O’Connor
J.T.C.C.:-These
appeals
were
heard
in
Toronto,
Ontario
on
July
20
and
21,
1994
pursuant
to
the
General
Procedure
of
this
Court
respecting
the
appellant’s
1986,
1987
and
1988
taxation
years.
Issue
The
only
issue
in
these
appeals
is
whether
the
appellant,
in
those
years
was
or
was
not
an
excluded
corporation
as
defined
in
subsection
127.1(2)
of
the
Income
Tax
Act,
R.S.C.
1952,
c.
148
(am.
S.C.
1970-71-72,
c.
63)
(the
"Act").
If
not,
the
appellant
was
entitled
to
a
full
refund
of
the
investment
tax
credits
claimed
in
those
years.
If
it
was
an
excluded
corporation,
it
was
only
entitled
to
a
refund
of
40
per
cent
of
those
credits.
The
issue
boils
down
to
whether
the
appellant
was
"controlled
directly
or
indirectly,
in
any
manner
whatever"
by
the
Hospital
for
Sick
Children
and/or
the
Hospital
for
Sick
Children
Foundation.
These
two
entities
were
registered
charities
exempt
from
tax
under
Part
1
of
the
Act
pursuant
to
section
149.
The
Foundation
is
the
funding
arm
of
the
Hospital
and
for
the
purposes
of
these
appeals,
they
both
can
be
considered
as
one
entity.
Any
references
hereafter
to
"the
Hospital"
is
a
reference
to
both
entities.
Facts
acts
The
admitted
facts
are:
1.
The
appellant
was
incorporated
under
the
Corporations
Act
(Ontario),
R.S.O.
1980,
c.
54,
on
November
2,
1981
as
a
charitable
corporation
without
share
capital.
2.
Supplementary
letters
patent
were
issued
to
the
appellant
on
March
2,
1984
which
(a)
removed
all
references
to
the
status
of
the
appellant
as
a
charitable
corporation;
(b)
amended
clause
(e)
of
the
November
2,
1981
letters
patent
to
provide
that
"upon
the
dissolution
of
the
corporation
and
after
the
payment
of
all
debts
and
liabilities
its
remaining
property
shall
be
distributed
or
disposed
of
to
either
or
both
of
the
Hospital
for
Sick
Children
and
the
Hospital
for
Sick
Children
Foundation";
(c)
added
new
clause
3(c)
to
provide
that
the
appellant’s
profits
would
be
distributed
‘solely
to
either
one
or
both
of
the
Hospital
for
Sick
Children
and
the
Hospital
for
Sick
Children
Foundation,
provided
that
the
timing
and
the
amounts
of
such
distributions
of
profit
[would]
be
at
the
discretion
of
the
directors
and
provided
that
any
profits
not
so
distributed
[would]
be
used
solely
in
furtherance
of
the
objects
of
the
corporation;
and
(d)
added
new
paragraph
3A
which
provided
that
the
foregoing
provisions
of
clause
3(c)
could
not
be
altered
"except
with
the
unanimous
resolution
of
the
directors
which
is
confirmed
in
writing
by
100
per
cent
of
the
members".
3.
Further
supplementary
letters
patent
were
issued
to
the
appellant
on
July
16,
1984
which
provided
that
the
appellant’s
objects
were,
among
other
things,
"to
make
profits
by
the
commercial
exploitation
of
the
results
of
scientific
and
medical
research
to
be
undertaken
or
acquired
by
the
[appellant]"
and
"to
carry
on
any
other
activities
of
a
useful
nature
related
to
research".
These
supplementary
letters
patent
also
added
the
requirement
that
the
profits
generated
by
the
appellant
be
used,
firstly,
to
advance
and
assist
the
appellant
in
furthering
its
scientific
and
medical
activities
and,
secondly,
to
the
extent
not
required
for
its
business
purposes,
to
be
distributed,
at
the
discretion
of
the
board
of
directors
of
the
appellant,
to
the
hospital.
4.
At
no
time
in
1986,
1987
and
1988
did
the
members
of
the
appellant
appointed
by,
associated
with,
or
connected
to
the
hospital
or
any
other
person
exempt
from
tax
under
Part
I
of
the
Act
by
virtue
of
section
149
(individually
referred
to
as
an
"exempt
person"
and
collectively
referred
to
as
"exempt
persons"),
have
sufficient
votes
to
elect
a
majority
of
the
board
of
directors
of
the
appellant.
5.
The
appellant
incurred
expenditures
in
the
aggregate
of
$179,346,
$250,844
and
$659,492
in
its
1986,
1987
and
1988
taxation
years,
respectively,
which
constituted
expenditures
in
respect
of
scientific
research
and
experimental
development
under
paragraph
37(1
)(a)
of
the
Act
and
section
2900
of
the
Regulations
to
the
Act,
and
"qualified
expenditures"
under
subsection
127(9)
of
the
Act.
This
resulted
in
investment
tax
credits
for
purposes
of
section
127
of
the
Act
of
$62,771,
$87,795
and
$230,822
in
each
of
those
years,
respectively.
The
appellant
claimed
the
additional
refund
under
subparagraphs
127.1
(
1
)(a)(vi)
and
(vii)
of
the
Act
in
respect
of
the
investment
tax
credits
resulting
from
its
qualified
expenditures
in
each
of
its
1986,
1987
and
1988
taxation
years
on
the
grounds
that
it
was
a
"qualifying
corporation"
other
than
an
"excluded
corporation"
under
subsection
127.1(2)
of
the
Act.
6.
The
Minister
of
National
Revenue
(the
"Minister")
assessed
the
appellant
by
notices
of
assessment,
disallowing
60
per
cent
of
the
amount
claimed
by
the
appellant
as
a
refundable
investment
tax
credit
in
each
of
its
1986,
1987
and
1988
taxation
years,
on
the
grounds
that
the
appellant
was
controlled,
directly
or
indirectly,
in
any
manner
whatever,
by
one
or
more
exempt
persons
and
was,
therefore,
an
"excluded
corporation"
under
subsection
127.1(2)
of
the
Act.
