Walsh,
J:—This
is
an
appeal
from
income
tax
assessments
for
appellant’s
1965,
1966
and
1967
taxation
years
dated
December
10,
1968
whereby
taxes
were
assessed
in
the
amount
of
$24,557.94
for
1965,
$39,463.10
for
1966,
and
$19,470.25
for
the
year
1967.
The
total
increase
in
taxation
payable
over
the.
amounts
declared
and
paid
by
appellant
for
the
three
years
amounted
to
$47,636.43.
This
resulted
from
the
disallowance
in
the
1965
taxation
year
of
the
sum
of
$45,540
claimed
as
a
deduction
as
a
payment
to
a
pension
fund
for
past
services
and
$2,783.50
for
current
services,
a
similar
disallowance
for
the
1966
taxation
year
of
the
sum
of
$45,540
paid
to
the
pension
fund
as
a
past
service
contribution
and
the
amount
of
$2,783.50
for
current
services,
and
a
disallowance
for
the
1967
taxation
year
of
the
amount
of
$3,000
claimed
simply
as
a
payment
to
the
directors’
pension
fund.
Appellant
lodged
a
notice
of
objection
to
each
of
these
assessments
under
the
provisions
of
section
58
of
the
Income
Tax
Act
in
effect
at
that
time
and
in
due
course
on
September
24,
1970
respondent
advised
appellant
that
it
confirmed
these
assessments,
Appellant
then
appealed
directly
to
the
Exchequer
Court
by
proceedings
entered
December
22,
1970,
which
have
only
now
been
brought
on
for
hearing.
Appellant’s
pension
plan
was
established
on
February
26,
1965,
effective
as
of
February
1,
1965
by
an
agreement
in
notarial
form.
Appellant
sent
a
copy
of
this
agreement
to
respondent
for
approval
under
the
provisions
of
paragraph
139(1)(ahh)
of
the
Act.
At
the
same
time,
pursuant
to
the
provisions
of
section
76
appellant
forwarded
an
actuarial
certificate
to
respondent,
which
certificate
established
on
the
basis
of
the
presumptions
on
which
it
was
calculated
that
appellant
should
deposit
in
the
fund
an
amount
of
$210,860
as
of
February
1,
1965
by
five
annual
payments
of
$45,540
for
past
service
contributions.
By
letter
dated
April
14,
1965,
signed
by
G
M
Taylor,
Director,
Legal
Branch,
on
behalf
of
respondent,
appellant
was
advised
that
the
plan
is
“accepted
for
registration
by
the
Minister
of
National
Revenue
as
an
employees’
superannuation
or
pension
fund
or
plan
and
is
effective
as
of
February
1,
1965”.
Subsequently,
by
letter
dated
February
3,
1966,
Mr
Taylor
advised:
“We
are
now
in
receipt
of
a
reply
from
the
Superintendent
of
Insurance
who
confirms
that
the
past
service
liability
was
$210,860
as
on
1st
February,
1965.
This
amount
may
be
claimed
under
section
76
of
the
Income
Tax
Act.”
Appellant’s
argument
that
this.
binds
the
respondent
and
that
these
payments
cannot
later
be
disallowed
has
been
rejected
in
a
number
of
cases
including
Concorde
Automobile
Ltée
v
MNR,
[1971]
CTC
246;
71
DTC
5161;
West
Hill
Redevelopment
Company
Limited
v
MNR,
[1969]
CTC
581;
69
DTC
5385;
The
Cattermole-Trethewey
Contractors
Ltd
v
MNR,
[1970]
CTC
619;
71
DTC
5010;
and
Susan
Hosiery
Limited
v
MNR,
[1969]
CTC
533;
69
DTC
5346.
This
argument
was
conclusively
disposed
of
in
the
Supreme
Court
case
of
MNR
v
Inland
Industries
Limited,
[1972]
CTC
27;
72
DTC
6013,
where
at
page
31
[6017]
Mr
Justice
Pigeon,
in
rendering
the
unanimous
judgment
of
the
Court,
stated:
However,
it
seems
clear
to
me
that
the
Minister
cannot
be
bound
by
an
approval
given
when
the
conditions
prescribed
by
the
law
were
not
met.
Appellant
further
contends
that
the
pension
plan
established
by
it
was
not
a
sham
created
with
the
view
of
obtaining
income
tax
deductions
but
actually
existed
and
after
minor
amendments
to
make
it
conform
to
legal
requirements
it
was
also
approved
on
May
12,
1969
under
the
provisions
of
the
Quebec
Supplemental
Pension
Plans
Act,
SQ
13-14
Eliz
II,
c
25,
and
was
registered
under
the
provisions
thereof.
Appellant
further
argues
that
all
the
amounts
paid
by
it
or
its
employees
to
the
plan
have
been
vested
irrevocably
in
the
hands
of
the
administrators
who
have
acted
exclusively
on
behalf
of
the
pension
plan
and
that
their
investment
of
the
funds
in
preferred
shares
of
appellant
was
a
legal
and
safe
investment
and,
as
a
matter
of
fact,
these
preferred
shares
were
redeemed
early
in
1970.
Respondent
for
its
part
claims
that
the
establishment
of
the
pension
fund
was
merely
the
first
step
in
a
series
of
transactions
having
the
purpose
of
artificially
reducing
appellant’s
income.
It
is
contended
that
all
amounts
paid
to
the
plan
were
immediately
returned
to
appellant
by
purchase
of
its
preferred
shares,
and
the
fact
that
the
plan
was
approved
under
the
provisions
of
the
Quebec
Supplemental
Pension
Plans
Act
does
not
change
its
character
as
a
sham.
Respondent
submits
that
in
order
for
a
current
service
deduction
to
be
made
under
the
provisions
of
paragraph
11(1)(g)
of
the
Act
and
for
past
service
contributions
under
section
76
of
the
Act
the
plan
must
not
only
have
been
registered
but
the
payments
must
also
have
been
made
irrevocably
and
that
in
the
present
case
the
trustees
always
acted
merely
as
agents
of
appellant.
Respondent
contends
moreover
that
even
if
the
payments
were
irrevocably
made
they
were
of
an
artificial
nature
and
if
allowed
would
unduly
or
artificially
reduce
the
income
of
appellant
and
should
be
disallowed
by
virtue
of
the
provisions
of
subsection
137(1)
of
the
Act.
For
the
purposes
of
convenience
I
will
now
set
out
the
sections
of
the
Act
in
question:
11.
