Supreme Court of Canada
Rogers-Majestic Corp. Ltd., [1943] S.C.R. 440
Date: 1943-06-29
Rogers-Majestic
Corporation Limited (Plaintiff) Appellant;
and
The Corporation of
the City of Toronto (Defendant) Respondent.
1943: May 20, 21; 1943: June 29.
Present: Duff C.J. and Davis, Kerwin,
Taschereau and Rand JJ.
ON APPEAL FROM THE COURT OF APPEAL FOR
ONTARIO.
Assessment and taxation—Assessment Act,
R.S.O. 1937, c. 272—Company assessed under s. 8 for business assessment; also
under s. 9 (1) (b) in respect of certain income—Income assessable as not being
derived from business in respect of which company was assessable under s.
8—Appeal under s. 85, as being “on a question of law or the construction of a
statute”.
Appellant company manufactured radios and
other articles and, in respect of land occupied for that purpose, it was
assessed by respondent city for business assessment as a manufacturer, under s.
8 (1) (e) of The Assessment Act, R.S.O. 1937, c. 272. Prior to
1934, appellant had also owned and operated on other land, as part of its
business, a broadcasting station, but in 1934 a broadcasting company was
incorporated to which appellant transferred certain capital assets including
land, buildings and equipment used in the operation of
[Page 441]
the broadcasting branch of the business, and
from that time the broadcasting company operated said station (and was assessed
under s. 8 (1) (k) of said Act for business assessment in respect
of the land occupied for that purpose). For its said transfer, appellant
received the broadcasting company’s issue of capital stock and bonds. Certain
directors of appellant were also directors (and one of them was also manager)
of the broadcasting company; the companies had the same president and
secretary; the broadcasting company’s books and its book-keeper were at
appellant’s head office (on land in respect of which appellant was assessed for
business assessment); the broadcasting station was used to advance by
advertising the sale of appellant’s radio receiving sets without charge.
Respondent assessed appellant for income tax
on a sum received as interest on said bonds of the broadcasting company held by
appellant. Appellant disputed respondent’s right to do so, claiming that the
sum was not, within the meaning of s. 9 (1) (b) of said Act (having due
regard to s. 8 (3), and to the facts), “income not derived from the business in
respect of which” appellant was assessable under s. 8. Macdonell Co. Ct. J., on
appeal from the Court of Revision, held that the sum was not taxable. On appeal
by way of special case stated under s. 85 of said Act, his decision was
reversed by the Court of Appeal for Ontario, [1943] O.R. 1.
Held (affirming
judgment of the Court of Appeal): The sum in question was assessable. To escape
assessment under s. 9 (1) (b), income of appellant would have to
be derived from its business in respect of which it occupied land and was
liable for business assessment; that business was the business of manufacturing
and selling its products; from which the income in question was not derived.
Held, also,
that respondent’s appeal to the Court of Appeal was competent, being “on a
question of law or the construction of a statute” within the meaning of s. 85
(1) of said Act (cases bearing on the question reviewed).
APPEAL from the judgment of the Court of
Appeal for Ontario
allowing (Riddell J.A. dissenting) an appeal by the present respondent, by way
of special case stated pursuant to s. 85 of The Assessment Act, R.S.O.
1937, c. 272, from the decision of His Honour Judge Macdonell, a Judge of the
County Court of the County of York, in favour of the present appellant. The
special case stated by His Honour Judge Macdonell was as follows (the present
appellant being therein referred to as the “respondent” or the “respondent
company”, and the present respondent being therein referred to as the
“appellant”):
Pursuant to the powers conferred by Section
123 of The Assessment Act, the Corporation of the City of Toronto
enacted By-law 14140 dated June 25th, 1934, as amended by By-law 14584 dated
June 20th, 1936, being a by-law respecting taxation of income.
The Respondent is a company with its head
office at 622 Fleet Street West,
in the City of Toronto, where
it occupies or uses land for the
[Page 442]
purpose of carrying on its business. It was
assessed in the year 1939 for business assessment as a manufacturer under
Section 8, paragraph (e) of The Assessment Act.
It was also entered on the roll of taxable
income under Section 123 of the said Act for the year 1940 for taxable income
for the sum of $14,625. The Respondent admitted that it had a taxable income of
$4,125 but disputed its assessment for the balance of $10,500 and appealed to
the Court of Revision, which confirmed the said assessment. The Respondent then
appealed and the hearing came on before me at which time the Appellant asked me
to make a note of any question of law or construction of statute that might
arise and to state same in the form of a special case for the Court of Appeal.
