JUDSON,
J.
(all
concur)
:—The
appellant,
Oakfield
Developments
(Toronto)
Limited,
is
a
private
company
provincially
created
by
letters
patent
of
amalgamation
dated
October
8,
1964.
One
of
its
predecessor
corporations
was
Polestar
Developments
Limited.
In
respect
of
its
two
fiscal
periads
ended
March
91,
1963
and
August
27,
1963
Polestar
was
assessed
by
the
Minister
on
the
basis
that
it
was
‘‘controlled’’
by
certain
corporate
shareholders
within
the
meaning
of
Section
39(4)
of
the
Income
Tax
Act
and,
therefore,
“associated”
with
other
companies
controlled
by
the
same
shareholders.
The
effect
of
this
assessment
was
to
disentitle
Polestar
to
the
lower
tax
rate
on
its
first
$385,000
of
taxable
income
as
provided
in
Section
39(1).
On
appeal
to
the
Exchequer
Court,
these
assessments
were
confirmed
and
Oakfield
now
appeals
from
that
decision.
The
sole
point
in
issue
is
whether
Polestar
was
so
controlled
during
its
two
1963
taxation
years.
Polestar
was
incorporated
on
March
22,
1960
pursuant
to
the
provisions
of
the
Ontario
Corporations
Act.
There
were
9,000
common
shares
issued,
each
carrying
one
vote
per
share,
and
held
as
follows:
1/3
by
Ardwell
Holdings
Limited
—
1,667
1/3
by
Bradford
Investments
Limited
—
1,666
1/9
by
Doric
Developments
Limited
—
556
1/9
by
Loring
Developments
Limited
—
556
1/9
by
Adair
Developments
Limited
—
555
Total
5,000
The
shares
in
42
other
companies,
referred
to
as
the
‘‘Okun
group”,
were
also
held
by
these
five
corporations,
except
that
El
Cindad
Limited
frequently
replaced
Loring.
These
corporate
shareholders,
referred
to
as
the
‘‘inside
group’’,
were
assumed
to
control
each
of
the
other
companies
in
the
Okun
group
for
the
purpose
of
this
appeal.
On
March
31,
1960
the
Minister
of
Finance
announced
that
the
provisions
of
the
Income
Tax
Act
were
to
be
changed
so
that
association
of
companies
would
be
determined
on
the
basis
of
“control”
rather
than
on
‘‘ownership’’
which
was
the
rule
at
that
time.
The
proposed
legislation
was
to
be
applicable
to
the
1961
and
subsequent
taxation
years.
This
change
was
subsequently
enacted
by
Section
11(1)
of
Statutes
of
Canada
1960,
c.
43,
which
amended
Section
39(4)
to
read:
(4)
For
the
purpose
of
this
section,
one
corporation
is
associated
with
another
in
a
taxation
year,
if
at
any
time
in
the
year,
(a)
one
of
the
corporations
controlled
the
other,
(b)
both
of
the
corporations
were
controlled
by
the
same
person
or
group
of
persons,
(c)
each
of
the
corporations
was
controlled
by
one
person
and
the
person
who
controlled
one
of
the
corporations
was
related
to
the
person
who
controlled
the
other,
and
one
of
those
persons
owned
directly
or
indirectly
one
or
more
shares
of
the
capital
stock
of
each
of
the
corporations,
(d)
one
of
the
corporations
was
controlled
by
one
person
and
that
person
was
related
to
each
member
of
a
group
of
persons
that
controlled
the
other
corporation,
and
one
of
those
persons
owned
directly
or
indirectly
one
or
more
shares
of
the
capital
stock
of
each
of
the
corporations,
or
(e)
each
of
the
corporations
was
controlled
by
a
related
group
and
each
of
the
members
of
one
of
the
related
groups
was
related
to
all
of
the
members
of
the
other
related
group,
and
one
of
the
members
of
one
of
the
related
groups
owned
directly
or
indirectly
one
or
more
shares
of
the
capital
stock
of
each
of
the
corporations.