7.
The
appellant
objected
to
such
assessments
and
by
notice
of
confirmation
dated
January
20,
1992,
the
Minister
confirmed
the
disallowance
of
$37,663,
$52,667
and
$138,493
of
the
refundable
tax
credit
claimed
by
the
appellant
in
its
1986,
1987
and
1988
taxation
years,
respectively.
Other
facts
which
were
proved
to
the
satisfaction
of
the
Court
were:
8.
The
appellant
was
initially
established
to
commercially
exploit
the
various
ideas,
products
and
other
innovations
developed
by
the
hospital
and
the
Research
Institute,
a
division
of
the
hospital.
Whereas
the
Research
Institute
developed
ideas
to
further
scientific
knowledge,
the
appellant
was
set
up
to
take
these
ideas
and
develop
them
into
viable
commercial
products
for
sale
to
third
parties.
9.
Pursuant
to
paragraph
3
of
By-law
No.
1
of
the
appellant,
responsibility
for
management
of
the
appellant
was
vested
in
a
board
composed
of
twelve
directors.
At
all
relevant
times,
said
By-law
No.
I
required
the
board
of
directors
of
the
appellant
to
consist
of
twelve
individuals.
10.
The
appellant
commenced
operations
with
two
employees.
Cyberfluor
Inc.
("Cyberfluor")
was
incorporated
in
1985
to
carry
on
research
and
development
in
a
specific
area.
The
appellant
initially
subscribed
for
70
per
cent
of
the
shares
of
Cyberfluor
in
consideration
of
the
transfer
by
the
appellant
to
Cyberfluor
of
technology
valued
at
$2,000,000.
The
remaining
shares
were
apparently
taken
by
IDEA
Corporation,
an
Ontario-sponsored
corporation.
During
the
years
in
question
the
appellant
always
owned
more
than
50
per
cent
of
the
shares
of
Cyberfluor.
At
this
time
in
1985,
the
appellant
had
approximately
40
employees
and
the
appellant
and
Cyberfluor
combined
had
approximately
55
employees.
11.
All
decisions
to
hire
and
fire
employees
of
the
appellant
were
made
by
Dr.
J.A.
Lowden,
the
appellant’s
president.
Before
1985,
Dr.
J.A.
Lowden’s
salary
was
paid
50
per
cent
by
the
appellant
and
50
per
cent
by
the
hospital,
as
he
was
still
an
active
member
of
the
hospital’s
Research
Institute.
From
1985
onward,
however,
all
of
Dr.
J.A.
Lowden’s
salary
was
paid
by
the
appellant,
as
he
was
no
longer
associated
with
the
hospital.
12.
For
convenience,
the
appellant
purchased
payroll
administration
and
purchasing
services
from
the
hospital
and
paid
the
hospital
an
administration
fee
for
such
services.
All
payroll
and
benefit
expenses
were
paid
by
the
appellant.
13.
While
the
appellant
was
initially
established
to
commercially
exploit
technology
developed
by
the
hospital,
it
subsequently
devoted
a
major
portion
of
its
efforts
to
exploiting
technology
developed
by
the
appellant
or
by
third
parties.
One
of
the
appellant’s
witnesses,
a
Mr.
Campbell,
testified
that
a
great
percentage
of
the
appellant’s
operations
related
to
technology
developed
by
the
hospital,
but
this
testimony
was
contradicted
by
other
witnesses
who
were
more
familiar
with
the
day
to
day
operations
of
the
appellant.
14.
The
appellant
obtained
start-up
funding
from
the
hospital
and
attempted
to
obtain
additional,
longer-term
financing
from
government
agencies
such
as
the
National
Research
Council,
IDEA
Corporation
as
well
as
from
investments
by
venture
capitalists
and
other
private
sector
investors
and
by
sales
and
licensing
revenue
and
by
fees
paid
for
carrying
out
research
for
other
entities.
15.
The
start-up
funding
from
the
hospital
was
$3,000,000
in
the
form
of
a
loan
payable
over
a
five-year
period.
16.
Although
the
appellant
communicated
with
the
board
of
the
hospital
from
time
to
time,
such
communication
was
done
on
an
informal
basis.
The
appellant
did
not
"report”
to
the
hospital.
Law
The
most
relevant
provision
of
the
Act
is
subsection
127.1(2)
which
reads:
127.1(2)
Definitions.
In
this
section,
"excluded
corporation”
for
a
taxation
year
means
a
corporation
that
is,
at
any
time
in
the
year,
(a)
controlled
directly
or
indirectly,
in
any
manner
whatever,
by
(i)
one
or
more
persons
exempt
from
tax
under
this
Part
by
virtue
of
section
140....
Appellant’s
submissions
Appellant
submits
that,
since
in
the
years
in
question
the
majority
of
the
members
(all
of
whom
were
also
directors)
of
the
appellant
were
not
appointed
by,
associated
with
or
employed
by
the
hospital
there
was
no
de
jure
control
of
the
appellant
by
the
hospital.
Appellant
further
submits
that
there
was
no
de
facto
control
by
the
hospital.
Even
if
there
was,
the
enactment
in
1988
of
subsection
256(5.1)
of
the
Act
which
defined
the
phrase
"controlled
directly
or
indirectly,
in
any
manner
whatever"
as
including,
for
years
after
1988,
de
facto
control,
changed
the
law,
so
that
one
can
argue
for
the
years
in
question,
de
facto
control
was
not
sufficient
to
constitute
the
control
contemplated
by
subsection
127.1(2).
Respondent's
submissions
The
respondent
submits
that
there
was
de
jure
control
as
that
concept
has
been
expanded
by
the
jurisprudence
over
the
years.
