M
J
Bonner
[ORALLY]:—The
appellant
appeals
from
assessments
of
income
tax
for
the
1975,
1976
and
1977
taxation
years.
As
to
the
assessment
for
1977,
the
appellant
concedes
that
it
is
correct
and
consents
to
judgment
dismissing
the
appeal
therefrom.
Judgment
for
that
year
will
go
accordingly.
The
1975
assessment
was
founded
in
part
on
a
finding
that
in
August
of
1974
the
appellant
received
a
loan
of
$31,482.81
from
Arames
Holdings
Limited,
which
sum
the
appellant
caused
to
be
paid
to
Royal
Trust
in
satisfaction
of
a
mortgage
held
by
the
latter
on
a
house
owned
by
the
appellant’s
son.
The
respondent
regarded
this
sum
as:
(a)
a
loan
made
to
a
shareholder
within
the
meaning
of
subsection
15(2)
of
the
Income
Tax
Act;
and
(b)
property
paid
or
transferred
pursuant
to
the
direction
of
the
appellant
as
a
benefit
the
appellant
desired
to
have
conferred
on
his
son
within
the
meaning
of
subsection
56(2)
of
the
Act.
As
an
alternative
to
the
first
point
it
was
argued
that
a
benefit
or
an
advantage
had
been
conferred
within
the
meaning
of
subsection
15(1)
of
the
Act.
In
this
regard
the
respondent’s
counsel
relied
on
the
evidence
as
to
a
rather
hazy
paper
record
of
the
existence
of
an
obligation
on
the
part
of
the
son
to
repay
Arames.
The
appellant
was
the
sole
shareholder
of
Arames
Holdings
Limited.
The
son
was,
at
the
time
the
loan
was
made,
an
employee
of
the
company.
The
appellant
did
not
authorize
the
loan.
It
appears
from
the
appellant’s
evidence
that
he
had
little,
if
anything,
to
do
with
the
transaction,
save
to
discuss
it
with
his
son.
The
appellant
did
not
initiate
the
transaction.
As
to
the
respondent’s
suggestion
that
the
transaction
was
not
a
loan
at
all,
evidence
on
the
books
of
Arames
which
consistently
showed
the
transaction
as
a
loan
to
the
son,
and
the
action
of
the
son
in
repaying
$17,000
to
Arames
in
1977,
make
it
quite
clear,
I
believe,
that
the
transaction
was
a
loan
and
not
a
gift,
and
that
it
was
a
loan
to
the
son.
Subsection
56(2)
of
the
Income
Tax
Act
cannot
be
relied
upon
to
redeem
the
assessment.
Assuming
that
the
appellant
concurred
in
the
making
of
the
payment
to
the
son
of
the
moneys
loaned
to
him,
and
assuming
that
such
payment
to
the
son
was
made
in
some
way
as
a
benefit
that
the
appellant
desired
to
have
conferred
on
the
son,
subsection
56(2)
could
operate
only
to
require
the
inclusion
of
the
payment
in
the
computation
of
the
appellant’s
income
to
the
same
extent
as
would
be
the
case
if
the
payment
had
been
made
to
the
appellant.
If
the
payment
of
moneys
loaned
to
the
son
by
Arames
had
been
made
to
the
appellant,
that
hypothetical
situation
would
not
alone
operate
to
transmute
the
loan
made
to
the
son
into
a
loan
made
to
the
appellant.
Subsection
15(2)
can
have
no
application
here.
The
assessment
is
therefore
in
error
and
the
appellant
is
entitled
to
succeed
in
this
regard.
In
assessing
tax
for
1975
and
1976,
the
respondent
treated,
as
loans
made
to
Arames
by
its
shareholder,
the
appellant,
within
the
meaning
of
subsection
15(2)
of
the
Act,
two
other
amounts,
namely:
(a)
$46,000,
being
the
total
of
unsecured
intercorporate
loans
made
by
Arames
to
Sunnydene
Estates
Limited;
and
(b)
$80,000,
being
a
liability
of
Sunnydene
to
Arames
secured
by
a
mortgage
on
a
house
which,
at
one
stage,
was
owned
by
Sunnydene.
The
appellant
was
the
sole
shareholder
of
Sunnydene
Estates
Limited.
It
was
common
ground
that
the
indebtedness
arose
originally
from
loans
made
by
Arames
to
Sunnydene.
The
respondent’s
thesis
was
that
the
loans
were
made
to
the
appellant
when
the
appellant
purchased
the
house
from
Sunnydene
pursuant
to
an
agreement,
Exhibit
A-20,
which
called
for
the
assumption
of
Sunnydene’s
obligations
to
Arames
in
respect
of
the
loans.
Put
as
simply
as
possible,
it
was
the
respondent’s
contention
that
loans
must
have
been
made
to
the
appellant
by
Arames
because:
(a)
in
the
case
of
the
$80,000,
the
mortgage
from
Sunnydene
to
Arames
was
discharged
and
a
new
mortgage
substituted
on
different
terms;
and
(b)
in
the
case
of
the
$46,000,
the
Articles
of
Dissolution
showed
that
the
corporation,
Sunnydene,
had
no
debts.