In
anticipation
of
the
passage
of
this
legislation,
a
plan
of
reorganization
was
devised
so
that
the
companies
would
still
not
be
associated
with
each
other.
On
December
20,
1960
Polestar
applied
to
amend
its
letters
patent
so
that
it
would
be
authorized
to
issue
Class
B
voting
non-participating
cumulative
redeemable
preferred
shares.
Supplementary
letters
patent
were
subsequently
signed
and
sealed
on
February
15,
1961,
but
bore
the
date
of
December
20,
1960.
On
December
21,
1960
the
directors
of
Polestar
purported
to
allot
and
issue
5,000
Class
B
preferred
shares,
4,999
to
Lionel
Schipper
and
one
to
his
wife,
both
strangers
to
the
members
of
the
inside
group.
Each
group
then
represented
50%
of
the
voting
power.
Mr.
Okun
personally
guaranteed
to
the
preferred
shareholders
a
return
upon
30
days’
notice
of
the
moneys
invested
by
them
in
the
purchase
of
the
shares,
and
the
payment
of
10%
per
annum
thereon.
The
Class
B
preferred
shares
carried
the
right
to
a
fixed
cumulative
preferential
dividend
at
the
rate
of
10%
per
annum,
payable
yearly,
and
the
right
to
repayment
of
capital
in
priority
to
the
common
shares
in
the
winding
up
of
Polestar,
but
no
rights
as
to
further
participation
in
profits
or
assets.
The
first
dividend
on
the
voting
preference
shares
was
declared
on
April
1,
1961
and
all
subsequent
dividends
were
regularly
paid.
At
the
same
meeting
on
December
21,
1960
the
number
of
directors
was
increased
from
three
to
four,
and
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Schipper
were
elected
as
directors.
Payment
for
the
preferred
shares
was
received
by
Polestar
and
certificates
were
duly
issued.
Pursuant
to
the
plan
of
reorganization,
the
supplementary
letters
patent
also
provided
that
the
chairman
presiding
at
any
directors’
or
shareholders’
meeting
was
not
to
have
a
casting
vote
in
the
case
of
an
equality
of
votes.
In
addition,
50%
of
the
votes
of
shareholders
entitled
to
vote
could
authorize
a
surrender
of
the
company’s
letters
patent.
The
taxation
year
of
Polestar
ordinarily
ended
on
March
31
of
each
year.
In
August
1963
Polestar
was
amalgamated
with
another
company,
thereby
ending
a
second
taxation
year
in
1963.
The
taxation
years
under
appeal
are
the
fiscal
periods
ending
March
31,
1963
and
August
27,
1963.
Section
11
of
the
Ontario
Corporations
Act
provides
that
a
corporation
comes
into
existence
on
the
date
of
the
letters
patent
incorporating
it.
After
the
decision
of
the
court
below,
the
following
subsection
was
added
to
Section
11
by
The
Corporations
Amendment
Act,
8.O.
1968-69,
c.
17,
Section
2
:
(2)
Letters
patent
of
incorporation,
letters
patent
of
continuation,
letters
patent
of
amalgamation
and
supplementary
letters
patent,
issued
under
this
Act
or
any
predecessor
thereof,
take
effect
on
the
date
set
forth
therein.
The
Minister
assessed
Polestar
on
the
basis
that
it
was
associated
with
the
other
companies
in
Okun’s
group.
The
validity
of
these
assessments
is
dependent
upon
whether
the
‘‘inside
group”
or
common
shareholders
of
Polestar
controlled
the
company
within
the
meaning
of
Section
39(4).
The
inside
group
controlled
50%
of
the
voting
power
through
their
ownership
of
the
common
shares.
They
were
entitled
to
all
the
surplus
profits
on
a
distribution
by
way
of
dividend
after
the
payment
of
the
fixed
cumulative
dividend
to
the
preferred
shareholders.
On
a
winding
up
of
Polestar,
they
were
entitled
to
all
of
the
surplus
after
return
of
capital
and
the
payment
of
a
10%
premium
to
the
preferred
shareholders.
Their
voting
power
was
sufficient
to
authorize
the
surrender
of
the
company’s
letters
patent.