(1)
Notwithstanding
paragraphs
(a),
(b)
and
(h)
of
subsection
(1)
of
section
12,
the
following
amounts
may
be
deducted
in
computing
the
income
of
a
taxpayer
for
a
taxation
year:
(g)
an
amount
paid
by
the
taxpayer
in
the
year
or
within
120
days
from
the
end
of
the
year
to
or
under
a
registered
pension
fund
or
plan
in
respect
of
services
rendered
by
employees
of
the
taxpayer
in
the
year,
subject,
however,
as
follows:
(i)
in
any
case
where
the
amount
so
paid
is
the
aggregate
of
amounts
each
of
which
is
identifiable
as
a
specified
amount
in
respect
of
an
individual
employee
of
the
taxpayer,
the
amount
deductible
under
this
paragraph
in
respect
of
any
one
such
individual
employee
is
the
lesser
of
the
amount
so
specified
in
respect
of
that
employee
or
$1,500,
and
(ii)
in
any
other
case,
the
amount
deductible
under
this
paragraph
is
the
lesser
of
the
amount
so
paid
or
an
amount
determined
in
prescribed
manner,
not
exceeding,
however,
$1,500
multiplied
by
the
number
of
employees
of
the
taxpayer
in
respect
of
whom
the
amount
so
paid
by
the
taxpayer
was
paid
by
him,
plus
such
amount
as
may
be
deducted
as
a
special
contribution
under
section
76.
76.
(1)
Where
a
taxpayer
is
an
employer
and
has
made
a
special
payment
in
a
taxation
year
on
account
of
an
employees’
superannuation
or
pension
fund
or
plan
in
respect
of
past
services
of
employees
pursuant
to
a
recom-
mendation
by
a
qualified
actuary
in
whose
opinion
the
resources
of
the
fund
or
plan
required
to
be
augmented
by
an
amount
not
less
than
the
amount
of
the
special
payment
to
ensure
that
all
the
obligations
of
the
fund
or
plan
to
the
employees
may
be
discharged
in
full
and
has
made
the
payment
so
that
it
is
irrevocably
vested
in
or
for
the
fund
or
plan
and
the
payment
has
been
approved
by
the
Minister
on
the
advice
of
the
Superintendent
of
Insurance,
there
may
be
deducted
in
computing
the
income
of
the
taxpayer
for
the
taxation
year
the
amount
of
the
special
payment.
139.
(1)
In
this
Act,
(ahh)
“registered
pension
fund
or
plan’’
means
an
employees’
superannuation
or
pension
fund
or
plan
accepted
by
the
Minister
for
registration
for
the
purposes
of
this
Act
in
respect
of
its
constitution
and
operations
for
the
taxation
year
under
consideration;
137.
(1)
In
computing
income
for
the
purposes
of
this
Act
no
deduction
may
be
made
in
respect
of
a
disbursement
or
expense
made
or
incurred
in
respect
of
a
transaction
or
operation
that,
if
allowed,
would
unduly
or
artificially
reduce
the
income.
It
is
now
necessary
to
examine
the
plan
in
detail.
Section
III
of
the
plan
limits
its
application
to
“executives
adjudged
by
the
Board
of
Directors
of
the
Company
to
be
eligible
for
qualification”.
Section
V
provides
for
a
regular
pension
“equal
to
70%
of
the
member’s
best
average
salary
minus
the
regular
pension
provided
by
the
group
annuity
policy
number
GA540N
issued
by
the
London
Life
Insurance
Company”.
Section
VI
provides
basic
contributions
for
current
service
of
“a
maximum
of
$1,500”
to
be
made
by
both
the
member
and
the
employer
in
each
case
less
the
regular
contribution
to
the
aforementioned
group
annuity
policy
with
the
London
Life
Insurance
Company.
Section
IX
provides
inter
alia
that
“the
payments
of
benefits
under
the
plan
shall
be
a
liability
of
the
pension
fund
and
not
of
the
trustees
or
of
the
company”.
Section
IX(3)
reads
as
follows:
IX
(3)
TRUSTEES:
The
Plan
shall
be
administered
as
to
its
membership
and
benefit
provisions
by
the
Trustees.
The
Trustees
shall
also
administer
and
supervise
the
investment
of
the
Pension
Fund.
The
Company
shall,
from
time
to
time,
appoint
Trustees
who
will
act
for
the
Company
in
assuming
the
responsibilities
mentioned
above.
Until
further
notice
the
Trustees
of
the
Plan
shall
be
those
named
in
an
Agreement
dated
February
26th
1965
—
between
the
company
and
the
Trustees.
(Italics
mine.)
Section
X(4)(a)
provides:
X
(4)
MODIFICATION
OR
DISCONTINUANCE
OF
THE
PLAN:
(a)
The
Company
expects
and
intends
to
maintain
the
Plan
in
force
indefinitely,
but
necessarily
reserves
the
right
to
change,
suspend
or
terminate
the
Plan
at
any
time;
It
is
provided,
however,
that
in
the
event
of
any
such
change
or
termination
no
beneficiary
may
be
deprived
without
his
consent
of
his
right
to
the
benefits
accrued
to
his
credit
up
to
the
time
of
the
change.
The
notarial
agreement
entered
into
between
appellant,
designated
as
“Donor”
and
Maurice
Germain,
Dame
Lucie
Dube-Germain,
and
Claude
Germain,
designated
as
“Trustees”
provided,
inter
alia,
that
the
trustees
should
not
be
prohibited
“from
investing
part
or
all
of
the
Trust
Fund
in
the
common
or
preferred
shares
of
the
Donor..
.
.”.
It
further
provided
that
in
the
event
of
the
resignation,
death,
incapacity
or
inability
or
refusal
to
act
of
any
trustee
“he
shall
be
replaced
by
written
declaration
to
that
effect
by
such
person
as
may
be
designated
by
the
Donor”.
Paragraph
10
provided
“The
Donor
may
at
any
time
replace
any
or
all
of
the
Trustees
on
giving
one
month’s
notice
to
such
Trustee,
in
which
event
the
Donor
shall
be
entitled
to
designate
a
new
Trustee
or
Trustees
to
replace
such
person
or
persons”.
The
terms
of
this
trust
deed
and
of
the
pension
plan
were
duly
approved
by
by-law
32
of
appellant.
Appellant
already
had
a
pension
plan
with
London
Life
dating
from
1956
providing
a
pension
for
all
employees
with
two
years
of
service
and
who
had
attained
the
age
of
25
years
in
the
case
of
males
and
30
years
in
the
case
of
females,
requiring
a
minimum
contribution
of
5%
by
each
of
the
employer
and
employee.
The
supplemental
pension
plan
with
which
we
are
now
concerned
was
limited
to
six
key
employees
of
the
company,
Maurice
Germain,
the
president
and
founder,
Lucie
D
Germain,
his
wife
and
a
director
of
the
company,
Claude
Germain,
his
brother
and
also
a
director,
Georges
Jolicoeur
who
had
been
with
the
company
since
1951
and
was
personnel
manager
in
1965,
later
becoming
a
director
in
1970,
Bruno
Lavigne,
who
had
been
with
the
company
since
1948
as
a
sales
representative
but
has
never
been
a
director,
and
Pierre
Quesnel
who
had
been
with
the
company
since
1953
and
was
sales
manager
at
the
time
and
became,
in
1971,
a
director
and
vice-president
in
charge
of
sales.
