Delmer
E
Taylor:—This
is
an
appeal
from
an
income
tax
assessment
for
the
year
1975.
In
that
year
the
sale
of
certain
real
estate
provided
a
gain
to
the
estate,
and
after
making
allowances
considered
appropriate,
the
Minister
of
National
Revenue
assessed
the
estate
on
the
basis
of
a
taxable
capital
gain
of
$7,256.25.
The
Valuation
Day
amount
attributed
by
Revenue
Canada
to
the
property
was
$13,600
in
the
assessment,
but
at
the
appeal
hearing
counsel
for
the
respondent,
on
behalf
of
his
client,
agreed
that
this
amount
should
be
increased
to
$15,969
and,
therefore,
to
that
extent,
Revenue
Canada
was
committed
to
a
reconsideration
of
the
mathematics
of
the
assessment.
However,
the
basis
of
the
appeal
remained.
This
basis
is
that
the
appellant
claims
the
real
estate
sold
should
be
considered
as
a
principal
residence
and
the
provision
of
the
Income
Tax
Act
applied
dealing
with
a
sale
under
such
circumstances.
The
respondent
relied,
inter
alia,
upon
section
38
and
subsections
39(1),
40(1)
and
(2)
of
the
Income
Tax
Act,
SC
1970-71-72,
c
63
and
on
subsection
26(3)
of
the
Income
Tax
Application
Rules.
Facts
William
Allison
Smellie
died
on
or
about
June
15,
1971,
leaving
a
will
dated
December
15,
1953.
Mr
Smellie’s
widow,
Ida
Muriel
Smellie,
had
the
use
of
the
home
dwelling
(the
real
estate
considered
to
be
the
subject
of
this
appeal)
until
her
death
or
remarriage
under
the
terms
of
the
will.
She
did
occupy
the
home
until
her
death
on
November
13,
1974.
Contentions
For
the
appellant:
—Subsections
70(6),
40(4)
and
40(5)
of
the
Income
Tax
Act
have
no
application
since
they
apply
to
dispositions
after
1971.
Since
the
trust
herein
was
set
up
before
the
end
of
1971
and
restrictive
definition
of
a
spouse
trust
was
not
enacted
until
the
end
of
1971,
it
is
submitted
that
the
trust
herein
should
be
able
to
claim
the
property
as
its
principal
residence
in
the
same
manner
as
provided
for
by
the
above
noted
section.
—It
is
submitted
that
the
intention
of
the
Act
in
circumstances
such
as
this
is
that
the
position
of
the
taxpayer
should
not
be
adversely
affected
by
a
husband’s
desire
to
provide
a
residence
for
his
widow
after
his
death.
—It
is
submitted
that
Mr
Smellie
did
not
otherwise
generously
provide
for
his
wife
in
his
will.
The
estate
was
a
small
one
($17,122.59).
It
is
probable
that
an
order
transferring
the
residence
to
Mrs
Smellie
could
have
been
obtained
under
The
Dependants'
Relief
Act.
She
would
then
have
had
the
residence
and
no
capital
gains
tax
would
now
be
payable.
She
elected
not
to
do
so
and
it
would
seem
grossly
unjust
that
tax
should
now
be
demanded.
For
the
respondent:
—The
dwelling
in
which
Mrs
Smellie
resided
until
her
death
in
November
of
1974
was
not
the
principal
residence
of
the
appellant
within
the
meaning
of
subsection
40(5)
and
paragraph
54(g)
of
the
Act.
Evidence
William
James
Smellie,
one
of
the
two
executors
and
trustees
of
the
appellant
estate
(the
other
being
the
late
Ida
Muriel
Smellie),
identified
and
submitted
for
the
Board’s
consideration
a
copy
of
the
will
of
the
late
William
Allison
Smellie
and
a
copy
of
the
purchase
and
sale
agreement
for
the
property.
These
documents
served
only
to
support
the
facts
previously
accepted
by
counsel.
Argument
Essentially
the
position
of
counsel
for
the
appellant
was
that
the
property
in
question
was
by
all
accepted
standards
the
principal
residence
of
Ida
Muriel
Smellie
after
the
death
of
William
Allison
Smellie
up
until
the
date
of
her
death,
and
that
the
effect
of
the
changes
in
the
Income
Tax
Act
taking
effect
as
of
January
1,
1972
was
to
retroactively
alter
this
position,
at
least
to
the
extent
of
the
imposition
of
tax
on
the
proceeds
of
an
estate
already
administered
before
the
“new”
Income
Tax
Act.
