Cattanach,
J:—These
are
appeals
from
the
assessment
by
the
Minister
of
the
appellant
to
income
tax
for
his
1967
and
1968
taxation
years
whereby
the
Minister
disallowed
the
appellant’s
claims
to
exemption
from
payment
of
tax
in
those
respective
taxation
years
pursuant
to
Article
VHIA
of
a
Canada-US
Tax
Convention
concluded
between
the
two
states
indicated
in
the
title
on
March
4,
1942
which
article
reads
as
follows:
Article
VHIA:
A
professor
or
teacher
who
is
a
resident
of
one
of
the
contracting
States
and
who
temporarily
visits
the
other
contracting
State
for
the
purpose
of
teaching,
for
a
period
not
exceeding
two
years,
at
a
university,
college,
school
or
other
educational
institution
in
such
other
State,
shall
be
exempted
by
such
other
State
from
tax
on
his
remuneration
for
such
teaching
for
such
period.
This
convention
was
approved
and
declared
to
have
the
Force
of
law
in
Canada
by
the
Canada-United
States
of
America
Tax
Convention
Act,
1943.
Subsequent
amendments
to
the
Convention
were
also
approved
and
declared
to
have
the
force
of
law
in
Canada
by
statutes
duly
enacted
by
the
Parliament
of
Canada.
Article
VIIIA
was
added
and
approved
by
chapter
27,
Statutes
of
Canada
1950.
The
Convention
has
a
preamble
which
declares
that
the
objectives
of
the
two
contracting
states
are
(1)
the
promotion
of
the
flow
of
commerce
between
the
two
countries,
(2)
the
avoidance
of
double
taxation
and
(3)
the
prevention
of
fiscal
evasion
in
the
case
of
income
taxes.
Many
years
ago
Lord
Coke
said
that
a
preamble
is
a
good
means
to
find
out
the
meaning
of
a
statute,
and
as
a
key
to
open
the
understanding
thereof.
The
basic
facts
which
give
rise
to
these
appeals
are
not
in
dispute
but
there
is
one
area
of
dispute
based
upon
the
proper
inference
to
be
drawn
from
those
facts
and
that
is
whether
the
appellant
ceased
to
be
a
resident
of
the
United
States.
The
appellant
was
born
in
Ohio,
one
of
the
States
of
the
United
States
of
America.
There
is
no
question
whatsoever
that
he
is
a
citizen
of
that
country
and
resided
there
until
July
18,
1967.
He
completed
his
early
education
there
and
then
attended
Case
Western
Reserve
University
in
Ohio.
He
was
employed
at
that
University
from
1953
to
1957
and
during
that
period
he
was
simultaneously
working
towards
his
doctorate
in
philosophy
which
he
achieved
in
1956.
From
1957
to
1958
he
worked
as
a
consultant
in
a
research
institute
in
Cleveland,
Ohio.
From
1958
to
1961
he
worked
as
a
private
consultant
with
the
Case
Institute
which
was
a
separate
entity
technically
but
closely
affiliated
with
the
University.
The
appellant’s
wife
had
been
born
in
Newfoundland,
Canada,
but
moved
to
the
United
States
prior
to
their
marriage.
In
1967
there
were
four
children
to
the
union,
two
of
whom
were
teenagers.
In
1961
the
appellant
and
his
family
moved
to
Washington,
DC.
From
1961
to
1962
he
taught
at
William
&
Mary
University
in
Norfolk,
Virginia.
From
there
he
returned
to
Washington
where
he
was
employed
by
the
Montgomery
Board
of
Health
and
the
Montgomery
Board
of
Education.
While
so
employed
he
bought
a
house
in
Kensington,
Maryland
which
he
owned
until
1964
when
he
moved
to
Wheaton,
Maryland
where
the
family
lived
in
rented
accommodation.
All
these
places
are
in
the
area
of
Washington,
DC.
Both
of
the
appellant’s
parents
are
deceased.
If
my
recollection
of
the
evidence
is
correct,
his
only
living
relative
is
a
brother
who
lives
in
the
United
States.
The
appellant
and
his
brother
were
joint
owners
of
a
house
which
was
rented
to
a
third
person.
The
appellant
sold
his
interest
in
this
property
in
1968.
The
appellant
also
bought
property
in
the
States
of
Florida
and
New
Mexico,
neither
of
which
properties
he
has
ever
seen.
I
suspect
that
these
properties
may
have
been
bought
as
a
speculation
from
land
developers.
While
the
appellant
was
in
Washington,
DC
an
employment
listing
in
the
University
of
Alberta
at
Edmonton,
Alberta
came
to
his
attention.
He
wrote
to
the
chairman
of
the
appropriate
department
of
the
University
on
December
5,
1966.
He
received
a
reply
from
the
chairman
in
February
1967.
This
reply
was
to
the
effect
that
the
chairman
would
be
in
New
York
and
suggested
an
interview
with
the
appellant.
That
interview
took
place
and
formed
the
basis
for
further
discussion.
That
further
discussion
took
place
when
the
appellant
flew
to
Edmonton
for
that
purpose.
As
a
result
a
verbal
agreement
for
employment
was
reached.
On
March
27,
1967
a
contract
was
received
by
the
appellant
from
the
University
of
Alberta
while
the
appellant
was
living
in
Washington,
DC.
On
March
31,
1967
he
signed
that
contract
and
returned
it
to
the
University.
In
his
letter
of
December
5,
1966
to
the
University
the
appellant
indicated
his
interest
in
“re-locating
to
Canada’’,
that
he
had
been
watching
movements
and
trends
in
Canada
for
some
time
and
that
he
had
noticed
differences
that
attracted
him
“personally
and
professionally”.
In
reciting
his
personal
attributes
he
made
reference
to
the
fact
that
his
wife
was
a
Canadian
and
that
most
of
his
living
relatives
were
in
Canada.
He
mentioned
that
the
family
had
bought
a
school
bus
which
was
converted
into
a
“prairie
schooner”
in
which
the
family
had
toured
extensively
in
Eastern
Canada.
He
also
mentioned
that
all
members
of
the
family
were
camping,
fishing
and
outdoor
enthusiasts.
He
concluded
this
letter
by
stating
that
the
family
felt
that
“Canada
is
the
new
land
of
promise”.
Bearing
in
mind
that
this
was
a
letter
seeking
employment
and
that
the
appellant,
as
a
prospective
employee,
would
set
out
facts
and
circumstances
which
he
considered
might
influence
the
employer
in
his
favour,
the
letter
may
not
be
of
great
significance
being
in
the
nature
of
puffing.
However,
it
is
an
indication
of
the
appellant’s
thoughts
and
the
nomadic
way
of
his
life,
no
doubt
dictated
by
the
appellant’s
occupation.
On
the
other
hand,
Mrs
Stickel
gave
evidence
that
the
move
to
Edmonton
was
discussed
at
a
family
conference.
She,
herself,
was
less
than
enthusiastic.
She
had
no
desire
to
return
to
Eastern
Canada
and
she
was
unfamiliar
with
Western
Canada.
It
was
the
consensus
of
the
family,
including
the
appellant,
that
they
should
give
it
a
try
for
two
years
and
remain
open
minded
about
the
project.
The
contract
between
the
appellant
and
the
University
was
for
his
employment
as
an
associate
professor
in
the
Department
of
Educational
Psychology
in
the
Faculty
of
Education,
the
effective
date
of
appointment
being
July
1,
1967
for
a
probationary
period
ending
June
30,
1969,
which
I
would
point
out
is
for
a
period
of
two
years
exactly.
The
appellant
moved
to
Edmonton,
Alberta
with
his
family
on
July
18,
1967
to
take
up
his
duties
under
this
appointment.
Prior
to
moving
to
Canada
the
appellant
terminated
the
lease
on
the
premises
occupied
in
the
United
States.
Certain
personal
effects,
which
could
not
be
conveniently
moved
to
Canada,
were
left
with
his
brother.
The
evidence
is
not
conclusive
if
this
was
an
outright
gift
or
whether
the
effects
were
to
be
kept
for
the
appellant.
The
appellant
had
a
loan
account
which
he
closed
out
but
continued
payments
for
about
eighteen
months
to
discharge
the
outstanding
balance.
His
checking
and
saving
account
was
moved
to
Edmonton.
When
the
appellant
first
came
to
Edmonton
he
had
difficulty
in
finding
suitable
accommodation
for
rent.
He
eventually
found
accommodation
but
after
occupying
it
for
a
period
the
property
was
offered
for
sale.
The
appellant
was
left
with
the
alternative
of
buying
the
property
or
moving.
The
appellant
moved.
On
March
27,
1968
he
entered
into
a
lease
for
another
property
for
a
period
of
five
years
supplemented
by
an
option
agreement,
for
a
consideration
of
$2,000,
to
purchase
and
with
an
agreement
for
sale
annexed,
which
might
be
exercised
after
February
15,
1973.
The
lease
expired
on
March
31,
1973.
The
appellant’s
explanation
was
that
he
entered
into
these
arrangements,
ie
a
lease,
an
option
and
an
agreement
for
sale,
because
his
obligations
thereunder
could
be
transferred
readily
and
the
option
sold.
At
the
expiration
of
his
teaching
contract
with
the
University
on
June
30,
1969,
the
appellant
did
not
renew
it.
He
was
dissatisfied
with
the
changes
wrought
over
the
two-year
period.
In
his
view
the
enrolment
had
become
too
great
for
satisfactory
teaching.
He
had
become
disillusioned
and
no
longer
wished
to
teach
under
those
conditions.
The
appellant
decided
to
continue
in
two
part-time
posts
in
Edmonton.
He
was
employed
as
a
consulting
psychologist
in
a
private
clinic,
The
Cold
Mountain
Institute,
and
conducted
seminars
in
human
relations.
From
July
18,
1967
until
he
left
Canada
on
March
9,
1970
he
did
not
return
to
the
United
States
except
to
attend
professional
conventions
and
in
the
fall
of
1969
for
an
interview
about
prospective
employment
in
the
State
of
Alaska.
He
received
an
offer
of
employment
in
January
1970
as
a
result
of
that
interview
which
he
accepted
and
left
Canada
in
March
1970.
To
recapitulate
the
salient
facts
in
summary
form,
the
appellant
was
a
professor,
he
was
a
resident
of
the
United
States
on
July
18,
1967
on
which
date
he
came
to
Canada
to
teach
at
the
University
of
Alberta.
He
taught
at
that
University
for
a
period
of
two
years
ending
June
30,
1969.
From
June
30,
1969
to
March
9,
1970,
a
period
of
slightly
more
than
eight
months,
he
remained
in
Canada
and
engaged
in
employment,
other
than
teaching,
for
which
he
received
remuneration.
