Ritchie,
J
(concurred
in
by
the
Chief
Justice
and
Pigeon,
J):—
I
agree
with
the
reasons
for
judgment
prepared
for
delivery
by
Mr
Justice
Laskin,
but
I
am
unable
to
partake
of
the
view
expressed
by
Mr
Justice
Spence
and
the
majority
of
the
Court
of
Appeal
of
British
Columbia
that
ihe
impugned
legislation
(subsection
94(1)
of
the
Companies
Act,
RSBC
1960,
c
67)
was
a
colourable
attempt
under
the
guise
of
company
law
to
alter
the
situs
of
shares
so
as
to
bring
them
within
the
Province.
I
share
the
opinion
expressed
by
Davey,
CJBC
in
his
dissenting
reasons
in
the
Court
of
Appeal
that
the
impugned
legislation
is
not
ultra
vires
and,
as
I
have
indicated,
I
would
dismiss
the
appeal
for
the
reasons
stated
by
my
brother
Laskin.
Spence,
J
(concurred
in
by
Abbott
and
Judson,
JJ):—I
have
had
the
opportunity
to
read
the
reasons
for
judgment
of
Mr
Justice
Laskin
and
I
agree
that
the
appeal
should
be
dismissed
for
the
reason
which
he
gave
therein.
The
point
upon
which
my
brother
Laskin
determines
the
issue
was,
however,
taken
for
the
first
time
in
this
court
and
I
feel
therefore
that
I
should
express
a
view
upon
the
grounds
relied
upon
in
the
courts
below.
As
Mr
Justice
Laskin
has
pointed
out
in
his
reasons,
Hinkson,
J,
before
whom
the
matter
came
in
the
first
instance,
said
in
his
reasons:
Applying
these
principles
to
the
1937
amendment
to
the
Companies
Act,
I
conclude
it
was
clearly
a
colourable
attempt
under
the
guise
of
company
law
to
alter
the
situs
of
shares
to
bring
the
situs
within
the
Province.
Had
this
been
attempted
in
1921
it
would
have
been
equally
colourable.
No
valid
reason
has
been
advanced
as
to
why
the
Province
can
alter
the
situs
of
shares
of
a
deceased
shareholder
for
corporate
purposes.
An
examination
of
the
history
of
the
legislation
makes
it
clear
to
me
that
the
purpose
was
to
enable
the
Province
to
collect
succession
duty.
I
have
reached
the
same
conclusion
in
respect
of
the
1967
amendment
to
the
Companies
Act.
That
view
found
favour
with
the
majority
in
the
Court
of
Appeal
for
British
Columbia
and
Mr
Justice
McFarlane,
with
whom
Mr
Justice
Branca
agreed,
said:
Hinkson,
J
concluded
that
the
1967
amendment
of
section
94
(like
similar
legislation
enacted
in
1937,
SBC
1937,
c
10,
section
2)
was
beyond
the
legislative
power
of
the
legislature
because
“it
was
clearly
a
colourable
attempt
under
the
guise
of
company
law
to
alter
the
situs
of
Shares
to
bring
the
situs
within
the
Province”.
The
result
of
the
change
of
situs,
if
valid,
would
be
to
subject
the
shares
held
by
a
non-resident
now
deceased
to
imposition
of
succession
duty
in
this
Province.
In
my
opinion
the
learned
Judge
reached
the
right
conclusion
and
I
agree
with
his
expressed
reasons
for
judgment.
I
am
also
of
the
opinion
that
the
impugned
legislation
was
clearly
a
colourable
attempt
under
the
guise
of
company
law
to
alter
the
situs
of
shares
and
to
bring
the
situs
within
the
province.
I
have
nothing
to
add
to
the
reasons
delivered
by
Hinkson,
J
and
by
the
majority
of
the
Court
of
Appeal
for
British
Columbia
and
I
am
ready
to
dismiss
the
appeal
for
those
reasons
as
well
as
those
advanced
by
Mr
Justice
Laskin.
Laskin,
J
(concurred
in
by
Abbott,
Martland,
Judson
and
Dickson,
JJ):—The
question
in
this
case
is
whether
certain
shares
in
a
British
Columbia
corporation
had
their
situs
in
that
Province
so
as
to
attract
taxation
under
subsection
6(1)
of
the
Succession
Duty
Act,
RSBC
1960,
c
372.
That
section,
so
far
as
material,
reads
as
follows:
All
property
of
a
deceased
person,
whether
he
was
at
the
time
of
his
death
domiciled
in
the
Province
or
domiciled
elsewhere,
situate
within
the
Province
passing
to
any
person
for
any
beneficial
interest
is,
except
as
provided
in
section
5,
subject
to
duty
on
the
dutiable
value
thereof
at
the
rate
prescribed
in
the
Table
of
Rates
in
Schedule
C.
