Marceau,
J:—This
is
an
appeal
from
a
decision
of
the
Tax
Appeal
Board
dated
January
23,
1970,
whereby
the
appeal
of
the
herein
appellant
from
reassessments
to
income
tax
dated
January
19,
1966,
in
respect
of
the
taxation
years
1958,
1959
and
1961,
was
dismissed.
During
the
years
1958
to
1961
the
appellant
was
the
president,
the
controlling
shareholder
and
the
beneficial
owner
of
all
the
shares
of
a
company
doing
business
as
a
lingerie
in
Montreal
and
known
as
Francine
Manufacturing
Company
Limited
(to
which
I
will
refer
hereinafter
as
Francine
Company).
In
1966
the
respondent
discovered
that
in
1958,
1959
and
1961
Francine
Company’s
purchases.
had
been
fraudulently
overstated
by
amounts
of
at
least
$5,098.50,
$16,429.51
and
$8,766.77
respectively,
the
effect
of
which
being
that
the
net
and
taxable
income
of
the
corporation
had
been
understated
by
equivalent
amounts.
Assuming
that
the
said
unreported
income
had
been
appropriated
by
the
appellant,
the
respondent
issued
a
notice
of
reassessments
adding
the
amounts
to
her
taxable
income
for
the
corresponding
taxation
years.
The
appellant
objected
saying
that
she
had
no
knowledge
of
the
said
understatements
and
had
never
received
the
amounts
for
which
she
was
taxed
but
her
objection
was
rejected
on
the
ground
that
the
additional
amounts
were
payments
within
the
meaning
of
subsection
(1)
of
section
16
of
the
Income
Tax
Act,
and
had
been
properly
included
in
the
taxpayer’s
income
in
accordance
with
subsection
(1)
of
section
8
of
the
said
Act.
After
a
long
hearing,
the
Board
dismissed
the
appellant’s
contentions
and
the
reassessments
remained
undisturbed.
The
present
appeal
was
then
launched
and
at
last
came
on
for
trial.
At
the
outset
of
the
trial,
the
appellant—who
was
acting
on
her
own
behalf
with
the
assistance
of
her
son
Michael
Saykaly—and
counsel
for
the
respondent
announced
that
they
had
reached
an
agreement
whereby
(1)
the
evidence
before
the
Tax
Appeal
Board
was
to
be
accepted
as
evidence
before
this
Court;
(2)
the
originals
of
the
exhibits
filed
at
the
hearing
before
the
Board
having
been
lost
apparently
when
transferred
to
the
Court
in
1970,
copies
of
some
of
them
were
to
be
used
in
their
stead;
and
(3)
the
appellant
would
be
at
liberty
to
adduce
additional
evidence
concerning
a
certain
power
of
attorney
she
had
allegedly
given
to
her
former
husband
during
the
years
pertinent
to
the
appeal.
As
the
advantages
of
such
a
course
were
in
the
circumstances
quite
obvious,
I
concurred
therein.
The
basic
facts
of
the
case,
as
they
have
been
established
before
the
Board,
have
not
been
challenged
before
me.
They
can
be
summarized
as
follows.
The
appellant,
who
was
born
in
Lebanon,
married
one
Charles
Saykaly,
in
Jamaica,
in
1940,
and
came
to
live
in
Canada
with
her
husband,
a
businessman
with
interests
in
Montreal.
In
1943
she
bought
a
house
in
the
town
of
Mount
Royal
for
$18,000,
out
of
which
she
paid
$3,000
in
cash
which
she
had
received
as
a
wedding
present,
the
balance
being
payable
by
monthly
instalments.
In
1957
she
sold
her
house
and
moved
with
her
children
to
New
York
City
where
she
took
up
residence
in
an
apartment
on
Fifth
Avenue.
From
then
on,
her
husband,
who
had
retained
a
small
apartment
for
himself
in
Montreal,
was
to
commute
between
Montreal
and
New
York
every
week
while
she,
herself,
would
come
to
Montreal
occasionally.
Out
of
the
proceeds
of
the
sale
of
her
house,
in
1957,
the
appellant
gave
her
husband
$20,000
which
he
invested
in
a
newly
constituted
corporation,
Francine
Company,
of
which
she
became
the
sole
beneficial
shareholder
and
the
president.
Charles
Salkaly,
at
the
time,
was
controlling
and
managing
many
corporations
in
Montreal
and,
at
least
in
so
far
as
administrative
control
was
concerned,
Francine
Company
was
only
added
to
the
others.
From
1958
until
1961
the
day-to-day
operations
of
the
business
were
undoubtedly
left
to
him,
even
though
the
minutes
of
the
meetings
of
its
directors
and
shareholders
as
well
as
its
official
reports
were
all
certified
and
signed
by
the
appellant,
as
president.