The
actuarial
certificate
was,
of
necessity,
based
on
certain
assumptions.
The
mean
salary
for
the
past
six
years
before
the
fund
was
established
was
used
as
the
“best
average
salary”
provided
for
in
the
plan,
no
allowance
being
made
for
the
effects
of
inflation.
With
respect
to
current
service
payments,
the
plan
merely
provided
a
contribution
by
employer
and
employee
of
a
maximum
of
$1,500
each
minus
the
contributions
paid
to
the
London
Life
Insurance
Company.
In
making
the
calculations
it
was
assumed
that
the
necessary
amounts
would
be
contributed
to
the
maximum
of
$3,000,
which
maximum
applied
only
in
the
case
of
Mrs
Germain
who
was
not
covered
by
the
London
Life
policy
although
she
had
always
been
an
employee
of
the
company.
The
other
current
service
contributions
payable
annually
were
$450
for
Maurice
Germain,
$1,254
for
Georges
Jolicoeur
$209
for
Bruno
Lavigne,
$628
for
Claude
Germain
and
only
$26
for
Pierre
Quesnel.
With
respect
to
past
service
contributions,
these
were
necessary
only
for
Maurice
Germain
for
whom
$142,220
had
to
be
paid,
and
Mrs
Germain
for
whom
$68,640
was
required.
For
the
others
the
effect
of
their
relatively
low
salaries
and
the
pensions
which
would
already
be
provided
by
the
London
Life
policy,
together
with
the
period
for
which
it
could
be
actuarily
estimated
that
current
service
contributions
would
be
made,
resulted
in
there
being
no
need
for
past
service
contributions.
According
to
the
trust
deed
the
original
trustees
were
Maurice
Germain,
his
wife
Lucie
Dubé-Germain
and
Claude
Germain
who
Mr
Germain
testified
were
all
directors
of
the
company.
Subsequently
the
plan
was
amended
to
add
Mr
Valmont
D’Auteuil,
chartered
accountant,
and
at
that
time
the
company’s
auditor,
as
a
trustee
of
the
plan.
A
letter
from
Mr
Taylor
of
the
Legal
Branch
of
the
Department
of
National
Revenue
dated
August
19,
1965
acknowledges
a
letter
from
the
company
of
July
26,
1965
which
enclosed
an
amendment
of
the
plan
to
this
effect.
It
was
Mr
D’Auteuil
who
signed
cheques
on
behalf
of
the
plan
with
Mr
Maurice
Germain.
Subsequently
the
plan
was
again
amended
at
a
meeting
on
March
21,
1969,
the
amendments
to
take
effect
as
of
January
1,
1966,
these
amendments
being
necessitated
by
the
Quebec
Supplemental
Pension
Plans
Act
which
had
come
into
effect
on
July
15,
1965.
At
the
same
time
Claude
Germain
was
replaced
as
trustee
by
Michel
Gilbert,
the
company’s
solicitor.
As
the
Quebec
statute
required
the
naming
of
administrators
instead
of
trustees
and
the
establishment
of
a
retirement
fund
it
was
provided
at
the
same
meeting
that
Maurice
Germain,
his
wife
Lucie
Dubé-Germain
and
Michel
Gilbert
would
be
administrators
and
members
of
the
retirement
committee.
Nothing
is
stated
about
when
Mr
D’Auteuil
retired
as
a
trustee.
It
is
also
of
interest
to
note
that
in
the
minutes
of
the
said
directors’
meeting
of
March
21,
1969,
attended
by
Maurice
Germain,
Georges
Jolicoeur
and
Mrs
Lucie
Dubé-Germain,
it
is
stated
they
are
all
the
directors
of
the
company.
This
is
contrary
to
Mr
Maurice
Germain’s
evidence
that
Mr
Jolicoeur
became
a
director
of
the
company
only
in
1970
and
that
Claude
Germain
was
a
director
in
1965
and
still
is.
In
any
event,
the
amended
plan
was
duly
approved
by
the
Quebec
Pension
Board
as
already
indicated.
It
must
be
emphasized
that
we
are
dealing
with
the
1965,
1966
and
1967
taxation
years
of
the
company
and
evidence
of
what
took
place
after
that
is
only
of
interest
in
attempting
to
determine
the
intent
of
the
parties
and
the
manner
in
which
the
plan
was
administered.
It
should
also
be
noted,
although
it
may
be
of
no
great
significance,
that
the
company’s
fiscal
year
ends
on
February
28,
whereas
the
pension
plan
commenced
on
February
1,
1965
and
hence
its
fiscal
year
ends
on
January
31.
The
first
payment
to
the
pension
plan
in
the
amount
of
$48,820
was
made
on
February
26,
1965.
Since
the
company’s
contribution
for
past
service
was
to
have
been
in
the
amount
of
$45,540
and
its
share
of
the
total
current
service
contributions
would
amount
to
one-half
of
$5,567
or
$2,783.50,
it
would
seem
that
the
total
payment
should
have
been
$48,323.50.
In
any
event,
a
further
payment
of
$2,287
was
made
on
April
2,
1965
making
the
total
$51,107
which,
including
employees’
current
service
contributions,
would
be
correct.
Simultaneously,
cheques
were
issued
by
the
fund
in
favour
of
the
company
in
the
amounts
of
$48,820
on
February
26
and
$2,200
on
April
2,
and
the
shareholders’
ledger
shows
that
preferred
shares
in
the
company
were
issued
for
these
amounts
although
in
both
cases
the
issue
dates
are
shown
as
February
28,
1965.
Similarly,
on
February
28,
1966
cheques
were
issued
for
$45,540
and
$5,567
respectively
on
behalf
of
the
company
in
favour
of
the
pension
fund,
which
were
deposited
on
April
4
and
two
cheques
were
issued
the
same
day
by
the
fund
payable
to
the
company
for
$45,540
and
$5,560
respectively
to
purchase
$52,700
worth
of
preferred
shares
for
the
pension
fund,
an
additional
cheque
of
$1,600
having
been
issued
on
April
1
by
the
pension
fund
to
make
up
the
difference.
(The
fund
had
received
a
third
cheque
from
the
company,
possibly
for
dividends
in
the
amount
of
$1,575.60,
also
dated
February
28,
1966.)
On
February
28,
1967
the
pension
plan
received
a
cheque
from
the
company
for
current
service
contributions
in
the
amount
of
$5,567
and
on
the
same
date
issued
a
cheque
to
the
company
in
the
amount
of
$5,570
to
purchase
further
preferred
shares.