.
.
.
The
Act
in
subsection
2(1)
defines
“passing”
or
“passing
on
death”
to
mean,
inter
alia,
“passing
under
a
will,
intestacy,
or
otherwise,
either
immediately
on
the
death
of
a
person
or
on
the
expiration
of
an
interval
thereafter,
either
absolutely
or
contingently,
and
either
originally
or
by
way
of
substitutive
limitation
.
.
Both
at
trial
and
in
the
British
Columbia
Court
of
Appeal
the
issue
of
situs
was
regarded
as
turning
on
the
validity
of
subsection
94(1)
of
the
Companies
Act,
RSBC
1960,
c
67,
as
amended
by
1967
(BC),
c
12,
section
9.
This
provision
is
in
these
terms:
A
transfer
of
the
share
or
other
interest
of
a
deceased
member
in
a
company
made
by
his
personal
representative
shall,
although
the
personal
representative
is
not
himself
a
member,
be
as
valid
as
if
he
had
been
a
member
at
the
time
of
the
execution
of
the
instrument
of
transfer
and,
notwithstanding
the
provisions
of
section
87,
the
transfer
of
the
share
or
other
interest
of
a
deceased
member
shall
be
made
on
the
register
kept
under
section
82.
The
amendment
was
in
the
concluding
words,
and
the
effect
thereof
was
to
require
a
transfer
of
shares
of
a
deceased
shareholder
to
be
made
only
on
the
register
kept
at
the
registered
office
of
the
company
situated
in
British
Columbia,
notwithstanding
that
the
company
had
branch
registers
outside
the
Province,
established
under
the
authority
of
section
87
of
the
Companies
Act,
on
which
transfers
of
shares
could
ordinarily
be
effected.
It
was
common
ground
that,
apart
from
the
effect
of
subsection
94(1),
the
situs
of
the
shares
in
the
present
case
was
outside
of
British
Columbia.
The
shares
were
registered
to
their
owner,
one
Hugh
Herbert
Wolfenden,
on
the
company’s
principal
register
in
Vancouver
at
the
time
of
his
death
on
May
26,
1968
and
had
been
so
registered
before
the
amendment
to
subsection
94(1)
of
the
Companies
Act
in
1967.
Wolfenden
died
domiciled
in
Nevada,
having
there
the
share
certificates
evidencing
his
shareholding.
The
company
had
branch
registers
in
New
York
City
as
well
as
in
Winnipeg,
Toronto
and
Montreal,
and
it
appears
that
Wolfenden
had
purchased
his
shares
before
the
establishment
of
a
branch
register
in
New
York.
On
these
facts,
counsel
agreed
that
under
the
authority
of
The
King
v
Williams,
[1942]
AC
541,
and
Treasurer
of
Ontario
v
Blonde;
Treasurer
of
Ontario
v
Aberdein,
[1947]
AC
24,
having
regard
as
well
to
the
judgment
of
this
Court
in
The
King
v
National
Trust
Co,
[1933]
SCR
670,
Wolfenden’s
shares
were
not
situated
in
British
Columbia
unless
subsection
94(1)
had
the
effect
of
giving
them
locality
there
for
succession
duty
purposes.
Hinkson,
J,
before
whom
the
matter
came
by
way
of
an
agreed
special
case,
was
of
the
opinion
that
the
amended
subsection
94(1)
(which
had
a
forerunner
in
1937
which
was
appealed
in
1960)
was
a
colourable
attempt
under
the
guise
of
company
law
to
bring
situs
within
the
Province
to
enable
it
to
collect
succession
duty.
A
majority
of
the
British
Columbia
Court
of
Appeal
agreed
with
his
reasons
and
conclusion.
Davey,
CJBC
in
dissent
had
no
doubt
that
“subsection
94(1)
was
enacted
to
give
shares
of
a
deceased
shareholder
a
local
situs
under
the
principles
of
the
common
law
and
thereby
render
them
liable
to
provincial
succession
duty”;
but,
in
his
opinion,
this
consequence
did
not
make
it
ultra
vires.
If
a
provincial
legislature
could
validly
change
situs
by
authorizing
the
establishment
of
branch
registers
through
enactments
relating
to
companies,
it
was
his
view
that
it
could
just
as
validly
reverse
the
process
in
its
company
registration.
It
is
not,
of
course,
true,
having
regard
to
the
judicially
developed
tests
of
situs
of
shares,
that
the
existence
of
multiple
share
registers
within
and
outside
the
Province
is
alone
a
controlling
factor.