The amount in dispute is the said sum of
$10,500 which was credited to the Respondent Company by Rogers Radio
Broadcasting Company Limited and received as interest on bonds of the latter
company held by the Respondent Company.
Prior to 1934 the Respondent Company owned
and operated broadcasting station CFRB as part of its business. In that year
Rogers Radio Broadcasting Company Limited was incorporated and the Respondent
Company transferred to the Broadcasting Company certain capital assets
including land, buildings and equipment used in connection with the operation
of the broadcasting branch of the business. The Respondent Company received as
consideration for such transfer $200,000 in bonds of the Broadcasting Company
as well as the entire issued capital stock. At the present time $150,000 of
bonds are still held by the Respondent Company, the balance having been
redeemed.
The Broadcasting Company was incorporated
and the bond issue created in order that the Respondent Company might have an
asset upon which it would borrow money for its purposes and the bonds were used
for that reason.
The Broadcasting Company carried on the
business of radio broadcasting thereafter (particularly in the year 1939, which
is the year under consideration in this case), operating radio station CFRB,
and was assessed for business assessment in respect of the premises occupied by
it for this purpose at 37 Bloor Street West, in the City of Toronto, under
Section 8, paragraph (k) of the said Assessment Act.
The Board of Directors of the Broadcasting
Company consists of three of the Directors of the Respondent Company and two of
the engineers of the Broadcasting Company. The companies have the same
President and the same Secretary. Mr. Harry Sedgwick, the Manager of the
Broadcasting Company, is a director of both companies.
The income of the Broadcasting Company is
derived from the carrying on of the business of a broadcasting station. The
books of the Broadcasting Company are kept at the Head Office of the Respondent
Company and are under the general supervision of the Comptroller of the
Respondent Company. The book-keeper for the Broadcasting Company was at the
office of the Respondent Company, was paid by the Respondent Company and a part
of her salary charged by journal entry against the Broadcasting Company.
The broadcasting station is used for the
purpose of advancing by advertising the sale of the radio receiving sets of the
respondent company without charge.
Equipment for the Broadcasting Company in
some cases was made by the Respondent Company and charged to the Broadcasting
Company at cost.
[Page 443]
The interest which is in question was not
paid in cash but was charged by the Respondent Company to the Broadcasting
Company by means of journal entry and was thus received by the Respondent
Company. The profits of the Broadcasting Company were turned over to the
Respondent Company and treated as an asset of the Broadcasting Company and a
liability of the Respondent Company.
The following powers are included in the
Letters Patent of the Respondent Company dated May 13, 1925:
(a) To manufacture, sell, lease, purchase,
import, export and otherwise dispose of and deal in radio and electrical
machines, appliances, accessories and equipment of all kinds;
(b) To manufacture, sell, lease, purchase,
import, export 2nd otherwise dispose of and deal in all kinds of goods and
merchandise directly or indirectly connected with or entering into the
manufacture, construction and assembling of radio and electrical machines,
equipment, accessories and appliances, or the erection, equipment and operation
of radio reception and transmission stations;
(d) To build, acquire, equip, operate and
dispose of radio reception and transmission stations;
(i) To purchase, take or acquire by
original subscription or otherwise, and to hold, sell or otherwise dispose of
shares, stock, debentures and other obligations in and of any other company and
to vote all shares so held through such agent or agents as the directors may
from time to time appoint.
The Respondent Company occupies three
premises, one at 622 Fleet Street West, one at the Crosse and Blackwell plant on Fleet Street, and one in
a building on Hanna Street, at
all of which it is assessed for 60 per cent. of the value of the land occupied
by it as a manufacturer. It manufactures radios, radio parts and equipment,
electric refrigerators and similar products. Its income is derived from the
sale of these products through a large jobber organization across Canada. The annual financial statement of
the two companies indicate that both carry on a substantial business. In the
year 1939 the Broadcasting Company had a net operating profit of $126,621.09
and the consolidated statement of the Respondent Company and its subsidiaries
shows a net operating profit of $101,308.26.
DECISION
Upon these facts, I decided the said sum of
$10,500 was not taxable and allowed the appeal reducing the assessment to
$4,125.
REASONS
FOR MY DECISION
Counsel for the Appellant contended that
because there were two corporations, each liable for business tax, carrying on
separate businesses, the said sum of $10,500 received by the Respondent Company
from the Broadcasting Company as interest on bonds of the Broadcasting Company
could not be income derived by it from the business in respect of which it was
assessable under Section 8. He claimed that upon the proper construction of the
said Section 9 (1) (b) the amount was assessable. I disagreed with this
contention, whereupon counsel asked that I submit this question of law for the
opinion of the Court of Appeal. Upon my construction of the statute I
considered that I should find as a fact that the said sum was received as
income derived from the business of the Respondent Company and was not
assessable.