It
is
not
necessary
to
trace
all
the
transactions
between
the
company
and
the
pension
plan,
which
regularly
received
dividends
from
the
company
on
the
preferred
shares
already
acquired
and
immediately
reinvested
them
in
further
preferred
shares
so
that
it
never
at
any
time
retained
more
than
very
nominal
funds
in
its
account.
It
is
of
some
interest
to
note
that
the
first
payments
by
the
company
to
the
pension
fund
took
place
before
the
letter
of
April
14,
1965,
approving
the
plan
for
registration,
but
since
it
was
accepted
for
registration
as
of
February
1,
1965,
this
does
not
appear
to
be
relevant.
Although
the
reassessments
were
only
made
on
December
10,
1968,
Mr
Guy
Loubier,
who
has
been
comptroller
of
the
company
since
April
1967
and
is
familiar
with
its
records
before
that
date,
believes
that
there
were
indications
before
the
end
of
its
1966
year
on
February
28,
1967
that
the
deductions
of
contributions
made
to
the
plan
might
be
disallowed,
and
that
is
why
only
the
current
service
contributions
amounting
to
$5,567
were
made
in
the
cheque
of
February
28,
1967.
In
due
course,
when
regulations
made
under
the
Quebec
Supplemental
Pension
Plans
Act
prohibited
investment
of
pension
funds
in
preferred
shares
of
the
company,
the
preferred
shares
were
all
redeemed
and
the
sum
of
$150,000
was
deposited
in
the
Bank
of
Montreal
in
a
term
deposit
account
on
July
30,
1970
which
bore
7%
interest
until
September
30,
then
6
/2%
until
December
31,
1970,
then
57s%
until
March
31,
1971,
5%
from
then
until
April
1,
1972
and
then
5
A%
until
April
2,
1973.
The
cumulative
redeemable
preferred
shares
of
the
company
paid
an
interest
rate
of
6%
and
the
dividends
had
always
been
paid.
The
trustees
of
the
pension
plan
never
held
any
meetings
as
such
and
no
formal
statements
were
ever
prepared
although
Mr
Loubier
testified
that
each
year
he
prepared
a
working
sheet
as
his
predecessor
had
done
showing
the
financial
position
of
the
fund
as
of
February
28
each
year.
It
is
interesting
to
note
that
this
is
the
termination
date
of
the
company’s
fiscal
year
immediately
prior
to
which
the
payments
were
always
made
and
not
that
of
the
pension
fund
which
terminates
one
month
earlier.
These
unsigned
statements
were
filed
with
the
book
of
documents
and
the
statement
as
of
February
28,
1967
showed
total
assets
of
the
fund
as
$117,290.60
which
includes
income
for
1965-66
of
$3,100.70
and
for
1966-67
of
$6,408.90.
This
consisted
of
investment
in
preferred
shares
of
the
company
in
the
amount
of
$117,280
and
only
$10.60
in
the
bank.
By
February
28,
1972
this
had
grown
to
$166,763.97
of
which
$159,136.97
is
shown
as
money
in
the
bank,
$2,060
as
206
preferred
shares
of
the
company
and
an
amount
of
$5,567
as
payment
due.
This
latter
amount
had
been
carried
forward
each
year
since
it
appeared
for
the
first
time
on
the
statement
for
February
28,
1969,
but
was
not
cumulated
each
year
so
that
the
indication
is
that
only
one
further
current
service
contribution
was
considered
as
due
and
unpaid.
Not
only
were
the
contributions
by
the
company
and
by
the
employees
always
reinvested
in
preferred
shares
of
the
company
as
long
as
it
was
permissible
to
do
so,
but
the
individual
employees
who
also
had
an
interest
in
the
pension
plan
voluntarily
invested
bonus
money
which
they
received
in
preferred
shares,
thereby
indicating
that
they
considered
this
a
satisfactory
investment
of
their
own
funds
and
impliedly
that
they
did
not
object
to
the
pension
plan
fund
being
invested
in
the
same
manner.
The
employees
in
question
were
not
formally
consulted
about
the
investment
of
the
pension
funds
in
preferred
shares
of
the
company
but
it
is
quite
evident
from
the
evidence
that
had
they
been
they
would
have
agreed.
With
the
exception
of
Maurice
Germain
and
his
wife,
none
of
them
appear
to
have
had
much
say
in
how
the
financial
administration
of
the
company
was
handled
even
though
they
may
have
been
considered
part
of
the
executive
group.
The
only
one
of
these
employees
who
testified,
Mr
Jolicoeur,
stated
he
knew
what
was
done
with
the
pension
funds
and
was
satisfied.
The
salary
deductions
were
made
only
once
a
year,
not
each
month
as
provided
for
in
the
plan.
He
was
under
the
impression
that
he
received
a
cheque
for
the
amount
of
his
pension
deduction
which
he
then
turned
over
to
the
trustees
of
the
plan,
but
this
does
not
seem
to
be
correct
since
these
payments
were
made
directly
by
the
company
to
the
plan.
Mr
Rochette,
the
company’s
auditor,
was
under
the
impression
that
although
the
employees’
contributions
to
the
plan
were
made
by
the
company
annually
they
were
deducted
from
their
pay
but
he
was
not
sure
of
this.
When
the
decision
was
made
not
to
make
any
further
past
service
contributions
to
the
pension
fund
or
even
current
service
contributions
for
the
years
following
1967
as
a
result
of
the
dispute
which
had
arisen
concerning
the
deductibility
of
same
for
tax
purposes,
Mr
Loubier
was
under
the
impression
that
the
members
of
the
plan
were
advised
of
this
decision.
Mr
Jolicoeur
went
so
far
as
to
state
that
he
never
considered
that
the
company
was
obliged
to
continue
to
contribute.
Mr
Loubier
testified
that
Messrs
Jolicoeur
and
Quesnel
both
considered
it
a
privilege
to
be
allowed
to
use
their
bonus
money
to
buy
preferred
shares
in
the
company
and
Mr
Maurice
Germain
testified
to
the
same
effect.
While
I
consider
it
an
exaggeration
to
refer
to
the
right
to
buy
preferred
shares
in
the
company
stock
as
a
privilege,
it
is
nevertheless
fair
to
say
that
considering
the
interest
rates
pre-
vailing
in
1965
and
1966
a
6%
cumulative
preferred
stock
in
a
company
which
was
prosperous
and
paid
its
dividends
regularly
was
not
a
bad
investment.
It
seems
evident
that
the
senior
employees
considered
themselves
part
of
the
company
team
and
were
quite
prepared
to
leave
everything
to
the
president
and
founder
Mr
Germain
and
the
company
administrators
in
whom
they
had
confidence.
