Supreme Court of Canada
The King v. McLeod, [1941] S.C.R.
228
Date: 1941-02-21
His Majesty
The King Appellant;
v.
J. W. R.
McLeod Respondent.
1941: February 5; 1941:
February 21.
Present: Duff C.J. and
Rinfret, Crocket, Davis and Hudson JJ.
ON APPEAL FROM THE COURT OF
APPEAL FOR BRITISH COLUMBIA
Criminal law—Companies—False
statement by director—False by implication—Liability of director—Balance sheet
of company—Loan to company treated as cash asset—Particulars—Criminal Code,
sections 413 and 414.
APPEAL by the Attorney-General
for British Columbia from the judgment of the Court of Appeal for British Columbia which (Macdonald C.J.B.C. and O'Halloran J.A.
dissenting) allowed the respondent's appeal and quashed the conviction of the
accused respondent.
The respondent, who was president
and managing director of the Freehold Oil Corporation Limited, obtained the sum
of $40,336.46 on the 31st of March, 1937, from an associate named Miller
through his secretary (Miller being away at the time) and deposited it to the
credit of the Freehold Company. In repayment thereof he handed the said
secretary six post-dated cheques of the Freehold Company aggregating the above
sum and dated respectively the 8th, 9th, 10th, 12th, 13th and 14th of April,
1937. Three days later the Freehold Company's balance sheet was made up by the
company's chartered accountants, showing current assets as of March 31st, 1937,
to include " cash in bank $48,789.76." This amount included the sum
of $40,336.46 obtained by the respondent as aforesaid. Four days later at a
meeting of the directors the balance sheet was approved. The annual meeting of
the company was called for April 14th and a copy of the balance sheet was
directed to be forwarded to the shareholders with the notice calling the meeting.
No disclosure was made to the shareholders of the six post-dated cheques.
Particulars delivered pursuant to order stated that the false statement
consisted in entries in the books of the company showing a sale of shares of
another company for $40,336.46 and a re-purchase of the same number of shares
from a third company for the same amount, and an audited balance sheet showing
as an asset "Cash in bank" $48,789.76,
[Page 229]
which did not reflect the true
financial position of the respondent's company. The respondent was convicted
under section 414 of the Criminal Code, for that he, being a director of a
public company, did, with intent to deceive its shareholders, concur in making
a statement of its financial position which he knew to be false in a material
particular, viz., that the assets of the company consisted of $48,789.76 in
cash. The trial judge, Lennox Co.J., found that although on the material date
the company had cash in the bank in said amount, yet the statement was false in
that it did not show that of that amount $46,336.46 represented money borrowed
by the company which was still owing to the lender. The Court of Appeal
reversed that judgment, quashed the conviction and held (Macdonald C.J.B.C. and
O'Halloran J.A. dissenting) that while the respondent might have been charged
with falsifying the balance sheet at large in not showing the true state of the
company's affairs or that it was false in particular in not disclosing the
liability for the loan, nevertheless the respondent ought not to have been
convicted of making a false balance sheet as alleged in the terms of the
conviction, because in truth the company had in the bank to its credit the sum
of $48,789.76 and that sum was an asset of the company no matter what
liabilities there were against it: the Crown elected to complain of only one
item and that item by itself was unquestionably a true and not a false "
material particular."
E. Pepler for the
appellant.
H. Aldous Aylen K.C. for
the respondent.
On appeal to the Supreme Court of
Canada, after hearing the arguments of counsel for the appellant and for the
respondent, the Court reserved judgment, and on a subsequent day delivered
judgment allowing the appeal.
The judgment of the Court was
delivered by
THE CHIEF JUSTICE—We have come to
the conclusion that this appeal must be allowed. We agree with the reasons of
the learned Chief Justice of British Columbia and think it unnecessary to add
to them.
Appeal allowed.
Solicitor for the
appellant: Eric Pepler.
Solicitor for the
respondent: Elmore Meredith.