While
the
appellant
was
engaged
in
teaching
at
the
University
of
Alberta
in
the
years
1967
and
1968
the
administrative
officer
in
charge
of
payroll
operations
deducted
income
tax
and
payments
to
the
Canada
Pension
Plan,
remitted
the
amounts
so
deducted
to
the
Minister
of
National
Revenue
and
issued
T4
slips
therefor.
During
the
months
of
July
to
December
1967
a
total
of
$1,804.33
was
deducted
from
the
salary
of
the
appellant
for
income
tax
together
with
a
total
of
$79.20
as
Canada
Pension
Plan
payments,
making
a
total
deduction
of
$1,884.03
for
the
1967
year.
During
the
year
1968
income
tax
deductions
from
the
appellant’s
salary
totalled
$3,819.54
and
Canada
Pension
Plan
deductions
totalled
$81,
making
a
total
of
$3,900.54.
I
might
also
add
that
deductions
were
also
made
from
the
appellant’s
salary
in
these
two
years
for
contributions
to
a
University
Pension
Plan.
The
bursar’s
office,
particularly
the
administrative
officer
in
charge
of
payroll
operations,
was
not
aware
of
the
Canada-US
Reciprocal
Tax
Convention
and
did
not
become
aware
of
it
until
the
matter
was
brought
to
the
attention
of
the
office
in
June
1968.
In
that
month
the
Department
of
National
Revenue,
Taxation
Division
supplied
copies
of
Information
Bulletin
No
41,
dated
May
21,
1968
and
published
in
the
Canada
Gazette
of
June
1,
1968,
the
subject
of
which
bulletin
is
the
exemption
from
income
tax
in
Canada
of
professors
and
teachers
from
other
countries.
it
is
now
the
practice
of
that
office
to
obtain
from
a
visiting
professor
a
statement
of
exemption
stating
(1)
the
name
of
his
home
country,
(2)
the
date
he
entered
Canada,
(3)
that
he
came
to
Canada
for
the
express
purpose
of
teaching
in
this
country,
(4)
that
his
intention
is
to
leave
Canada
within
24
consecutive
months
from
the
date
of
his
entry
and
(5)
that
he
has
not
been
allowed
a
tax
exemption
in
respect
of
teaching
income
earned
in
Canada
for
any
period
prior
to
the
date
of
entry
indicated.
This
statement
of
exemption
was
drafted
and
designed
in
accordance
with
the
instructions
in
Bulletin
No
41.
The
appellant
did
not
complete
such
a
statement
at
any
time
for
the
very
obvious
reason
that
neither
the
bursar’s
office,
nor
the
appellant
were
aware
of
the
tax
treaty
or
Bulletin
No
41
until
June
1968
and
the
spring
of
1969
or
possibly
the
summer
of
1968
respectively.
The
appellant
did
file
tax
returns
with
the
appropriate
authority
of
the
United
States
in
which
he
claimed
“non-resident”
status.
He
has
paid
no
income
tax
to
the
United
States
on
the
income
earned
in
Canada.
The
appellant
did
not
file
income
tax
returns
in
Canada
for
the
1967
and
1968
taxation
years
until
March
1970.
Apparently
the
appellant
filed
two
tax
returns
for
each
taxation
year.
The
returns
which
bear
the
latter
date
do
not
claim
tax
exemption
under
the
tax
treaty
but
the
returns
which
bear
the
earlier
date
do.
I
do
not
attach
significance
to
this
added
confusion
because
by
Notices
of
Assessment
dated
April
14,
1970
and
April
16,
1970,
the
Minister
advised
the
appellant
that
he
did
not
qualify
for
tax
exemption
“under
Article
8A
of
the
Income
Tax
Act
[sic]”
and
that
he
was
being
assessed
accordingly.
I
might
also
add
that
while
the
appellant
claimed
tax
exemption
for
all
teaching
income
earned
in
Canada
in
1967
he
only
claimed
exemption
on
the
teaching
income
earned
by
him
to
June
30
in
the
year
1968.
The
appellant
forthwith
filed
Notices
of
Objection.
The
Minister
notified
the
appellant
that
he
had
been
properly
assessed
under
subsection
5(1)
of
the
Act
and
that
the
provisions
of
Article
VIIIA
of
the
tax
convention
are
not
applicable.
Hence
the
present
appeals.
Counsel
for
the
appellant
submitted
that
a
treaty
must
be
interpreted
so
as
to
give
effect
to
the
rule
of
effectiveness
and
the
rule
of
liberal
interpretation.
I
fail
to
follow
how
the
rule
of
effectiveness
can
mean
any
more
than
the
obvious
duty
of
the
Court
to
give
effect
to
the
treaty.
That
duty
is,
as
I
conceive
it,
to
ascertain
and
give
effect
to
the
intention
of
the
contracting
states
as
expressed
in
the
words
used
by
them.
Similarly
I
find
little
help
in
the
statement
that
a
treaty
shall
receive
a
liberal
or
extensive
construction
rather
than
a
strict
one.
The
consensus
of
all
writers
is
that
treaties
are
to
be
construed
in
the
most
liberal
spirit
provided
however
that
the
sense
is
not
wrested
from
its
plain
and
obvious
meaning.
In
my
view
the
duty
of
the
Court
is
to
construe
a
treaty
as
it
would
construe
any
other
instrument
public
or
private,
that
is
to
ascertain
the
true
intent
and
meaning
of
the
contracting
states
collected
from
the
nature
of
the
subject
matter
and
from
the
words
employed
by
them
in
their
context.
In
this
I
am
assisted
by
the
preamble
of
this
particular
treaty
which
states
that
two
of
the
overall
aims
are
the
avoidance
of
double
taxation
and
the
prevention
of
fiscal
evasion
in
the
case
of
income
tax.
The
clear
and
unambiguous
language
of
subsections
(1)
and
(2)
of
section
2
of
the
Income
Tax
Act
imposes
a
tax
on
the
appellant,
were
it
not
for
Article
VIIIA.
Subsection
(1)
imposes
a
tax
on
every
person
resident
in
Canada
at
any
time
in
the
taxation
year
and
subsection
(2)
imposes
a
tax
on
a
person
not
resident
in
Canada
on
income
earned
in
Canada.
Accordingly
for
the
appellant
to
be
exempt
he
must
bring
himself
precisely
within
the
four
corners
of
Article
VIIIA.
The
avowed
purpose
of
Article
VIIIA
in
so
far
as
it
concerns
the
present
appellant
is
to
ensure
relief
from
double
taxation.
The
appellant
has
not
been
subjected
to
tax
in
the
United
States
on
the
remuneration
earned
by
him
for
teaching
in
Canada.
The
appellant
has
filed
returns
in
the
United
States
on
the
basis
that
he
was
a
non-resident
of
the
United
States.
The
revenue
authorities
of
that
state
have
categorized
the
appellant
as
a
non-resident
and
he
was
accordingly
informed
that
no
tax
was
due
to
that
jurisdiction
on
the
money
earned
by
him
in
Canada.
This
being
so
I
fail
to
appreciate
how
the
appellant
falls
within
the
general
objective
of
the
treaty
which
is
to
avoid
double
taxation.
The
appellant
has
not,
as
yet,
been
subjected
to
double
taxation
but
there
remains
the
possibility
that
he
might
be
subjected
to
tax
in
that
jurisdiction
as
well.
Article
XVI
of
the
Convention
provides
that
where
a
taxpayer
shows
proof
that
the
action
of
the
revenue
authorities
of
one
of
the
contracting
States
has
resulted
in
double
taxation,
then
the
taxpayer
is
entitled
to
lodge
a
claim
with
the
State
of
which
he
is
a
citizen
or
resident.
The
competent
authority
of
that
State
will
then
consult
with
the
corresponding
authority
of
the
other
State
to
determine
if
the
double
taxation
may
be
avoided.
In
the
present
instance
the
appellant
cannot
resort
to
this
procedure
because
he
has
paid
no
taxes
in
the
United
States
on
his
teaching
remuneration
earned
in
Canada,
nor
has
the
United
States
sought
to
impose
a
tax
on
that
amount
as
yet.
Therefore
the
condition
precedent
to
the
appellant
invoking
a
determination
of
the
avoidance
of
double
taxation
does
not
exist
because
as
yet
there
is
no
double
taxation.
It
therefore
follows
that
I
am
obliged
to
determine
if
the
appellant
is
exigible
to
tax
in
Canada
and
to
do
so
I
must
determine
if
the
appellant
falls
within
the
exemption
contemplated
by
the
language
employed
by
the
contracting
parties
in
Article
VIIIA.
It
was
the
further
submission
on
behalf
of
the
appellant
that
the
Minister
is
estopped
from
taxing
the
appellant.
This
contention
is
based
upon
Information
Bulletin
No
41
issued
by
the
Minister,
particularly
the
text
appearing
under
the
heading
“Transitional
Rules”.
This
is
to
the
effect
that
where
a
teacher
remains
in
Canada
after
the
expiration
of
a
24-month
period
from
the
date
of
his
arrival
in
Canada
he
will
be
subject
to
tax
and
to
making
Canada
Pension
Plan
payments
“only
to
the
extent
that
such
income
was
earned
after
the
end
of
the
month
in
which
the
24-month
period
expired”.
The
effect
of
this
language
in
Information
Bulletin
No
41
is
that
a
teacher
could
come
to
Canada
and
teach
for
two
years
during
which
his
remuneration
would
be
tax
exempt
under
Article
VIIIA,
but
if
that
teacher
should
remain
in
Canada
to
teach
for
a
period
in
excess
of
two
years
then
the
remuneration
earned
during
the
first
two
years
would
continue
to
remain
tax
exempt
but
the
remuneration
earned
by
him
in
the
third
and
subsequent
years
will
be
subject
to
tax.
It
is
the
contention
on
behalf
of
the
Minister
that,
in
order
for
the
appellant
to
qualify
for
exemption
under
Article
VIIIA,
the
term
of
his
visit
to
Canada
must
not
endure
beyond
two
years
and
the
visit
must
be
exclusively
for
the
purpose
of
teaching.
The
position
taken
by
counsel
for
the
appellant
is
that
the
Minister
is
precluded
from
taking
such
stand
in
the
face
of
the
express
statements
made
in
the
Information
Bulletin.
In
support
of
his
position
counsel
relies
on
the
decision
of
the
Tax
Appeal
Board
in
D
G
W
Smith
v
MNR,
[1970]
Tax
ABC
938:
70
DTC
1594,
and
the
decision
of
the
Tax
Review
Board
in
G
L
Bowen
v
MNR,
[1972]
CTC
2174;
72
DTC
1161,
dated
February
3,
1972.
