THORSON,
P.:—These
appeals
from
the
income
tax
assessments
for
the
years
1938,
1939,
1940
and
1941
depend
on
whether
certain
sums
received
by
the
appellant
in
such
years
constituted
income
not
liable
to
taxation
as
being
derived
from
income
tax
exempt
bonds
within
the
meaning
of
sec.
4(j)
of
the
Income
War
Tax
Act,
R.S.C.
1927,
chap.
97,
which
provides:
“4.
The
following
incomes
shall
not
be
liable
to
taxation
hereunder
:
(7)
The
income
derived
from
any
bonds
or
other
securities
of
the
Dominion
of
Canada
issued
exempt
from
any
income
tax
imposed
in
pursuance
of
any
legislation
enacted
by
the
Parliament
of
Canada.”
The
facts
are
not
in
dispute.
The
appellant
is
the
widow
of
Sir
Albert
Edward
Kemp
who
died
on
August
12,
1929.
By
his
last
will
and
testament
he
appointed
her
together
with
Arthur
B.
Coleville
and
National
Trust
Company
Limited
as
executors
and
trustees,
and
made
substantial
provision
for
her
in
a
number
of
ways.
Para.
3
provided
in
part
as
follows:
"3.
I
GIVE
AND
DEVISE
to
my
said
Trustees
my
residence
and
lands
in
the
City
of
Toronto,
known
as
"Castle
Frank’’,
including
houses,
out-houses
and
other
buildings
thereon,
and
all
the
appurtenances
used
and
enjoyed
therewith
(all
of
which
are
to
be
understood
as
being
included
in
the
term
‘Castle
Frank’)
upon
the
following
trusts:
(a)
During
the
lifetime
of
my
wife,
Virginia,
so
long
as
she
shall
remain
my
widow,
and
so
long
as
she
desires
to
make
use
of
the
same
as
her
residence,
to
keep
up
Castle
Frank
in
a
suitable
condition
for
that
purpose;
and
all
costs
and
charges
for
the
payment
of
taxes,
insurance
and
for
repairs,
renewals
and
other
like
expenditures
for
the
proper
structural
upkeep
C.T.C.
Kemp
v.
M.N.R.
345
of
the
said
houses
and
buildings
shall
be
borne
by
my
estate
and
be
paid
by
my
Trustees.
(b)
To
allow
my
said
wife
during
her
lifetime,
and
so
long
as
she
remain
my
widow,
to
occupy
Castle
Frank
as
her
home
and
residence,
free
of
rent.
(d)
While
my
said
wife
shall
occupy
Castle
Frank
as
her
home
and
residence,
my
Trustee
shall
also
bear
the
expense
of
the
maintenance
and
management
thereof;
and
to
cover
such
cost,
my
Trustees
shall
pay
to
my
wife
the
sum
of
Two
Thousand
Two
Hundred
and
Fifty
Dollars
($2,250)
each
month
in
advance
so
long
as
she
continues
to
reside
in
Castle
Frank
and
to
use
it
as
her
home.
‘
‘
and
para.
4
further
provided:
‘4.
I
DIRECT
that
the
above
provisions
in
favour
of
my
wife
shall
be
a
first
charge
upon
my
estate,
and
shall
be
provided
for
and
paid
by
my
Trustees
in
priority
to
any
other
legacies
payable
under
my
said
Will,
and
I
further
direct
that
any
Succession
Duties,
and
all
income
taxes
which
may
be
payable
in
respect
of
the
above
provisions
for
my
wife
shall
be
paid
out
of
my
estate
by
my
Trustees.
‘
‘
Then
under
para.
16
the
appellant
is
to
receive
one-sixteenth
of
the
residuary
estate
outright
and
also
the
following
income,
namely,
from
one-sixteenth
of
the
residuary
estate
during
her
life
and
also
from
one-eighth
of
the
residuary
estate
as
long
as
she
remains
the
testator’s
widow.
The
appellant
also
had
income
from
sources
other
than
the
will.
Under
para.
4
of
the
will
the
amounts
payable
to
the
appellant
under
para.
3
were
made
a
first
charge
on
the
estate
with
the
result
that
there
could
be
no
payment
of
legacies
and
no
distribution
of
any
of
the
estate
to
other
beneficiaries
unless
the
appellant
consented
thereto.