They
made
no
objection
when
the
company
stopped
making
payments
to
the
pension
plan.
Since
the
plan
could
be
suspended
or
terminated
by
the
company
at
any
time
any
such
objections
would
have
been
unavailing
in
any
event.
Appellant
concedes
that
a
long
line
of
jurisprudence
has
refused
to
allow
deductions
for
tax
purposes
of
contributions
made
to
supplemental
pension
fund
plans
somewhat
similar
to
its
plan,
but
contends
that
these
decisions
can
be
distinguished
on
the
facts
of
the
present
case.
There
is
no
doubt
that
certain
distinctions
can
be
made
but
the
question
to
be
decided
is
whether
such
differences
would
have
altered
the
decisions
reached
in
the
judgments
in
question.
In
the
first
place
appellant
contends
that,
unlike
some
of
the
other
cases,
it
did
not
need
to
have
the
money
contributed
to
the
pension
plan
immediately
reinvested
in
the
company.
The
business
of
the
company
was
prosperous,
showing
net
profits
before
taxes
for
the
year
ended
February
29,
1964
of
$70,804.63,
for
the
year
ended
February
28,
1965
of
$38,446.35,
for
the
year
ended
February
28,
1966
of
$75,709.25
and
for
the
year
ended
February
28,
1967
of
$71,050.62.
It
had
a
line
of
credit
of
$350,000.
Mr
Rochette,
the
company’s
auditor,
produced
figures
indicating
that
at
the
time
the
payments
were
made
to
the
fund
the
company
could
always
have
made
same
without
exceeding
its
line
of
credit.
While
there
is
some
question
as
to
whether
the
use
of
this
credit
is
not
limited
to
the
commercial
requirements
of
the
company
and
that
it
could
not,
therefore,
be
used
to
make
payments
to
a
pension
fund
plan,
Mr
Loubier,
the
company’s
comptroller,
disputed
this
stating
that
the
company
was
not
required
to
show
the
bank
how
it
used
its
line
of
credit.
Respondent
pointed
out
that
when
the
company
issued
its
cheques
for
the
pension
plan
payments
it
did
not
have
sufficient
money
in
the
bank
to
cover
them
and
relied
on
the
Supreme
Court
case
of
MNR
v
Cox
Estate,
[1971]
CTC
227;
71
DTC
5150,
as
authority
that
the
exchanges
of
cheques
between
the
company
and
the
pension
fund
did
not
really
constitute
a
payment
by
either.
I
would
doubt
whether
it
would
be
applicable
to
the
present
situation,
however,
as
in
rendering
judgment
Judson,
J
said
at
page
229
[5151]:
The
simultaneous
exchange
of
cheques,
where
neither
would
be
honoured
due
to
insufficient
funds
were
it
not
for
the
offsetting
entry
of
the
other
cheque,
can
only
be
viewed
as
a
single
transaction.
I
do
not
think
in
the
present
case
that
the
company’s
cheque
would
not
have
been
honoured,
because
of
its
good
credit
position.
Mr
Loubier
pointed
out
that
actually
it
would
have
been
to
the
company’s
advantage
to
have
borrowed
this
money
from
the
bank
to
make
the
payments
into
the
pension
fund
plan
as
in
this
event
it
could
have
charged
the
interest
as
an
expense,
whereas
when
the
money
was
invested
in
its
preferred
shares
it
had
to
pay
the
dividends
on
same
out
of
its
after-tax
revenue.
Despite
this,
Mr
Maurice
Germain
testified
very
categorically
that
he
had
been
advised
that
the
past
service
contributions
were
deductible
under
section
76
of
the
Act
and
that
otherwise
the
plan
would
not
have
been
put
into
effect
as
it
would
have
been
too
onerous
for
the
company.
At
the
same
time
he
insisted
that
the
company’s
only
motive
in
establishing
the
plan
was
to
provide
extra
protection
by
way
of
pension
for
the
employees
covered.
Mr
Loubier
also
admitted
that
although
he
could
not
speak
for
the
company,
it
is
his
own
personal
opinion
that
it
would
not
make
further
payments
to
the
pension
fund
unless
it
was
assured
of
their
deductibility.
The
fact
that
the
pension
plan
could
have
been
established
by
the
company
even
if
the
sums
paid
to
it
had
not
been
immediately
reinvested
in
preferred
shares
of
the
company
merely
indicates
that
the
company
had
the
capacity
to
establish
such
a
plan
without
necessarily
establishing
that
the
plan
established
complies
with
all
the
requirements
of
section
76
of
the
Act
so
as
to
make
the
past
service
contributions
paid
into
it
deductible.
Neither
does
the
fact
that
the
dividends
on
the
preferred
shares
were
always
regularly
paid
in
the
present
case,
unlike
for
example
the
case
of
Concorde
Automobile
Ltée
v
MNR
(supra)
where
the
dividends
were
not
so
paid.
While
this
led
to
an
inference
in
that
case
that
the
trustees
were
not
acting
independently
and
in
the
interests
of
the
fund
in
making
the
investment
they
did,
unlike
the
present
case,
where,
whether
they
were
acting
independently
or
not,
the
fund
was
not
prejudiced
by
the
investment
made,
it
is
not
the
conduct
of
the
trustees
which
is
the
real
issue
but
rather
the
nature
of
the
pension
plan
itself.
In
the
Concorde
Automobile
case
judgment
was
based
on
the
application
of
subsection
137(1)*
of
the
Income
Tax
Act.
This
judgment
read
in
part
at
pages
267-68
[5174]:
.
.
.
I
therefore
believe
it
is
necessary
in
any
given
case
to
attempt
to
determine
from
the
facts
of
that
case
whether
the
company
was
merely
incidentally
gaining
a
tax
advantage
as
a
result
of
setting
up
a
bona
fide
pension
plan,
or
whether
it
would
not
have
considered
setting
up
this
pension
plan
but
for
the
tax
advantage
to
be
gained
as
a
result
thereof,
and
in
the
latter
event,
Section
137(1)
would
be
applied.
The
evidence
of
Mr
Germain
in
the
present
case
to
the
effect
that
the
plan
would
have
been
too
onerous
for
the
company
had
the
payments
for
past
service
contributions
not
been
deductible
under
section
76,
and
the
fact
that
as
soon
as
it
appeared
that
there
might
be
difficulty
in
having
the
Minister
accept
these
deductions,
all
further
payments
for
past
service^
contributions
were
stopped
and
even
the
current
service
contributions
were
only
continued
for
one
year,
certainly
invites
a
similar
conclusion
despite
the
fact
that
in
the
present
case,
unlike
the
Concorde
Automobile
case,
it
does
not
appear
to
have
been
an
essential
part
of
the
plan
that
the
moneys
paid
into
the
pension
fund
be
reinvested
in
preferred
shares
of
the
company.