In
Smith
v
MNR
the
appellant
who
was
a
professor
came
to
Canada
on
September
9,
1966
with
his
family
for
the
purpose
of
teaching
at
the
University
of
Alberta.
His
teaching
contract
was
for
a
period
of
four
years
but
evidence
was
adduced
and
accepted
by
the
Board
that
this
was
in
error
and
the
contract
was
in
fact
for
two
years
only.
Before
the
end
of
the
two
year
period
(ie
September
1968)
the
appellant’s
family
returned
to
England
in
May
1968.
On
June
18,
1968
an
offer
of
renewal
of
his
teaching
contract
for
a
further
two
years
was
made
to
the
appellant
under
more
advantageous
conditions.
In
July
1968
the
appellant
went
to
England
to
persuade
his
wife
to
return
to
Alberta
for
a
further
two
years.
The
appellant,
accompanied
by
his
family,
returned
to
Canada
in
September
1968
to
continue
teaching
for
a
further
two
years
(a
total
of
four
years).
The
Board
allowed
the
appeal
on
acceptance
of
the
fact
that
it
was
the
appellant’s
intention
to
teach
in
Canada
for
no
more
than
two
years.
Obviously
the
Board
based
its
decision
on
the
appellant’s
intention.
If
the
ratio
of
this
decision
is,
as
it
appears
to
be,
that
the
professor’s
intention
to
teach
in
Canada
for
not
more
than
two
years
is
the
determining
factor,
then
I
am
forced
to
the
conclusion
that
the
Smith
case
(supra)
was
wrongly
decided.
In
my
view,
the
intention
of
a
professor
or
teacher
when
he
enters
Canada
has
no
relevance
in
the
interpretation
and
application
of
the
pertinent
articles
of
the
Treaty.
In
Bowen
v
MNR
(supra)
the
appellant
was
an
exchange
teacher
from
New
Zealand
who
taught
in
Canada
for
two
years.
At
the
end
of
that
period
the
appellant
had
made
all
necessary
arrangements
to
return
to
New
Zealand.
However,
prior
to
that
time
the
appellant
learned
of
an
excursion
flight
to
Europe
where
the
appellant
had
relatives,
but
to
take
advantage
of
that
flight,
the
appellant
would
be
obliged
to
teach
for
a
further
10
months
beyond
the
two-year
period.
He
therefore
enquired
of
the
district
tax
office
and
was
informed,
in
accordance
with
the
terms
of
Information
Bulletin
No
41,
that
the
policy
of
the
Department
was
that
where
a
teacher
remained
in
Canada
subsequent
to
the
expiration
of
the
24-month
period
the
teacher
would
not
be
subject
to
income
tax
and
Canada
Pension
Plans
on
the
income
which
had
been
exempt
in
the
original
two
years.
On
the
strength
of
this
representation
the
appellant
stayed
on
in
his
teaching
post
beyond
the
two-year
period.
He
was
assessed
to
income
tax
for
the
prior
two-year
period
on
the
ground
that
Article
X
of
the
Canada-New
Zealand
Tax
Agreement
did
not
apply.
The
effect
of
Article
X
is
similar
to
that
of
Article
VIIIA
of
the
Canada-US
Treaty,
although
the
language
differs
substantially.
The
learned
member
of
the
Tax
Review
Board
stated
at
page
2182
[1165
I:
.
.
.
I
have
come
firmly
to
the
conclusion
that
it
is
not
now
open
to
the
Minister
to
plead
Article
X
of
the
Schedule
to
the
Canada-New
Zealand
Income
Tax
Agreement
to
the
exclusion
of
and
without
having
due
regard
to
Information
Bulletin
No
41
which
undoubtedly
supports
the
appellant’s
position
herein.
.
.
.
There
is
no
question
that
the
appellant
acted
upon
the
representation
contained
in
Information
Bulletin
No
41
and
more
particularly
on
the
letter
from
the
District
Taxation
office,
by
altering
his
plans
and
thereby
his
position
leaving
himself
vulnerable
to
the
assessments
to
income
tax
imposed
by
the
Minister.
With
due
respect
to
the
learned
member
of
the
Tax
Review
Board
I
cannot
accept
his
statement
because,
in
my
view,
it
is
contrary
to
well
established
principles.
First
Information
Bulletin
No
41
is
precisely
what
it
is
stated
to
be,
and
that
is
an
information
bulletin
issued
by
the
Deputy
Minister
of
the
Department
of
National
Revenue.
The
Deputy
Minister
does
not
have
the
power
to
legislate
on
this
subject
matter
delegated
to
him.
In
reality,
this
information
bulletin
is
nothing
more
than
the
Department’s
interpretation
of
Article
VIIIA
of
the
Treaty
for
departmental
purposes.
It
is
also,
in
effect,
a
direction
to
employers
of
professors
and
teachers
from
other
countries
who
are
expected
to
work
in
Canada
at
the
employer’s
institution
for
a
period
of
two
years
or
less
to
refrain
from
making
deductions
from
the
employee’s
remuneration
for
teaching
for
income
tax
and
pension
plan
and
remitting
these
deductions
to
the
Department.
Information
Bulletin
No
41
is
not
a
statute.
On
the
other
hand,
the
Canada-US
Reciprocal
Tax
Convention
was
by
statute
approved
and
declared
to
have
the
force
of
law
in
Canada.
It
is
therefore
the
domestic
law
of
the
land.
The
position
taken
by
counsel
for
the
appellant
to
the
effect
that
the
Minister
is
precluded
from
relying
on
the
language
of
Article
VIIIA
of
the
convention
to
the
exclusion
of
and
without
having
regard
to
the
interpretation
implicit
in
Information
Bulletin
No
41
is
an
invocation
of
the
doctrine
of
estoppel.
In
Woon
v
MNR,
[1951]
Ex
CR
18;
[1950]
CTC
263;
4
DTC
871,
one
of
the
grounds
of
appeal
was
that
the
Commissioner
had
given
a
“ruling”
that
if
the
appellant
followed
a
certain
procedure
tax
would
be
imposed
under
a
particular
section
of
the
Income
War
Tax
Act.
That
procedure
was
followed
but
the
Minister
assessed
the
appellant
to
a
much
greater
tax
under
another
section
of
the
Act
which
was
applicable.
It
was
argued
that
the
Minister
was
precluded
from
alleging
that
the
particular
section
under
which
the
assessment
was
made
was
applicable
because
of
the
prior
ruling
of
the
Commissioner.
Mr
Justice
Cameron,
after
a
detailed
and
analytical
review
of
the
leading
authorities,
held
that
the
Commissioner
had
no
power
to
bind
the
Minister
by
a
ruling
limiting
tax
action
other
than
in
accordance
with
the
statute;
that
the
assessment
must
be
made
pursuant
to
the
terms
of
the
statute
and
it
is
not
open
to
the
appellant
to
set
up
an
estoppel
to
prevent
the
operation
of
the
statute.
In
MNR
v
Inland
Industries
Limited,
[1972]
CTC
27;
72
DTC
6013,
the
respondent
sought
to
deduct
contributions
made
to
pension
plans
in
computing
its
income.
The
plans
had
been
submitted
to
the
department,
and
were
approved
and
registered
by
it.
Further,
the
respondent
was
advised
by
the
Minister
that
contributions
made
to
the
plans
with
respect
to
past
services
of
the
employees
would
be
deductible.
Mr
Justice
Pigeon,
in
delivering
the
unanimous
judgment
of
the
Supreme
Court
of
Canada,
held
that
it
was
an
express
requirement
of
the
pertinent
section
of
the
Income
Tax
Act
that
there
must
be
an
obligation
of
the
plan
to
its
employees.
To
preclude
the
Minister
from
contending
and
establishing
that
such
an
obligation
of
the
plan
to
its
employees
did
not
exist
would
nullify
the
provisions
of
the
Act.
He
added
that
the
approval
of
the
Minister
was
not
decisive
of
the
existence
of
the
statutory
condition
precedent
to
approval
of
the
plan.
He
effectively
disposed
of
any
question
of
an
estoppel
arising
by
stating
at
p
31
[6017]:
However
it
seems
clear
to
me
that
the
Minister
cannot
be
bound
by
any
approval
given
when
the
conditions
prescribed
by
law
were
not
met.
It
therefore
follows
that
if
approval
and
registration
given
by
the
Minister
to
a
pension
plan
does
not
give
rise
to
estoppel
then
a
fortiori
an
information
bulletin
cannot
either.
In
short,
estoppel
is
subject
to
the
one
general
rule
that
it
cannot
override
the
law
of
the
land.
Therefore,
the
Minister
is
not
precluded
from
relying
on
Article
VIHA
to
the
exclusion
of
the
information
bulletin.
Accordingly,
I
reiterate
that
the
question
to
be
determined
is
whether
the
appellant
herein
falls
within
the
exemption
contemplated
by
the
language
of
Article
VIIIA.
The
argument
advanced
on
behalf
of
the
Minister
was
that
in
order
for
the
appellant
to
be
eligible
for
exemption
by
virtue
of
Article
VIIIA
of
the
tax
convention
he
must
comply
with
the
conditions
set
out
immediately
below:
(1)
He
must
have
been
a
resident
of
the
United
States
at
the
time
of
entering
Canada.
In
this
respect
Article
VIIIA
is
abundantly
clear.
The
language
is
“A
professor
who
is
a
resident
of
one
of
the
Contracting
States”.
The
evidence
established
beyond
doubt
that
the
appellant
was
a
professor
and
on
the
date
he
entered
Canada
he
was
a
resident
of
the
United
States.
(2)
He
must
retain
his
status
as
a
resident
of
the
United
States
throughout
the
period
of
his
temporary
visit
to
Canada.
That
is
if
the
appellant
meets
the
first
qualification
above
enumerated
that
he
continues
to
be
a
resident
of
the
United
States
upon
his
entry
to
Canada
but
subsequently
during
the
prescribed
period
of
two
years,
ceases
to
be
a
resident
of
the
United
States
then
the
appellant
loses
any
right
or
privilege
that
he
may
otherwise
have
had
to
exemption
from
taxation
in
Canada
by
virtue
of
the
tax
convention.
!t
was
the
further
submission
on
behalf
of
the
Minister
that
on
the
basis
of
the
objective
criteria
discussed
in
P
W
Thomson
v
MNR,
[1946]
SCR
209;
[1946]
CTC
51;
2
DTC
812
and
in
Beament
v
MNR,
[1952]
SCR
486;
[1952]
CTC
327;
52
DTC
1183
to
determine
if
the
respective
appellants
in
those
cases
fell
within
the
meaning
of
the
words,
“residing”,
“resident”
and
“ordinarily
resident”
as
used
in
the
pertinent
sections
of
the
Income
Tax
Act
there
under
review,
it
should
be
found
as
a
fact
that
the
appellant
herein
had
ceased
to
be
a
resident
of
the
United
States.