Alternatively
if
de
jure
control
did
not
exist,
de
facto
control
did,
principally
because
the
appellant
was
initially
a
creation
of
the
hospital,
that
it
owed
a
substantial
sum
of
money
to
the
hospital,
that
profits
not
required
for
the
purposes
of
the
appellant
were
to
go
to
the
hospital
and
that
on
a
wind
up
of
the
appellant
its
assets
went
to
the
hospital.
The
respondent
submits
further
that
for
a
non-share
corporation
like
the
appellant
the
concept
of
de
jure
control
must
be
expanded.
One
cannot
simply
adopt
or
adapt
the
test
developed
by
the
jurisprudence
for
share
corporations.
Analysis
In
the
pre-1972
Act,
the
words
"control”
or
"controlled”
were
in
most
cases
used
without
qualification.
When
those
provisions
were
carried
forward
into
the
1972
Act
they
were
generally
carried
forward
without
change.
In
new
provisions
which
were
added
to
the
1972
Act,
however,
such
as
the
definitions
of
"Canadian-controlled
private
corporation"
or
"private
corporation”,
the
qualification
"directly
or
indirectly,
in
any
manner
whatever"
was
in
most
cases
added.
This
language
was
included
in
the
definition
of
"excluded
corporation"
in
subsection
127.1(2)
when
it
was
enacted
in
1983.
Have
the
courts
distinguished
between
"control"
and
"controlled
directly
or
indirectly,
in
any
manner
whatever"?
The
leading
case
is
the
decision
of
the
Exchequer
Court
of
Canada
in
Buckerfield's
Ltd.
v.
M.N.R.,
[1964]
C.T.C.
504,
64
D.T.C.
5301
(Ex.
Ct.).
In
that
case,
the
Court
considered
the
meaning
of
the
term
"control"
in
the
context
of
the
associated
corporation
rules
in
subsection
39(2)
of
the
1952
Act.
President
Jackett
stated
at
pages
507-08
(D.T.C.
5303)
as
follows:
The
word
"control"
might
conceivably
refer
to
de
facto
control
by
one
or
more
shareholders
whether
or
not
they
hold
a
majority
of
shares.
I
am
of
the
view,
however,
that,
in
section
39
of
the
Income
Tax
Act,
the
word
‘controlled’
contemplates
the
right
of
control
that
rests
in
ownership
of
such
a
number
of
shares
as
carries
with
it
the
right
to
a
majority
of
the
votes
in
the
election
of
the
Board
of
Directors.
See
British
American
Tobacco
Co.
v.
LR.C.,
[1943]
1
A.E.R.
13,
where
Viscount
Simon
L.C.,
at
page
15,
says:
The
owners
of
the
majority
of
the
voting
power
in
a
company
are
the
persons
who
are
in
effective
control
of
its
affairs
and
fortunes.
In
M.N.R.
v.
Dworkin
Furs
(Pembroke)
Ltd.,
[1967]
S.C.R.
223,
[1967]
C.T.C.
50,
67
D.T.C.
5035,
the
Supreme
Court
of
Canada
approved
President
Jackett’s
decision.
Mr.
Justice
Hall
stated
at
page
224
(C.T.C.
51,
D.T.C.
5036)
that:
The
word
"controlled"
as
used
in
this
subsection
was
held
by
Jackett
P.
to
mean
de
jure
control
and
not
de
facto
control
and
with
this
I
agree.
These
initial
pronouncements
expanded
over
time.
It
became
clear
that,
in
determining
whether
de
jure
control
exists,
courts
are
not
to
be
limited
simply
to
technical
and
narrow
interpretations
of
the
legal
rights
attaching
to
shares
of
a
corporation.
The
courts
will
take
into
account
both
the
immediate
legal
ability
of
a
shareholder
to
control
the
corporation
and
the
ultimate
legal
ability
of
a
shareholder
to
control
the
corporation.
Thus,
in
Donald
Applicators
Ltd.
v.
M.N.R.,
[1969]
C.T.C.
98,
69
D.T.C.
5122
(Ex.
Ct.);
aff’d
[1971]
C.T.C.
402,
71
D.T.C.
5202
(S.C.C.),
the
Minister
assessed
the
appellant
corporations
as
associated
corporations
on
the
basis
that
each
was
associated
with
Company
S,
and
therefore,
with
each
other.
In
each
company
there
were
two
classes
of
shares,
Class
A
and
Class
B.
In
each
company,
two
Class
A
shares
were
issued;
one
to
each
of
two
individuals
and
498
Class
B
shares
were
issued
to
Company
S.
Class
A
shareholders
could
vote
on
any
issue;
Class
B
shareholders
could
vote
on
any
issues
except
the
election
of
directors.
Company
S
in
fact
managed
the
business
and
affairs
of
each
of
the
appellant
corporations.
Because
the
Class
B
shareholder
ultimately
had
the
legal
power
to
remove
the
existing
directors
from
office,
and
to
authorize
the
issuance
of
additional
Class
A
shares,
the
Court
found
that
Company
S
had
de
jure
control
of
all
of
the
corporations.
Mr.
Justice
Thurlow
stated
at
page
105
(D.T.C.
5126)
as
follows:
A
shareholder
who,
though
lacking
immediate
voting
power
to
elect
directors,
has
sufficient
voting
power
to
pass
any
ordinary
resolution
that
may
come
before
a
meeting
of
shareholders
and
to
pass
as
well
a
special
resolution
through
which
he
can
take
away
the
powers
of
the
directors
and
reserve
decisions
to
his
class
of
shareholders,
dismiss
directors
from
office
and
ultimately
even
secure
the
right
to
elect
the
directors
is
a
person
of
whom
I
do
not
think
it
can
correctly
be
said
that
he
has
not
in
the
long
run
the
control
of
the
company.
Such
a
person
in
my
view
has
the
kind
of
de
jure
control
contemplated
by
section
39
of
the
Act.
The
Minister
also
argued
that
Company
S
controlled
the
taxpayer
corporations
by
virtue
of
the
de
facto
control
exercised
by
it.