There
was
uncontroverted
evidence
that
no
money
passed
from
Sunnydene
to
Arames
in
payment
of
the
debts
and
that,
thus,
no
money
or
property
passed
from
Arames
to
the
appellant
by
way
of
loan
in
connection
with
the
transactions.
The
substitution
of
the
new
mortgage
from
the
appellant
to
Arames
was
a
transaction
relating
to
security
for
indebtedness
only
and
not
a
transaction
which,
as
the
respondent
was
forced
to
argue,
necessarily
involved
a
loan
to
the
appellant.
Questions
as
to
whether
Sunnydene
was
or
should
have
been
released
from
its
covenants,
whether
express
or
implied,
to
repay
Arames
are
irrelevant.
What
is
essential
in
these
appeals
is
the
question
whether
any
transaction
took
place
whereby
the
two
amounts
were
loaned
to
the
appellant
by
Arames.
I
reiterate
that
the
only
loans
which
were
shown
to
have
been
made
were
made
by
Arames
to
Sunnydene.
The
appellant’s
liability
to
Arames
in
respect
of
those
loans
arises
only
from
his
undertaking
to
Sunnydene
to
assume
its
liabilities
in
respect
of
the
loans.
Nothing
done
by
the
appellant
in
the
discharge
of
that
undertaking
involved
the
movement
of
money
or
property
of
Arames
to
the
appellant
by
way
of
loan.
All
that
happened
here
was
a
substitution
for
Sunnydene’s
original
covenant
to
repay
money
loaned
to
it
of
the
appellant’s
covenant
to
pay
the
same
amount
to
Arames
on
different
terms.
The
operative
words
of
subsection
15(2)
are
“made
a
loan”.
I
recognize
that,
in
the
result,
the
appellant
has
ended
up
in
a
position
in
which
he
is
indebted
to
his
company,
Arames.
That
indebtedness
did
not,
however,
result
from
any
loan
made
by
Arames
to
the
appellant.
I
think
it
is
useful
to
refer
to
two
passages
from
the
reasons
for
judgment
of
members
of
the
Supreme
Court
of
Canada
in
MNR
v
T
E
McCool
Limited,
[1949]
CTC
395;
49
DTC
700,
both
of
which,
in
my
view,
apply
here
mutatis
mutandis.
At
708,
Mr
Justice
Estey
said:
Terms
such
as
“borrowed
capital”,
“borrowed
money”
in
tax
legislation
have
been
interpreted
to
mean
capital
or
money
borrowed
with
a
relationship
of
lender
and
borrower
between
the
parties.
Inland
Revenue
Commissioners
v
Port
of
London
Authority,
[1923]
AC
507;
Inland
Revenue
Commissioners
v
Rowntree
&
Co
Ltd,
[1948]
1
All
ER
482;
Dupuis
Frères
Ltd
v
Minister
of
Customs
and
Excise,
[1927]
Ex
CR
207.
It
is
necessary
in
determining
whether
that
relationship
exists
to
ascertain
the
true
nature
and
character
of
the
transaction.
The
other
passage
to
which
I
would
refer
is
in
the
Reasons
for
Judgment
of
Mr
Justice
Kellock
at
712:
It
is
not
sufficient
to
say
that
if
the
company
had
borrowed
the
amount
of
the
note
and
paid
McCool
it
would
have
been
entitled
to
the
deduction.
However
that
may
be,
that
was
not
done
and
the
statute
does
not
apply.
I
might
also
refer
to
the
Reasons
of
Mr
Justice
Rand
where
he
said
at
713:
It
is,
I
think,
misleading
to
convert
a
transaction
of
this
sort
into
what
is
considered
to
be
its
equivalent
and
then
to
attribute
to
it
special
incidents
that
belong
to
the
latter.
In
my
view,
subsection
15(2)
of
the
Act
can
have
no
application.
In
the
result,
first,
the
appeal
from
the
assessment
for
the
1977
taxation
year
will,
as
I
have
noted
previously,
be
dismissed.
Secondly,
the
appeals
from
the
assessments
for
the
1975
and
1976
taxation
years
will
be
allowed
and
the
assessments
will
be
referred
back
to
the
respondent
for
reconsideration
and
reassessment
on
the
basis
that
subsection
15(2)
of
the
Income
Tax
Act
did
not
warrant
the
inclusion
in
income
of
any
amounts
in
respect
of:
(a)
the
loan
made
by
Arames
Holdings
Limited
to
the
appellant’s
son
of
$31,482.81;
and
(b)
the
liabilities
of
the
appellant
to
Arames
Holdings
Limited
resulting
from
the
appellant’s
agreement
with
Sunnydene
Estates
Limited
to
assume
the
indebtedness
to
the
former
of
the
latter.
Appeal
allowed.