As
Mr
Justice
Cartwright
(as
he
then
was)
pointed
out
in
the
Beament
case
(supra),
the
decision
as
to
the
place
or
places
in
which
a
person
is
resident
must
turn
on
the
facts
of
the
particular
case.
(3)
The
period
of
the
appellant’s
“temporary
visit”
must
not
exceed
two
years
and
the
temporary
visit
must
be
exclusively
for
teaching,
in
the
appellant’s
case,
at
a
University.
I
propose
to
consider
the
submissions
on
behalf
of
the
Minister
in
the
reverse
order
to
which
they
were
presented
and
accordingly
I
turn
to
the
third
submission.
The
key
words,
which
I
have
emphasized,
of
Article
VIIIA
are
a
professor
who
is
resident
of
one
of
the
contracting
states
“and
who
temporarily
visits
the
other
contracting
State
for
the
purpose
of
teaching,
for
a
period
not
exceeding
two
years,”
at
a
university
shall
be
exempted
by
the
State
which
he
visits
from
tax
on
the
remuneration
for
teaching
for
such
period.
The
introduction
of
commas
before
and
after
the
phrase
“for
a
period
not
exceeding
two
years”
is
a
circumstance
of
importance.
The
phrase
modifies
the
language
which
precedes
it
and
is
not
limited
to
a
modification
of
the
words
“for
the
purpose
of
teaching”.
The
phrase
also
modifies
the
words
“temporarily
visits”.
This
being
so,
it
follows
that
the
temporary
visit
is
limited
to
a
“period
not
exceeding
two
years”.
If
the
phrase
“for
a
period
of
two
years”
were
restricted
to
a
modification
of
the
phrase
“for
the
purpose
of
teaching”,
which
might
be
the
case
but
for
the
insertion
of
the
commas,
then
the
word
“temporarily”
would
be
redundant
and
should
be
given
no
meaning.
However,
it
is
a
cardinal
rule
of
interpretation
that
every
word
used
must
be
given
a
meaning
where
possible.
Had
the
language
been
“visits
for
the
purpose
of
temporarily
teaching”,
then
the
duration
of
the
visit
would
not
be
specifically
limited.
But
such
is
not
the
case.
The
word
“temporarily”
is
introduced
before
the
word
“visits”
and
modifies
that
word.
The
words
“temporarily
visits”
are
modified
by
the
words
“for
a
period
not
exceeding
two
years”.
Therefore,
the
temporary
visit
cannot
endure
beyond
two
years
in
order
for
the
exemption
to
apply.
Then
there
is
the
further
qualification
that
the
nature
or
character
of
the
visit
must
be
“for
the
purpose
of
teaching”.
It
follows
that
in
order
to
qualify
for
exemption
by
virtue
of
Article
VIIIA
a
professor
or
teacher
who
is
resident
of
one
of
the
contracting
states
to
the
convention
must
meet
a
two-fold
test:
(1)
the
duration
of
the
temporary
visit
must
not
be
in
excess
of
two
years;
and
(2)
the
visit
must
be
for
the
purpose
of
teaching.
If
a
professor
or
teacher
fails
in
either
aspect,
then
he
is
not
within
the
exemption
contemplated
by
Article
VIIIA.
The
undisputed
facts
in
the
present
appeals
are
that
the
appellant
came
to
Canada
for
the
purpose
of
teaching
and
accordingly
meets
one
of
the
two
tests.
He
taught
for
a
period
of
two
years
but
he
extended
his
visit
beyond
that
period,
and
earned
income
from
employment
other
than
teaching,
so
that
he
failed
in
the
second
aspect
of
the
two-fold
test
above
propounded
in
that
his
visit
was
in
excess
of
two
years.
In
view
of
this
conclusion,
it
is
unnecessary
for
me
to
consider
the
other
argument
advanced
on
behalf
of
the
Minister
that
the
appellant
must
retain
his
status
as
a
resident
of
the
United
States
throughout
the
period
of
his
temporary
visit
to
Canada
and
that,
on
the
Minister’s
submission,
the
appellant
had
not
done
so.
For
the
foregoing
reasons,
the
appeals
are
dismissed
with
costs.
GIBSON
BROS
INDUSTRIES
LIMITED,
Appellant,
and
MINISTER
OF
NATIONAL
REVENUE,
Respondent.
Federal
Court—Trial
Division
(Walsh,
J),
April
19,
1972,
on
appeal
from
assessments
of
the
Minister
of
National
Revenue.
Income
tax—Federal—Income
Tax
Act,
RSC
1952,
c
148—12(1)(h),
20(6)(g),
Two
issues
were
before
the
Court:
(1)
the
effect
of
transactions
whereby
the
appellant
transferred
its
assets
to
a
new
company
formed
to
receive
them,
followed
by
the
sale
of
the
new
company’s
shares,
and
(2)
the
computation
of
personal
expenses
to
be
disallowed
in
connection
with
the
use
of
a
vessel
owned
by
the
appellant.
The
appellant
was
a
logging
company
whose
contract
to
supply
logs
in
a
certain
area
expired
in
1960.
Prior
to
this
date
negotiations
between
the
appellant
and
its
principal
led
to
an
agreement
whereby
the
appellant
caused
a
new
company
to
be
formed
to
receive
its
assets
at
book
values
and
then
sold
the
shares
in
the
new
company
to
its
principal.
In
the
Minister’s
view
the
new
company
was
at
all
material
times
a
simulacrum,
cloak,
alias
or
alter
ego
of
the
appellant
or,
in
the
alternative,
an
agent
of
either
or
both
the
appellant
and
its
principal.
On
this
footing
the
Minister
imputed
part
of
the
appellant’s
profit
on
the
sale
of
the
shares
to
proceeds
of
disposition
of
the
depreciable
property,
so
as
to
effect
a
recapture
of
capital
cost
allowance
of
$109,557.
In
the
alternative,
the
Minister
contended
that
the
overall
profit
on
the
sale
of
the
shares,
amounting
to
$141,570,
arose
from
an
adventure
in
the
nature
of
trade
within
paragraph
139(1)(e)
or
that
a
taxable
benefit
of
$109,557
was
conferred
on
the
appellant
within
subsection
137(2).
On
the
second
issue,
the
appellant
owned
a
vessel
that
was
used
in
part
to
earn
income
(by
charter)
and
in
part
for
the
personal
use
of
its
shareholders.
It
was
conceded
that
some
disallowance
should
be
made
of
expenses
imputable
to
the
personal
use
of
the
vessel
and
the
appellant
sought
to
compute
such
part
as
a
portion
of
only
the
variable
expenses
whereas
the
Minister
sought
to
apportion
the
total
expenses,
including
capital
cost
allowance.
HELD:
The
Minister’s
view
of
the
appellant’s
subsidiary
as
being
a
simulacrum,
cloak,
alter
ego
or
agent,
etc
was
correct
and
the
appellant’s
appeal
in
this
respect
therefore
failed
(making
it
unnecessary
to
consider
the
Minister’s
alternative
arguments).
On
the
second
point
it
seemed
proper
to
apportion
the
total
expenses
relevant
to
the
vessel,
including
capital
cost
allowance,
and
the
Minister’s
computation
of
the
disallowance
was
therefore
correct.
Appeal
dismissed.
Heward
Stikeman,
QC
and
D
G
H
Bowman
for
the
Appellant.
F
J
Dubrule,
QC
for
the
Respondent.
CASES
REFERRED
TO:
Sazio
v
MNR,
[1968]
CTC
579;
69
DTC
5001
;
Claude
Belle-Isle
v
MNR,
[1964]
CTC
40;
64
DTC
5041;
[1966]
CTC
85;
66
DTC
5100
(Can
SC);
Cumming
v
MNR,
[1967]
CTC
462;
67
DTC
5312.
Walsh,
J:—This
is
an
appeal
from
income
tax
assessments
dated
January
30,
1964
and
March
21,
1967
for
appellant’s
1961
taxation
year.
There
are
two
distinct
issues
involved
in
the
appeal,
the
first
arising
out
of
the
manner
in
which
appellant
disposed
of
certain
of
its
assets
in
connection
with
its
Jeune
Landing
lumbering
operations
on
Northern
Vancouver
Island,
and
the
second
with
the
manner
in
which
it
apportioned
the
expenses
arising
out
of
the
operation
of
the
vessel
"Norsal"
used
by
it
partially
for
business
purposes
and
partially
for
personal
use
by
its
shareholders.
The
facts
relating
to
the
first
of
these
issues
are
set
out
in
paragraphs
1
to
10
of
appellant’s
Notice
of
Appeal,
which
read
as
follows:
1.
The
Appellant
was
incorporated
under
the
laws
of
British
Columbia
and
carried
on,
at
all
material
times,
a
business
of
logging.
2.
Since
1946,
the
Appellant
and
its
predecessors
logged
under
agreements
with
Rayonier
Canada
Limited
certain
areas
near
Jeune
Landing
on
Northern
Vancouver
Island
in
the
Province
of
British
Columbia.
3.
In
anticipation
of
the
termination
of
the
logging
agreements
referred
to
in
paragraph
2
hereof,
and
under
an
agreement
made
as
of
the
15th
day
of
December,
1959,
the
Appellant
agreed
with
Rayonier
Canada
Limited
to
cause
a
new
company
to
be
incorporated
as
a
wholly-owned
subsidiary
and
to
sell
to
the
said
new
company
all
land,
timber,
camp
buildings,
equipment,
machinery
and
other
goods
and
property
forming
part
of,
or
used
in
connection
with
the
carrying
out
of
the
said
logging
agreements
with
Rayonier
Canada
Limited,
the
latter
agreeing
that
it
or
its
nominee
would
purchase
al!
of
the
shares
in
the
capital
stock
of
the
said
new
company
and
any
debt
of
the
new
company
to
the
Appellant.
4.
Pursuant
to
the
agreement,
to
which
reference
is
made
in
paragraph
3
hereof,
the
Appellant
caused
a
new
company
called
Quatsino
Logging
Ltd
to
be
incorporated
and
on
or
about
the
30th
day
of
June,
1960,
subscribed
for
and
paid
for
in
cash
at
$1.00
per
share
ten
fully
paid
up
shares
in
the
capital
stock
of
Quatsino
Logging
Ltd.
5.
On
or
about
the
30th
day
of
June,
1960,
the
Appellant
sold
to
Quatsino
Logging
Ltd
the
property
and
assets
to
which
reference
is
made
in
paragraph
3
hereof
for
the
sum
of
$84,212.75,
being
$26,212.75
for
the
land
and
$58,000.00
for
the
remaining
assets,
and
caused
Consolidated
Forest
Products
Ltd
to
sell
to
Quatsino
Logging
Ltd
a
truck
and
trailer
for
the
sum
of
$32,000.00.
