Gibson,
J:—The
appellant,
a
Canadian
corporation,
obtained
certain
intangible
assets
from
The
Rapids-Standard
Company
Inc,
of
Grand
Rapids,
Michigan,
hereinafter
called
“the
US
company”
by
a
so-called
Deed
of
Gift,
which
assets
the
appellant,
after
acquisition,
put
a
value
on
of
$500,000.
The
$500,000
was
not
a
negotiated
price
but
a
value
arbitrarily
and
unilaterally
put
on
these
assets
for
corporate
and
tax
purposes.
The
appellant
reflected
this
value
in
its
books
by
journal
entry
debiting
intangible
assets
and
crediting
contributed
surplus
with
$500,000.
In
computing
its
income
from
1957
to
1968,
the
appellant
claimed
capital
cost
allowances
under
paragraph
11(1)(a)
of
the
Income
Tax
Act
and
Part
XI
of
the
Income
Tax
Regulations
in
respect
to
these
intangible
assets
on
the
basis
that
they
were
depreciable
property
of
the
type
listed
in
Class
14
of
Schedule
B
to
the
Income
Tax
Regulations
based
on
a
capital
cost
of
$500,000.
In
the
first
fiscal
period,
which
was
only
a
part-year,
the
appellant
claimed
$41,667,
in
the
following
years
to
1967,
$50,000
and
the
balance
in
1968.
Because
the
appellant
had
losses
until
1966,
no
practical
monetary
taxable
issue
arose
until
the
subject
taxation
years
1966,
1967
and
1968.
By
that
time,
the
appellant,
had
made
substantial
profits
and
because
of
the
carrying
forward
of
losses,
the
right
to
amortize
the
said
intangible
assets
by
claiming
capital
cost
allowance
became
relevant
in
a
practical
way
for
the
first
time.
The
appeal
concerns
three
income
tax
reassessments
each
dated
February
24,
1970
by
which
the
following
amounts
were
levied
in
respect
of
income
for
the
taxation
years
of
the
appellant
1966,
1967
and
1968,
that
is
to
say:
1966
|
$
51,783.04
|
1967
|
19,744.80
|
1968
|
35,895.18
|
The
appellant
was
incorporated
under
the
laws
of
Canada
on
January
21,
1957
and
carries
on
business
in
Metropolitan
Toronto
as
a
manufacturer
and
distributor
of
conveyor
systems
under
a
license
from
the
US
Company.
Prior
to
1968,
these
conveyor
systems
were
not
manufactured
in
Canada,
but
instead
a
Canadian
company
by
the
name
of
Specialty
Manufacturing
and
Distributing
Company
Limited,
hereinafter
called
“Specialty”,
acted
as
the
Canadian
distributor
for
the
US
Company.
In
1956,
the
US
Company
approached
and
subsequently
entered
into
a
transaction
with
Specialty
as
a
result
of
which
the
appellant
company
was
incorporated
as
a
result
of
which
Specialty
obtained
a
51%
equity
share
interest
and
the
US
Company
a
49%
equity
share
interest
in
the
appellant.
The
mechanics
for
implementing
this
agreement
and
activating
the
appellant
as
pleaded
were
as
follows:
(a)
Under
a
written
agreement
dated
January
31,
1957,
Specialty
sold
its
whale
business
as
a
going
concern
to
the
Appellant
in
consideration
of
the
sum
of
$125,784,
which
was
then
offset
against
the
issue
price
of
600
5%
non-cumulative
preferred
shares,
of
the
par
value
of
$100
each,
and
65,784
common
shares,
of
the
par
value
of
$1
each,
being
the
only
shares
of
the
Appellant
which
were
then
outstanding.
The
total
sale
price
of
$125,784
was
determined
on
the
basis
of
the
net
book
value
of
the
business
of
Specialty
as
of
the
date
of
sale
plus
an
arbitrary
amount
of
$60,000
for
goodwill.