Mr.
Justice
Thurlow
dismissed
the
Minister’s
alternative
argument,
stating
at
page
102
(D.T.C.
5124)
that:
I
can
deal
with
the
alternative
submission
by
saying
that
in
my
opinion
de
facto
control
is
not
to
be
taken
into
account,
that
de
jure
control
is
what
is
contemplated
by
the
statute....
Similarly,
a
Court
will
look
beyond
apparent
voting
equality
in
a
corporation
to
the
true
legal
right
of
control.
In
Oakfield
Developments
(Toronto)
Ltd.
v.
M.N.R.,
[1971]
S.C.R.
1032,
[1971]
C.T.C.
283,
71
D.T.C.
5175,
the
taxpayer
corporations
issued
non-participating
preferred
shares
to
individuals
who
were
not
related
to
a
group
holding
the
majority
of
the
common
shares.
The
result
was
that
the
preferred
shareholders
held
50
per
cent
of
the
voting
rights
in
each
corporation
and
the
common
shareholders
held
50
per
cent
as
well,
creating
an
apparent
equality
of
voting
rights.
In
holding
that
the
holders
of
the
common
shares
controlled
the
taxpayer
corporations,
the
Court
looked
at
the
legal
rights
attached
to
each
class
of
shares,
including
the
ability
of
the
common
shareholders
to
authorize
the
surrender
of
the
corporation’s
Letters
Patent
and
to
wind
it
up.
Mr.
Justice
Judson
stated
at
page
1037
(C.T.C.
286;
D.T.C.
5177-78)
as
follows:
The
inside
group
controlled
50
per
cent
of
the
voting
power
through
their
ownership
of
the
common
shares.
They
were
entitled
to
all
the
surplus
profits
on
a
distribution
by
way
of
dividend
after
the
payment
of
the
fixed
cumulative
dividend
to
the
preferred
shareholders.
On
a
winding
up
of
Polestar,
they
were
entitled
to
all
of
the
surplus
after
return
of
capital
and
the
payment
of
a
10
per
cent
premium
to
the
preferred
shareholders.
Their
voting
power
was
sufficient
to
authorize
the
surrender
of
the
company’s
letters
patent.
In
my
opinion,
these
circumstances
are
sufficient
to
vest
control
in
the
group
when
owners
of
non-participating
preferred
shares
hold
the
remaining
50
per
cent
of
the
voting
power.
The
Supreme
Court
of
Canada
considered
a
situation
similar
to
that
in
Oakfield
Developments,
supra,
in
The
Queen
v.
Imperial
General
Properties
Ltd.,
[1985]
2
S.C.R.
288,
[1985]
2
C.T.C.
299,
85
D.T.C.
5500.
In
that
case
90
of
the
100
issued
common
shares
of
the
taxpayer
corporation
were
owned
by
V.
Ltd.
The
remaining
ten
shares
were
held
by
an
individual
who,
with
his
wife,
held
80
voting
but
non-participating
preference
shares.
The
result
was
that
V.
Ltd.
held
90
per
cent
of
the
common
shares
and
50
per
cent
of
the
voting
power.
A
50
per
cent
vote
was
sufficient
to
terminate
the
existence
of
the
corporation.
In
allowing
the
Crown’s
appeal,
Mr.
Justice
Estey
stated
at
page
295
(C.T.C.
302-03;
D.T.C.
5503)
that:
In
determining
the
proper
application
of
subsection
39(4)
to
circumstances
before
a
Court,
the
Court
is
not
limited
to
a
highly
technical
and
narrow
interpretation
of
the
legal
rights
attached
to
the
shares
of
a
corporation.
Neither
is
the
court
constrained
to
examine
those
rights
in
the
context
only
of
their
immediate
application
in
a
corporate
meeting.
It
has
long
been
said
that
these
rights
must
be
assessed
in
their
impact
"over
the
long
run”.
This
decision
appears
consistent
with
the
decisions
of
the
Supreme
Court
in
Oakfield
Developments
and
in
Donald
Applicators
and
Mr.
Justice
Estey
stated
at
page
298
(C.T.C.
304;
D.T.C.
5504)
that:
The
approach
to
"control"
here
taken
does
not
involve
any
departure
from
prior
judicial
pronouncements
nor
does
it
involve
any
"alteration"
of
the
existing
statute.
The
conclusions
reached
above
merely
result
from
applying
existing
case
law
and
existing
legislation
to
the
particular
facts
of
the
case
at
bar.
The
application
of
the
‘control’
concept,
as
earlier
enunciated
by
the
courts,
to
the
circumstances
now
before
the
Court
is,
in
my
view,
the
ordinary
progression
of
the
judicial
process
and
in
no
way
amounts
to
a
transgression
of
the
territory
of
the
legislator.
Each
of
the
Buckerfields,
Oakfield
Developments,
Donald
Applicators,
and
Imperial
General
Properties
cases,
supra,
involved
provisions
of
the
Act
which
did
not
include
the
qualifying
words
"directly
or
indirectly,
in
any
manner
whatever".
Decisions
of
the
courts,
however,
interpreting
provisions
of
the
Act
containing
such
words
have
interpreted
them
in
an
identical
manner,
that
is,
by
applying
the
concept
of
de
jure
control.
In
Scandia
Plate
Ltd.
v.
The
Queen,
[1982]
C.T.C.
431,
83
D.T.C.
5009
(F.C.T.D.),
the
Court
considered
the
definition
of
"Canadian-controlled
private
corporation"
in
paragraph
125(6)(a)
which
includes
those
words.
At
page
433
(D.T.C.
5011)
of
the
report,
Mr.
Justice
Cattanach
stated,
in
respect
of
paragraph
125(6)(a),
that:
The
word
’’controlled"
as
used
in
the
context
of
the
definition
means
de
jure
control
and
not
de
facto
control.
and
proceeded
to
cite
the
passage
quoted
above
from
the
decision
of
the
Supreme
Court
of
Canada
in
Dworkin
Furs.