Among
the
other
corporations
controlled
and
managed
by
Charles
Saykaly
was
one
Balfour
Corporation
Limited.
The
appellant
herself
was
formally
employed
as
assistant
manager
by
that
company,
her
salary
being
$5,200
annually
according
to
her
personal
income
tax
returns.
Some
of
the
aforementioned
irregularities
discovered
by
officials
of
the
Department
in
1966
were
concealed
behind
business
transactions
entered
into
between
Balfour
Corporation
Limited
and
the
appellant’s
company:
false
or
fictitious
invoices
were
sent
and
charged
to
Francine
Manufacturing
Company
Limited
by
Balfour
Corporation
Limited,
which
resulted
in
overstatements
of
the
former’s
purchases
of
material
permitting
overpayments
to
the
latter.
These
irregularities,
incidentally,
were
only
part
of
the
many
disclosed
by
the
Department
investigators
in
the
management
of
Mr
Saykaly’s
own
businesses
as
well
as
in
the
business
he
was
administering
for
his
wife;
shortly
thereafter
all
of
them,
including
Francine
Company,
went
into
bankruptcy.
In
these
years
1958
to
1961
the
appellant,
who
was
as
aforesaid
residing
in
New
York,
had
a
checking
account
at
the
Chemical
Bank
New
York
Trust
Company,
which
she
was
using
to
cover
part
of
her
expenses
and
in
which
her
husband
used
to
deposit
sums
of
money.
Her
husband
had
also
a
bank
account
at
the
same
institution
in
New
York,
which
served
to
pay
expenses
of
the
family
such
as
rent,
telephone,
etc,
in
addition
to
the
one
he
had
kept
in
Montreal.
It
was
established
by
the
investigators
of
the
Department
of
National
Revenue
that
during
the
year
1961
only,
funds
to
the
amount
of
$37,391.16
were
transferred
from
Mr
Saykaly’s
Montreal
bank
account
directly
to
the
appellant’s
bank
account
in
New
York,
independently
of
the
transfers
of
funds
amounting
to
approximately
$64,700
the
husband
had
made
from
his
account
in
Montreal
to
his
own
account
in
New
York.
The
investigators
were
even
able
to
positively
identify
funds
extracted
from
Francine
Company
and
trace
them
to
the
husband’s
Montreal
bank
account,
from
which
they
had
been
transferred
to
either
the
latter’s
or
his
wife’s
bank
account
in
New
York.
Those
are
the
undisputed
facts
on
which
the
respondent
based
his
reassessments.
The
appellant’s
defence
before
this
Court
is
the
same
as
the
one
she
relied
on
before
the
Board.
It
is
based
on
two
allegations.
First,
she
contends
that
she
never
appropriated
herself
the
proceeds
of
the
fictitious
payments
made
by
Francine
Company
nor
did
she
derive
any
direct
benefit
therefrom.
Second,
she
asserts
that
the
management
of
her
business
was
left
entirely
to
her
husband
and
she
was
not
aware
of
anything
that
was
being
done
about
it.
All
the
documents
she
signed
with
respect
to
the
affairs
of
the
company,
and
even
her
personal
income
tax
returns,
were
prepared
by
her
husband
or
by
her
husband’s
lawyer
or
accountant
and
handed
over
to
her
for
signature.
Since
she
was
placing
her
trust
in
her
husband
and
had
herself
no
business
experience
whatsoever,
she
always
complied
and
signed
the
documents
without
asking
any
questions
as
to
their
true
meaning.
Both
allegations
were
rejected
by
the
Member
of
the
Tax
Appeal
Board
who
heard
the
appeal.
I
am
unable
to
disagree
with
that
finding
as
to
the
first
of
the
two
allegations.
The
evidence
adduced
by
the
respondent,
which
I
have
reviewed
with
great
care,
is
too
consistent
to
be
put
aside
by
the
simple
statement
of
the
appellant
that
her
husband
was
just
supporting
her.
As
already
explained,
during
the
years
when
the
appellant
was
residing
with
her
children
in
New
York,
most
expenses
of
the
family
were
paid
by
her
husband
out
of
a
bank
account
he
had
in
his
own
name,
in
New
York.
And
yet,
in
the
year
1961
only,
funds
to
the
amount
of
$37,391.16
were
transferred
from
Mr
Saykaly’s
Montreal
bank
account
to
the
appellant’s
personal
bank
account,
and
some
of
these
funds
could
be
identified
as
funds
extracted
from
Francine
Company.
The
respondent
could
not,
in
the
circumstances,
be
more
specific
and
in
the
absence
of
any
valuable
explanatory
factor
or
proof
to
the
contrary,
the
inference
that
the
appellant
derived
direct
benefit
from
the
proceeds
of
the
fictitious
payments
and
for
the
whole
amounts
of
these
payments
cannot
be
escaped.
