this
interpretation.
In
Miron
&
Frères
Ltée
v.
M.N.R.,
[1955]
S.C.R.
678-679;
[1955]
C.T.C.
182,
the
factual
incidents
were
substantially
these:
“The
appellant
(in
1948)
aequired
a
farm
from
one
of
its
shareholders
at
a
price
for
exceeding
the
original
cost
to
the
vendor.
The
appellant
claimed
a
capital
cost
allowance
based
on
the
price
paid.
All
the
issued
shares
of
the
appellant,
minus
three,
were
owned
by
the
vendor
and
his
five
brothers,
with
more
than
one
half
of
the
shares
being
owned
by
the
vendor
and
any
three
of
his
brothers
.
.
.
Held:
The
appeal
should
be
dismissed.
Under
s-s.
(5)
of
s.
127
of
the
Income
Tax
Act,
1948,
c.
52,
the
appellant
and
the
vendor
were
deemed
not
to
have
dealt
with
each
other
at
arm’s
length.
Per
Kerwin
C.J.
and
Fauteux
J.:
Since
the
appellant
was
controlled
by
the
vendor
and
three
of
his
brothers,
the
vendor
was
one
of
several
persons
by
whom
the
appellant
was
directly
or
indirectly
controlled
(italics
are
mine).
Per
Taschereau,
Kellock
and
Abbott
J.J.:
The
appellant
failed
to
show
error
in
respect
of
the
Minister’s
conclusion
that
the
transaction
was
not
one
between
persons
dealing
at
arm’s
length.”
Mr.
Justice
Cameron,
in
the
cause
of
the
M.N.R.
v.
Kirby
Maurice
Co.
Ltd.,
[1958]
Ex.
C.R.
77
at
pages
84-85;
[1958]
C.T.C.
at
pages
48-49,
wrote:
“That
subsection
(5)
of
Section
139
does
not
purport
to
define
all
transactions
which
are
not
at
arm’s
length
is
made
clear
in
the
case
of
M.N.R.
v.
Sheldon
s
Engineering,
Ltd.,
[1955]
S.C.R.
637;
[1955]
C.T.C.
174,
where
Locke,
J.,
in
delivering
the
judgment
for
the
Court,
said
at
p.
648
[[1955]
C.T.C.
179]
:
‘The
words
(2.e.,
to
deal
with
each
other
at
arm’s
length)
do
not
appear
in
the
Income
War
Tax
Act,
though
the
same
subject-matter
is
dealt
with
in
Section
6(1)
(n)
of
that
Act.
In
addition
to
appearing
in
Sections
20
and
127,
the
term
is
employed
in
Sections
12(3),
17(1),
(2)
and
(8),
36(4)
and
125(3)
of
the
Income
Tax
Act.
Section
127(5)
does
not
purport
to
define
the
meaning
of
the
expression
generally;
it
merely
states
certain
circumstances
in
which
persons
are
deemed
not
to
deal
with
each
other
at
arm’s
length.
I
think
the
language
of
Section
127(5),
though
in
some
respects
obscure,
is
intended
to
indicate
that,
in
dealings
between
corporations,
the
meaning
to
be
assigned
to
the
expression,
elsewhere
in
the
statute
is
not
confined
to
that
expressed
in
that
section’.”
On
the
merits
of
the
case
Cameron,
J.,
continues
thus:
“The
evidence
of
Maurice
satisfies
me
completely
that
the
transaction
by
which
the
franchise
came
into
the
hands
of
the
respondent
was
not
one
at
arm’s
length.
The
Act
does
not
define
the
expression,
and
it
would
perhaps
be
unwise
for
me
to
attempt
to
do
so.
It
is
sufficient
to
state
that
in
my
Opinion,
in
a
vendor
and
purchaser
matter,
an
arm’s
length
transaction
does
not
take
place
when
the
purchaser
is
merely
carrying
out
the
orders
of
the
vendor,
and
exercising
no
independent
judgment
as
to
the
fairness
of
the
terms
of
the
contract,
or
seeking
to
get
the
best
possible
terms
for
himself
.
.
.
In
effect,
Maurice
was
both
vendor
and
purchaser,
and
while
he
was
not
actually
a
shareholder
at
the
time
the
agreement
of
October
1,
1952
was
signed,
he
had
in
fact
full
control
of
the
entire
operation.’’
A
comparable
situation
exists
here:
the
all-important
patent
rights
owned
by
Palmer,
the
impressive
bulk
of
his
stock-holdings,
plus
his
parental
connection
with
one
and
business
ties
with
two
other
directors,
his
presidency
of
the
appellant
company,
were
of
such
a
nature
that
‘‘he
had
in
fact
full
control
of
the
entire
operation’’
now
under
review,
and,
I
repeat,
was,
therefore,
not
dealing
at
arm’s
length,
with
the
appellant.
There
now
remains
for
determination
the
assessment
of
a
capital
cost
to
Golden
Sprayers
Ltd.,
of
the
“depreciable
property”
acquired,
in
other
words
the
‘‘right
to
use’’,
these
oft-
mentioned
patents.
Section
20(4)
and
(a)
of
this
subsection
provide
the
relevant
rule:
“20.
(4)
Where
depreciable
property
did,
at
any
time
after
the
commencement
of
1949,
belong
to
a
person
(hereinafter
referred
to
as
the
original
owner)
and
has,
by
one
or
more
transactions
between
persons
not
dealing
at
arm’s
length,
became
vested
in
a
taxpayer,
the
following
rules
are,
notwithstanding
section
17,
applicable
for
the
purposes
of
this
section
and
regulations
made
under
paragraph
(a)
of
subsection
(1)
of
section
11:
(a)
the
capital
cost
of
the
property
to
the
taxpayer
(1.e.,
Golden
Arrow
Sprayers
Ltd.)
shall
be
deemed
to
be
the
amount
that
was
the
capital
cost
of
the
property
to
the
original
owner
(i.e.,
John
E.
Palmer)
”
John
EK.
Palmer
asserted
having
spent
‘‘about
$700
to
secure
his
patents
for
Spraying
Nozzle,
Field
Marker’
and
an
appli-
cation
for
a
third
patent
now
abandoned’’.
This
expense,
I
believe,
represents
the
capital
cost
of
the
property
to
its
original
owner
and
should
be
allowed
to
the
appellant.
For
the
reasons
above,
the
appeal
is
dismissed,
save
that
appellant
will
be
granted
a
capital
cost
allowance
of
$700
in
respect
of
its
income
tax
return
for
taxation
year
1953.
The
Minister
of
National
Revenue
is
entitled
to
the
costs
of
this
appeal
after
taxation.