The
Chairman
(orally):—This
is
an
appeal
by
W
Vézina
&
fils
Ltée
against
the
reassessment
of
the
Minister
of
National
Revenue
for
the
taxation
year
1965
in
which
a
sum
paid
into
a
pension
plan,
pursuant
to
section
76,
for
past
services,
was
disallowed.
I
may
say
at
the
outset
that
there
might
be
some
pauses
of
unseemly
length
during
the
course
of
this
judgment,
but
because
of
the
28
or
29
exhibits,
all
of
which
were
in
French,
it
has
given
me
a
little
extra
work
to
assemble
my
thoughts
and
to
assure
myself
that
I
have
taken
the
correct
meaning
from
the
exhibits
placed
before
me.
I
think
first
that
I
should
say
that
this
is
what
has
commonly
become
known
as
a
section
76
case
and
has
come
about
as
a
result
of
the
Supreme
Court
of
Canada
decision
in
MNR
v
Inland
Industries
Limited,
the
exact
citation
for
which
I
do
not
have
at
the
moment
but
which
can
be
included
in
the
judgment
later.*
A
brief
history
of
what
led
up
to
this
situation
I
think
is
in
order
in
this
case
because
we
all
have
tended
to
simply
refer
to
section
76
cases
without
giving
any
thought
to
the
background
that
led
up
to
the
possibility
of
businesses
entering
into
the
type
of
pension
plan
that
was
contemplated
by
that
section.
I
think
that
it
is
well
known
that
amounts
expended
by
an
employee
or
a
taxpayer
with
a
view
to
providing
an
income
for
future
years
of
reduced
employment,
or
of
retirement,
are
not
expended
with
a
view
to
earning
the
present
income
but
are
expended
more
with
a
view
to
averaging
income
over
the
years
of
the
taxpayer’s
life.
This
type
of
payment
would
not
ordinarily
be
deductible
in
common
law
as
being
a
proper
deduction
in
computing
the
taxpayer’s
net
income
or,
to
use
the
language
of
the
courts,
is
not
part
of
the
cost
of
earning
the
income
for
the
year.
The
fact
that
a
superannuation
or
pension
fund
may
be
set
up
at
the
insistence
of
the
employer
to
make
contributions
by
employees
compulsory
does
not
alter
this
situation,
and
such
payments
will
be
equally
disallowable
as
being
personal
expenditures
of
the
taxpayer
employee.
However,
Parliament,
in
its
wisdom
and
through
the
vehicle
of
the
Income
Tax
Act,
conferred
on
employees
a
limited
right
to
deduct
contributions
to
pension
plans.
Correspondingly,
the
Act
taxes
payments
out
of
such
pension
plans.
Moreover,
the
Act
encourages
the
formation
of
funds
by
employers
by
permitting
them
to
deduct
amounts
paid
into
a
registered
pension
fund
or
plan
in
computing
their
incomes
for
each
taxation
year.
It
further
enables
employers,
in
order
to
establish
the
fund
or
plan,
to
make
provision
for
past
services
of
employees,
and
this
permits
the
deduction
of
what
might
otherwise
have
been
regarded
as
a
capital
outlay.
I
think
that
there
is
no
doubt
whatsoever
that
the
provisions
that
were
brought
into
the
/ncome
Tax
Act
by
virtue
of
section
76
were
the
result
of
a
desire
to
help
small
businesses,
primarily
family
businesses,
which
would
not
otherwise
have
had
an
opportunity
to
accumulate
funds
for
their
owners’
later
and
less
productive
years,
and
thus
provide
small
businessmen
with
an
income
sufficient
to
sustain
their
needs
above
the
bare
minimum
level.
Sucn
provisions,
of
course,
for
executives
in
large
international
corporations,
have
always
been
taken
into
account
in
arriving
at
contractual
arrangements
between
unions
and
companies,
and
although
the
Act,
which
must
be
universally
applied
to
all
taxpayers,
also
grants
these
benefits
to
other
than
small
or
family
groups,
nevertheless,
in
my
mind,
section
76
was
originally
conceived
for
their
benefit.
Therefore,
a
few
years
ago
there
was
a
great
rush
by
companies,
both
large
and
small,
to
set
up
pension
plans.