6.
On
or
about
the
1st
day
of
August,
1960,
Consolidated
Forest
Products
Limited
assigned
to
the
Appellant
all
of
its
right,
title
and
interest
in
the
sum
of
$32,000.00
owed
to
it
by
Quatsino
Logging
Ltd.
7.
On
or
about
the
1st
day
of
August,
1960,
the
Appellant
sold
at
face
value
to
Rayonier
BC
Limited,
nominee
for
Rayonier
Canada
Limited,
the
sum
of
$116,212.75
owed
to
it
by
Quatsino
Logging
Ltd
(being
the
aggregate
of
the
sums
of
$26,212.75,
$58,000.00
and
$32,000.00
referred
to
in
paragraphs
5
and
6
hereof).
8.
On
or
about
the
1st
day
of
August,
1960,
the
Appellant
sold
all
of
its
shares
in
the
capital
stock
of
Quatsino
Logging
Ltd
to
Rayonier
BC
Limited,
nominee
for
Rayonier
Canada
Limited,
for
the
sum
of
$141,579.99.
9.
The
sale
price
of
the
depreciable
assets
(the
sum
of
$58,000.00
referred
to
in
paragraph
5
hereof)
sold
by
the
Appellant
to
its
wholly-owned
subsidiary,
Quatsino
Logging
Ltd,
was
approximately
equal
to
their
undepreciated
capital
cost.
10.
The
Respondent
considered
that
the
sale
of
the
depreciable
assets
owned
by
the
Appellant,
to
which
reference
is
made
in
paragraph
5
hereof,
was
not
made
for
the
sum
of
$58,000.00
but
for
the
sum
of
$199,787.25.
In
assessing
the
Appellant
for
the
taxation
year
1961,
the
Respondent
included
in
the
income
of
the
Appellant
an
amount
of
$109,557.54
as
recapture
of
the
depreciation
of
property
forming
part
of
certain
prescribed
classes
where
a
credit
existed
in
the
asset
pool
as
at
the
end
of
the
Appellant’s
taxation
year
1961,
and
also
reduced
the
undepreciated
capital
cost
of
other
prescribed
classes
by
an
amount
of
$90,229.71.
Respondent
admits
paragraphs
1
to
6
inclusive
and
paragraph
10
but
does
not
admit
paragraphs
7,
8
and
9.
Respondent
states
that
in
assessing
the
appellant
with
respect
to
the
sale
of
the
assets
he
assumed
that:
(a)
The
Appellant
or
its
agents
agreed
with
Rayonier
Canada
Limited
or
its
agents
to
sell
to
the
latter
all
lands,
timber,
camp
buildings,
equipment,
machinery,
and
other
goods
and
property,
including
depreciable
property,
with
the
exception
of
certain
inventories,
forming
part
of
or
used
in
connection
with
the
Jeune
Landing
Logging
Camp
and
operations
of
the
Appellant
or
W
F
Gibson
&
Sons
Ltd,
all
as
more
particularly
set
out
in
the
appraisal
thereof
made
in
August
1959
by
Universal
Appraisal
Co
Ltd
(hereinafter
referred
to
as
“the
Jeune
Landing
assets”),
for
and
in
consideration
of
the
sum
of
$272,000.00
which
Rayonier
Canada
Limited
undertook
to
pay;
(b)
It
was
agreed
between
the
parties
as
evidenced
by
an
agreement
between
Gibson
Bros
Industries
Ltd,
W
F
Gibson
&
Sons
Ltd,
Albert
Earson
Gibson,
James
Gordon
Gibson,
John
Lambert
Gibson
and
William
Clarke
Gibson,
and
Rayonier
Canada
Limited
dated
the
15th
day
of
December
1959
and
executed
the
30th
day
of
June,
1960,
that
the
said
sale
of
the
Jeune
Landing
Assets
would
be
completed
in
accordance
with
the
terms
of
that
agreement
and
more
particularly
but
without
restricting
the
generality
of
the
foregoing:
(i)
by
the
Appellant
causing
a
new
company
(ultimately
known
as
Quat-
sino
Logging
Limited
and
hereinafter
referred
to
as
‘‘Quatsino’’)
to
be
incorporated
as
a
wholly-owned
subsidiary
of
the
Appellant;
(ii)
by
transferring
the
Jeune
Landing
assets
to
Quatsino
for
not
less
than
$90,000.00;
(iii)
by
Rayonier
then
purchasing
the
shares
of
the
Appellant
in
Quatsino
for
the
sum
of
$272,000.00;
(c)
Pursuant
to
the
said
agreement:
(i)
Quatsino
was
incorporated
on
the
30th
day
of
June
1960
as
a
wholly-
owned
subsidiary
of
the
Appellant;
(ii)
On
or
about
the
30th
day
of
June
1960
the
Jeune
Landing
assets
were
transferred
by
the
Appellant
to
Quatsino
for
the
sum
of
$116,430.00
being
$90,000.00
for
depreciable
assets
of
certain
prescribed
classes
of
the
Income
Tax
Regulations,
$217.25
for
incorporation
costs,
and
$26,212.75
for
land
and
timber.
On
transfer,
an
account
payable
in
the
said
sum
of
$116,430.00
was
entered
on
the
books
of
account
of
Quatsino
in
favour
of
the
Appellant;
(iii)
On
the
first
of
August
1960,
the
Appellant
transferred
its
shares
in
Quatsino
to
Rayonier
Canada
Limited
and
received
therefor
the
sum
of
$272,000.00
in
money
or
money’s
worth;
(iv)
Thereafter
the
Jeune
Landing
assets
were
transferred
by
Quatsino
to
Rayonier
at
the
former’s
cost.
(d)
Quatsino
was,
at
all
material
times,
a
simulacrum,
cloak,
alias
or
alter
ego
of
the
Appellant
or
in
the
alternative,
at
all
material
times
was
the
agent
of
either
or
both
of
the
Appellant
or
Rayonier
Canada
Limited.
Respondent
states
that
of
the
purchase
price
of
$272,000
the
sum
of
$199,787.25
was
received
by
the
appellant
for
the
sale
of
depreciable
property
of
certain
classes,
and
after
giving
details
of
the
distribution
of
this
among
the
various
classes
and
of
the
undepreciated
capital
cost
of
appellant’s
assets
in
these
classes
prior
to
the
distribution,
concludes
that
the
proceeds
of
distribution
of
the
property
of
Classes
6,
9
and
10,
exceeded
the
undepreciated
capital
cost
to
the
appellant
of
the
depreciable
property
of
those
classes
immediately
before
the
disposition
in
the
amount
of
$109,557.54
which
sum
is
included
in
the
appellant’s
income
for
the
year
pursuant
to
subsection
20(1)
of
the
Income
Tax
Act.
Alternatively,
respondent
contends
that
if
the
agreement
between
the
parties
was
not
for
the
sale
of
assets
but
for
the
sale
of
shares,
then
appellant
was
engaged
in
an
adventure
in
the
nature
of
trade
within
the
meaning
of
paragraph
139(1)(e)
of
the
Income
Tax
Act
in
that
it
purchased
shares
in
Quatsino
with
the
full
and
sole
intention
of
reselling
the
said
shares
to
Rayonier
at
a
profit
in
accordance
with
the
agreement
of
December
15,
1959
and
that
in
this
event
the
sum
of
$141,570
should
be
included
in
computing
appellant’s
income
for
the
year
pursuant
to
sections
3
and
4
of
the
Income
Tax
Act,
this
being
the
portion
of
the
sum
of
$272,000
which
can
reasonably
be
attributed
to
the
purchase
of
the
shares
of
Quatsino,
the
remainder
of
the
said
sum
being
reasonably
attributable
to
the
value
of
the
assets
transferred
by
the
appellant
to
Quatsino
immediately
beforehand.
Respondent
also
pleads
as
an
alternative
that
as
a
result
of
the
said
sales
there
was
conferred
on
the
appellant
a
benefit
in
the
amount
of
$109,557.54
which
sum
should
be
included
in
computing
appellant’s
income
for
the
year
by
virtue
of
subsection
137(2)
of
the
Act.
During
the
course
of
his
evidence,
the
company’s
auditor,
Mr
Kelsey,
said
the
exact
total
paid
was
$258,000
and
not
$272,000
as
$14,000
of
the
original
purchase
price
had
been
attributed
to
a
lot
with
timber
on
it
but
this
was
fully
logged
by
appellant
during
the
first
six
months
of
1960
so
the
price
was
reduced
accordingly.
Of
the
$258,000,
$116,420.01
was
shown
as
the
indebtedness
of
Quatsino
to
appellant,
which
indebtedness
was
assigned
by
appellant
to
Rayonier,
and
the
balance
of
$141,579.99
represented
payment
for
the
shares.
The
figure
of
$141,570
appears
in
the
balance
sheet
of
appellant
for
the
year
1961
under
“Earned
Surplus”
as
“gain
on
sale
of
shares
in
Quatsino
Logging
Limited”.
The
difference
between
this
and
the
approximately
$141,580
paid
for
the
shares
represents
the
ten
dollars
subscription
price
for
same.
Mr
Gordon
Gibson,
one
of
the
four
Gibson
brothers,
who
had
been
in
the
family
logging
business
together
since
1916
and
eventually
incorporated
the
appellant
Gibson
Brothers
Industries
Limited,
testified
in
a
very
frank
and
lucid
manner,
and
there
is,
in
fact,
little
room
for
dispute
as
to
the
facts.
By
virtue
of
an
agreement
entered
into
on
July
15,
1946
with
the
British
Columbia
Pulp
and
Paper
Company
Limited,
he
and
his
brothers
at
that
time
operating
under
the
name
of
W
F
Gibson
and
Sons,
undertook
to
log
certain
timber
lands
in
the
Jeune
Landing
area
of
British
Columbia,
which
agreement
was
to
expire
on
June
29,
1960.
British
Columbia
Pulp
and
Paper
Company
Limited
later
became
Alaska
Pine
and
Cellulose
Limited
and
by
an
agreement
dated
January
1,
1958,
this
company
in
turn
assigned
to
Alpine
Logging
Limited
all
its
rights
in
the
1946
agreement
and
supplemental
agreement.