(b)
The
US
Company
then
subscribed
for
and
was
issued
63,204
common
shares
of
the
Appellant,
thereby
acquiring
49%
of
the
equity
share
interest,
and
in
consideration
therefor
it
paid
the
Appellant
$63,204
in
cash
and,
as
part
of
the
same
transaction,
under
a
deed
dated
February
1,
1957,
(called
a
“Deed
of
Gift’,
Exhibit
1E)
the
US
Company
granted
to
the
Appellant,
without
further
consideration,
the
right
to
hold
and
enjoy
for
a
term
of
10
years
(subject
to
earlier
termination
in
certain
events
which
are
not
relevant
in
these
proceedings)
all
of
its
manufacturing,
engineering
production,
management
and
sales
know-how,
techniques,
skills
and
experience,
together
with
all
of
its
blueprints
and
designs
and
franchises,
rights
and
licences,
limited
to
and
exclusive
in
Canada,
(i)
To
manufacture
or
assemble
and
to
market
the
full
range
of
RAPISTAN
products;
(ii)
To
use
all
RAPISTAN
product
designs
and
applications,
productions,
Sales
and
marketing
data,
methods
and
techniques,
bibliography,
library,
field
reports,
sales
aids
and
data;
(ill)
To
use
the
existing
RAPISTAN
developed
Canadian
sales
organizations;
(iv)
To
use
all
RAPISTAN
trade
names,
trade
marks,
registered
or
unregistered,
including
the
right
to
use
future
acquired
trade
names
and
trade
marks,
and
to
become
a
registered
user
of
the
Canadian
registered
trade
marks;
(v)
To
use
and
practice
the
arts
disclosed
in
all
RAPISTAN
patents
and
applications
for
patents.
This
Deed
of
Gift
(Exhibit
1E)
the
appellant
submits,
represented
“existing
rights”
as
of
February
1,
1957.
In
addition,
at
the
same
time,
the
appellant
entered
into
two
other
agreements
with
the
US
Company
called
respectively
a
“Service
Agreement”
(Exhibit
1F)
and
an
“Internal
Management
Agreement”
(Exhibit
2).
The
appellant
submitted
that
the
Service
Agreement
referred
to
“ongoing
rights”,
and
in
evidence
the
so-called
Internal
Management
Agreement
was
not
necessary.
Prior
to
entering
into
these
agreements
and
in
particular
the
Deed
of
Gift,
the
US
Company
obtained
a
US
Internal
Revenue
advanced
tax
ruling
that
the
transfer
of
these
intangible
assets
as
set
out
in
the
Deed
of
Gift
from
the
US
Company
to
the
appellant
would
not
attract
United
States
capital
gain
tax
and
would
be
a
non-taxable
transaction
under
section
351
of
the
1954
US
Code.
At
the
time
these
intangible
assets
detailed
in
the
Deed
of
Gift
appeared
on
the
balance
sheet
of
the
US
Company
at
$1.00.
Subsequently
to
that,
in
October
1957,
the
directors
of
the
appellant
unilaterally
and
without
independent
valuation
and
as
stated
for
corporate
and
tax
purposes,
fixed
a
value
on
these
intangible
assets
in
the
Deed
of
Gift
at
$500,000,
and
made
the
journal
entry
above
referred
to
reflect
the
$500,000
on
the
assets
and
liabilities
side
of
its
balance
sheet.
The
appellant
in
evidence
gave
details
of
the
sale
in
1962
of
the
share
interest
of
one
Geddes
in
the
appellant
company
(which
Geddes
owned
through
Specialty
by
reason
of
the
fact
that
Geddes
owned
41%
of
the
equity
shares
of
Specialty
and
Specialty
in
turn
owned
51%
of
the
equity
shares
of
the
appellant).
This
sale
was
for
$32,000.
At
that
time,
the
unamortized
value
of
the
said
intangible
assets
of
the
Deed
of
Gift
were
shown
on
the
balance
sheet
of
the
appellant
at
$233,333.
From
this
evidence,
the
appellant
sought
to
prove
that
the
Geddes
shares
had
no
value
if
this
unamortized
value
of
these
intangible
assets
and
goodwill
of
$60,000
on
the
balance
sheet
were
not
real
asseis.
The
appellant
also
called
an
independent
valuator
who
gave
evidence
of
the
value
of
these
intangible
assets
in
1957
at
the
time
of
the
Deed
of
Gift.
He
made
his
valuation
in
1972.
With
certain
caveats
and
qualifications
and
after
outlining
the
great
difficulty
normally,
and
especially
in
this
case,
of
putting
a
market
value
on
these
intangible
assets,
he
expressed
the
opinion
that
they
had
a
market
value
in
1957
of
$500,000.
The
appellant
in
its
pleadings
claims:
..
1.