[Page 444]
QUESTION
Upon a true construction of The
Assessment Act, particuarly section 9, (1) (b), was I right in deciding
that the said sum of $10,500 did not form part of the taxable income of the
Respondent Company in the year 1940.
To the question above propounded in the stated
case, the Court of Appeal (Riddell J.A. dissenting) answered in the negative.
The Court of Appeal also held (unanimously) that the question for determination
was a question of law and therefore an appeal lay to it under said s. 85.
Special leave to appeal to the Supreme Court of
Canada was granted to the present appellant by the Court of Appeal for Ontario.
Besides other contentions, counsel for the
appellant referred to s. 8 (3) of the Act (quoted in the reasons for judgment
in this Court infra) and contended that the assessment of appellant as a
manufacturer under s. 8 (1) (e) was no more than a fixing of the rate at
which it should be assessed; assessment as a manufacturer only indicated that
the business of manufacturing was the chief or preponderating business of those
carried on by appellant in respect of which it was assessed for business tax;
and that the Act should be so construed that the words “business in respect of
which it is assessable” as they appear in s. 9 (1) (b) mean all business
carried on by appellant upon the premises in respect of which it is assessed
for business tax; it could not be said that the income which appellant received
prior to 1934 from the broadcasting branch of its business was not income
derived from the business in respect of which it was assessed for business tax
and the mere fact that it created a separate corporate entity did not make the
broadcasting business any less the business of the appellant; it derived the
income from the broadcasting branch of its business by means of interest on the
bonds instead of directly from its earnings as theretofore; that the
broadcasting company was merely appellant’s agent for the purpose of earning
income for appellant as part of appellant’s business.
Against such a contention it was argued (inter
alia) that the sum paid to appellant as interest on bonds was income
not derived from the business in respect of which appellant occupied land and
carried on business, but was derived from the business in respect of which the
broad-
[Page 445]
casting company occupied land and carried on
business; and, when received by appellant, was clearly assessable under s. 9
(1) (b); the fact that it was received from a subsidiary company did not
make it income derived from the business in respect of which appellant was
assessable for business tax; the holding of the bonds was an investment which
might be part of the business of appellant in the general meaning of that word
“business”, but it was not part of the business in respect of which appellant
was liable for business assessment, and the income derived from such bonds or
investments was the very income which the Act makes assessable; appellant did
not occupy or use land for the purpose of radio broadcasting; that business was
carried on solely by the broadcasting company and it alone was liable for
business assessment in respect thereof; the companies were separate and
distinct entities, and the business of radio broadcasting was not appellant’s,
but the broadcasting company’s, business; further, there was no finding that
appellant carried on the business of radio broadcasting or that appellant
controlled the broadcasting company, or that the latter carried on as agent for
appellant.
Samuel Rogers K.C. and B.V. Elliot for
the appellant.
J. Palmer Kent K.C. for the respondent.
The judgment of the Court was delivered by
KERWIN J.—By leave of the Court of Appeal for
Ontario, Rogers-Majestic Corporation Limited appeals from a decision of that
Court allowing an appeal by the present respondent, the Corporation of the City
of Toronto, from the decision of a County Court Judge by way of a special case
stated pursuant to section 85 of The Assessment Act, R.S.O. 1937,
chapter 272. The first question that arises is whether there was a question of
law or the construction of a statute within the meaning of subsection 1 of
section 85 upon which an appeal to the Court of Appeal could be based; and the
second is whether the appellant was properly assessed for certain income under
section 9, subsection 1 (b), of the Act, as being income not derived
from the business in respect of which the appellant was assessable for business
assessment under section 8.
[Page 446]
The relevant part of section 8, section 9, and
subsections 1, 2 and 3 of section 85 are as follows:
8. (1) Irrespective of any assessment of
land under this Act, every person occupying or using land for the purpose of
any business mentioned or described in this section shall be assessed for a sum
to be called “business assessment” to be computed by reference to the assessed
value of the land so occupied or used by him, as follows:
(e) Subject to the provisions of
clause j every person carrying on the business of a manufacturer for a
sum equal to sixty per centum of the assessed value, and a manufacturer shall
not be liable to business assessment as a wholesale merchant by reason of his
carrying on the business of selling by wholesale the goods of his own
manufacture on such land.
(k) Every person carrying on the
business of a photographer or of a theatre, concert hall, or skating rink, or
other place of amusement, or of a boarding stable, or a livery, or the letting
of vehicles or other property for hire, or of a restaurant, eating house, or
other house of public entertainment, or of a hotel or any business not before
in this section or in clause l specially mentioned, for a sum equal to
twenty-five per centum of the assessed value.