Alpine
Logging
Limited
is
controlled
by
Rayonier
Canada
Limited
and
although
the
initial
discussions
and
correspondence
in
1959
dealing
with
what
would
happen
when
the
agreement
expired
on
June
29,
1960
were
with
representatives
of
Alpine
Logging
Limited,
it
was
ap-
parent
to
all
parties
that
the
decisions
were
being
made
by
Rayonier
Canada
Limited,
and
although
both
companies
are
parties
to
the
final
agreement
made
on
January
1,
1960
and
executed
June
30,
1960,
as
are
W
F
Gibson
and
Sons
Limited
and
the
four
Gibson
brothers
as
well
as
the
appellant
Gibson
Brothers
Industries
Limited,
it
is
not
necessary
for
the
purposes
of
these
proceedings
to
go
into
the
intricate
intercompany
relationships
and
the
agreement
can
be
considered
as
having
been
one
made
between
Gibson
Brothers
Industries
Limited
and
Rayonier
Canada
Limited.
While
the
appellant
would
have
liked
to
continue
the
logging
agreement
after
it
expired,
especially
as
it
had
all
its
equipment
on
the
site,
it
soon
became
apparent
that
Rayonier
preferred
to
do
this
themselves
and
that
as
they
also
had
most
of
the
equipment
they
would
require
in
the
area
they
were
not
anxious
to
purchase
appellant’s
equipment
although
at
the
same
time
they
wished
to
treat
appellant
fairly
in
view
of
their
long
and
friendly
association.
It
was
agreed
to
have
a
joint
appraisal
made
of
the
value
of
the
logging
operation
by
independent
appraisers,
Universal
Appraisal
Company
Limited,
and
their
report
dated
August
7,
1959
gave
as
the
depreciated
value
of
all
the
buildings
and
equipment
a
figure
of
$1.-
000,620.30.
As
appellant
had
no
other
timber
tracts
on
which
they
could
use
the
equipment
and
there
was
very
little
market
for
the
equipment
in
any
event
since
many
independent
loggers
were
being
forced
out
of
business
at
the
time,
and
the
cost
of
moving
it
would
absorb
most
of
the
value,
appellant
was
not
in
a
very
good
bargaining
position.
The
negotiations
culminated
in
a
letter
of
agreement
dated
December
15,
1959
whereby
it
was
agreed
to
extend
the
logging
agreement
for
six
months
to
December
31,
1960
under
terms
and
conditions
which
do
not
concern
us
here,
the
important
clauses
being
clauses
2
and
3(a)
which
read
as
follows:
2.
The
Gibson
Company
will,
at
its
own
expense,
cause
a
new
company
to
be
incorporated
as
a
wholly
owned
subsidiary
of
the
Gibson
Company
(hereinafter
called
“the
new
Company’’)
and
not
less
than
thirty
(30)
days
before
the
closing
date
shall
have
caused
to
be
sold
and
transferred
to
the
new
Company,
at
an
undepreciated
capital
cost
for
income
tax
purposes
on
the
books
of
the
new
Company
of
not
less
than
$90,000,
all
land,
timber,
camp
buildings,
equipment,
machinery
and
other
goods
and
property
(exclusive
of
the
inventories
referred
to
in
paragraph
3(h)
hereof)
forming
part
of
or
used
in
connection
with
the
logging
camp
and
operation
at
Jeune
Landing
of
the
Logger
and/or
of
the
Gibson
Company
(herein
collectively
called
“the
said
assets”)
all
as
are
more
particularly
set
out
in
the
appraisal
thereof
made
in
August,
1959,
by
Universal
Appraisal
Co.
Ltd.
The
new
Company
shall
have
such
name,
form
and
characteristics
as
shall
have
been
first
approved
by
Rayonier.
3.
The
parties
hereto
will
enter
into
an
agreement
for
the
sale
and
purchase
of
the
shares
of
the
new
Company
and
the
said
inventories
substantially
as
follows:
(a)
On
some
date
after
the
termination
of
the
1946
Agreement
to
be
agreed
upon
between
the
parties
hereto
but
not
later
than
February
15th,
1961
(herein
called
“the
closing
date”),
Rayonier
or
its
nominee
will
purchase
all
the
issued
shares
in
the
capital
of
the
new
Company
for
a
total
consideration
of
$272,000,
payable
to
the
Gibson
company
in
cash
on
the
closing
date
subject
to
reduction
as
hereinafter
provided.
The
final
agreement
executed
on
June
30,
1960,
contains
substantially
similar
clauses
(this
date
would
seem
to
be
incorrectly
stated
in
the
agreement
since
there
is
in
the
file
a
copy
of
a
letter
dated
July
14,
1960
from
Rayonier
Canada
Limited
to
appellant’s
attorneys
which
commences
"We
enclose
the
Logging
Agreement
and
the
Sale
Agreement,
both
in
quadruplicate,
for
execution
by
your
clients”).
This
letter
reads,
in
part,
1.
The
assets,
other
than
inventories,
will
be
sold
and
transferred
to
Quatsino
as
at
June
30th,
1960
for
a
total
consideration
of
$116,212.75,
comprising
$90,000
for
boats,
fixtures,
logging
equipment,
etc
and
$26,212.75
for
land
and
timber.
Quatsino
will
issue
ten
shares
at
$1.00
each
to
Gibson
Bros
industries
Ltd,
or
its
nominees,
and
the
balance
will
be
set
up
as
an
open
account
owing
to
Gibson
Bros
Industries
Ltd.
This
sale
and
transfer
will
be
fully
reflected
in
the
minutes
of
Quatsino
.
.
.
5,
Closing
date
will
be
August
1st,
1960.
6.
On
the
closing
date,
you
will
deliver
to
us
all
documents
necessary
to
complete
the
sale,
including
the
executed
Indemnity
Agreement;
the
certificates,
duly
endorsed,
representing
all
issued
shares
in
Quatsino;
the
resignations
of
all
the
directors
(being
Gibson
nominees);
minutes
accepting
the
resignations
and
approving
the
change
in
shareholders
and
directors;
executed
Assignment
to
be
drawn
by
you
from
Gibson:
Bros
Industries
Ltd
to
Rayonier
BC
Limited
covering
the
debt
arising
on
the
sale
of
the
assets
to
Quatsino;
all
documents
executed
in
connection
with
the
sale
of
the
assets
to
Quatsino;
and
incorporation
documents,
company
seal,
Minute
book,
share
register,
share
certificate
book
and
all
other
pertinent
contracts,
books,
records
and
material
relating
to
Quatsino
and
its
assets.
If
you
wish
us
to
draw
the
minutes
referred
to
above,
will
you
please
give
us
particulars
of
the
original
shareholders
and
directors.
7.
On
the
closing
date,
the
agreed
purchase
price
will
be
paid
in
full
to
Gibson
Bros
Industries
Ltd.
Unless
you
have
some
objection,
we
might
prefer
to
complete
our
purchase
by
two
distinct
transactions,
namely
—
pay
$116,212.75
for
the
debt
and
pay
the
balance
of
the
purchase
price
for
the
shares.
Prior
to
closing,
we
must
of
Course
agree
upon
any
reduction
in
the
purchase
price
by
reason
of
any
of
the
equipment,
machinery,
etc
being
no
longer
in
existence
or
in
unsatisfactory
repair
or
condition.
Our
nominees
to
be
directors
of
Quatsino
and
owners
of
one
share
each
in
its
capital
stock
are
William
E
Breitenback,
Ross
R
Douglas,
Gordon
L
Draeseke,
Peter
Sloan
and
R
W
Blatchley.
The
other
five
shares
will
be
acquired
in
the
name
of
Rayonier
BC
Limited.
With
respect
to
the
incorporation
of
Quatsino,
there
is
a
letter
dated
May
10,
1960
from
Rayonier
Canada
Limited
to
appellant’s
attorneys
which
refers
to
the
enclosure
of
"Memorandum
and
Articles
of
association,
both
in
duplicate,
of
Quatsino
Logging
Ltd”
and
goes
on
to
say:
“We
have
reserved
the
name
Quatsino
Logging
Ltd,
for
twenty-one
days
from
April
29th
last.”
and
a
letter
the
next
day
dated
May
11,
1960
from
appellant’s
attorneys
to
appellant
stating
that
they
have
now
received
and
enclose
the
proposed
memorandum
and
articles
of
association
of
the
company
which
is
to
be
named
“Quatsino
Logging
Ltd”,
that
they
have
looked
through
them
and
they
appear
to
be
in
order
and
that
the
company
has
the
ability
to
acquire
the
assets
proposed
to
be
transferred
to
it.
The
letter
goes
on
to
say:
“Unless
you
find
something
objectionable,
we
propose
to
advise
Rayonier
that
the
documents
are
in
order
and
to
proceed
with
incorporation
of
the
company.”
it
is
abundantly
clear
that
although
Quatsino
Logging
Ltd
may
have
actually
been
incorporated
by
appellant’s
attorneys,
the
ground
work
was
laid
by
Rayonier
Canada
Limited
and
the
form
and
characteristics
of
the
company
were
approved
by
it.
The
balance
sheet
as
of
July
15,
1960
of
Quatsino
Logging
Ltd
shows
an
amount
of
$116,420.01
as
owing
to
Gibson
Brothers
Industries
Limited
and
this
includes
payment
of
the
expenses
of
incorporation
in
the
amount
of
$217.26
so
appellant
was
reimbursed
for
this
by
Rayonier
Canada
Limited.
The
extension
of
the
logging
agreement
following
June
30
proved
to
be
unnecessary
as
the
47
million
square
feet
called
for
under
it
had
already
been
delivered
by
appellant
prior
to
that
date.
Mr
Gibson
testified
that
all
assets
and
inventories
were
turned
over
as
of
June
30,
1960
and
appellant’s
insurance
coverage
on
them
cancelled
as
of
that
date.
Although
the
shares
in
Quatsino
were
not
transferred.
until
August
3,
he
never
at
any
time
gave
any
instructions
to
the
shareholders
or
directors
of
Quatsino,
nor
did
Quatsino
do
any
business
of
any
nature
whatsoever
while
a
wholly-owned
subsidiary.
It
is
necessary
to
explain
the
figure
of
$58,000
referred
to
in
paragraph
19
of
appellant’s
Reasons
for
Appeal
as
the
sale
price
of
its
depreciable
assets
which
differs
from
the
figure
of
$90,000
used
in
the
agreement.
One
large
piece
of
equipment
consisting
of
a
lumber
truck
and
trailer
valued
at
$32,000
was
actually
owned
by
Consolidated
Forest
Products
Limited,
a
subsidiary
of
appellant
and
since
this
was
included
in
the
assets
sold
to
Quatsino
Logging
Ltd,
Consolidated
Forest
Products
Limited,
on
August
1,
1960,
assigned
its
rights
to
payment
of
this
amount
to
appellant.
Respondent’s
original
reassessment
in
1964
added
the
sum
of
$141,570
as
profit
on
sale
of
shares
of
Quatsino
Logging
Ltd.