The
Court
also
considered
the
definition
of
"Canadian-controlled
private
corporation"
in
International
Mercantile
Factors
Ltd.
v.
The
Queen,
[1990]
2
C.T.C.
137,
90
D.T.C.
6390
(F.C.T.D.).
In
that
case
voting
rights
in
the
taxpayer
corporation
were
divided
equally
between
two
public
corporations
and
a
private
corporation.
The
taxpayer
corporation’s
board
of
directors
consisted
of
four
nominees
of
the
two
public
corporations
and
one
nominee
of
the
private
corporation.
During
the
currency
of
a
shareholders
agreement
and
management
agreement
in
the
relevant
taxation
years,
the
composition
of
the
board
of
directors
could
not
be
changed.
After
surveying
the
prior
jurisprudence,
Mr.
Justice
Teitelbaum
concluded
at
pages
147-48
(D.T.C.
6398)
that:
From
the
wording
of
paragraph
125(6)(a)
of
the
Act
as
it
was
in
1979
to
1982
inclusively
and
from
the
jurisprudence
submitted
and
considered,
I
would
have
found
that
the
public
corporations
did
not
have
control
over
the
plaintiff
corporation
either
directly
or
indirectly
in
any
manner
whatsoever
had
the
issued
voting
shares
of
the
corporation
been
equally
divided
between
the
two
groups,
Rieris
and
Charter
and
Hamilton
and
both
groups
would
have
had
equal
voice
in
determining
all
matters
relating
to
the
plaintiff
corporation.
The
Court
did
not
draw
any
distinction
between
the
statutory
provisions
considered
in
the
previous
jurisprudence
and
in
the
case
at
bar.
Teitelbaum
J.
concluded
at
page
148
(D.T.C.
6399)
that:
This
finding
may
not
be
"on
all
fours"
with
the
findings
in
the
cases
of
Buckerfield
and
Dworkin
Furs,
supra.
As
in
the
cases
of
Oakfield
or
Imperial
Properties,
supra,
the
Supreme
Court
of
Canada
went
further
than
the
Buckerfield
and
Dworkin
Furs
cases
by
defining
the
issue
of
control
not
on
the
fact
of
equal
voting
rights,
but
by
the
fact
that
one
50
per
cent
shareholder
could
cause
the
liquidation
of
the
Company
giving
it
control.
I
also,
following
the
principle
in
Oakfield
and
Imperial
Properties,
am
satisfied
that
because
Charter
and
Hamilton
have
retained,
for
as
long
as
they
wish,
the
majority
of
the
Board
of
Directors,
they
have
retained
legal
and
effective
control
of
the
plaintiff
corporation
as
control
was
defined
in
paragraph
125(6)(a)
of
the
Income
Tax
Act.
In
Zinkhofer
v.
M.N.R.,
[1991]
1
C.T.C.
2493,
91
D.T.C.
643
(T.C.C.),
this
Court
considered
the
"stop
loss"
provisions
of
subsections
85(4)
and
85(5.1)
of
the
Act.
The
two
individual
taxpayers
owned
40
per
cent
of
the
voting
shares
of
a
corporation.
Their
three
sons
owned
the
other
60
per
cent.
Each
of
the
taxpayers
and
their
sons
were
directors.
The
taxpayers
disposed
of
a
property
to
the
corporation
pursuant
to
a
section
85
election
and
realized
a
loss.
On
the
transfer
of
property
to
the
corporation,
the
taxpayers
received
non-voting
retractable
Class
D
preference
shares
and
promissory
notes
payable
30
days
after
demand.
The
Minister
took
the
position
that
the
loss
was
denied
on
the
basis
that,
after
the
transfer
of
the
properties,
the
taxpayers
controlled
the
corporation.
Judge
Sobier
described
the
Minister’s
position
as
follows
at
page
2496
(D.T.C.
646):
The
respondent’s
position
is
that
the
economic
clout
wielded
by
the
appellants
gave
them
control
of
the
corporation
notwithstanding
that
together
they
only
held
40
per
cent
of
the
voting
shares.
The
Court
rejected
this
argument
after
reviewing
the
jurisprudence
already
described
above
on
the
meaning
of
"control”.
Judge
Sobier
concluded
at
page
2497
(D.T.C.
646)
that:
After
analyzing
these
cases,
the
inescapable
conclusion
is
not
that
economic
control
alone
will
give
or
shift
control
but
that
where
there
is
an
apparent
voting
equality
which
may
or
may
not
be
artificially
contrived,
one
must
look
at
other
factors
to
determine
control,
such
as
the
right
to
terminate
a
company’s
existence
and
seize
the
residue
of
its
assets.
The
respondent
further
contends
that
the
retractable
feature
of
the
Class
D
Shares
gives
the
appellants
that
clout
and
vests
control
in
them.
With
this
the
Court
cannot
agree.
What
the
appellants
receive
is
their
investment
and
no
more.
They
cannot
vote
to
elect
or
oust
the
directors,
alter
the
corporation’s
articles,
demand
increased
dividends,
wind
up
the
corporation
Or
cause
its
existence
to
cease
or
do
any
things
which
controlling
shareholders
may
do.
The
amount
of
money
they
may
remove
from
the
corporation
by
way
of
return
of
capital
is
limited
to
their
original
investment.
In
this
instance,
the
parties
have
not
bestowed
voting
rights
on
a
class
of
shares
in
order
to
give
the
appearance
of
equality
of
votes
and
therefore
there
is
nothing
to
look
behind
in
order
to
determine
actual
control.
Here,
actual
control
rests
in
the
hands
of
the
holders
of
the
Class
A
shares
no
matter
how
small
their
investment.
The
respondent
urged
the
Court
to
look
to
the
fact
that
the
appellants
held
promissory
notes
of
the
corporation
which
would
again
give
them
leverage
over
the
corporation
by
the
ability
to
call
the
notes.