(3) Subject to the provisions of
subsections 4 and 5, no person shall be assessed in respect of the same
premises under more than one of the clauses of subsection 1, and where any
person carries on more than one of the kinds of business mentioned in that
subsection on the same premises, he shall be assessed by reference to the
assessed value of the whole of the premises under that one of those clauses in
which is included the kind of business which is the chief or preponderating
business of those so carried on by him in or upon such premises.
9. (1) Subject to the exemptions provided
for in sections 4 and 8,—
(a) every corporation not
liable to business assessment under section 8 shall be assessed in respect of
income;
(b) every corporation although
liable to business assessment under section 8 shall also be assessed in respect
of any income not derived from the business in respect of which it is
assessable under that section.
(2) The income to be assessed shall be the
income received during the year ending on the 31st day of December then last
past.
85. (1) An appeal shall lie to the Court of
Appeal as hereinafter provided from the judgment of the judge on a question of
law or the construction of a statute, a municipal by-law, any agreement in
writing to which the municipality concerned is a party, or any order of the
Ontario Municipal Board (except an order made under section 84).
(2) Any party desiring so to appeal to the
Court of Appeal shall on the hearing of the appeal by the judge request the
judge to make a note of any such question of law or construction, and to state
the same in the form of a special case for the Court of Appeal.
(3) It shall be the duty of the judge to
make a note of such request, and he may thereupon state such question in the
form of a special case, setting out the facts in evidence relative thereto, and
his decision of the same, as well as his decision of the whole matter.
Whether there is a question of law or the
construction of a statute upon which an appeal lies to the Court of
[Page 447]
Appeal is not always free from difficulty.
Probably no satisfactory definition can be framed so as to cover all
circumstances. In Farmer v. Cotton’s Trustees, the Commissioners for the General Purposes
of the Income Tax Acts had decided that certain premises were not “divided into
and let in different tenements” within the meaning of a provision of the Customs
and Inland Revenue Act, 1878. In the House of Lords, Earl Loreburn pointed
out, at page 930, that the House had no jurisdiction to review the
determination of the Commissioners upon any issue of fact. “We could, of
course,” he says,
interpose if it were clear that the
Commissioners had proceeded upon a wrong construction of the Act, and I think
they did by regarding the question as one merely of structural separation; but
they have not told us what construction they placed upon the Act.
He was disposed to remit the case to obtain that
information, if it were necessary, but he decided there was another ground of
law upon which the Commissioners were wrong. “There is, upon a true
construction of the Act, no evidence in this case upon which their decision can
be supported.” Lord Atkinson concurred. Lord Parker, at page 932, states it is
not always easy to distinguish between questions of fact and questions of law;
that the views from time to time expressed in the House of Lords had been far
from unanimous
but in my humble judgment, where all the
material facts are fully found, and the only question is whether the facts are
such as to bring the case within the provisions properly construed of some
statutory enactment, the question is one of law only.
Lord Sumner, although dissenting in the result,
stated in the opening of his speech, at page 938:
In this case the Commissioners have
furnished a description of the building in question, partly in words and partly
by plans, so full that your Lordships know as much about it as they did. The
rest is matter of law.
In Girls’ Public Day School Trust Limited v.
Ereaut, the
House of Lords held that the term “public school”, as used in a rule of
Schedule A of the Income Tax Act, 1918, was not a term of art, and that
the question of what was the common understanding of the term was a question of
fact for the Commissioners; and that, there being ample evidence to support the
conclusion, it could not be reviewed.
[Page 448]
In Re Mclntyre Porcupine Mines Limited and
Morgan, Mr.
Justice Hodgins of the Ontario Court of Appeal states at page 220:
The construction of the words of any
statutory enactment is a question of law, while the question of whether the
particular matter or thing is of such a nature or kind as to fall within the
legal definition of its terms is a question of fact:
but later on the same page he remarks:
It is no doubt difficult to separate
questions of law and fact in a case of this kind, where evidence which enables
the Court to put itself in a position to construe the words of the Act is very
often the same or practically the same as that which determines whether the
statute covers the particular thing in question.
The substance of the first of these two
sentences may be found in the judgment of this Court in Township of Tisdale
v. Hollinger Consolidated Gold Mines Limited, but it is important, I
think, to read the entire paragraph:
The questions as to whether or not the
buildings, plant and machinery are in or on mineral land, and are used mainly
for obtaining minerals from the ground, or form part of the concentrators, are
not exclusively of fact. The Ontario Railway and Municipal Board having found
that the property attempted to be assessed is situate on “mineral land”, it
seems, as found by the Supreme Court of Ontario, that, upon the evidence
adduced and the findings of the Board, we would be precluded from interfering
therewith, if we agree, in law, with their view as to the meaning of the
statute. The construction of a statutory enactment is a question of law, while
the question of whether the particular matter or thing is of such a nature or
kind as to fall within the legal definition of its term is a question of fact.