In
my
opinion,
these
circumstances
are
sufficient
to
vest
control
in
the
group
when
the
owners
of
non-participating
preferred
shares
hold
the
remaining
50%
of
the
voting
power.
The
decision
of
this
Court
in
M.N.R.
v.
Dworkin
Furs
(Pembroke)
Ltd.
et
al.,
[1967]
S.C.R.
223;
[1967]
C.T.C.
50,
can
be
distinguished
from
the
present
case.
In
the
Dworkin
Furs
case
the
voting
was
split
equally
between
two
groups
also,
but
there
was
only
one
class
of
shares.
Each
group
had
the
same
de
jure
rights,
and
each
shareholder
was
entitled
to
share
rateably
in
the
profits
and
assets
of
the
company
by
dividends
or
on
winding
up.
In
addition,
neither
group
could
itself
wind
up
the
company.
I
would
dismiss
the
appeal
with
costs.
Cattanach,
J.,
in
the
Exchequer
Court,
arrived
at
the
same
result
but
on
different
grounds.
He
held
that
the
Minister
was
not
precluded
from
establishing
that
the
supplementary
letters
patent
bore
a
date
antecedent
to
their
actual
issue
on
the
authority
of
Letain
v.
Conwest
Exploration
Ltd.,
[1961]
S.C.R.
98,
and
they
were
not
in
fact
issued
until
February
15,
1961.
It
followed
that
no
preference
shares
were
validly
issued
by
Polestar
on
December
21,
1960,
as
the
capital
stock
of
Polestar
did
not
include
such
stock
at
that
time,
and
the
common
shareholders
never
lost
control
of
the
company.
It
is
unnecessary
to
deal
with
these
grounds
in
view
of
my
opinion
that
there
was
sufficient
control
even
if
the
preferred
shares
were
validly
issued.
JORDAN
PAGE
HARSHMAN
AND
PRUE
LYDIA
HARSHMAN,
EXECUT‘ORS
oF
THE
LAst
WILL
AND
TESTAMENT
OF
HUBERT
HARRY
HARSHMAN,
Deceased,
Appellants,
and
MINISTER
OF
NATIONAL
REVENUE,
Respondent.
Exchequer
Court
of
Canada
(Gibson,
J.),
May
3,
1971,
on
appeal
from
an
assessment
of
the
Minister
of
National
Revenue.
Estate
tax
—
Federal
—
Estate
Tax
Act,
S.C.
1958,
c.
29
—
Section
7(1)(d)—Gifts
and
bequests
to
charitable
organization—Gifts
to
trust
—Whether
a
“trust”
an
“organization”—Possibility
of
unnamed
beneficiaries
—
Whether
gifts
“absolute
and
indefeasible”
—
Meaning
of
“charitable”.
In
issue
was
whether
an
inter
vivos
gift
made
by
the
deceased
in
1963
and
a
gift
of
the
capital
and
income
of
the
residue
of
his
estate,
subject
to
a
limited
right
of
encroachment
in
favour
of
the
widow,
were
deductible
as
gifts
to
charitable
organizations
within
Section
7(1)
(d)
of
the
Act.
The
purpose
of
the
foundation
was
to
provide
fellowships
and
scholarships
and
to
this
end
the
trustees
were
required
to
pay
over
annually
at
least
90%
of
the
income
to
two
named
charitable
organizations,
with
the
proviso
that
if
those
organizations
were
not
using
the
funds
as
intended
the
trustees
might
pay
the
income
to
one
or
more
educational
institutions
selected
by
them.
In
the
Minister’s
view
the
latter
unnamed
institutions
could
not
be
said
to
be
charitable
organizations
within
Section
7(1)
(d)
nor
could
the
gifts—whether
to
the
trustees
or
to
the
ultimate
recipients—be
considered
absolute
and
indefeasible.
The
Minister
also
contended
that
a
charitable
trust
was
not
a
“charitable
organization”
for
the
purpose
of
the
Act.
HELD:
Section
7(1)
(d)
did
not
prescribe
how
a
“charitable
organization”
in
Canada
must
be
created.