If
this
were
the
case
then
any
creditor,
particularly
a
secured
creditor,
could
be
said
to
control
a
corporation
since
it
controls
its
assets.
This
could
never
be
the
meaning
of
control
for
the
purposes
of
the
Act.
In
order
for
the
respondent
to
establish
that
the
appellants
control
the
corporation,
he
must
establish
that
the
appellants
had
a
preponderance
of
the
votes
at
a
meeting
of
the
shareholders
of
the
corporation
or
that
they
had
sufficient
votes
when
coupled
with
other
powers
to
control
the
corporation
as
that
term
was
defined
in
Imperial
General
Properties,
supra.
Applying
the
de
jure
test,
did
the
hospital
control
the
appellant
in
the
relevant
taxation
years?
It
is
the
evidence
that:
—
at
no
relevant
time
was
the
majority
of
the
directors
of
the
appellant
appointed
by,
associated
with,
or
connected
to
the
hospital
or
the
foundation
—
the
directors
of
the
appellant
were
its
sole
members
-
the
directors
had
complete
discretion
as
to
the
admission
of
members
and
could
terminate
the
membership
of
any
member
—
the
hospital
had
no
direct
or
indirect
right
to
appoint
members
or
directors
of
the
appellant
-
the
hospital
had
no
direct
right
to
cause
the
appellant
to
be
wound
up.
The
cases
reviewed
above
show
that
prior
to
the
amendments
to
the
Act
made
in
1988
which
added
subsection
256(5.1),
the
courts
consistently
construed
the
words
"controlled,
directly
or
indirectly,
in
any
manner
whatever"
to
apply
a
de
jure
and
not
a
de
facto
test
for
control.
For
taxation
years
commencing
after
1988,
subsection
256(5.1)
of
the
Act
provides
that
the
phrase
"controlled,
directly
or
indirectly,
in
any
manner
whatever"
includes
factual
or
de
facto
control.
This
provision
does
not
apply
to
the
taxation
years
of
the
appellant
before
the
Court.
It
is
the
submission
of
the
appellant
that
this
amendment
changed,
rather
than
clarified,
the
law;
that
the
phrase
"controlled,
directly
or
indirectly,
in
any
manner
whatever"
for
taxation
years
commencing
prior
to
1989
did
not
include
any
concept
of
factual
or
de
facto
control.
Subsection
45(2)
of
the
Interpretation
Act
provides
that
the
fact
of
an
amendment,
in
and
of
itself,
does
not
give
rise
to
an
inference
that
the
amendment
changed
the
pre-existing
law.
It
provides
as
follows:
45(2)
The
amendment
of
an
enactment
shall
not
be
deemed
to
be
or
to
involve
a
declaration
of
the
law
under
that
enactment
was
or
was
considered
by
Parliament
or
other
body
or
person
by
whom
the
enactment
was
enacted
to
have
been
different
from
the
law
as
it
is
under
the
enactment
as
amended.
Notwithstanding
subsection
45(2),
the
courts
have
taken
account
of
amendments
in
construing
the
amended
statute.
In
Bathurst
Paper
Ltd.
v.
Minister
of
Municipal
Affairs
of
the
Province
of
New
Brunswick,
[1972]
S.C.R.
471,
22
D.L.R.
(3d)
115,
the
Court
considered
amendments
to
the
New
Brunswick
Assessment
Act
changing
the
definition
of
"tax
concession".
Counsel
for
the
appellant
relied
in
part
on
section
13
of
the
New
Brunswick
Interpretation
Act
which
provided
that:
The
amendment
of
an
Act
shall
not
be
deemed
to
be,
or
to
involve,
a
declaration
that
the
law
under
the
Act
was
different
from
the
law
as
it
has
become
under
the
Act
as
amended.
This
provision
is
in
substance
identical
to
section
45
of
the
Interpretation
Act.
Laskin
J.
found
at
page
476
(D.L.R.
118)
that:
In
my
opinion,
section
13
merely
precludes
a
Court
from
making
the
prohibited
inference
from
the
fact
that
an
amendment
was
enacted.
It
does
not
exclude
reference
to
the
amendment
as
an
item
of
legislative
history
bearing
on
the
construction
of
the
amended
statute.
and
concluded
at
page
477
(D.L.R.
119)
that:
There
is
another
consideration
that
is
equally
telling.
Legislative
changes
may
reasonably
be
viewed
as
purposive,
unless
there
is
internal
or
admissible
external
evidence
to
show
that
only
language
polishing
was
intended.
The
submission
of
the
appellant
would
have
it
that
the
amendment
in
1968
accomplished
nothing
of
substance,
but
merely
improved
the
drafting.
This
is,
in
my
opinion,
an
untenable
position.
In
Ottawa
v.
Hunter
(1900),
31
S.C.R.
7,
the
Court
considered
the
provisions
of
two
statutes
whose
language
was
originally
identical
but
where
additional
words
had
been
added
to
one
of
the
provisions.
The
Court
was
urged
to
interpret
both
provisions
as
having
the
same
effect.
Mr.
Justice
Taschereau
stated
at
page
10
as
follows:
Now
when
we
see
in
statutes
in
pari
materia,
by
the
very
same
legislature,
additional
words
of
that
nature
to
a
prior
enactment,
we
would
be
setting
at
naught
the
very
clear
intention
of
the
legislature
if
we
gave
to
the
last
enactment
the
same
construction
that
had
been
judicially
given
to
the
prior
one,
as
the
appellant
asks
us
to
do.
We
cannot
so
read
out
of
a
statute
expressions
that
must
be
held
to
have
deliberately
been
inserted
so
as
to
make
the
new
statute
different
from
the
prior
one.
This
is
also
the
position
taken
by
Driedger,
Construction
of
Statutes,
second
edition
who
states
at
page
127
that:
In
general
a
change
in
language
on
reenactment
of
a
provision
must
be
presumed
to
have
some
significance.