Section
76
of
the
Act
provided
a
specific
set
of
circumstances
that
had
to
be
completed
in
order
that
the
plan
would
be
registered,
and
until
the
plan
was
registered
and
accepted
by
the
Department
of
National
Revenue,
ie,
the
Minister,
a
company
could
not
take
advantage
of
these
benefits,
and
so
literally
hundreds,
perhaps
thousands,
of
these
plans
were
approved
and
a
certificate
issued
by
the
Department
of
National
Revenue
indicating,
as
in
the
case
before
me
today,
that
the
plan
was
accepted
and
all
compliances
with
the
Act
had
been
fufilled.
Nothing
more
transpired,
really,
until
the
famous
Inland
Industries
case
cited
above.
The
Inland
Industries
case
did
no
more
than
confirm
what
has
been
accepted
for
years
as
the
law
in
income
tax
cases,
that
is,
that
the
Minister’s
subordinates
cannot
bind
him
by
their
actions.
The
judgment
of
Mr
Justice
Pigeon
succinctly
put
it
that,
regardless
of
what
certificates
were
issued,
if
they
were
not
in
accordance
with
the
provisions
of
the
Act,
in
law
they
were
worthless,
and
each
pension
scheme
must
therefore
be
scrutinized
to
see
whether
or
not
it
fulfils
the
intention
of
the
Act.
I
am
readily
willing
to
admit
to
a
high
degree
of
plagiarism
from
the
judgment
of
Mr
Justice
Walsh
in
Produits
LDG
Products
Inc
v
MNR,
[1973]
CTC
273
;
73
DTC
5222,
the
most
recent
case
on
this
topic,
which
was
received
by
this
Board
on
May
22,
1973
and
in
which
judgment
was
delivered
on
May
4,
1973,
the
case
having
been
heard
in
this
city
(Montreal)
in
February
of
this
year.
Mr
Justice
Walsh
has
had
a
longer
opportunity
to
scan
the
cases,
most
of
which
are
the
cases
cited
to
me
yesterday,
and
I
therefore
have
taken
the
liberty
of
referring
to
a
great
many
passages
in
his
judgment.
On
page
283
[5229],
he
quotes
from
page
32
[6017]
of
the
judgment
in
Inland
Industries
(supra),
which
was
the
judgment
of
the
Supreme
Court
of
Canada
by
Mr
Justice
Pigeon:
.
.
.
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.
He
is
simply
saying
there,
or
I
am
paraphrasing
what
he
is
saying,
that
all
of
these
cases
depend
on
their
facts,
subject
to
the
general
principle
of
law
laid
down
by
the
highest
court
in
the
land
that
there
must
be
a
legal
obligation
on
the
employer
to
the
fund
and
the
fund
to
the
employee.
As
a
result,
many
cases
again
have
been
heard
to
determine
further
the
implications
of
the
Inland
Industries
decision,
and
the
judgment
of
Mr
Justice
Walsh
in
the
LDG
Products
case
(to
which
I
have
referred
and
will
refer),
the
Cam
Gard
Supply
Ltd
v
MNR
decision
of
Mr
Justice
Cattanach
([1973]
CTC
111;
73
DTC
5133),
and
the
decision
in
Mittler
Bros
of
Quebec
Ltd
v
MNR,
[1973]
CTC
182;
73
DTC
5158
(a
decision
of
the
Associate
Chief
Justice
of
the
Federal
Court
of
Canada)
merely
confirm,
and
in
my
view
correctly
so,
that
one
cannot
make
a
blanket
statement
affecting
pension
plan
cases
but
must
deal
with
each
on
its
merits,
I
say
this
as
a
perhaps
rather
lengthy
introduction
to
the
judgment
in
this
case,
but
I
do
so
out
of
abundant
caution
lest
we
perhaps
tend
to
lose
sight
of
the
purpose
of
the
legislation,
and
the
purpose
of
the
legislation
was
unquestionably
to
give
an
advantage
to
those
people
who
could
qualify
strictly
within
the
confines
of
the
Act.
The
facts
of
this
case
are
rather
simple.
There
were
four,
or
perhaps
five,
Vézina
brothers
who
operated
a
plumbing
business
in
the
City
of
Montreal.