Mr. Justice Grant, in the Court of Appeal, had pointed out in this case that there
was no definition of the words “mineral land” and I think it may be taken that
the Court of Appeal and this Court decided that there was evidence upon which
the Ontario Railway and Municipal Board could decide as it did.
In The Corporation of the City of Toronto v.
Famous Players’ Canadian Corporation Ltd.,
this Court dismissed an appeal from the Court of Appeal for Ontario because it
considered that it would be impossible to set aside the findings of the Board
on the ground that, on the evidence, they were legally inadmissible; and
considered it equally impossible to hold that, given the findings, the order of
the Board was wrong in law.
[Page 449]
In Loblaw Groceterias Co. Ltd. v. City
of Toronto, it is
stated in the judgment of this Court at page 254:
It is argued that, the courts below having
reached the conclusion that the land and building were used as distribution
premises, this is a finding of fact with which we ought not to interfere. But
it is a question of law that is made the subject-matter of the right of appeal
from the County Judge upon a stated case and we are bound to determine upon the proper
construction of the amendment whether or not, upon the facts stated, the land
and building are caught by the increased rate of assessment. Questions of this
sort are constantly before the House of Lords on taxing statutes and are dealt with
as raising the proper construction to be put upon the language of the statutes.
In the present case the County Court Judge
states in the stated ease, immediately before propounding the question, “Upon
my construction of the statute I considered that I should find as a fact that
the said sum was received as income derived from the business of the Respondent
Company and was not assessable.” The difficulty is that we do not know what his
construction of the statute was, but, in my opinion, upon a true construction
of the relevant provisions of The Assessment Act, there is no evidence
upon which his decision can be supported.
This really involves the determination of the
second question. By letters patent, the appellant was authorized, inter
alia, to build, acquire, equip, operate and dispose of radio reception and
transmission stations, and, prior to 1934, the appellant owned and operated a
broadcasting station, CFRB, as part of its business. In that year Rogers Radio
Broadcasting Company Limited was incorporated and the appellant transferred to
it certain capital assets, including land, buildings and equipment used in
connection with the operation of the broadcasting branch of the appellant’s
business. Since 1934 the Broadcasting Company has carried on the business of
radio broadcasting, operating radio station CFRB, and was assessed for business
assessment in respect of the premises occupied by it for that purpose at 37 Bloor Street West, Toronto, under
paragraph (k) of subsection 1 of section 8 of The Assessment
Act. Since 1934 the appellant has not owned or operated the broadcasting
station. The appellant, to quote from the stated case,
[Page 450]
occupies three premises, one at 622 Fleet Street West, one at the Crosse
and Blackwell plant on Fleet Street, and one in a building on Hanna Street, at all of which it is
assessed for 60 per cent. of the value of the land occupied by it as a
manufacturer. It manufactures radios, radio parts and equipment, electric
refrigerators and similar products. Its income is derived from the sale of
these products through a large jobber organization across Canada.
It is apparent from the stated case, and
particularly from that part of it to which I have just referred, that it is as
a manufacturer that the appellant is assessable, and is assessed, for business
assessment under section 8 (1) (e). There is no evidence that the
appellant carries on any business other than the business of a manufacturer on
the three premises referred to and there is, therefore, no basis for any inquiry
as to whether it has a chief or preponderating business within the purview of
subsection 3 of section 8.
No doubt the appellant has power to invest in
shares or bonds of other companies and for some purposes the income from such
shares or bonds, such as the income from the broadcasting Company’s bonds here
in question, might properly be said to be part of the income of the appellant.
Under subsection 1 (b) of section 9 of The Assessment Act, that
is not sufficient. It must be income derived from the business of the appellant
in respect of which it occupies land and is liable for business assessment.
That business is the business of manufacturing and selling its products. The
income in question was not derived from that business and is therefore
assessable. In the Court of Appeal for Ontario, the Chief Justice of the Common
Pleas and Mr. Justice Riddell decided in this sense in Re City of Toronto
and John Northway and Son Limited, and I
agree that this is the proper interpretation of the clause.
The appeal is dismissed with costs.
Appeal dismissed with costs.
Solicitors for the appellant: Rogers
& Rowland.
Solicitor for the respondent: C.M.
Colquhoun.