On
the
evidence,
the
trustees
constituted
an
“organization
in
Canada”;
the
organization
was
“charitable”
within
the
Pemsel
case;
the
alternative
educational
institutions
were
intended
to
be
only
educational
institutions
in
Canada;
and
the
purposes
of
the
gifts
were
“absolute
and
indefeasible”
within
the
meaning
of
Section
7(1)
(d).
It
followed
that
the
conditions
of
deductibility
had
been
complied
with.
Appeal
allowed.
W.
L.
N.
Somerville,
Q.C.
for
the
Appellants.
D.
G.
II.
Bowman
and
E.
M.
McFayden
for
the
Respondent.
CASES
REFERRED
TO:
M.N.R.
v.
Trusts
C°
Guarantee
Co.
Ltd.
(Birtwistle
Trust),
[1938]
Ex.C.R.
95;
[1938-39]
C.T.C.
356;
[1939]
S.C.R.
125;
[1938-39]
C.T.C.
363;
[1940]
A.C.
138;
[1938-39]
C.T.C.
371;
Executors
of
the
Estate
of
the
Honourable
Patrick
burns
v.
M.N.R.,
[1946]
Ex.C.R.
229;
[1946]
C.T.C.
18;
[1947]
8.C.R.
132;
[1946]
C.T.C.
253;
Trustees
of
the
Estate
of
James
Cosman
v.
M.N.R.,
[1941]
Ex.C.R.
33;
[1940-41]
C.T.C.
330;
Towle
Estate
v.
M.N.R.,
[1967]
S.C.R.
133;
[1966]
C.T.C.
755.
GIBSON,
J.:—This
is
an
appeal
from
an
assessment
for
estate
tax
made
August
1,
1968
whereby
tax
in
the
sum
of
$61,444.95
was
levied.
This
assessment
added
the
sum
of
$93,828.21
to
the
estate
tax
payable
for
the
value
of
certain
inter
vivos
gifts
made
by
the
deceased
Hubert
Harry
Harshman
to
what
is
called
in
these
proceedings
‘
The
Harshman
Foundation’’,
and
for
the
value
at
the
date
of
death
of
the
gift
to
The
Harshman
Foundation
under
the
will
of
the
said
Hubert
Harry
Harshman
deceased.
In
effect,
the
assessment
disallowed
both
these
sums
as
deductions
in
the
computation
of
the
aggregate
net
value
of
the
deceased’s
estate
for
the
purposes
of
estate
tax
on
the
ground
that
they
were
not
gifts
to
an
organization
in
Canada
constituted
exclusively
for
charitable
purposes
within
the
meaning
of
Section
7(1)
(d)
of
the
Estate
Tax
Act.
(In
this
connection,
it
is
agreed
that
in
respect
to
the
bequest
to
The
Harshman
Foundation
by
the
will
of
Hubert
Harry
Harshman
deceased,
that
there
should
in
any
event
be
deducted
from
it,
if
the
appellant
should
succeed
on
this
appeal,
the
proper
capital
amounts
which
for
estate
tax
calculation
constitute
the
limits
of
the
discretion
given
to
the
trustees
under
the
will
to
encroach
on
the
residue
of
the
estate
in
favour
of
the
deceased’s
widow
which
power
of
encroachment
is
provided
in
paragraph
9
of
the
will
and
permits
an
encroachment
of
the
income
up
to
the
sum
of
$10,000
in
any
one
year
and
an
encroachment
upon
the
capital
during
the
lifetime
of
the
wife
to
an
amount
not
exceeding
in
the
aggregate
30,000.