Aimé
Vézina
was
called
as
the
representative
of
the
company,
and
gave
evidence
that
he
had
worked
for
his
father
in
the
business
since
he
was
14
or
15
years
of
age,
that
the
business
had
started
out
as
an
unincorporated
company
operated
by
his
father,
and
that
in,
I
think
it
was
1951,
the
company
was
incorporated.
Apparently
the
father
is
now
deceased—at
least
he
appears
no
longer
in
the
picture—but
there
is
some
evidence
of
the
mother,
although
having
no
official
status
under
corporate
law,
being
still
present
at
board
meetings.
The
business
is
primarily
that
of
the
brothers.
They
have
not
worked
for
exorbitant
salaries
over
the
years
but
have
put
whatever
meagre
earnings
there
were
back
into
the
company.
In
1960
the
witness
Vézina
suffered
a
heart
attack,
which
gave
him
the
initiative
to
consider
the
prospects
for
the
future—presumably
those
of
himself
and
his
family
and
the
business.
The
brothers
discussed
the
possibility
at
that
time
of
insurance—term
partnership
insurance—or
what
I
think
is
more
properly
understood
as
insurance
that
is
implemented
in
a
buy-sell
agreement.
When
one
member
of
a
closely
knit
corporation
dies,
the
funds
from
the
insurance
policy
are
used
to
buy
the
shares
of
the
estate
of
the
deceased.
However,
the
profits
of
the
company
were
not
sufficiently
great
to
make
any
serious
strides
towards
that
security
possible
until
the
year
1965.
In
the
year
1965,
the
company
had
made
a
substantial
profit.
It
had
jumped
from
profits
of
some
two,
three
or
four
thousand
dollars
until,
I
think
by
the
month
of
October,
almost
a
hundred
thousand
dollars
was
apparent
by
way
of
profit.
Again
the
thought
of
security
came
to
Mr
Vézina
and
he
discussed
it
with
his
advisers—with,
I
believe,
a
member
of
the
Metropolitan
Life
Insurance
Company
and
of
the
Royal
Trust
Company,
and
eventually,
in
any
event,
it
was
pointed
out
that
the
company
could
now
take
advantage
of
the
Income
Tax
Act
and
set
up
a
pension
plan
which
could
include,
and
which
eventually
did
include,
an
insurance
factor
in
its
terms.
Several
meetings
were
held
of
the
informal
nature
that
one
would
expect
from
such
a
small
family
company,
but
the
evidence
is
uncontradicted
that
by
December
17,
1965,
or
give
or
take
a
day
from
that
date,
the
decision
had
been
made
to
take
the
step,
and
by
December
29
the
funds
had
been
paid
into
the
pension
plan,
which
I
will
identify
as
such
throughout
as
distinguished
from
the
company,
in
the
amount
of
$93,100.
Immediately,
the
company
sold
to
the
pension
plan,
or
the
pension
plan
purchased
from
the
company,
non-cumulative
5%
preference
shares
to
the
extent
of
$91,000.
It
is
the
contention
of
the
Minister
that
this
was
a
sham,
that
there
were
no
funds
available
in
the
bank
of
the
appellant
company
to
honour
the
cheque
to
the
pension
plan,
and
this
is
true.
There
weren’t
sufficient
funds
in
the
bank
to
so
honour
it.
Respondent’s
Exhibit
2
is
a
photocopy
of
the
two
cheques,
the
first
one
to
the
pension
fund
dated
December
29,
1965
and
the
return
cheque
for
the
preferred
shares
dated
December
30,
1965,
both
negotiated
at
the
bank,
according
to
the
stamp
on
the
face
of
them,
on
December
30,
1965.
So
I
think
that
I
must
deal
first
with
this
aspect
of
the
case,
because,
if
it
is
a
sham
at
this
point,
there
is
no
need
for
me
to
consider
the
possibility,
or
existence,
of
a
legal
obligation
as
referred
to
in
the
Inland
Industries
case.
The
thrust
of
the
Department
lying
behind
the
term
“sham”,
whether
or
not
they
used
it,
is
the
provision
of
subsection
137(1)
of
the
Income
Tax
Act
which,
notwithstanding
all
other
sections,
prohibits
a
taxpayer
from
artificially
reducing
his
income.