Appellant
also
argued
that
the
present
case
can
be
distinguished
from
the
cases
of
Cattermole-Trethewey
(supra),
Concorde
Automobile
(supra)
and
Goldberg
Bros
Ltd
v
MNR,
[1972]
CTC
1;
72
DTC
6045,
in
that
the
beneficiaries
of
the
plan
were
not
limited
to
those
controlling
the
enterprise.
While
it
is
true
that
there
were
six
employees
in
the
present
plan,
it
was
clearly
established
primarily
for
the
benefit
of
Mr
Maurice
Germain
and
his
wife
Lucie
D
Germain.
She
had
not
been
included
in
the
company’s
London
Life
Pension
Plan,
as
Mr
Germain
was
under
the
impression
that
a
medical
examination
might
have
been
required
at
the
time
it
was
established,
which
might
have
caused
some
difficulty
as
she
was
not
in
good
health
at
the
time.
In
any
event
the
entire
past
service
contribution
to
be
paid
was
for
the
benefit
of
Mr
Germain
and
Mrs
Germain
in
the
amount
of
$142,220
for
him
and
$68,640
for
Mrs
Germain.
In
her
case
the
current
service
contribution
was
also
the
maximum
of
$3,000
a
year
from
her
and
the
company
jointly
while
for
four
other
beneficiaries
the
joint
contribution
merely
ranged
between
$26
and
$1,254
per
annum,
comparatively
trivial
amounts.
I
do
not
believe
that
a
valid
distinction
can
be
made
for
this
reason
therefore.
The
main
issue
is
whether
the
fund
or
plan
incurred
a
firm
obligation
to
the
employees
and
whether
the
payment
made
by
the
company
was
irrevocably
vested
in
it
within
the
meaning
of
subsection
76(1)
of
the
Act.
Here
again
the
appellant
is
in
a
somewhat
stronger
position
than
in
some
of
the
other
cases
such
as
the
leading
Supreme
Court
case
of
MNR
v
Inland
Industries
Limited
(supra)
in
which
the
plan
merely
provided
that
the
company
would
contribute
an
amount
equal
to
$1,500
each
year
for
each
member
joining
the
plan
on
the
effective
date
and
an
amount
equal
to
$100
each
year
for
each
member
and
stated:
“in
addition
the
Company
hopes
and
expects
to
make
additional
contributions
out
of
profits
in
respect
of
all
members.
In
addition
the
Company
hopes
and
expects
to
make
a
past
service
contribution
in
respect
of
each
member
of
the
Plan
who
joins
at
the
effective
date.”
It
went
on
to
provide
that
the
maximum
pension
would
be
the
difference
between
70%
of
the
member’s
average
earnings
during
his
six
highest
earning
years
and
the
pension
otherwise
provided
by
the
company.
In
rendering
the
judgment
of
the
Court,
Pigeon,
J
stated
at
page
32
[6017]:
The
existence
of
such
an
obligation
is
a
statutory
condition
of
the
right
to
the
deduction
and
in
its
absence,
there
is
no
right
to
deduct
a
special
payment.
It
cannot
be
said
that
because
the
intention
of
making,
at
some
future
time,
payments
in
the
amount
now
claimed
was
disclosed
to
the
department
in
the
application
for
registration
of
the
plan,
an
obligation
to
make
the
payments
was
created.
On
the
contrary,
the
terms
of
the
plan
were
perfectly
clear
to
the
effect
that
no
obligation
towards
Mr.
Parker
would
arise
in
respect
of
those
sums
unless
and
until
the
company
chose
to,
and
actually
did,
make
the
contemplated
payments
into
the
fund.
Similarly,
in
the
Cattermole-Trethewey
case
(supra)
the
plan
merely
indicated
that
the
employer
“hopes
and
expects”
to
make
adequate
annual
contributions.
In
the
present
case,
however,
a
specific
amount
of
pension
was
provided
(70%
of
the
member’s
best
average
salary).
To
ensure
this
not
only
was
the
past
service
contribution
necessary
in
the
cases
of
Maurice
Germain
and
Mrs
Germain,
but
current
service
contributions
for
all
six
beneficiaries.
When
we
come
to
contributions
we
find
that
for
current
service
contributions
the
employer
and
member
will
each
contribute
“a
maximum
of
$1,500
per
year”
minus
the
contributions
to
the
London
Life
annuity.
While
the
sum
of
$1,500
is
the
maximum
amount
which
is
deductible
annually
by
virtue
of
paragraph
11(1)(g)
of
the
Act,
it
is
to
be
noted
that
the
plan
does
not
provide
that
the
employer
(or
for
that
matter
the
member)
shall
provide
such
annual
contributions
up
to
this
maximum
as
the
actuary
has
determined
to
be
necessary
to
provide
the
difference
between
the
London
Life
pension
and
the
70%
of
“member’s
best
average
salary’.
No
minimum
annual
contribution
being
required,
the
employer
could
have
contributed
$1
per
year
in
which
case
presumably
the
assets
of
the
fund
would
have
been
insufficient
to
provide
for
the
stipulated
pension
on
retirement
of
the
members.
With
respect
to
the
past
service
contributions,
the
plan
provided
that
the
company
“shall”
contribute
the
amounts
which
on
the
advice
of
the
actuary
are
estimated
to
be
necessary
to
provide
the
benefits
of
the
plan
with
respect
to
service
prior
to
its
effective
date.
Actually,
the
company
made
two
such
contributions
in
accordance
with
the
actuary’s
certificate
and
defaulted
thereafter
so
that
the
plan
would
not
have
had
sufficient
assets
to
provide
for
the
members’
retirement
pensions
in
the
amount
specified.
While
the
company
retained
the
right
to
change,
suspend
or
terminate
the
plan
at
any
time,
there
is
no
evidence
of
any
formal
resolution
to
do
so.
Instead,
the
company
merely
stopped
making
payments
when
it
found
that
the
deductibility
of
same
for
tax
purposes
was
in
dispute.
Whether
or
not
under
these
circumstances
the
trustees
of
the
plan
could
sue
the
company
for
arrears
Of
payment
is
not
an
issue
before
me,
and
in
any
event
this
appears
to
be
academic
since
the
trustees
are
substantially
the
same
persons
as
the
directors
of
the
company
and
are
certainly
not
in
a
position
to
act
independently
of
it.
Even
though
the
unfortunate
wording
of
Section
IX(3)
of
the
original
plan
to
the
effect
that
“the
company
shall
from
time
to
time
appoint
Trustees
who
will
act
for
the
company
in
assuming
the
responsibilities
mentioned
above”
was
changed
as
a
result
of
the
amendment
made
in
1969
to
comply
with
the
provisions
of
the
Quebec
Supplemental
Pension
Plans
Act,
there
is
no
question
that
in
practice
the
trustees
who
were
appointed
by
the
company,
and
the
majority
of
whom
were
the
principal
beneficiaries
of
the
plan,
were
under
the
company’s
control.