Subsequently,
by
the
1967
reassessment,
this
sum
was
deleted
but
the
appellant’s
capital
cost
allowance
schedules
were
adjusted
so
as
to
include
recapture
of
capital
cost
allowance
totalling
$109,557.54
arising
out
of
the
alleged
proceeds
of
disposition
of
depreciable
property
used
in
the
Jeune
Landing
operation
being
$199,787.25.
Respondent
in
its
Reply
to
the
Notice
of
Appeal,
however,
does
not
altogether
abandon
the
contention
that
the
sum
of
$141,570
resulted
from
an
adventure
in
the
nature
of
trade
under
paragraph
139(1)(e)
arising
out
of
the
purchase
of
the
shares
in
Quatsino
with
the
full
and
sole
intention
of
selling
them
to
Rayonier
at
a
profit
in
accordance
with
the
agreement
of
December
15,
1959,
but
retains
this
as
an
alternative
argument.
Respondent’s
principal
argument
is
based
on
paragraph
4(d)
of
its
Reply
to
Notice
of
Appeal
in
which
it
is
stated:
(d)
Quatsino
was,
at
all
material
times,
a
simulacrum,
cloak,
alias
or
alter
ego
of
the
Appellant
or
in
the
alternative,
at
all
material
times
was
the
agent
of
either
or
both
of
the
Appellant
or
Rayonier
Canada
Limited.
On
the
facts
of
this
case
I
agree
with
this
conclusion.
Appellant
relies
on
the
case
of
Sazio
v
MNR,
[1968]
CTC
579;
69
DTC
5001,
which
held
at
page
588
[5007]:
Ever
since
the
Salomon
case,
[1897]
AC
22,
it
has
been
a
well
settled
principle,
which
has
been
jealously
maintained,
that
a
company
is
an
entirely
different
entity
from
its
shareholders,
Its
assets
are
not
their
assets,
and
its
debts
are
not
their
debts.
It
is
only
upon
evidence
forbidding
any
other
conclusion
can
it
be
held
that
acts
done
in
the
name
of
the
company
are
not
its
acts
or
that
profits
shown
in
its
accounts
do
not
belong
to
it.
The
fact
that
a
company
may
have
been
formed
to
serve
the
interests
of
a
particular
person
is
not
sufficient
to
establish
the
relationship
of
principal
and
agent
between
that
person
and
the
company.
In
order
to
hold
otherwise
it
must
be
found
that
the
company
is
a
“mere
sham,
simulacrum
or
cloak”.
It
is
significant
to
note
the
part
of
this
quotation
stating:
It
is
only
upon
evidence
forbidding
any
other
conclusion
can
it
be
held
that
acts
done
in
the
name
of
the
company
are
not
its
acts
or
that
profits
shown
in
its
accounts
do
not
belong
to
it.
Certainly
it
is
clear
in
the
present
case
that
Quatsino
Logging
Ltd
was
never
formed
with
the
intention
of
carrying
on
any
business
but
that
it
merely
acquired
certain
assets
from
appellant
for
which
it
eventually
paid
with
funds
furnished
by
Rayonier
Canada
Limited
including
even
the
costs
of
its
incorporation,
and
that
the
second
stage
whereby
Rayonier
Canada
Limited
then
bought
the
shares
of
Quatsino
from
appellant
for
the
balance
of
the
purchase
price
as
previously
agreed
was
part
and
parcel
of
one
transaction
whereby
the
assets
in
question
were
acquired
for
the
price
of
$272,000
(less
$14,000
deducted
for
lumber
removed
prior
to
the
agreement
as
see
supra).
Appellant’s
attempt
to
distinguish
the
case
of
Claude
Belle-Isle
v
MNR,
[1964]
CTC
40;
64
DTC
5041,
approved
in
the
Supreme
Court,
[1966]
CTC
85;
66
DTC
5100,
in
which
appellant
sold
a
hotel
to
a
corporation
formed
for
the
purpose
of
receiving
payment
partly
in
shares
of
the
corporation
and
partly
in
the
form
of
a
mortgage,
the
value
placed
on
the
shares
being
the
difference
between
the
mortgage
and
the
selling
price.
On
the
same
date
he
sold
the
shares
to
a
third
party
for
a
sum
substantially
in
excess
of
the
value
attributed
to
them
when
he
acquired
them
as
part
of
the
consideration
for
the
sale
of
the
hotel.
The
Minister
at
first
sought
to
tax
the
whole
profit
as
income
from
an
adventure
in
the
nature
of
trade
as
he
did
in
the
present
case
but
later
agreed
to
limit
the
taxable
portion
to
an
amount
representing
the
recapture
of
capital
cost
allowance
on
the
presumption
that
the
second
transaction
established
the
true
value
of
the
shares
and
that
this
supported
the
recapture
of
the
capital
cost
allowance.
This
was
upheld.
While
in
the
present
case
the
assets
were
not
sold
to
Quatsino
for
a
consideration
expressed
partially
in
cash
and
partially
in
shares
of
that
company,
they
were
in
effect
sold
to
Rayonier
for
a
consideration
to
be
paid
in
part
in
cash
by
Quatsino
with
funds
provided
by
Rayonier
and
in
part
by
Rayonier
undertaking
to
buy
shares
which
appellant
would
subscribe
in
Quatsino,
at
a
pre-arranged
price,
greatly
in
excess
of
what
appellant
had
paid
for
them.
The
intervention
of
a
third
company
created
apparently
for
this
express
purpose
is
not
in
my
view
sufficient
to
distinguish
the
situation
here
from
that
in
the
Belle-Isle
case.
The
situation
might
have
been
different
had
appellant,
knowing
its
logging
agreement
was
about
to
expire,
and
without
any
prior
discussions
or
agreement
with
Rayonier
decided
to
incorporate
a
company
and
transfer
to
it
the
machinery
and
equipment
of
its
Jeune
Landing
operations
for
$90,000
plus
$26,-
212.75
for
land
and
timber.
At
a
later
date,
if
it
had
then
received
an
offer
from
Rayonier
Canada
Limited
to
buy
the
shares
of
this
company
which
it
had
formed,
it
is
likely
that
the
question
of
recapture
of
capital
cost
allowance
on
the
depreciable
assets
so
disposed
of
would
never
have
arisen
and
appellant
might
have
been
able
to
argue
thai
the
profit
realized
on
the
sale
of
the
shares
of
the
company
so
formed
was
capital
gain.
I
am
expressing
no
opinion
on
this
since
this
is
not
what
happened,
but
I
wish
to
emphasize
the
distinction
between
such
a
situation
and
the
present
one
where
the
incorporation
of
Quatsino
Logging
Ltd
was
clearly
part
and
parcel
of
the
agreement
from
its
inception
and
formed
part
of
the
method
adopted
for
the
eventual
disposition
of
these
assets
to
Rayonier
Canada
Limited.
Appellant
relies
strongly
on
subsection
20(4)
of
the
Income
Tax
Act
which,
in
the
case
of
property
which
has
been
transferred
by
one
or
more
transactions
between
persons
not
dealing
at
arm’s
length,
limits
the
taxpayer
who
has
eventually
acquired
it
to
capital
cost
allowance
only
on
the
amount
that
was
the
capital
cost
to
the
original
owner.
On
this
basis,
although
appellant
and
Rayonier
Canada
Limited
were
dealing
at
arm’s
length
the
sale
by
appellant
to
Quatsino
and
the
subse-
queht
acquisition
by
Rayonier
Canada
Limited
of
these
assets
from
Quatsino
when
its
assets
were
distributed
to
its
shareholders
were
both
non-arm’s
length
transactions
and
hence
Rayonier
Canada
Limited
was
limited
to
claiming
capital
cost
allowance
on
$90,000.
It
so
happened
in
the
present
case
that
a
fire
took
place
in
the
cook-house,
one
of
the
major
depreciable
assets,
shortly
after
it
was
acquired
by
Rayonier
Canada
Limited
and
when
the
insurance
claim
was
settled
in
1961
the
Minister,
in
crediting
this
to
recaptured
capital
cost
allowance,
limited
Rayonier
Canada
Limited
to
the
figure
of
$90,000,
by
implication
accepting
the
purchases
by
Quatsino
from
appellant
and
Rayonier
from
Quatsino
at
their
face
value
as
non-arm’s
length
transactions.
Appellant
argues
that
if
the
Minister
now
adopts
the
position
that
the
sale
by
appellant
to
Quatsino
and
acquisition
of
the
depreciable
assets
by
Rayonier
Canada
Limited
from
Quatsino
are
to
be
looked
on
as
a
mere
sham,
simulacrum
or
cloak
to
cover
a
direct
sale
of
these
assets
from
appellant
to
Rayonier
Canada
Limited
then
this
company
would
be
entitled
to
take
these
assets
on
its
books
at
the
price
paid
and
claim
capital
cost
on
them
accordingly
as
subsection
20(4)
would
have
no
application,
the
transaction
being
an
arm’s
length
one.
According
to
appellant’s
counsel,
the
Minister
is
now
adopting
a
contradictory
position
in
applying
paragraph
20(6)(g)
in
apportioning
the
price
paid
between
depreciable
and
non-depreciable
property,
reaching
a
conclusion
that
in
so
far
as
present
appellant
is
concerned,
the
sum
of
$199,787.25
was
received
for
the
sale
of
depreciable
property.
Paragraph
20(6)(g)
reads
as
follows:
(6)
For
the
purpose
of
this
section
and
regulations
made
under
paragraph
(a)
of
subsection
(1)
of
section
11,
the
following
rules
apply:
(g)
where
an
amount
can
reasonably
be
regarded
as
being
in
part
the
consideration
for
disposition
of
depreciable
property
of
a
taxpayer
of
a
prescribed
class
and
as
being
in
part
consideration
for
something
else,
the
part
of
the
amount
that
can
reasonably
be
regarded
as
being
the
consideration
for
such
disposition
shall
be
deemed
to
be
the
proceeds
of
disposition
of
depreciable
property
of
that
class
irrespective
of
the
form
or
legal
effect
of
the
contract
or
agreement;
and
the
person
to
whom
the
depreciable
property
was
disposed
of
shall
be
deemed
to
have
acquired
the
property
at
a
capital
cost
to
him
equal
to
the
same
part
of
that
amount;
He
points
out
further
that
all
parties
entered
into
this
transaction
with
the
benefit
of
good
legal
and
accounting
advice
and
in
full
awareness
of
the
tax
situation
and
that
the
price
paid
was
affected
by
these
considerations
so
that
in
the
event
that
Rayonier
Canada
Limited
had
been
able
to
claim
capital
cost
allowance
on
the
full
price
paid
for
the
depreciable
property
rather
than
on
the
$90,000
attributed
to
this
in
the
agreement,
and
on
the
other
hand
had
appellant
believed
that
it
would
be
called
upon
to
pay
recaptured
capital
cost
allowance
on
the
portion
of
the
total
price
attributed
by
the
Minister
to
depreciable
assets
by
the
application
of
paragraph
20(6)(g),
then
on
the
one
hand
the
purchasers
might
have
been
willing
to
pay
more
and
on
the
other
hand
appellant
would
have
insisted
on
a
higher
price
because
of
this.