In
other
words,
the
sole
purpose,
in
the
eyes
of
the
Minister,
in
this
branch
of
his
argument,
is
that
the
appellant
was
motivated
solely
by
the
potential
benefits
that
it
would
reap
by
virtue
of
the
reduction
of
its
tax
payments
by
a
considerable
sum
of
money,
probably
half
of
the
$91,000,
in
the
year
1965.
This
is
something
that
must
be
considered,
and
has
been
considered,
and
that
has
been
referred
to
again
in
the
judgment
of
Mr
Justice
Walsh
in
the
LDG
Products
Inc
case,
where
he
quotes
from
pages
267-8
[5174]
of
his
judgment
in
Concorde
Automobiles
Ltée
v
MNR,
[1971]
CTC
246;
71
DTC
5161,
as
follows:
.
I.
.
1
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.
That
there
was
bound
to
be
a
tax
advantage
in
any
of
these
section
76
cases
is
obvious
from
my
opening
remarks,
because
the
very
funds
that
were
to
be
paid
for
past
services,
as
in
this
case,
would,
without
the
existence
of
section
76,
not
have
been
a
deductible
expense.
So,
in
every
pension
plan,
no
matter
how
pure,
there
is
an
element
of
tax
avoidance
present.
The
very
salient
questions
raised
in
the
Concorde
case
are:
was
the
decision
based
on
a
desire
to
protect
the
individuals
in
the
future?
or
was
it
made
solely
for
the
purpose
of
avoiding
tax?
The
second
part
of
this
argument
of
the
Minister
is
that
it
could
only
have
been
for
the
purpose
of
avoiding
tax
that
they
made
this
transaction
of
exchanging
cheques,
which
was
a
worthless
transaction,
in
his
assertion,
because
they
did
not
have
the
funds
to
meet
it.
Reliance
is
placed
on
the
decision
in
MNR
v
Cox
Estate,
[1971]
CTC
227;
71
DTC
5150,
a
judgment
of
Mr
Justice
Judson.
What
Mr
Justice
Judson
said
in
that
case
was
that
there
were
no
funds,
the
cheques
would
not
have
been
honoured
had
they
been
presented
to
the
bank,
and
so
the
whole
affair
was
one
single
transaction
between
the
parties,
and
this
is
set
out
again
in
the
decision
of
Mr
Justice
Walsh
in
the
LDG
Products
case
at
page
281
[5228]
where
he
says:
.
.
.
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
tween
the
company
and
the
pension
fund
did
not
really
constitute
a
payment
by
either.
!
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
view
it
as
a
single
transaction
in
that
case,
and
I
agree
with
that
comment.
I
also
agree
with
Mr
Justice
Walsh
when
he
says
“I
would
doubt
whether
it
would
be
applicable
to
the
present
situation”,
and
I
refer
now
to
the
evidence
of
Mr
René
Tremblay,
who
is
the
manager
of
the
Banque
Provinciale
du
Canada,
1909
Laurier
East,
and
who,
although
he
was
not
connected
with
the
appellant
company
in
1965,
did
have
access
to
the
company
records
and,
by
a
letter
dated
February
16,
1973,
which
was
obviously
prepared
for
this
hearing
(appellant’s
Exhibit
19),
he
pointed
out
that,
in
May
of
1966,
credit
to
the
appellant
company
was
in
the
order
of
seventy
thousand
dollars.
He
feels,
on
the
evidence
of
the
accounts
receivable,
that
in
the
year
1965,
the
appellant
company
would
have
encountered
no
difficulty
whatsoever
in
obtaining
a
credit
rating
of
$90,000.
I
think
he
said
the
general
rule
is
that
the
bank
looks
at
the
accounts
receivable,
with
the
usual
allowance
for
doubtful
accounts,
and
will
go
as
high
as
40
or
50%.
In
the
letter
written
in
1973,
he
said
that
the
accounts
receivable
in
1971
were
almost
a
million
dollars,
the
capital
surplus
was
over
two
hundred
thousand
dollars,
and
the
credit
rating
of
this
company
was
half
a
million
dollars.