In
Woodward
Stores
Ltd.
v.
Canada,
[1991]
1
C.T.C.
233,
91
D.T.C.
5090
(F.C.T.D.),
the
Court
considered
the
provisions
of
subsection
45(2)
of
the
Interpretation
Act.
In
this
case
the
corporate
taxpayer
had
received
"fixturing
allowances"
which
would
have
fallen
within
the
subsequently-
enacted
provisions
of
paragraph
12(l)(x)
of
the
Act.
It
was
argued
by
the
taxpayer
that
the
enactment
of
paragraph
12(l)(x)
had
changed
the
law.
The
existence
of
the
transitional
provisions
led
Mr.
Justice
Joyal
to
rebut
any
presumption
that
the
enactment
of
paragraph
12(l)(x)
was
merely
intended
to
clarify
the
existing
state
of
the
law.
He
concluded
at
page
246
(D.T.C.
5100)
that:
Subsection
37(2)
of
the
Interpretation
Act
[now
subsection
45(2)]
simply
states
that
there
is
no
presumption
that
a
legislative
amendment
indicates
a
change
in
the
law.
This
cannot
mean
that
an
amendment
can
never
be
interpreted
as
reflecting
a
change
in
the
law,
especially
when
there
is
external
evidence
to
that
effect.
In
the
present
case,
there
is
internal
and
external
evidence
to
show
that
the
addition
of
subsection
256(5.1)
effected
a
change
in
the
law.
Prior
to
the
enactment
of
subsection
256(5.1),
which
is
applicable
to
taxation
years
commencing
after
1988,
the
Act
did
not
define
the
phrase
’’controlled,
directly
or
indirectly,
in
any
manner
whatever".
As
noted
above,
until
the
addition
of
subsection
256(5.1),
this
phrase
was
used
interchangeably
with
the
terms
"control"
and
"controlled
directly
or
indirectly"
to
denote
the
concept
of
control.
For
example,
prior
to
the
1988
amendments,
the
Act
referred
to
corporations
"controlled,
directly
or
indirectly,
in
any
manner
whatever"
in
the
following
provisions:
(a)
Category
"A"
Provisions
(i)
subsection
24(2),
which
provides
rules
applicable
where
an
individual
ceases
to
carry
on
a
business
which
is
thereafter
carried
on
by
a
corporation
controlled
by
the
individual;
(ii)
paragraph
54(i),
which
defines
"superficial
loss";
(iii)
subsections
85(4)
and
(5.1),
which
provide
rules
applicable
to
dispositions
of
property
to
controlled
corporations;
(iv)
paragraph
95(6)(b),
an
anti-avoidance
provision
applicable
to
foreign
affiliates
and
controlled
non-resident
corporations;
(v)
paragraph
125(7)(b),
which
defines
"Canadian-controlled
private
corporation";
and
(vi)
the
definition
of
“excluded
corporation”
in
subsection
127.1(2),
applicable
for
purposes
of
the
refundable
investment
tax
credit.
(b)
Category
"B"
Provisions
(i)
paragraphs
12(l)(o)
and
18(l)(m)
and
subsections
69(6)
and
69(7),
in
respect
of
corporations
controlled
by
Her
Majesty
in
right
of
Canada
or
a
province;
(ii)
subparagraph
85.1
(2)(b)(i),
in
respect
of
share
for
share
exchanges;
(iii)
paragraph
89(1
)(f)
defining
"private
corporation’;
(iv)
paragraph
95(1
)(a)
defining
"controlled
foreign
affiliate";
and
(v)
subsection
186(1),
in
respect
of
corporations
liable
for
Part
IV
tax.
Pursuant
to
S.C.
1988,
c.
55,
subsection
192(3),
subsection
256(5.1)
was
enacted
to
provide
that
for
taxation
years
commencing
after
1988,
where
the
expression
"controlled,
directly
or
indirectly
in
any
manner"
is
used,
a
corporation
is
considered
to
be
so
controlled
by
a
corporation,
person
or
group
of
persons
if
it
is
controlled
in
fact
by
such
corporation,
person
or
group
of
persons.
When
the
simple
terms
"control"
or
"controlled"
continued
to
be
used,
this
"control
in
fact"
test
did
not
apply.
The
Act
was
contemporaneously
amended
in
1988
to
delete
from
the
provisions
listed
under
Category
"B",
in
the
above
paragraph,
the
words
"directly
or
indirectly
in
any
manner
whatever".
No
such
deletions
were
made
to
the
Category
"A"
provisions.
These
amendments
were
applicable
to
taxation
years
commencing
after
1988,
the
effective
date
of
new
subsec-
tion
256(5.1).
The
effect
of
these
deletions
was
to
ensure
that
the
new
control
in
fact
test
did
not
apply
to
these
provisions.
Had
the
enactment
of
subsection
256(5.1)
merely
clarified
that
the
phrase
"controlled
directly
or
indirectly
in
any
manner
whatever"
was
intended
to
encompass
factual
control,
the
deletion
of
these
words
would
not
have
been
necessary.
The
conclusion
that
the
enactment
of
subsection
256(5.1)
effected
a
change
in
the
law
is
also
supported
by
the
wording
of
the
provision
and
its
effective
date.
Unlike
a
number
of
provisions
in
the
Act
(for
example,
subsection
248(24)),
which
begin
with
the
words
"for
greater
certainty",
subsection
256(5.1)
begins
with
the
words
"for
the
purposes
of
this
Act"...the
expression
"controlled,
directly
or
indirectly
in
any
manner
whatever
shall
be
considered
…."
If
the
drafters
intended
to
merely
clarify
the
meaning
of
the
phrase
"controlled
directly
or
indirectly
in
any
manner
whatever",
they
could
have
done
so
with
clear
wording.
The
fact
that
they
did
not
is
indicative
of
the
fact
that
subsection
256(5.1)
introduced
a
new
concept
of
control.