The
Minister
could
rely
on
subsection
8(1)
of
the
Act
for
his
reassessments,
as
that
subsection
then
read
as
follows:
8.
(1)
Where,
in
a
taxation
year,
(a)
a
payment
has
been
made
by
a
corporation
to
a
shareholder
otherwise
than
pursuant
to
a
bona
fide
business
transaction.
(b)
funds
or
property
of
a
corporation
have
been
appropriated
in
any
manner
whatsoever
to,
or
for
the
benefit
of,
a
shareholder,
or
(c)
a
benefit
or
advantage
has
been
conferred
on
-a
shareholder
by
a
corporation
otherwise
than
[exceptions
(i),
(ii)
and
(iii)
not
relevant]
the
amount
or
value
thereof
shall
be
included
in
computing
the
income
of
the
shareholder
for
the
year.
The
appellant’s
second
allegation,
however,
must
be
dealt
with
quite
differently.
I
am
more
inclined
to
believe
in
its
truthfulness
than
was
Mr
Davis
of
the
Tax
Appeal
Board.
The
evidence
adduced
before
me
at
the
trial,
which
was
given
by
the
appellant’s
son
and
by
her
former
husband’s
legal
counsel
and
auditor,
certainly
failed
to
prove
that
Charles
Saykaly
had
been
given
a
formal
power
of
attorney
to
act
in
his
wife’s
name,
but
nevertheless
it
gave
some
weight
to
the
appellant’s
testimony
in
that
respect.
The
management
of
her
business
was
certainly
left
to
her
husband
and
she,
herself,
was
not
responsible
for
the
wrongdoings
which
were
committed.
I
am
ready
to
believe
her
when
she
says
she
was
not
aware
of
what
was
going
on
with
her
company.
I
do
not
think,
however,
that
my
disagreement
with
Mr
Davis
on
that
point
could
lead
me
to
a
conclusion
different
from
that
he
finally
reached.
It
is
to
be
first
noted
that
the
point
may
have
a
certain
bearing
only
as
regard
the
question
of
whether,
despite
the
expiry
of
the
4-year
period
prescribed
in
paragraph
46(4)(b)
of
the
Act,
the
Minister
could
proceed
in
1966
with
reassessments
for
the
years
1958
and
1959.
I
said
that
in
my
view
the
funds
of
Francine
Company
up
to
the
amounts
represented
by
the
fictitious
overpayments
had
been
appropriated
for
the
benefit
of
the
appellant
and
had
actually
been
paid
to
her.
It
follows
that,
in
not
declaring
these
amounts
in
computing
her
income
for
the
years
1958
and
1959,
the
appellant
made
a
“misrepresentation”
within
the
meaning
of
paragraph
46(4)(b)
of
the
Act.
I
think
that
her
“misrepresentation”
was
innocent,
she
not
being
aware
of
it,
but
it
has
been
held
repeatedly
that
a
“misrepresentation”,
though
innocent,
justifies
the
Minister
in
proceeding
with
a
reassessment
at
any
time
(MNR
v
M
Taylor,
[1961]
CTC
211;
61
DTC
1139;
MNR
v
L
H
Appleby,
[1964]
CTC
323;
64
DTC
5199;
MNR
v
Foot,
66
DTC
5072)
as
long
as,
according
to
Mr
Justice
Pratte’s
decision
in
MNR
v
Bisson,
[1972]
CTC
446;
72
DTC
6374,
the
error
committed
by
the
taxpayer
could
be
attributable
to
negligence
on
his
part.
It
is
obvious
that
a
normally
wise
and
cautious
taxpayer
would
not
have
acted
the
way
the
appellant
did.
She
claims
that
her
behaviour
was
understandable,
that
it
is
normal
for
a
wife
to
obey
and
trust
her
husband,
“which
is
a
rule
of
public
social
order”
adds
her
counsellor.
I
do
not
think
that
the
so-called
rule
could
prevail
over
the
basic
rules
of
normal
prudence
so
as
to
allow
a
married
woman
to
go
into
business
with
her
husband,
and
then
keep
on
signing
official
papers
as
president
of
a
company,
accepting
a
salary
as
general
manager
of
another,
drawing
personal
cheques
for
many
thousand
dollars
on
a
bank
account
supplied
by
income
derived
from
business
operations
in
which
she
is
officially
involved,
and
finally
attesting
personal
income
tax
returns,
without
even
bothering
to
look
into
what
is
going
on
or
to
try
to
understand
what
she
is
asked
to
certify.
If
such
behaviour
is
socially
understandable,
which
I
doubt,
it
is
certainly
not
excusable
legally.
For
these
reasons,
I
think
that
the
reassessments
could
be
issued
notwithstanding
paragraph
46(4)(b)
of
the
Act
and
that
they
were
well
founded
in
fact
and
in
law.
The
appeal
must
therefore
be
dismissed.
The
respondent
is
entitled
to
his
costs.