It
is
not
necessary
to
go
as
far
as
accepting
respondent’s
argument
that
they
were
agents
of
the
company,
to
conclude
that
in
practice
it
is
hard
to
conceive
of
them
suing
the
company
for
any
obligations
incurred
by
the
company
to
the
plan
which
were
not
fulfilled.
The
fact
that
the
payments
already
made
to
the
plan
are
irrevocably
vested
in
it
and
belong
to
the
members
and
cannot
be
returned
to
the
company
is
a
common
feature
of
all
pension
plans,
but
this
is
not
sufficient
to
find
that
the
company
has
made
payments
irrevocably
vested
in
the
plan
sufficient
“to
ensure
that
all
the
obligations
of
the
fund
or
plan
to
the
employees
may
be
discharged
in
full”
within
the
meaning
of
section
76
of
the
Act.
Further
light
on
this
can
be
found
in
two
recent
and
as
yet
unreported
judgments.
In
the
case
of
Mittler
Bros
of
Quebec
Ltd
v
MNR,
[1973]
CTC
182;
73
DTC
5158,
a
judgment
of
the
Associate
Chief
Justice,
payments
made
on
account
of
past
service
contributions
were
invested
partly
in
preferred
shares
of
the
company
and
partly
in
a
loan
to
the
company,
which
preferred
shares
were
redeemed
and
the
loan
eventually
repaid.
While
in
that
case
it
is
true
that
the
plan
used
the
words
“may
make”
with
respect
to
past
service
contributions
and
provided
for
a
pension
of
“up
to”
70%
of
the
average
of
the
employee’s
best
six
years
of
salary
and
therefore,
as
in
the
case
of
the
Inland
Industries
judgment
(supra)
provided
no
specific
amount
of
pension,
the
remarks
of
the
learned
Associate
Chief
Justice
in
his
reasons
for
judgment
at
page
186
[5161]
might
well
be
applied
to
the
present
case.
He
states:
Here
also
the
only
obligations
to
a
member
were
to
use
in
the
prescribed
manner
the
funds
paid
into
the
plan
and
no
obligation
had
been
created,
either
on
the
fund
or
on
the
company
to
furnish
the
members
with
the
benefits
which
were
intended
to
be
provided
by
the
special
payments.
It
seems
clear
to
me
that
the
existence
of
an
obligation
of
the
company’s
pension
plan
towards
the
employees
in
respect
of
past
services
is
a
statutory
condition
of
the
right
of
the
deductions
and
in
the
absence
of
such
an
obligation
there
was
no
right
to
deduct
any
special
payments.
In
the
present
case,
while
the
plan
may
have
incurred
specific
obligations
towards
the
members
with
respect
to
the
amount
of
the
pension
to
be
paid,
the
fact
that
no
specific
amount
was
provided
for
current
service
contributions,
but
merely
a
maximum,
and
that
the
plan
could
be
suspended
or
terminated
at
any
time
by
the
company,
together
with
the
evident
inability
or
unwillingness
of
the
trustees
to
oblige
the
company
to
fulfil
its
obligations
under
the
plan
all
indicate
that
the
plan
would
be
unable
to
fulfil
its
obligations
to
the
members
unless
the
company
chose
to
continue
to
make
its
necessary
contributions
to
the
plan.
The
said
judgment
expresses
the
same
view
on
page
186
[5161]
where
it
is
stated:
Indeed
no
obligation
towards
the
members
could
arise
under
the
plan
in
respect
of
special
payments
made
unless
and
until
the
company
chose
to
and
actually
did
make
the
contemplated
payments
into
the
fund
.
.
.
It
is
significant
to
note
that
Section
IX(1)
of
the
plan
provides
that
“The
payments
of
benefits
under
the
Plan
shall
be
a
liability
of
the
Pension
Fund
and
not
of
the
Trustees
or
the
Company”.
In
the
case
of
Cam
Gard
Supply
Ltd
v
MNR,
[1973]
CTC
111;
73
DTC
5133,
a
judgment
of
Cattanach,
J,
in
which,
as
in
the
present
case,
the
amount
of
pension
to
be
paid
was
specified
unlike
the
situation
in
the
Inland
Industries
case
(Supra)
and
in
which,
moreover,
a
lump
sum
payment
of
the
entire
past
service
contribution
had
been
made
to
the
plan
before
it
was
even
registered,
on
the
advice
of
the
actuary
as
to
the
amount
required,
the
appeal
was
nevertheless
dismissed
because
in
reference
to
the
proposed
payments
into
the
plan
the
words
“the
company
intends
to
contribute
subject
to
the
funds
for
such
purposes
being
available”
were
used.
At
page
118
[5138]
the
judgment
states:
Since
there
is
no
obligation
under
the
Plan
on
the
Company
to
contribute
it
follows
that
there
is
no
trust
created
unless
the
funds
are
contributed.
If
no
funds
are
contributed
by
the
Company
it
follows
that
the
fund
or
plan
is
under
no
obligation
to
the
employees.
The
same
judgment
also
criticizes
the
actuarial
certificate
which
might
also
well
be
criticized
in
the
present
case.
It
was
based
on
information
given
by
the
employer
as
to
the
average
salaries
of
the
employees
for
the
six
last
years
before
the
adoption
of
the
plan
which
showed
the
following:
Maurice
Germain
|
$40,000
|
Georges
Jolicoeur
|
6,240
|
Bruno
Lavigne
|
5,200
|
Claude
Germain
|
7,800
|
Pierre
Quesnel
|
4,980
|
Lucie
D.
Germain
|
10,000
|
We
find,
however,
in
Section
X(1)
under
the
heading
“Earnings”
the
following:
For
the
purpose
of
determining
the
amounts
of
contributions
and
pension
benefits
under
the
Plan,
earnings
shall
mean
salary,
wages,
sales
commissions,
payments
under
an
incentive
plan
and
other
remunerations
for
services
as
determined
by
the
Company
under
its
normal
practices
but
excluding
special
payments
or
indemnities
or
reimbursement
for
expenses.
A
list
of
salaries
paid,
including
commissions
and
special
bonuses,
from
January
1,
1965
to
December
31,
1972
shows
that
in
each
of
these
years
Maurice
Germain
received
payments
varying
between
a
maximum
of
$45,863.33
in
1966
and
a
minimum
of
$30,731
in
1968,
Georges
Jolicoeur
received
payments
graduating
from
$9,060
to
$16,166.10,
Bruno
Lavigne
received
payments
varying
between
a
maximum
of
$12,131.42
in
1966
and
a
low
of
$6,770.65
in
1968,
Claude
Germain
received
payments
varying
between
a
high
of
$16,181.10
in
1972
and
a
low
of
$10,289
in
1969,
Pierre
Quesnel
received
payments
graduating
from
$6,782
in
1965
to
$16,181.10
in
1972,
and
Lucie
Germain
received
payments
varying
between
a
high
of
$12,000
in
1969
and
1970
and
a
low
of
$10,500
in
1971.