These
arguments
are
hypothetical,
however,
and,
while
it
is
desirable
that
the
Minister
should
be
consistent
in
his
application
of
the
Income
Tax
Act
to
the
purchaser
and
to
the
vendor,
he
is
under
no
obligation
to
be
so.
The
decision
in
the
present
case
concerns
only
the
appellant
and
whether
or
not
Rayonier
Canada
Limited
was
properly
reassessed
on
December
17,
1964
with
respect
to
the
treatment
of
the
insurance
proceeds
in
its
1962
taxation
year
is
not
an
issue
before
me.
No
notice
of
objection
was
taken
to
it.
As
counsel
for
respondent
points
out,
subsection
20(4)
is
a
section
applying
to
the
purchaser
and
not
to
the
vendor.
By
applying
paragraph
20(6)(g)
to
appellant,
in
order
to
attribute
the
sum
of
$199,787.
25
as
the
value
of
the
depreciable
property
sold,
it
would
appear
that
the
same
figure
should
also
have
been
applied
in
the
case
of
Rayonier
Canada
Limited,
but
the
fact
that
a
different
position
was
taken
in
the
1964
reassessment
of
its
1962
taxation
year
does
not,
in
my
view,
estop
respondent
from
applying
this
section
in
appellant’s
case.
Neither
can
appellant
successfully
argue
that
since
the
purchaser
is
limited
to
capital
cost
allowance
on
$90,000
under
subsection
20(4)
if
the
two
transactions
are
taken
at
their
face
value
and
hence,
the
Minister
in
due
course,
benefits
by
the
limitation
of
the
capital
cost
allowance
to
the
lower
amounts
which
the
purchaser
can
claim
on
this
figure,
it
is
not
necessary
for
him
to
attempt
to
recover
recaptured
cost
allowance
from
the
vendor,
and
that
this
is
the
purpose
of
subsection
20(4),
in
view
of
the
Minister’s
right
to
treat
the
interposition
of
Quatsino
Logging
Ltd
as
a
sham
and
consider
the
sale
of
the
assets
and
the
sale
of
the
shares
as
one
single
arm’s
length
transaction
and
apply
paragraph
20(6)(g)
thereto.
Having
reached
a
conclusion
that
appellant’s
appeal
must
fail
on
this
ground
it
is
unnecessary
for
me
to
deal
with
the
argument
as
to
whether,
in
any
event,
a
benefit
was
conferred
on
appellant
in
the
amount
of
$109,557.54
within
the
meaning
of
subsection
137(2)
of
the
Act
or
the
alternative
argument
that
the
sale
of
the
shares
for
a
profit
of
$141,570
was
an
adventure
in
the
nature
of
trade
within
the
meaning
of
paragraph
139(1)(e)
of
the
Act.
I
now
turn
to
the
second
issue
raised
in
the
appeal.
Appellant
states
in
its
Notice
of
Appeal
that
it
owned
the
vessel
“Norsal"
which
was
used
by
it
in
connection
with
its
logging
business
but
there
was
no
need
for
this
when
this
business
ceased
and
it
then
endeavoured,
unsuccessfully,
to
dispose
of
it
by
sale.
Being
unable
to
arrange
a
sale
it
entered
into
the
business
of
chartering
the
vessel
to
earn
income
and
minimize
the
loss
on
the
investment.
The
income
from
such
chartering
for
the
years
1959
to
1963
inclusive
was
as
follows:
1959
|
nil
|
1960
|
$650
|
1961
|
$3,650
|
1962
|
$7,550
|
1963
|
$17,192
|
In
addition
to
this
the
vessel
was
from
time
to
time
used
personally
by
the
shareholders
of
appellant’s
parent
company
and
appellant,
in
filing
its
1961
and
1962
tax
returns,
calculated
the
net
loss
from
the
operation
of
the
vessel,
and,
to
determine
the
amount
of
non-allowable
expenses
arising
by
reason
of
personal
use,
apportioned
such
net
losses
in
the
ratio
that
such
personal
use
bore
to
the
total
use
of
the
vessel
in
each
such
year.
Upon
receipt
of
respondent’s
objection
to
this
method,
appellant
then
proposed
that
the
calculation
be
made
by
first
deducting
the
fixed
expenses
of
the
vessel
and
then
applying
to
the
variable
expenses
only,
such
as
crew
wages,
fuel
and
galley
the
ratio
that
personal
use
bore
to
the
total
use
of
the
vessel.
By
this
method
of
computation
the
non-allowable
expenses
would
have
been
$4,327
in
the
taxation
year
1961
and
$4,318
in
the
taxation
year
1962.
Respondent,
in
his
Reply
to
the
Notice
of
Appeal,
admits
this.
Appellant
states
that
in
assessing
for
its
1961
and
1962
taxation
years,
respondent
has
computed
the
non-allowable
expenses
applicable
to
the
personal
use
by
taking
the
portion
of
total
expenses
(including
capital
cost
allowance)
which
such
use
bore
to
the
total
use
of
the
vessel
and
thus
increased
the
income
of
the
appellant
for
the
taxation
year
1961
by
an
amount
of
$7,027.75
and
revised
the
business
loss
sustained
in
the
taxation
year
1962
by
reducing
the
said
loss
by
an
amount
of
$10,868.25,
in
each
case
the
figures
representing
the
difference
between
the
computation
proposed
by
the
appellant
as
set
forth
above
and
that
employed
by
the
respondent.
Respondent
does
not
admit
this
and
in
reply
states
as
follows:
6.
With
respect
to
the
vessel
Norsal,
he
assumed
that:
(a)
The
Appellant
in
the
years
1961
and
1962
incurred
expenses
of
$22,507.58
and
$28,853.92
respectively
and
sustained
a
net
loss
in
the
amount
of
$18,917.58
and
$21,303.92
of
which
sums
respectively
the
sums
of
$11,354.75
and
$15,186.25
were
not
related
to
the
gaining
or
producing
of
income
by
the
Appellant;
(b)
In
computing
the
amount
of
the
said
loss
not
incurred
in
the
gaining
or
producing
of
income,
the
Appellant
considered
that
only
the
portion
of
the
net
loss
on
operation
of
the
boat
that
personal
use
had
to
total
use
was
to
be
deducted
from
the
said
loss
and
that
the
excess
of
the
net
loss
over
such
sum
was
a
proper
deduction
from
income:
(c)
The
Respondent
considered
that
only
the
proportion
of
the
total
expenses
of
operation
of
the
boat
that
personal
use
had
to
total
use
was
to
be
deducted
from
the
said
loss
and
that
the
excess
of
the
net
loss
over
such
sum
was
a
proper
deduction
from
income.
7.
The
Appellant
in
its
Notice
of
Appeal
has
now
alleged
that
the
portion
of
the
loss
attributable
to
the
gaining
or
producing
of
income
should
be
computed
by
first
deducting
the
fixed
expenses
of
the
vessel
and
then
applying
to
the
variable
expenses
only
(eg
crew
wages,
fuel
&
galley)
the
ratio
that
personal
use
bore
to
total
use
of
the
vessel.
By
this
method
of
computation,
the
non-allowable
expenses
would
be
$4,327.00
in
the
taxation
year
1961
and
$4,318.00
in
the
taxation
year
1962.
8.
The
Respondent
submits
that
the
method
of
computation
employed
by
the
Respondent
in
assessing
the
Appellant
as
detailed
in
subparagraph
(c)
of
paragraph
6
herein
is
the
proper
method
of
calculation.
Neither
party
was
able
to
refer
to
any
jurisprudence
on
this
question
so
it
is
necessary
to
examine
it
on
basic
principles.
There
is
no
dispute
about
the
portion
of
the
total
use
which
was
attributed
to
personal
use
by
the
officers
of
the
company.
It
appears
to
me
that
the
proper
approach
is
to
divide
all
expenses,
including
capital
cost
allowance,
on
this
basis,
attributing
to
appellant
company
its
portion
of
such
total
expenses
and,
after
deducting
the
total
income
received
by
the
company
from
the
chartering
of
the
boat
from
its
share
of
the
total
expenses,
the
balance
would
represent
the
allowable
loss
to
be
claimed
by
appellant.
The
only
case
which
I
have
been
able
to
find
which
recognizes
a
distinction
between
capital
cost
allowance
and
actual
Operating
expenses
is
that
of
Cumming
v
MNR,
[1967]
CTC
462;
67
DTC
5312,
in
which
the
operating
expenses
of
an
automobile
were
imputed
25%
to
business
use
on
the
basis
of
mileage
but
the
capital
cost
allowance
was
imputed
50%
on
the
basis
of
time
involved.
Since,
in
the
present
case,
there
is
no
dispute
as
to
the
apportionment
and
no
figures
before
the
Court
as
to
the
relative
distance
covered
by
the
vesse!
while
in
personal
use
as
distinguished
from
business
use
or
the
proportion
of
the
vessel’s
time
which
was
devoted
to
personal
use
as
distinguished
from
business
use,
this
case
is
not
applicable.
In.
the
case
of
automobile
expenses,
these
are
normally
dealt
with
in
accordance
with
Information
Bulletin
No
28
of
the
Taxation
Division
of
January
6,
1965.*
This
takes
capital
cost
allowance
into
consideration
in
the
apportionment
of
the
total
expenses
in
the
use
of
a
car
between
personal
and
business
use.
I
see
no
reason
not
to
apply
this
principle
here.
If
appellant’s
officers
were
chartering
a
boat
from
someone
with
whom
they
were
dealing
at
arm’s
length,
the
charges
would
certainly
be
sufficiently
high
as
to
include
an
element
of
capital
cost
allowance.
It
is
only
by
apportioning
the
gross
expenses,
including
capital
cost
allowance,
that
the
true
expense
picture
appears,
and
by
then
applying
the
revenue
from
chartering
the
boat,
which
revenue
accrues
entirely
to
the
company
as
owners,
against
the
company’s
portion
of
these
expenses,
it
can
be
determined
whether
the
company
has
suffered
a
gain
or
a
loss
which
will
be
taxed
accordingly.
This
is,
in
effect,
what
the
Minister
has
done
in
his
reassessment.
Since
I
therefore
find
that
respondent’s
method
of
assessing
the
loss
on
the
operation
of
the
vessel
"Norsal"
is
correct,
the
appeal
must
also
fail
on
this
issue.
Appellant’s
appeal
is
therefore
dismissed
with
costs.