Not
wishing
to
delay
the
payment
of
legacies
or
hold
up
the
distribution
to
other
beneficiaries,
the
appellant
agreed,
although
she
was
not
obliged
to
do
so,
that
the
Trustees
should
set
up
trust
funds
out
of
the
assets
of
the
estate
to
provide
for
the
payment
of
the
obligations
of
the
estate
to
her
under
the
various
paragraphs
of
the
will.
Three
such
funds
were
set
up
in
the
books
of
the
Trustees,
namely,
Trust
No.
1
for
the
payment
of
the
income
from
one-sixteenth
of
the
residuary
estate.
Trust
No.
2
for
the
payment
of
the
income
from
one-eighth
of
the
residuary
estate
and
Trust
No.
3
for
the
payments
under
paras.
3
and
4.
After
these
funds
were
set
up
a
substantial
distribution
of
the
estate
became
possible.
The
funds
were
not
evidenced
by
any
documents
but
were
merely
set
up
in
the
books
of
the
Trustees.
The
fact
is
that
the
appellant
allowed
the
distribution
of
a
part
of
the
estate
and
was
willing
to
have
her
charge
upon
the
estate
confined
to
what
was
left.
The
trust
funds
were
not
in
separate
bank
accounts,
the
funds
of
the
estate
were
in
the
one
bank
account,
the
various
funds
being
kept
separate
only
on
the
books
of
the
Trustees.
We
are
concerned
only
with
the
trust
fund
known
as
Trust
No.
3
which
was
set
up
early
in
1930.
At
that
time
it
amounted
to
$743,700,
consisting
of
$738,200
in
Dominion
of
Canada
5%
bonds
due
December
1,
1937,
and
$5,500
in
cash.
With
this
cash
other
bonds
of
the
same
issue
were
bought
on
November
30,
1930.
All
these
bonds
were
exempt
from
income
tax
within
the
meaning
of
sec.
4
(j)
of
the
Act.
The
annual
income
from
them
as
received
by
the
Trustees
was
credited
as
revenue
of
Trust
No.
3
and
drawn
upon
to
make
the
payments
to
the
appellant
under
paras.
3
and
4
of
the
will,
and
any
balance
not
required
for
such
payments
was
retained
as
revenue
of
the
fund
and
accumulated
from
year
to
year.
The
amounts
thus
received
during
the
years
from
1930
to
1941,
both
inclusive,
and
their
disposition
including
the
accumulation
of
the
balances
above
referred
to
are
set
out
in
a
statement,
Exhibit
2,
filed
by
counsel
for
the
appellant.
This
fund,
Trust
No.
3,
may
be
dealt
with
in
two
periods,
the
first
being
from
its
beginning
until
the
end
of
1937.
In
the
first
column
of
Exhibit
2
there
is
shown
the
gross
income
of
the
fund
for
each
year
during
the
period,
consisting
of
the
receipts
by
the
Trustees
of
interest
on
the
income
tax
exempt
bonds
that
had
been
allocated
to
the
fund.
Then
columns
2,
3
and
4
show
the
dispositions
of
such
income,
column
2
the
annual
amount
of
$27,000
paid
to
the
appellant
under
para.
3
of
the
will,
column
3
the
amount
paid
to
her
under
para.
4,
and
column
4
the
amount
remaining
after
the
payments
under
paras.
3
and
4
of
the
will
had
been
made.
This
last
amount
was
retained
in
the
revenue
account
of
the
fund
and
allowed
to
accumulate.
Up
to
the
end
of
1937
the
gross
income
from
the
fund
had
been
more
than
sufficient
to
provide
the
payments
under
paras.
3
and
4
of
the
will,
and
the
balances
retained
and
accumulated
from
year
to
year
totalled
$93,520.55.
Out
of
such
accumulated
revenue
$27,000
was
reinvested
in
September
1934,
and
a
further
$8,727.96
in
February
1935.
There
is
no
controversy
in
respect
of
this
period.
Neither
the
estate
nor
the
appellant
was
taxed
in
respect
of
the
interest
on
the
income
tax
exempt
bonds
received
by
the
Trustees
or
in
respect
of
the
payments
received
by
the
appellant
under
paras.
3
and
4
of
the
will.
The
second
period
from
the
end
of
1937
to
the
end
of
1941
tells
a
different
story.
When
the
income
tax
exempt
bonds
matured
on
December
1,
1937,
the
proceeds
were
invested
in
securities
the
income
from
which
was
no
longer
exempt
from
income
tax.