It
is
true
that
these
payments
include
bonuses
which
are
not
included
in
calculating
the
contributions
but
we
are
told
that
most
of
the
employees
were
in
the
habit
of
investing
their
bonuses
in
the
stock
of
the
company.
Despite
this
we
find
that
Georges
Jolicoeur
bought
only
$1,200
worth
in
1965,
$1,900
worth
in
1967
and
another
$1,900
worth
in
1968,
Pierre
Quesnel
bought
$450
worth
in
1965,
$1,400
worth
in
1967
and
$1,900
worth
in
1968.
Bruno
Lavigne
bought
no
shares
after
1965
when
he
bought
$650
worth,
and
Claude
Germain
bought
none
after
1965:
when
he
bought
$1,600
worth.
It
would
certainly
not
appear
that
the
bonuses
paid
were
sufficient
to
account
for
the
very
substantial
discrepancies
between
the
payments
actually
received
and
the
salary
information
furnished
by
the
company
to
the
actuary
as
a
basis
of
his
determination
of
the
amount
of
past
service
contributions
required.
In
fairness
it
must
be
pointed
out
that
the
figures
provided
were
allegedly
based
on
an
average
of
six
years
prior
to
February
1965,
so
they
may
have
been
accurate
if
the
salaries
and
commissions
paid
prior
to
1965
were
very
substantially
lower
than
those
paid
in
the
year
1965
and
each
of
the
following
years.
It
is
apparent,
however,
that
to
provide
the
pension
contemplated,
very
substantially
higher
contributions
would
have
had
to
be
made
both
for
past
and
current
service
contributions,
and
the
actuarial
certificate
amended
to
provide
for
this.
The
actuary,
Mr
Bissonnette,
testified
that
new
certificates
should
have
been
provided
in
December
1968
and
December
1971
as
required
by
the
Quebec
Supplemental
Pension
Plans
Act
and
regulations.
This
was
never
done
and
Mr
Loubier
testified
that
he
wrote
Quebec
explaining
that
this
was
because
of
the
litigation.
Appellant
argued
that
the
contributions
called
for
were
duly
made
in
1965
and
1966
and
that
the
fact
that
they
were
later
suspended
cannot
have
a
retroactive
effect
so
as
to
indicate
that
the
plan
in
those
years
should
not
be
considered
as
a
bona
fide
pension
plan.
While
this
may
be
true,
what
subsequently
transpired
is
relevant
in
determining
the
motivation
of
the
company
in
establishing
the
plan,
and
it
certainly
indicates
that
the
company’s
attitude
was
that
if
the
payments
were
not
to
be
deductible,
it
would
not
continue
to
make
them,
and
the
trustees’
attitude
that
they
would
not
or
could
not
force
the
company
to
make
the
necessary
payments
to
enable
them
to
fulfil
the
obligations
incurred
under
the
plan
to
the
members
to
provide
a
retirement
pension
of
70%
of
their
best
average
salaries
less
the
sums
received
under
the
London
Life
plan.
I
therefore
conclude,
in
view
of
the
uncertainty
of
the
plan
with
respect
to
current
service
contributions
which
merely
provide
a
maximum
rather
than
a
fixed
amount,
the
doubtful
accuracy
of
the
information
on
which
the
actuarial
certificate
as
to
past
service
contributions
was
calculated,
and
the
fact
that
payments
to
the
fund
were
stopped
even
before
full
payment
of
the
amounts
so
calculated
for
past
service
contributions
had
been
made,
that
appellant
“did
not
insure
that
all
the
obligations
of
the
fund
or
plan
to
the
employees
would
be
discharged
in
full,
and
has
made
payment”
within
the
meaning
of
subsection
76(1)
of
the
Act.
The
deductions
of
the
payments
so
made
in
appellant’s
1965
and
1966
taxation
years
is
therefore
disallowed.
I
would
also
disallow
the
contributions
made
for
current
service
under
the
provisions
of
paragraph
11
(1
)(g)
of
the
Act
for
the
years
1965,
1966
and
1967.
While
this
would
be
sufficient
to
dispose
of
the
appeal
before
me
I
also
find
that
even
if
the
said
payments
were
found
to
have
been
made
to
a
validly
constituted
pension
fund
duly
constituted
in
conformity
with
subsection
76(1)
and
paragraphs
11(1)(g)
and
139(1)(ahh)
of
the
Act,
the
deductions
should
nevertheless
be
disallowed
under
the
provisions
of
subsection
137(1)
of
the
Act
as
having
been
made
in
respect
of
a
transaction
that
would
unduly
or
artificially
reduce
appellant’s
income.
While
the
intention
of
establishing
the
supplemental
pension
plan
may
perhaps
have
been
as
Mr
Maurice
Germain
de-
dared
to
provide
additional
pension
for
senior
executives
and
longterm
employees
and
to
retain
their
interest
in
the
company,
it
is
evident
that
this
was
not
nearly
as
important
in
the
company’s
view
as
the
taxation
advantages
resulting
from
the
establishment
of
such
a
fund.
Whether
or
not
the
amounts
so
paid
were
reinvested
in
preferred
shares
of
the
company,
which
may
not
have
been
necessary
in
this
case,
the
company
nevertheless
gained
a
50%
tax
advantage
by
the
deduction
of
these
amounts
from
its
taxable
income,
and
when
it
found
that
it
might
not
be
able
to
do
so
it
immediately
stopped
further
payments.
Payments
each
year
into
the
fund
of
$26
in
the
case
of
Quesnel,
$209
in
the
case
of
Lavigne,
$628
in
the
case
of
Claude
Germain,
and
$1,254
in
the
case
of
Georges
Jolicoeur
with
the
employee
himself
having
to
pay
half
of
this
amount,
would
hardly
be
sufficient
inducement
to
retain
these
employees
in
the
service
of
the
company
if
they
were
not
already
clearly
interested
in
it,
having
been
with
it
for
many
years
and
gradually
having
worked
up
to
positions
of
senior
responsibility.
The
conduct
of
the
company
and
of
the
administrators
of
the
fund
indicates
that
the
primary
objective
was
a
reduction
of
taxation
which
would
have
been
otherwise
payable
by
the
company,
the
other
reasons
for
establishing
the
fund
being
of
secondary
importance.
Appellant’s
appeal
is
therefore
dismissed,
with
costs.