A
second
argument
was
that
the
trust
itself
should
be
allowed
to
claim
the
property
as
its
principal
residence
since
one
of
the
executors
(Ida
Muriel
Smellie)
had
used
it
as
her
principal
residence
until
her
death.
Counsel
for
the
respondent
dealt
almost
exclusively
with
the
portion
of
the
argument
for
the
appellant
which
related
to
the
capacity
of
a
trust
which
was
not
by
definition
a
“testamentary
trust”
to
claim
a
principal
residence.
His
line
of
reasoning
was
that
the
trust
(the
Estate
of
William
Allison
Smellie,
appellant)
had
never
in
any
of
the
required
estate
filing
forms
declared
the
property
in
question
as
its
principal
residence
and
that
the
provisions
of
the
Income
Tax
Act
with
which
the
Board
is
dealing
at
this
hearing
must
be
interpreted
literally
and
not
given
the
broad
parameters
suggested
by
counsel
for
the
appellant.
Counsel
recognized
that
this
was
an
intricate
point
and
one
on
which
there
did
not
appear
to
be
much
background
decision
material.
He
therefore
provided
the
Board
with
a
detailed
review
of
the
relationship
between
a
trust,
a
person
and
a
taxpayer
under
the
Act,
as
they
should
be
applied
with
respect
to
a
principal
residence.
The
understanding
of
the
Board
is
that
counsel
conceded
that
a
trust
(any
trust)
could
indeed
claim
a
principal
residence
but
that
this
claim
was
not
automatic
merely
because
one
of
the
executors
had
inhabited
a
specific
residence.
Counsel
also
noted
for
the
Board
that
only
one,
not
both,
of
the
executors
in
the
instant
appeal
had
lived
in
the
home
residence.
The
cases
cited
for
the
attention
of
the
Board
were:
Montreal
Light,
Heat
and
Power
Consolidated
v
MNR
and
Montreal
Coke
and
Manufacturing
Company
v
MNR,
[1942]
CTC
1;
2
DTC
535;
Her
Majesty
the
Queen
v
Adolf
Scheller,
[1975]
CTC
601;
75
DTC
5406.
Findings
In
the
view
of
the
Board
there
is
really
only
one
point
at
issue—
whether
the
fact
that
one
of
the
executors
of
the
estate
lived
in
the
property
in
question
during
the
time
material,
thereby
established
such
property
as
the
principal
residence
of
the
trust
itself,
as
distinct
from
the
living
accommodation
it
provided
to
the
late
Ida
Muriel
Smellie
under
the
will
of
the
late
William
Allison
Smellie.
I
am
satisfied
that
the
property
was
the
principal
residence
of
the
late
Ida
Muriel
Smellie,
in
her
own
right
as
a
person
and/or
a
taxpayer.
I
am
unable
to
conclude
that
either
the
purpose
or
the
result
of
that
habitation
by
her
was
to
nominate
or
dedicate
the
property
as
the
principal
residence
of
the
trust
and
I
have
not
found
any
assurance
in
the
Act
itself,
or
in
the
relevant
jurisprudence,
that
such
habitation
would
bestow
particular
characteristics
on
the
property
itself.
At
the
same
time
the
Board
expresses
no
opinion
with
regard
to
the
apparent
conclusion
of
counsel
for
the
respondent
that
a
trust
could
in
fact
designate
a
specific
property
as
its
principal
residence,
commenting
only
that
if
indeed
this
state
of
affairs
for
purposes
of
the
Income
Tax
Act
could
be
reached
by
such
an
action,
then
such
a
designation
(which
appears
to
be
a
minimum
requirement)
was
not
made
in
this
case.
Decision
The
appeal
is
dismissed
but
with
the
understanding
that
the
commitment
of
counsel
for
the
respondent
to
a
reassessment,
changing
the
Valuation
Day
amount
used
in
the
calculation
of
Revenue
Canada
from
$13,600
to
$15,969,
will
be
implemented.
Appeal
dismissed.