Such
income
appears
under
column
1
of
Exhibit
2.
This
was
used
to
make
the
payments
to
the
appellant
under
paras.
3
and
4
of
the
will,
as
shown
by
columns
2
and
3
respectively,
as
far
as
it
would
go.
In
1938
the
income
was
more
than
sufficient
to
make
such
payments,
there
being
a
balance
remaining,
as
shown
by
column
4.
But
in
respect
of
the
years
1939,
1940
and
1941
the
income
was
not
sufficient
to
cover
all
the
payments
and
the
deficiency
in
making
the
payments
under
para.
4
was
made
up
by
drawing
on
the
accumulated
revenue
of
$93,520.55
above
referred
to.
The
amounts
so
drawn
were
$3,995.98
in
1939,
$6,333.36
in
1940
and
$16,232.22
in
1941.
The
simple
issue
in
these
appeals
is
whether
such
amounts,
paid
to
the
appellant
under
para.
4
of
the
will
out
of
the
said
accumulated
revenue
of
$93,520.55,
were,
when
received
by
her,
exempt
from
income
tax
as
income
derived
from
income
tax
exempt
bonds
under
sec.
4(j)
of
the
Act.
Counsel
for
the
appellant
contended
that
there
had
been
no
change
in
their
income
tax
exempt
nature;
that
the
accumulated
revenue
out
of
which
they
were
paid
consisted
of
amounts
which
at
the
time
of
their
receipt
constituted
part
of
the
income
of
the
estate
and,
there
being
no
power
under
the
will
to
capitalize
income,
remained
impressed
with
the
character
of
income
under
the
terms
of
the
will,
even
although
some
of
the
accumulation
had
in
fact
been
re-invested;
that
such
amounts
at
the
time
of
their
receipt
by
the
Trustees
were
income
that
was
exempt
from
income
tax
as
being
derived
from
income
tax
exempt
bonds
and,
in
the
absence
of
legislation
imposing
tax
thereon,
retained
that
character
until
they
reached
the
hands
of
beneficiaries
under
the
will.
The
argument
was
that
the
Trustees
were
a
conduit
pipe
between
the
testator
and
the
beneficiaries
under
the
will
and
that
if
amounts
of
income
received
by
the
Trustees
were
exempt
from
income
tax
in
their
hands
they
could
not
lose
their
income
tax
exempt
character
by
passing
from
the
Trustees
into
the
hands
of
beneficiaries
under
the
will,
unless
there
was
some
legislation
imposing
tax
thereon
and
there
was
no
such
legislation.
I
have
come
to
the
conclusion
that
counsel’s
contention
was
well
founded.
He
relied
strongly
on
the
judgment
of
the
Appellate
Division
of
the
Supreme
Court
of
Ontario
in
Re
Watkins
and
City
of
Toronto
(1923)
54
O.L.R.
136.
There
the
whole
of
the
testator’s
property
was
devised
to
his
executors
upon
trust.
For
a
period
of
ten
years
from
his
death
the
duty
of
the
trustees
was
to
pay
one-third
of
the
income
of
the
residuary
estate
to
his
son.
By
arrangement
the
rents
of
the
testator’s
real
estate
were
collected
by
agents
and
paid
directly
to
the
beneficiaries,
including
the
son,
without
passing
through
the
executors’
hands.
Under
sec.
5(21)
of
The
Assessment
Act,
R.S.O.
1914,
chap.
195,
it
was
provided
that
"‘rent
or
other
income
derived
from
real
estate”
was
exempt
from
liability
for
income
tax
and
the
question
in
issue
was
whether
the
son
was
entitled
to
the
benefit
of
this
exemption
in
respect
of
the
amount
which
the
agents
collected
as
rents
and
paid
directly
to
him.
It
was
held
that
he
was.
At
page
138,
Middleton
J.
said
of
the
amount
received
by
the
son:
"
‘I
think
that
it
may
be
admitted
that
when
it
reaches
the
hands
of
the
beneficiary
it
has
ceased
to
be
‘rent’,
but
the
statute
exempts
not
merely
rent
but
‘other
income
derived
from
real
estate’.
This,
I
think,
is
wide
enough
to
cover
the
rental
received
by
trustees
and
paid
over
to
a
beneficiary.
It
can
be
said
to
be
‘derived
from
real
estate’
within
the
meaning
of
the
statute—the
mere
intervention
of
trustees,
with
no
duty
but
to
pay
over,
does
not
change
its
character.’’
