M
J
Bonner:—These
are
appeals
from
assessments
of
income
tax
for
the
appellant’s
1973,
1974,
1975
and
1976
taxation
years.
The
appellant
is
the
son
of
the
late
Ethel
Jane
Brown
whose
will
provided
that:
All
the
rest
and
residue
of
my
estate
I
direct
my
Trustee
to
invest
and
keep
invested
.
.
.
and
to
receive
the
income
therefrom
and
the
income
from
so
much
of
my
estate
as
shall
for
the
time
being
remain
unsold
and
unconverted,
and
to
pay
the
said
income
to
my
son
Grant
Cullen
Brown
during
his
lifetime
.
..
The
estate
did
not,
in
its
returns
of
income
for
the
taxation
years
1973
to
1976
inclusive,
claim
any
deduction
in
respect
of
amounts
payable
to
the
appellant
pursuant
to
that
provision.
It
had
the
right
to
claim
such
deductions
pursuant
to
subsection
104(6)
of
the
Income
Tax
Act,
which
reads
as
follows:
104.(6)
For
the
purposes
of
this
Part,
there
may
be
deducted
in
computing
the
income
of
a
trust
for
a
taxation
year
such
part
of
the
amount
that
would,
but
for
this
subsection
and
subsection
(12),
be
its
income
for
the
year
as
was
payable
in
the
year
to
a
beneficiary
or
was
included
in
computing
the
income
of
a
beneficiary
for
the
year
by
virtue
of
subsection
105(2).
The
appellant
did
not
include,
in
computing
his
income
for
the
taxation
years
in
question,
the
amounts
so
payable
to
him.
The
respondent
assessed
tax
on
the
basis
that
their
inclusion
was
required
by
subsection
104(13),
which
reads
as
follows:
104.(13)
Such
part
of
the
amount
that
would
be
the
income
of
a
trust
for
a
taxation
year
if
no
deduction
were
made
under
subsection
(6)
or
(12)
or
under
regulations
made
under
paragraph
20(1)(a)
as
was
payable
in
the
year
to
a
beneficiary
shall
be
included
in
computing
the
income
of
the
person
to
whom
it
so
became
payable
whether
or
not
it
was
paid
to
him
in
that
year
and
shall
not
be
included
in
computing
his
income
tor
a
subsequent
year
in
which
it
was
paid.
Thus,
the
issue
in
these
appeals
is
whether
the
appellant
is
correct
in
contending,
in
effect,
that
where
no
deduction
is
claimed
by
the
estate
or
trust
under
the
provisions
of
subsection
104(6)
of
an
amount
payable
in
the
year
to
a
beneficiary,
the
provisions
of
subsection
104(13)
do
not
require
the
inclusion
of
such
amount
in
the
computation
of
the
income
of
the
beneficiary
for
that
year.
One
further
fact
should
be
noted.
Although
the
trust,
in
reporting
its
income,
did
not
seek
any
deduction
in
respect
of
amounts
payable
to
the
appellant,
the
respondent,
in
assessing
the
trust,
excluded
the
amounts
payable
to
the
appellant
in
the
computation
of
the
income
of
the
trust.
The
trust
objected
and
filed
waivers,
but
was
itself
unable
to
appeal
because,
as
a
consequence
of
the
deduction
in
effect
thrust
by
the
respondent
upon
the
trust,
the
respondent
notified
the
trust
that
no
tax
was
payable
by
it
for
any
of
the
years
in
question.
Counsel
for
the
appellant
argued
that
the
purpose
of
subsection
104(13)
is
to
quantify
the
amount
taxable
in
the
hands
of
the
beneficiary.
He
asserted
that
the
scheme
of
the
legislation
is
to
tax
the
income
in
the
hands
either
of
the
beneficiary
or
of
the
trust,
and
that
to
tax
the
amounts
in
question
in
the
hands
of
the
appellant
in
circumstances
where
the
trust
had
not
taken
a
subsection
104(6)
deduction
would
be
double
taxation.
In
short,
counsel
argued
that
there
existed
a
right
in
the
trust
to
elect
that
it
bear
the
tax
on
the
amount
in
question
by
refraining
from
claiming
the
subsection
104(6)
deduction
and
that
the
consequence
of
such
election
was
the
exclusion,
from
the
tax
base
of
the
beneficiary,
of
amounts
which
would
otherwise
be
included
pursuant
to
subsection
104(13).
I
cannot
accept
the
argument.
Subsection
104(13)
does
not
appear
to
me
to
be
in
any
way
unclear.
It
does
not
follow
from
the
words
“Such
part
of
the
amount
that
would
be
the
income
of
a
trust
for
a
taxation
year
if
no
deduction
were
made
under
subsection
(6)
...
as
was
payable
in
the
year
to
a
beneficiary
shall
be
included
in
computing
the
income
of
the
person
to
whom
it
so
became
payable
.
.
that
the
inclusion
thereby
required
is
required
only
when
the
trust
has
refrained
from
making
the
deduction
permitted
by
subsection
104(6).
The
words
of
subsection
104(13),
which
precede
the
words
“shall
be
included”,
do
not
look
to
the
contingency
suggested.
Counsel
for
the
appellant
referred
in
argument
to
the
history
of
the
legislative
provisions
dealing
with
trusts
and
to
certain
rules
of
interpretation.
Such
aids
to
interpretation
do
not
assist
in
this
case,
either
in
the
manner
suggested
or
at
all.
Generally
speaking,
aids
to
interpretation
come
into
play
when
the
legislature
has
failed
in
the
words
of
the
statute
to
make
its
intention
clear.
I
should
add
that
in
this
case
no
question
of
double
taxation
need
arise.
The
deduction
provided
for
in
subsection
104(6)
has
been
made.
I
can
see
no
basis
on
which
I
can
allow
these
appeals
and
they
must
therefore
be
dismissed.
Appeals
dismissed.