So,
in
comparing
the
appellant
company
with
others,
considering
its
management
and
its
activities,
he,
as
an
experienced
bank
manager,
would
have
the
belief
that
in
1965
the
company
could
easily
have
obtained
a
credit
of
$90,000
with
his
bank.
This,
of
course,
would
have
required
the
personal
guarantees
of
each
of
the
individual
shareholders,
but
that
does
not
make
the
appellant
any
different
from
any
other
corporation
controlled
by
a
small
group
of
individuals,
particularly
a
family
group.
I
should
point
out
at
this
time
that
the
only
evidence
called
in
this
case
was
Called
on
behalf
of
the
appellant
and
that
the
witnesses
were
all
in
some
way
connected
with
the
appellant.
Mr
Genest,
the
actuary,
could,
I
suppose,
to
some
extent
be
said
to
have
an
interest,
in
that
he
was
necessarily
justfying
his
granting
of
an
actuarial
certificate
in
1968
and
1971,
and
Mr
Tremblay
could
hardly
be
declared
independent
in
all
senses
of
the
word,
because
he
was
giving
evidence
on
behalf
of
a
company
that
has
become
a
very
good
customer.
Nevertheless,
I
have
observed
these
witnesses
in
the
box.
They
are
both
relatively
young
men,
men
whose
veracity
I
have
no
hestitation
whatsoever
in
accepting,
who
were
subjected
to
very
extensive
and
learned
cross-
examination
by
counsel
on
behalf
of
the
Minister.
I
therefore
accept
their
evidence
and
find
as
a
fact
that
in
1965,
had
the
appellant
company
applied
to
its
bankers
for
a
loan,
it
would
have
received
one
in
the
amount
required.
We
must
not
overlook
the
fact
that,
after
the
decision
was
made,
Vézina
was
not
sure
that
the
company
could
deal
In
its
own
preference
shares,
and
it
was
only
after
the
event
that
this
became
known.
It
subsequently
turned
out
that
the
Quebec
Supplementary
Pension
Board,
by
amendments
to
its
requirements,
prohibited
the
holding
of
the
preference
shares
of
the
company
in
the
pension
plan
and
allowed
the
appellant
five
years
in
which
to
dispose
of—or
perhaps
redeem
is
the
better
word—its
preference
shares,
which
the
company
did
in
the
year,
or
in
or
about
the
year,
1970.
(I
believe
July
1970
was
the
date
given
in
evidence.)
So,
I
am
satisfied,
on
the
evidence
of
Mr
Vézina,
that
the
sole
interest
in
the
company
and
in
its
controlling
shareholders
and
officers
and
directors
in
December
of
1965
was
to
create
a
pension
fund
that
would
provide
for
them
the
security
that
they
needed
and
wanted
in
later
life.
True,
there
was
a
tax
advantage,
but
I
am
satisfied
that
the
tax
advantage
was
incidentally
gained
by
virtue
of
their
action
and
was
not
the
overriding
consideration
in
the
setting
up
of
this
plan.
Secondly,
I
am
satisfied
that
they
used
the
vehicle
of
the
preference
shares
to
the
extent
permitted
by
law
at
that
time,
as
any
good
business
operator
would
do.
I
am
not
overlooking
the
fact
that
they
had
a
bank
credit
of
$25,000,
as
shown
in
Exhibit
R-2,
and
that
they
used
$20,000,
approximately,
of
that
credit.
This
is
a
revolving
credit
that
all
businesses
establish,
and
it
may
vary
from
time
to
time
as
to
the
amount
that
is
needed.
It
does
not,
in
my
view,
on
the
evidence
of
Tremblay,
represent
the
maximum
that
would
have
been
available
to
them
but,
on
the
contrary,
they
could
have
achieved
the
credit
necessary
to
make
the
past
payments
fixed
by
the
actuarial
certificate
of
Mr
Genest’s
predecessor.
I
therefore
find
that
this
was
not
a
sham
and
that
subsection
137(1)
of
the
Income
Tax
Act
is
not
a
bar
to
the
pension
plan
if
'I
can
find
that
the
said
plan
meets
the
other
criterion
set
out
in
the
Inland
Industries
case,
namely,
that
a
legal
obligation
exists
in
the
plan.