It
may
be
said
that
this
case
differs
from
the
present
one
in
that
here
there
was
no
direction
in
the
will
to
make
the
payments
under
para.
4
out
of
the
tax
exempt
income
of
the
estate.
It
is
true
that
there
was
no
such
direction
and
that
the
said
payments
need
not
have
been
made
out
of
such
income
but
could
have
been
made
from
other
estate
sources.
But
it
is
also
true
that
there
was
nothing
to
prevent
the
Trustees
from
lawfully
paying
them
out
of
the
tax
exempt
income
of
the
estate
and
they
were,
in
fact,
paid
out
of
an
accumulation
of
such
income
to
the
extent
mentioned.
That
being
so,
I
see
no
reason
why
that
portion
of
the
accumulated
revenue
that
was
paid
by
the
Trustees
to
the
appellant
under
para.
4
of
the
will,
being
exempt
from
income
tax
in
their
hands,
should
lose
its
income
tax
exempt
character
merely
through
being
lawfully
transferred
by
them
to
her.
There
is,
I
think,
strong
support
for
the
view
that
there
is
no
such
change
of
character
in
the
decision
of
the
Judicial
Committee
of
the
Privy
Council
in
Syme
v.
Commissioners
of
Taxes
[1914]
A.C.
1013,
an
appeal
from
the
Supreme
Court
of
Victoria.
In
that
case
under
a
will
the
trustees
carried
on
certain
businesses
in
Victoria
which
had
been
owned
by
the
testator
and
paid
the
appellant,
one
of
the
testator’s
sons,
a
fifth
share
of
the
annual
profit
thereof.
Under
the
Income
Tax
Acts,
1895
and
1896,
of
Victoria,
the
rate
of
tax
on
income
derived
from
personal
exertion
was
very
much
less
than
on
income
derived
from
the
produce
of
property.
In
respect
of
the
fifth
share
of
the
annual
profit
the
Commissioners
assessed
the
appellant
on
the
latter
basis,
whereas
he
claimed
that
he
was
entitled
to
be
assessed
on
the
former.
The
Commissioners
succeeded
in
the
Supreme
Court
of
Victoria,
but
this
decision
was
reversed
by
the
Judicial
Committee.
It
was
clear
that
the
income
received
by
the
trustees
from
carrying
on
the
businesses
was
income
derived
from
personal
exertion
within
the
meaning
of
the
taxing
Acts
and
the
issue
was
whether
it
mainained
such
character
when
it
was
passed
on
to
the
beneficiary
under
the
will
as
a
share
of
the
profits.
It
was
argued
for
the
respondent
that
the
income
so
received
by
the
appellant
was
a
different
income
from
that
derived
by
the
trustees:
from
the
businesses,
being
paid
out
of
a
fund
arrived
at
by
the
trustees
after
setting
off
profits
and
losses
and
deducting
prior
charges
but
this
argument
did
not
succeed.
It
was
held
by
Lord
Summer,
delivering
the
judgment
of
the
Committee,
that
the
sum
received
by
the
appellant
from
the
trustees
as
his
share
of
the
profits
of
the
businesses
was
not
different
in
character
from
the
income
received
by
the
trustees
from
carrying
them
on.
If
in
their
hands
it
was
derived
from
personal
exertion,
so
also
in
his
hands
it
was
also
so
derived.
At
page
1021,
Lord
Summer
put
his
conclusion
briefly
as
follows
:
"‘What
was
the
produce
of
personal
exertion
in
the
trustees’
hands
till
they
part
with
it
does
not,
in
the
instant
of
transfer,
suffer
a
change,
and
become
the
produce
of
property
and
not
of
personal
exertion,
as
it
passes
to
the
hands
of
the
cestur
que
trust.
‘
‘
The
whole
accumulated
revenue
consisted
of
income
received
by
the
Trustees
as
interest
on
income
tax
exempt
bonds
and
was
exempt
from
income
tax
under
sec.
4(j)
of
the
Act.
In
my
view,
it
lost
none
of
that
character
on
being
lawfully
transferred
by
the
Trustees
to
the
appellant
in
partial
discharge
of
the
obligations
to
her
under
para.
4
of
the
will.
But
even
if
the
income
derived
by
the
appellant
under
para.