The
Appellant
claims
that
by
virtue
of
Section
20(6)(c)
of
the
Income
Tax
Act
it
is
entitled
to
claim
capital
cost
allowances
under
Section
11
(1)(a)
of
the
Income
Tax
Act
and
Section
1100(1)(c)
of
the
Income
Tax
Regulations
in
respect
of
the
value
of
the
rights
to
use
the
patents,
franchises
and
trade
marks
which
it
acquired
from
The
Rapids-Standard
Company
Inc
by
way
of
gift
in
1957,
and
that
the
value
of
the
said
rights
was
Five
Hundred
Thousand
Dollars
($500,000)
at
the
time
of
such
gift.
2.
In
the
alternative,
the
Appellant
claims
that,
if
it
cannot
be
considered
as
having
acquired
the
rights
to
use
the
said
patents,
franchises
and
trade
marks
by
way
of
gift,
the
commercial
and
legal
effect
of
the
1957
transactions
in
their
entirety
must
be
considered.
Accordingly,
the
63,204
common
shares
which
were
allotted
and
issued
on
March
20,
1957
to
The
Rapids-
Standard.
Company
Inc
must
be
treated
as
having
been
issued.
for
a
total
consideration
of
Five
Hundred
and
Sixty-Three
Thousand,
Two
Hundred
and
Four
Dollars
($563,204),
of
which
Sixty-Three
Thousand,
Two
Hundred
and
Four
Dollars
($63,204)
was
paid
in
cash
and
Five
Hundred
Thousand
Dollars
($500,000)
in
the
form
of
a
conveyance
of
the
rights
to
use
the
said
patents,
franchises
and
trade
marks.
Consequently,
the
Appellant
is
entitled
to
claim
capital
cost
allowances
in
respect
of
the
said
rights,
as
assets
under
Class
14
of
Schedule
B,
under
Regulation
1100(1)(c)
and
Section
11(1)(a)
of
the
Income
Tax
Act,
at
the
maximum
rate
of
Fifty
Thousand
Dollars
($50,000)
per
year.
The
submission
of
the
appellant
was
put
in
this
way:
1.
All
the
1957
Agreements
are
part
of
a
single
transaction
and
must
be
interpreted
together
(Ottawa
Valley
Power
Company
v
MNR,
[1970]
SCR;
70
DTC
6223;
[1970]
CTC
305
(SCC),
affirming
[1969]
2
Ex
CR
64;
69
DTC
5166;
[1969]
CTC
242).
-
2.
The
Deed
of
Gift
and
Service
Agreement
are
distinct
in
that
the
former
relates
to
the
existing
technology
and
know-how,
and
the
latter
provides
for
the
use
of
future
technology
on
the
basis
of
sharing
expenses
through
a
royalty
which
was
less
than
the
royalties
charged
to
other
licensees.
3.
The
Appellant
obviously
received
something
over
and
above
what
it
had
to
pay
pursuant
to
the
Service
Agreement.
These
can
be
regarded
in
either
of
two
ways:
(a)
The
Appellant
had
acquired
a
gift;
or
(b)
The
consideration
which
the
US
corporation
paid
for
its
49%
interest
in
the
Appellant
consisted
not
only
of
$63,204
in
cash,
but
also
included
the
rights
to
use
the
existing
technology
which
it
transferred
to
the
Appellant.
4.
If
the
rights
were
acquired
by
a
gift,
Section
20(6)(c)
applies
and
they
are
deemed
to
have
been
acquired
at
a
cost
equal
to
the
fair
market
value
at
the
time
of
the
gift
(J
Bert
MacDonald
&
Sons
Limited
v
MNR,
[1970]
Ex
CR
230;
[1970]
CTC
17;
70
DTC
6032;
Ridge
Securities
Limited
v
CIR,
[1964]
1
All
ER
275;
44
TC
373;
Petrotim
Securities
Limited
v
Ayres
41
TC
389;
Jacgilden
(Weston
Hall)
Limited
v
CIR,
[1969]
3
All
ER
1110;
45
TC
685).
These
rights
fall
within
Class
14
of
Schedule
B
of
the
Income
Tax
Regulations.
Therefore,
the
Appellant
is
entitled
to
claim
capital
cost
allowances
in
respect
of
the
deemed
cost
of
these
rights
over
their
lifetime
(ten
years)
pursuant
to
Section
11(1)(a)
of
the
Income
Tax
Act
and
Section
1100(1)
of
the
Income
Tax
Regulations
(Capital
Management
Limited
v
MNR,
[1968]
SCR
213;
68
DTC
5041;
[1968]
CTC
29
(SCC),
affirming
[1967]
2
Ex
CR
84;
67
DTC
5103;
[1967]
CTC
150;
The
Investors
Group
v
MNR,
[1965]
Ex
CR
520;
65
DTC
5120;
[1965]
CTC
192).