The
effective
date
of
the
provision
(i.e.,
for
taxation
years
commencing
after
1988)
also
makes
it
clear
that
the
concept
of
factual
control
was
not
applicable
prior
to
1989.
In
the
absence
of
this
effective
date,
control
for
the
purposes
of
the
provisions
listed
in
Category
"B"
above,
would
have
included
factual
control.
Given
the
deletion
of
the
words
"directly
or
indirectly
in
any
manner
whatever"
from
these
provisions
when
subsection
256(5.1)
was
enacted,
this
was
clearly
not
intended.
The
Department
of
Finance
also
considered
the
addition
of
subsection
256(5.1)
by
S.C.
1988,
c.
55,
subsection
192(3)
to
effect
a
change
in
the
law.
In
the
Technical
Notes
to
subsection
192(3)
of
Bill
C-139,
dated
June
30,
1988,
the
Department
of
Finance
gave
the
following
explanation
as
to
the
effect
of
new
subsection
256(5.1)
of
the
Act:
New
subsection
256(5.1)
expands
the
concept
of
control
for
certain
provisions
of
the
Act
to
include
what
is
often
referred
to
as
de
facto
control.
Under
the
existing
rules,
control
of
a
corporation
generally
exists
by
reason
of
the
ability
to
elect
a
majority
of
the
directors
of
the
corporation
—
de
jure
control.
An
example
of
de
facto
control
might
be
a
situation
where
a
person
held
49
per
cent
of
the
voting
control
of
a
corporation
and
the
balance
was
widely
dispersed
among
many
employees
of
the
corporation
or
was
held
by
persons
who
could
reasonably
be
considered
to
act
in
respect
of
the
corporation
in
accordance
with
his
wishes.
Whether
a
person
can
be
said
to
be
in
actual
control
of
a
corporation,
notwithstanding
that
he
does
not
legally
control
more
than
50
per
cent
of
its
voting
shares,
will
depend
in
each
case
on
all
of
the
circumstances.
[Emphasis
added.]
Where
the
words
"controlled
directly
or
indirectly
in
any
manner
whatever"
were
removed
from
an
existing
provision,
such
as
subparagraph
12(
1
)(o)(iii),
the
following
explanation
was
given
in
the
Technical
Notes:
This
amendment
is
consequential
on
the
introduction
of
new
subsection
256(5.1)
and
ensures
that
the
provisions
of
that
subsection
—
relating
to
de
facto
control
—
are
not
applicable
to
paragraph
12(
1
)(o).
It
was
also
the
view
of
Revenue
Canada
that
the
enactment
of
subsection
256(5.1)
changed
the
law.
This
can
be
seen
from
a
comparison
of
the
relevant
Interpretation
Bulletin
which
had
been
issued
prior
to
the
enactment
of
subsection
256(5.1),
namely
IT-64R2,
dated
December
20,
1983
with
IT-64R3,
issued
March
9,
1992
and
entitled
"Corporations:
Association
and
Control
—
After
1988".
The
conclusion
is
that
the
1988
amendments
were
purposive,
that
purpose
being
to
expand
the
concept
of
control,
among
other
things,
for
the
purposes
of
the
definition
of
"excluded
corporation"
in
subsection
127.1(2)
of
the
Act,
to
include
de
facto
control.
Accordingly,
prior
to
the
amendment,
control
for
the
purposes
of
the
definition
of
"excluded
corporation"
was
legal
or
de
jure
control.
It
was
argued
by
counsel
for
the
respondent
that
the
jurisprudence
defining
de
jure
control
should
not
be
applied
to
a
corporation
without
share
capital.
There
is
apparently
no
reported
jurisprudence
on
this
point
but
counsel
for
the
respondent
submitted
that,
with
a
corporation
without
shares,
the
Court
must
look
beyond
the
directors/members
to
see
really
"who
is
in
the
driver’s
seat."
The
Court
has
done
this
but
concludes
that
the
hospital
did
not
have
de
jure
control
of
the
appellant
because,
at
all
relevant
times,
the
majority
of
the
members
and
directors
of
the
appellant
were
not
appointed
by,
employed
by,
associated
with
or
otherwise
connected
to
or
controlled
by
the
hospital
and
the
other
factors
discussed
below
were
not
sufficient
to
result
in
de
jure
control.
It
is
true
that
the
hospital
was
to
receive
the
property
of
the
appellant
on
winding
up
and
to
receive
any
excess
profit
as
determined
by
the
directors
of
the
appellant
and
that
the
initial
and
subsequent
funding
of
the
appellant
was
provided
by
the
hospital
and
guarantees
of
other
loans
were
given
by
the
hospital.
However,
the
hospital
had
no
legal
right
or
power
to
cause
the
winding
up
of
the
appellant
or
to
cause
its
directors
to
distribute
profits
or
to
remove
directors.
It
is
also
well
established
that
the
economic
power
of
a
creditor
does
not
constitute
control.
In
the
Court’s
opinion,
the
phrase
"controlled,
directly
or
indirectly,
in
any
manner
whatever",
in
the
years
in
question,
meant
de
jure
control.
Furthermore,
the
Court
finds
no
valid
reason
not
to
apply
the
concepts
of
control
developed
in
the
decided
cases
for
share
corporations
to
a
corporation
without
shares.
The
persons
who
control
the
non-share
corporation
are
the
members
who
in
turn
appoint
the
directors.
In
this
case
the
members
and
directors
are
one
and
the
same.
They
ran
the
day-to-day
operations
and
made
the
decisions.
If
the
hospital
had
any
control,
same
would
have
to
be
classified
as
de
facto
control
and
for
the
years
in
question,
this
was
not
sufficient.
For
all
of
the
above
reasons,
the
appeals
are
allowed,
with
costs,
and
the
matter
is
referred
back
to
the
Minister
for
reconsideration
and
reassessment.
Appeal
allowed.