4
of
the
will
were
not
the
same
as
that
received
by
the
Trustees
as
interest
on
income
tax
exempt
bonds,
it
does
not
follow
that
it
would
be
subject
to
income
tax,
for
proper
regard
must
be
had
to
the
meaning
of
the
word
“derived”
in
sec.
4(j).
Counsel
for
the
appellant
contended
that
it
must
not
be
read
as
meaning
‘‘received
in
the
first
instance’’.
I
agree.
In
a
taxing
Act
words
must,
generally
speaking,
be
given
their
plain
and
ordinary
meaning,
and,
according
to
such
meaning
the
word
“derived”
covers
a
wider
field
than
the
word
"
"
received
‘
and
when
applied
to
the
word
"‘income’’
it
connotes
the
source
or
origin
of
such
income
rather
than
its
immediate
receipt.
In
the
New
English
Dictionary,
Vol.
Ill,
page
230,
its
meaning
is
given
as
"Drawn,
obtained,
descended,
or
deduced
from
a
source;”
and
in
Webster’s
New
International
Dictionary,
Second
Edition,
"Formed
or
developed
out
of
something
else;
derivative;
not
primary
;’’.
The
word
was
recently
carefully
construed
by
this
Court
in
Guhooly
v.
Minister
of
National
Revenue
(1945)
Ex.
C.R.
141
by
Cameron
J.,
then
Deputy
Judge,
when
he
had
to
consider
whether
the
moneys
received
by
the
executors
of
‘an
estate
as
dividends
on
shares
held
by
it
in
a
mining
company
and
paid
to
a
beneficiary
entitled
to
a
share
of
the
income
of
the
estate
constituted
in
the
hands
of
such
beneficiary
‘‘income
derived
from
mining’’
within
the
meaning
of
sec.
5(a)
of
the
Act,
so
as
to
entitle
her
to
a
depletion
allowance.
He
came
to
the
conclusion
that
they
did.
In
arriving
at
such
conclusion
Cameron
J.
referred
to
a
number
of
cases,
namely,
In
re
Income
Tax
Acts
1895
and
1896
(1897)
22
V.L.R.
539;
In
re
Income
Tax
Acts
(No.
2)
(1903)
29
V.L.R.
525;
Syme
v.
Commissioner
of
Taxes
(supra)
In
re
Income
Tax
Acts,
1924-1928
(No.
2)
(1929)
St.
R.
Qd.
276;
and
Armstrong
v.
Commissioner
for
Inland
Revenue
(1938)
10
S.A.
Tax
Cases
1.
I
need
not
here
repeat
his
discussion
of
the
cases
of
his
citations
from
them.
In
my
view,
they
support
his
opinion
that
income
‘‘derived
from
mining’’
meant
‘‘income
originating
from
mining
or
coming
from
mining
as
its
source’’,
and
his
finding
that
the
moneys
received
by
the
appellant
beneficiary
as
a
share
of
the
income
from
the
estate
were
‘‘income
derived
from
mining’’,
notwithstanding
the
intervention,
first,
of
the
mining
company
paying
dividends
to
the
executors
of
the
estate
as
shareholders
in
the
company
and,
secondly,
of
the
executors
paying
a
share
of
the
income
of
the
estate
to
the
appellant
beneficiary.
Whether
the
moneys
were
received
by
the
executors
as
dividends
on
shares
or
by
the
beneficiary
as
her
share
of
the
income
of
the
estate,
they
had
their
source
or
origin
in
the
mining
operations
that
made
their
payment
possible
and
were,
therefore,
‘‘income
derived
from
mining”,
within
the
meaning
of
sec.
5(a).
Similarly,
it
seems
to
me
that
the
word
“derived”
in
sec.
4(7)
of
the
Act
as
applied
to
the
income
there
referred
to
cannot
be
limited
to
income
from
income
tax
exempt
bonds
immediately
or
directly
received
by
the
owners
thereof
as
interest
thereon,
but
must
include
income
that
has
its
source
in
such
bonds
even
although
there
may
be
intervening
channel
through
which
it
flows
from
such
source
to
its
final
destination.
The
word,
in
my
opinion,
is
wide
enough
to
include
the
payments
received
by
the
appellant
under
para.
4
of
the
will,
to
the
extent
that
they
came
out
of
the
accumulated
revenue
of
$93,520.55
made
up
of
balances
of
interest
on
income
tax
exempt
bonds
received
by
the
Trustees.
To
such
extent
they
were,
in
my
judgment,
income
derived
from
income
tax
exempt
bonds
within
the
meaning
of
sec.