)
Aside
from
Section
3
of
the
Estate
Tax
Act,
the
relevant
statutory
provision
to
be
considered
in
this
appeal
in
relation
to
its
facts
in
Section
7
(1)
(d)
of
the
Estate
Tax
Act
which
reads
as
follows
as
amended
by
Statutes
of
Canada
1960,
chapter
29,
section
4
:
(d)
the
value
of
any
gift
made
by
the
deceased
whether
during
his
lifetime
or
by
his
will,
where
such
gift
can
be
established
to
have
been
absolute
and
indefeasible,
to
(i)
any
organization
in
Canada
that,
at
the
time
of
the
making
of
the
gift
and
of
the
death
of
the
deceased,
was
an
organization
constituted
exclusively
for
charitable
purposes,
all
or
substantially
all
of
the
resources
of
which,
if
any,
were
devoted
to
charitable
activities
carried
on
or
to.
be
carried
on
by
it
or
to
the
making
of
gifts
to
other
such
organizations
in
Canada
all
or
substantially
all
of
the
resources
of
which
were
so
devoted,
and
no
part
of
the
resources
of
which
was
payable
to
or
otherwise
available
for
the
benefit
of
any
proprietor,
member
or
shareholder
thereof,
This
1960
amendment
to
this
subsection
substantially
changed
the
previous
law
by
enlarging
the
number
of
organizations
in
Canada
to
which
gifts
can
be
given
in
the
lifetime
of
a
decedent
or
by
his
will
which
will
qualify
as
a
deduction
from
the
aggregate
net
value
of
a
decedent’s
estate
for
the
purpose
of
computing
aggregate
tax
value.
The
said
subsection
7(1)
(d)
of
the
Estate
Tax
Act
prior
to
the
1960
amendment
read
as
follows
:
(d)
the
value
of
any
gift
made
by
the
deceased
whether
during
his
lifetime
or
by
his
will,
where
such
gift
can
be
established
to
have
been
absolute,
to
(i)
any
organization
in
Canada
that,
at
the
time
of
the
making
of
the
gift,
was
a
charitable
organization
operated
exclusively
as
such
and
not
for
the
benefit,
gain
or
profit
of
any
proprietor,
member
or
shareholder
thereof,
or
The
decedent
Hubert
Harry
Harshman
in
his
lifetime
after
retirement
from
business
and
as
far
back
as
1953,
carried
out
certain
charitable
endeavours.
Among
other
things
he
established
what
is
referred
to
in
these
proceedings
as
the
Institute
of
Citizenship
which
in
essence
was
an
organization
to
promote
good
Canadian
citizenship.
Another
organization,
known
as
the
Macdonald
Institute
which
subsequently
became
the
University
of
Guelph,
was
also
the
object
of
his
charity.
Then
on
September
15,
1963,
he
established
and
endowed
what
is
called
an
organization
referred
to
as
“The
Harshman
Foundation”
by
way
of
memorandum
of
trust.
A
copy
of
it
was
made
part
of
Exhibit
1
on
this
appeal.
That
document
provides,
among
other
things,
the
following.
First
of
all
it
recited
that
:
WHEREAS
the
Settlor
desires
to
establish
and
endow
a
foundation
to
be
known
as
“The
Harshman
Foundation”
for
the
charitable
purpose
of
providing
fellowships
and
scholarships
to
deserving
and
qualified
young
men
and
women
so
that
they
may
improve
their
education
by
attending
suitable
institutions
of
learning;
AND
WHEREAS
the
Trustees
have
agreed
to
act
as
the
Trustees
of
the
Foundation
and
to
carry
out
the
wishes
and
intentions
of
the
Settlor
as
hereinafter
set
forth;
It
then
provided
at
paragraph
1
as
follows:
1.