5.
Alternatively,
it
may
perhaps
be
considered
that
corporations
which
deal
with
each
other
at
arm’s
length
cannot
confer
gifts
on
one
another,
but
the
overall
business
transaction
must
be
considered
(Ottawa
Valley
Power
Company
v
MNR,
[1970]
SCR;
70
DTC
6223;
[1970]
CTC
305
(SCC),
affirming
[1969]
2
Ex
CR
64;
DTC
5166;
[1969]
CTC
242).
Therefore,
in
order
to
obtain
a
49%
interest
in
the
Appellant,
the
US
corporation
had
to
pay
$63,204
and
also
to
assign
certain
valuable
rights
to
the
Appellant.
6.
The
cost
of
the
property
acquired
by
the
Appellant
was
the
fair
market
value
of
the
63,204
common
shares
issued
to
the
US
corporation
less
the
$63,204
paid
in
cash
(Osborne
v
Steel
Barrel
Co
Limited,
[1942]
1
All
ER
634;
24
TC
293).
7.
The
Appellant
recorded
the
intangibles
as
having
been
acquired
for
$500,000
and
it
treated
this
amount
as
offset
by
a
credit
of
$500,000
of
contributed
surplus.
This
accounting
treatment
is
consistent
with
a
finding
that
the
capital
cost
of
the
intangibles
was
$500,000.
Tuxedo
Holding
Limited
v
MNR,
[1959]
CTC
172;
59
DTC
1102;
[1959]
Ex
CR
390;
J
Bert
MacDonald
&
Sons
Limited
v
MNR,
[1970]
CTC
17;
70
DTC
6032;
[1970]
Ex
CR
230;
Craddock
v
Zevo
Finance
Co
Limited,
27
TC
267).
8.
Whether
these
rights
were
acquired
by
gift
or
as
part
of
the
overall
business
transaction,
their
fair
market
value
can
be
amortized
as
an
asset
falling
within
Class
14
of
Schedule
B
of
the
Income
Tax
Regulations.
9.
Determining
the
fair
market
value
of
the
intangibles
acquired
in
1957
involves
difficult
valuation
problems,
but
they
are
not
insurmountable.
The
expert
evidence
reveals
that:
(a)
The
parties
made
a
conscious
effort
in
1957
to
arrive
at
a
fair
valuation.
(b)
They
had
good
reason
to
expect
that
the
merger
of
the
Canadian
operations
of
Specialty
Manufacturing
and
the
US
corporation
would
lead
to
a
substantial
volume
of
sales,
($1.2
million
in
five
years
and
much
more
by
the
end
of
ten
years);
(c)
The
Appellant
had
to
share
the
cost
of
research
and
development
through
a
2%
charge,
but
it
did
not
have
to
pay
for
the
benefit
of
the
existing
technology,
although
other
licensees
paid
approximately
5%
for
both;
(d)
Mr
Geddes
sold
his
interest
in
1962,
at
a
price
which
must
have
attributed
substantial
value
to
the
intangibles.
The
submission
of
the
respondent
in
part
was
as
follows:
In
order
to
succeed,
the
appellant
because
of
paragraph
11(1)(a)*
of
the
Income
Tax
Act,
must
establish
(1)
that
a
“cost”
was
incurred
by
it
as
a
taxpayer,
and
(2)
that
the
subject
matter
was
“property”,
and
has
failed
to
establish
either,
in
that
paragraph
20(6)(c)t
of
the
Act
does
not
apply
to
the
appellant’s
situation
because
in
the
circumstances
there
can
be
no
“gift”
between
two
corporations,
the
word
“gift”
in
this
subsection
being
used
ejusdem
generis
with
the
words
“bequest”
or
“inheritance”;
and
in
that
the
subject
property
is
not
within
Class
14
of
the
said
Regulations^
or
at
best,
only
some
items
are
depreciable
and
it
is
impossible
to
determine
which.
In
addition,
the
subject
matter
of
the
“Service
Agreement”
and
the
“Internal
Management
Agreement”
and
the
“Deed
of
Gift”
each
overlap
the
other,
or
if
not
completely,
then
partially.
Also,
all
of
the
value
of
the
intangibles
in
the
so-called
Deed
of
Gift
is
either
goodwill
and
therefore
not
depreciable,
or
any
value
arising
out
of
their
acquisition
arises
because
their
acquisition
constituted
an
implied
covenant
of
the
US
Company
not
to
compete
in
the
Canadian
market.