The
Chief
Justice
met
this
point
by
noting
in
his
reasons
that
subsection
94(1)
as
amended
did
not
change
the
principles
of
the
common
law
for
determining
the
situs
of
intangibles,
but
rather
it
changed
the
circumstances
upon
which
the
rules
of
the
common
law
would
operate.
According
to
Davey,
CJBC,
it
would
be
the
application
of
the
established
principles
that
would
put
the
shares
in
this
case
in
the
Province.
In
my
opinion,
the
question
of
the
validity
of
subsection
94(1)
does
not
arise
until
it
is
first
determined
that
temporally
it
can
have
an
operative
effect
upon
the
situs
of
shares
in
respect
of
their
taxability
under
subsection
6(1)
of
the
Succession
Duty
Act.
This
appears
to
have
been
assumed
in
the
British
Columbia
Courts,
but
it
is
not
an
assumption
that
I
would
make.
I
put
the
issue
here
as
follows:
As
of
what
time
is
the
situs
of
shares
to
be
determined
for
the
purposes
of
subsection
6(1)?
If
the
test
for
determining
situs
is
to
be
applied
at
the
very
moment
of
the
death
of
the
registered
owner,
on
the
basis
of
a
notional
transfer
of
ownership
by
registration
at
a
share
transfer
registry,
then
it
must
follow
that
subsection
94(1),
which
looks
to
a
transfer
after
death,
can
have
no
effect.
On
the
other
hand,
it
may
be
urged
that
since
the
test
for
determining
situs
(where
can
the
shares
be
effectively
dealt
with
as
between
shareholder
and
company
so
as
to
enable
a
transferee
to
become
a
shareholder)
looks
to
a
succeeding
transfer
on
a
share
registry
of
the
company,
it
can
only
crystallize
after
death
of
the
registered
shareholder
and
hence
subsection
94(1),
if
valid,
would
take
effect.
There
is
some
support
for
the
first
view
in
the
Blonde
and
Aberdein
case
and
for
the
latter
view
in
the
Williams
case.
The
primary
reference
must
be
to
subsection
6(1)
of
the
Succession
Duty
Act,
the
charging
provision,
and
I
read
it
to
impose
a
tax
on
the
basis
of
situs
at
the
very
moment
of
death
and
hence
to
require
a
notional
application
of
the
test
of
situs
at
that
time
and
not
later.
Whether
the
beneficial
interest
passes
immediately
to
beneficiaries
or
after
an
interval
or
upon
a
contingency
does
not
touch
situs.
It
is
“property
of
a
deceased
person
.
.
.
situate
within
the
Province”
that
is
made
the
subject
of
tax
under
subsection
6(1),
and
the
import
of
this
provision
is
that
the
ownership
of
the
property
and
its
situs
are
fixed
on
death.
Otherwise,
the
statute
would
be
attributing
ownership
to
a
person
already
dead
when
in
law
it
would
have
passed
to
his
personal
representatives.
No
difficulty
of
attribution
of
situs
on
death
exists
in
the
case
of
intangible
property
represented
by
a
specialty,
any
more
than
in
the
case
of
tangible
property.
But
because
the
situs
of
shares
has
come
to
depend
on
a
test
that
looks
to
a
transfer
on
a
share
registry,
a
logical
difficulty
exists
if
one
envisages
a
transfer
a
moment
before
death
(and
hence
before
the
Succession
Duty
Act
operates)
and,
similarly,
a
moment
after
death
(when
the
Act
has
already
taken
effect).
The
event
upon
which
duty
becomes
payable,
namely,
death,
involves
at
the
same
time
a
determined
situs
of
property
on
which
it
must
be
paid
if
the
property
is
in
the
Province.
In
my
view,
it
would
be
compounding
fiction
to
apply
the
test
for
situs
of
shares
according
to
an
event
(as
prescribed
by
the
challenged
subsection
94(1))
taking
place
after
the
death
of
the
person
whose
death
is
the
occasion
for
the
imposition
of
tax.
Application
of
the
test
at
that
time,
by
reference
to
a
supposed
transfer
according
to
the
statutory
prescripion,
would,
admittedly,
result
in
changing
the
situs
as
it
would
otherwise
be.
I
am
therefore
of
the
opinion
that
subsection
94(1)
can
have
no
operative
effect
in
respect
of
situs
of
shares
for
the
purpose
of
taxation
under
subsection
6(1)
of
the
Succession
Duty
Act
and,
accordingly,
no
question
of
validity
arises.
For
the
foregoing
reasons
I
would
dismiss
the
appeal
with
costs.