This,
of
course,
is
the
most
difficult
part,
because
the
interpretation
of
words
and
phrases
must
of
necessity
vary
within
the
minds
of
the
persons
making
the
interpretations.
There
are
a
few
facts
evidenced
in
the
26
exhibits
of
the
appellant
that
indicate
the
lengths
to
which
the
company
went
to
make
this
a
true
plan.
They
complied
with
the
Quebec
Board’s
requirements
of
new
actuarial
certificates
every
three
years;
the
Quebec
Board,
by
its
correspondence,
indicated
that
the
plan
had
met,
and
was
meeting,
its
obligations
as
late
as
June
1969;
and
although
there
was
at
the
moment
a
deficit
of
$173,000
for
past
services,
the
actuary
gave
evidence
that
this
was
within
the
range
of
amortization
over
the
period
of
time
that
would
be
necessary
for
the
fund
to
reach
its
potential
and
by
the
time
the
first
payment
out
of
the
fund
would
be
required.
The
evidence
is—and
again
it
is
uncontradicted
and
remains
unshaken
by
learned
cross-examination—that
the
Quebec
Pension
Board
could
have,
and
unquestionably
would
have,
taken
action
against
this
plan
had
it
not
been
satisfied
that
it
was
a
bona
fide
scheme
to
benefit,
eventually,
the
members
of
the
plan.
Also,
the
question
of
the
trustees
has
been
raised
in
issue.
These
trustees
were
three
in
number,
two
of
whom
were
Vézinas
and
the
third
their
accountant,
and
I
do
not
consider
him
to
be
independent.
Nevertheless,
subsequently
the
Act
required
that,
where
an
employer
contributes
to
such
a
pension
plan,
the
employer
or
an
officer
of
the
employer
must
be
a
member
of
the
trustee
committee.
It
is
not
so
much
the
position
of
the
trustees
vis-a-vis
the
company
that
is
important
as
it
is
the
actions
of
the
trustees
vis-a-vis
the
company
and
what
the
company
can
do
to
fetter
the
actions
of
the
trustees.
In
this
case,
the
pension
plan
could
be
terminated
at
any
time
by
the
company.
They
had,
by
virtue
of
Article
9
of
the
plan,
the
power
to
amend
or
discontinue
at
any
time.
However,
the
same
article
provides,
and
I
paraphrase,
that
all
amendments
to
the
plan
shall
not
affect
in
any
way
the
amounts
and
the
conditions
of
payment
already
established
and
earned,
and
should
it
be
necessary
for
the
company
to
discontinue
the
plan,
the
assets
will
be
attributed—or
maybe
distributed
is
a
better
word—to
the
members.
In
addition,
Article
6
provides
that
the
company
will
disburse
the
total
cost
of
past
service
and
will
also
contribute
for
present
service
the
maximum
allowed
by
the
Income
Tax
Act,
as
amended
from
time
to
time.
This
is
different
from
the
clauses
that
have
been
contained
in
the
other
cases
cited,
that
is,
in
the
inland
Industries
case,
the
Cam
Gard
case
and
the
Mittler
case.
Mr
Justice
Walsh
puts
it
very
succinctly
when
he
says,
at
pages
284-5
[5230]
of
his
reasons
in
the
LDG
Products
case:
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.”
In
his
own
words,
Mr
Justice
Walsh
goes
on
to
say:
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
timejby
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.
Further
down
on
page
285
[5231]
he
refers
to
the
Cam
Gard
Supply
Limited
case
and
the
judgment
of
Mr
Justice
Cattanach,
where
the
amount
of
pension
to
be
paid
was
specified,
unlike
the
Inland
Industries
case
and
like
the
case
before
me
now,
where
2%
per
year
of
service
was
to
be
paid,
that
is,
a
person
working
twenty
years
for
the
company
would
receive
40%
of
his
best
six
years’
average
salary,
and,
with
regard
to
the
Cam
Gard
case,
Mr
Justice
Walsh
goes
on
to
say
that
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
119
[5138]
of
the
Cam
Gard
judgment,
Mr
Justice
Cattanach,
I
think
quite
rightly,
held
that
this
did
not
create
an
obligation
but,
if
we
look
at
Article
6
of
the
Vézina
pension
plan
as
I
have
just
quoted
it
a
few
moments
ago,
it
says
the
company
will
disburse
the
total
cost.