4(j)
of
the
Act
and
not
liable
to
taxation.
To
the
extent
of
such
payments,
namely,
$3,995.98
in
1939,
$6,333.36
in
1940,
and
$16,232.22
in
1941,
the
appeals
from
the
assessments
for
such
years
must
be
allowed
and
the
assessments
set
aside
for
amendment
accordingly.
There
being
no
evidence
that
any
sum
was
paid
to
the
appellant
out
of
tax
exempt
income
in
1938,
the
appeal
from
the
assessment
for
that
year
must
be
dismissed.
In
view
of
this
result
there
is
no
object
in
considering
whether
the
payments
in
question
could
be
considered
as
annuities
under
sec.
3(g)
of
the
Act,
or
free
from
liability
under
sec.
3(a).
This
leaves
only
the
question
of
interest
and
penalties
on
the
unpaid
amounts
of
income
tax
as
from
the
date
at
which
they
ought
to
have
been
paid.
Counsel
for
the
appellant
urged
that
it
had
been
necessary
to
go
to
the
Court
for
interpretation
of
the
testator’s
will
on
a
number
of
points
including
questions
affecting
the
amount
of
the
appellant’s
income
tax
liability
and
that
in
view
of
the
difficulties
involved
in
determining
such
liability
interest
and
penalties,
or
at
any
rate
the
latter,
should
be
computed
only
as
from
the
date
of
assessment,
namely,
November
29,
1943.
It
is
true
that
the
aid
of
the
Court
in
interpreting
the
testator’s
will
was
sought
and
the
amount
of
the
appellant’s
tax
liability
was
not
determined
until
just
before
the
date
of
the
assessment,
but
I
have
come
to
the
conclusion
that
under
the
state
of
the
law
governing
the
matter
the
Court
is
powerless
to
grant
the
relief
sought
and
that
if
any
relief
is
to
be
afforded
it
must
come
pursuant
to
an
Order-in-Council
under
the
appropriate
legislation
dealing
with
such
matters
as
the
remission
of
penalties
and
the
like.
At
the
time
of
the
appellant’s
liability
for
income
tax
for
the
years
in
dispute
sec.
49
of
the
Act
read
as
follows:
“40.
If
any
person
liable
to
pay
any
tax
under
this
Act’
(except
any
tax
payable
under
section
eighty-eight
hereof
)
pays
less
than
one-third
of
the
tax
as
estimated
by
him,
or
should
he
fail
to
make
any
payment
at
the
time
when
the
filing
of
his
return
is
due,
or
fail
to
pay
the
balance
of
the
tax
as
estimated
by
him
within
four
months
therefrom,
he
shall
pay,
in
addition
to
the
interest
of
five
per
centum
per
annum
provided
for
by
the
last
preceding
section,
additional
interest
at
the
rate
of
three
per
centum
per
annum
from
the
date
of
default
to
the
date
of
payment.”
Counsel
for
the
respondent
pointed
out
that,
although
this
section,
as
later
amended,
was
repealed
in
1944,
the
repeal
could
not
help
the
appellant;
and
that
its
terms
are
mandatory
and
leave
no
discretion
as
to
relief
from
it
with
the
Court.
I
agree.
He
also
suggested
that
any
hardship
caused
in
this
case
was
not
due
to
the
respondent
but
to
the
fact
that
the
testator
had
made
a
difficult
will
that
required
interpretation
by
the
Court
and
that
the
appellant
could
have
protected
herself
against
interest
and
penalties
by
making
an
adequate
payment
subject
to
refund
of
any
excess
payment
if
necessary.
The
adequacy
of
this
suggested
answer
to
this
branch
of
the
claim
may
be
open
to
question
but,
be
that
as
it
may,
in
any
event,
I
think
it
is
clear
that
the
Court
cannot
grant
the
relief
sought
by
the
appellant
as
to
interest
or
penalties
other
than
as
consequential
to
the
amendments.
of
the
assessments
in
respect
of
which
there
are
successful
appeals
:
Minister
of
National
Revenue
v.
Trusts
and
Guarantee
Co.
(1940)
A.C.
188
at
151.
In
the
result
the
appeal
from
the
assessment
for
the
year
1938
is
dismissed
with
costs
and
the
appeals
from
the
assessments
for
the
years
1939,
1940
and
1941
are,
to
the
extent
indicated,
allowed
with
costs.
Judgment
accordingly.