In
my
view,
it
is
not
necessary
in
this
case
to
decide
a
number
of
matters,
as
for
example,
whether
or
not
these
intangible
assets
constituted
“property”
within
the
meaning
of
Class
14
of
Schedule
B
to
the
Income
Tax.
Regulations,
whether
or
not
they
constituted
a
“franchise
or
concession
or
licence
for
a
limited
period”
within
the
meaning
of
said
class,
or
whether
or
not
certain
items
in
the
three
agreements,
the
Deed
of
Gift
(Exhibit
1E),
the
Service
Agreement
(Exhibit
1F)
and
the
Internal
Management
Agreement
(Exhibit
2)
overlap
partially
or
totally;
or
to
express
any
view
as
to
the
quantum
or
relevancy
of
the
opinion
as
to
1957
market
value
of
the
intangible
assets
listed
in
the
Deed
of
Gift
(Exhibit
1E).
Instead,
on
the
premise
that
the
job
of
both
the
appellant
and
the
US
Company
at
all
material
times
was
to
make
a
profit,
it
is
necessary
only
in
the
determination
of
the
issues
in
this
case
to
examine
the
circumstances
surrounding
the
transfer
of
these
intangible
assets
to
the
appellant
by
the
US
Company.
At
the
material
time
when
the
appellant
was
incorporated
and
the
Said
transactions
entered
into
by
it
with
the
US
Company
and
also
with
Specialty,
in
order
to
activate
the
appellant,
both
the
US
Company
and
Specialty
each
got
what
each
wanted.
Specialty
received
$60,000
of
preferred
shares
for
alleged
goodwill
and
51%
of
the
equity
share
interest
of
the
appellant,
and
the
US
Company
received
49%
of
the
equity
share
interest
of
the
appellant
on
the
basis
of
paying
$63,204
and
the
transfer
of
the
so-called
intangible
assets
for
ten
years
by
Deed
of
Gift
and
the
benefits
of
the
Service
Agreement
and
the
Internal
Management
Agreement.
After
completion
of
transactions,
the
appellant
was
activated,
and
at
that
time
it
was
the
intention
and
hope
of
Specialty
and
the
US
Company
that
the
appellant
would
make
profits
which
thereby
would
increase
the
value
of
their
respective
equity
share
interest
in
the
appellant.
Only
later,
as
stated,
in
October
1957,
did
the
appellant
unilaterally
and
for
corporate
and
tax
purposes,
write
up
these
intangible
assets
of
the
Deed
of
Gift
(Exhibit
1E)
to
$500,000
by
journal
entry
as
described.
In
doing
so
it
purported
to
change
the
original
implemented
transactions
and
intention
of
the
parties.
In
my
view,
the
decision
in
this
case
is
one
of
fact.
The
transactions
speak
for
themselves
and
the
whole
of
all
the
arrangements
in
February
1957
must
be
looked
at.
At
that
time,
as
stated,
the
US
Company
and
Specialty
each
got
what
each
wanted.
in
doing
what
it
did,
Specialty
intended
to
benefit
through
its
preferred
and
equity
share
interest
in
the
appellant
if
the
appellant
made
profits,
and
the
US
Company
intended
to
benefit
through
its
equity
share
interest
in
the
appellant
and
through
its
three
contracts
with
the
appellant,
all
three
of
which
contracts
were
interrelated
and
inseparable,
namely,
the
so-called
Deed
of
Gift,
the
Service
Agreement
and
the
Internal
Management
Agreement.
At
the
time,
also,
it
was
the
intention
that
the
appellant
as
a
part
of
the
whole
of
these
transactions,
would
have
the
benefit
and
burden
of
the
said
three
contracts.
What
benefit
the
appellant
was
to
receive
and
did
receive
was
by
way
of
contract
and
not
by
way
of
acquisition
of
any
capital
assets.
As
a
matter
of
fact,
therefore,
in
my
view,
there
was
no
gift
of
these
intangible
assets
listed
in
the
so-called
Deed
of
Gift
(Exhibit
1E)
by
the
US
Company
to
the
appellant,
nor
were
they
part
of
the
consideration
to
the
extent
of
$500,000
by
which
the
US
Company
acquired
a
51%
equity
share
interest
in
the
appellant
in
February
1957.
The
appeal
is
therefore
dismissed
with
costs.