It
doesn’t
say
anything
about
“it
may”,
or
“if
the
funds
are
available
it
will
do
so”;
it
says
the
company
will
disburse
the
total
cost
and
will
also
contribute
to
the
maximum
allowed
by
the
Income
Tax
Act
as
amended
from
time
to
time.
If
section
76
is
to
have
any
meaning
whatsoever,
one
must
not
make
it
impossible
for
employers
to
satisfy
the
obligation
envisaged
by
the
Inland
Industries
case.
In
my
view,
there
is
a
clear
and
unequivocal
obligation
on
the
appellant
to
do
as
Article
6
says
as
long
as
the
plan
is
in
existence;
and
if
the
plan
is
cancelled,
there
is
an
equally
unequivocal
obligation
to
pay
the
proceeds
of
the
fund
at
that
time
to
the
members
on
the
formula
set
out
in
the
plan.
There
is
no
doubt
at
any
time
as
to
what
is
coming
to
a
particular
member
of
the
fund
in
question.
Again,
in
drawing
on
Mr
Justice
Walsh’s
decision,
the
question
that
so
often
comes
up
is
whether
or
not
we
may
look
past
the
year
under
appeal
(in
this
case
1965)
to
see
if
there
is
anything
to
assist
us
in
determining
the
case
at
hand,
and
it
is
often
argued,
and
it
is
accepted,
that
each
taxation
year
must
stand
on
its
own.
However,
the
purpose
of
any
hearing
is
to
arrive
at
the
truth
of
what
really
was
intended
by
the
parties.
In
dealing
with
the
question
of
what
transpired
subsequent
to
the
year
in
question,
Mr
Justice
Walsh
points
out,
at
page
287
[5232]
of
his
reasons
in
the
LDG
Products
case:
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.
Again,
at
pages
287-8
[5232]:
.
.
.
While
the
intention
of
establishing
the
supplemental
pension
plan
may
perhaps
have
been
as
Mr
Maurice
Germain
declared
to
provide
additional
pension
for
senior
executives
and
long-term
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.
I
refer
in
this
case
to
the
exact
converse
of
the
situation
that
existed
between
the
appellant
and
the
Minister
in
the
case
before
Mr
Justice
Walsh.
The
evidence
is
that
the
appellant
in
this
case
continued
to
make
payments
over
the
years,
even
to
the
present
time—
again
uncontradictd.
In
fact
it
is
supported
by
the
evidence
of
a
very
learned
actuary,
a
Fellow
of
the
Royal
Society
of
Canada,
who
states
that
in
1968
and
1971,
the
latter
being
after
the
reassessment,
he
prepared
certificates
required
by
the
Act
and
that
payments
were
made
in
accordance
therewith.
It
therefore
appears
to
me
that,
on
looking
at
the
subsequent
actions
of
the
appellant
company
in
this
instance,
there
is
support
for
my
belief
that
the
company’s
sole
intention
was
the
establishment
of
a
pension
plan
for
the
benefit
of
the
members
in
later
years.
There
is
also
support
for
my
belief
that
Article
6
and
Article
9
of
the
plan
contain
the
very
obligation
that
was
envisioned
by
the
Honourable
Mr
Justice
Pigeon
in
the
Inland
Industries
case,
and
that
it
is
an
obligation
that
would
force
the
funds
to
be
paid
to
the
members,
and
that
the
company
had
lost
control
of
those
funds
from
the
date
of
their
payment
in.
The
fact
that
the
company
has
continued
to
make
payments
and
that
the
fund
now
stands
at
some
quarter
of
a
million
dollars
again
lends
support
to
this
belief.
On
all
the
evidence,
both
viva
voce
and
documentary,
presented
to
me
in
this
case,
I
am
of
the
opinion
that
the
appellant
has
satisfied
the
onus
and
has
brought
itself
within
the
confines
of
section
76
of
the
Act.
Its
appeal
must
therefore
be
allowed
and
the
matter
referred
back
to
the
Minister
for
reassessment
accordingly.
Appeal
allowed.