The
sum
of
$100.00
now
paid
to
the
Trustees
and
such
further
sums
and
amounts
as
may
be
paid
or
transferred
to
the
Trustees
under
the
trusts
hereof
and
the
investment
resulting
from
the
investment
and
re-investment
of
such
amounts
and
the
income
arising
therefrom
from
time
to
time
shall
be
and
constitute
a
fund
to
be
known
as
the
Harshman
Foundation
to
be
held
and
administered
by
the
Trustees
on
the
following
trusts
and
conditions:
(a)
not
less
than
90%
of
the
annual
income
of
the
fund
shall
in
the
discretion
of
the
Trustees
be
paid
to
the
Institute
of
Citizenship
or
to
Macdonald
Institute
or
in
part
to
one
and
in
part
to
the
other
as
the
Trustees
may
see
fit
to
be
used
by
the
recipient
to
provide
fellowships
or
scholarships
in
fulfilment
of
the
intention
of
the
Settlor;
(b)
if
the
Trustees
feel
that
either
of
the
above
designated
recipients
are
not
using
the
amounts
received
by
them
in
a
manner
conforming
to
the
intentions
of
the
Settlor,
the
Trustees
in
their
discretion
may
pay
income
of
the
fund
to
one
or
more
educational
institutions
selected
by
them
to
be
used
by
such
institutions
for
the
purpose
above
stated;
(c)
if
at
any
time
in
the
future
the
Trustees
should
be
of
the
opinion
that
the
capital
of
the
fund
has
appreciated
to
an
amount
which
is
larger
than
is
required
for
the
purposes
of
the
Foundation,
they
may
in
any
year
disburse
for
the
purpose
and
in
the
manner
aforesaid,
an
amount
not
exceeding
25%
of
the
net
realized
capital
appreciation
in
the
fund
during
the
preceding
year;
At
paragraph
2
it
provided
that
in
addition
to
all
the
other
powers
conferred
on
the
trustees
by
the
other
provisions
of
this
agreement
or
by
any
law
or
statute
and
subject
to
the
other
provisions
of
this
agreement,
the
trustees
were
to
have
the
following
powers,
among
others,
namely
:
to
make
investments
other
than
those
authorized
for
trust
funds;
to
engage
investment
counsel
.
.
.
to
act
in
all
respects
as
owners
of
the
securities
and
assets
held.
The
agreement
then
provided
for
how
the
trustees
should
be
appointed
and
their
period
of
office
and
how
their
successors
were
to
be
appointed
and
certain
other
specific
things,
like
the
auditing
of
the
fund,
and
so
forth.
Then
paragraph
7
provided
as
follows:
7.
Subject
as
herein
set
forth,
this
agreement
and
the
terms
hereof
and
the
trusts
hereby
created
may
not
be
-varied
or
revoked
and
the
Trustees
declare
that
they
stand
possessed
of
the
fund
as
trustees
subject
to
the
trusts
herein
set
forth;
Two
of
the
trustees
gave
evidence
on
this
appeal,
namely,
Mr.
Arthur
W.
Rogers
and
Dr.
Jordan
Page
Harshman.
They
explained
the
intention
of
the
decedent
in
setting
up
the
so-called
The
Harshman
Foundation
’
namely,
that
he
was
interested
in
assisting
students
of
need
who
might
with
financial
assistance
in
their
education
be
able
to
take
their
place
in
Canadian
society
in
a
more
substantial
way
and
that
in
so
assisting
such
persons
through
the
Foundation,
that
in
some
measure
the
so-called
brain
drain
’
’
to
the
United
States
might
be
abridged.
They
also
explained
that
the
purpose
of
the
decedent
in
giving
to
the
trustees
the
power,
under
section
1(b)
of
the
trust
document,
to
when
both
of
those
latter
organizations
were
not
doing
the
job
of
carrying
out
the
kind
of
activity
for
which
the
decedent
intended
these
monies
be
used.
They
also
stated
that
an
investment
counsel,
Leon
Frazer
and
Associates,
had
at
all
material
times
been
hired
and
was
employed
for
the
purpose
of
advising
on
investments;
that
the
securities
held
as
investments
in
the
fund
were
held
by
the
Toronto-
Dominion
Bank
in
Toronto
as
custodian
;
that
a
nationally
known
firm
of
chartered
accountants
audited
the
fund
yearly;
that
at
no
time
did
any
trustee
receive
any
fee
or
other
payment
for
carrying
on
their
duties
as
trustees,
nor
was
it
ever
intended
any
trustee
was
to
receive
any
fee
or
other
payment;
and
generally
that
all
of
the
fund
has
been
devoted
at
all
times
to
the
purposes
set
out
in
the
trust
document
and
in
accordance
with
the
wishes
of
the
decedent.
The
parties
agree
that
each
of
the
Institute
of
Citizenship
and
the
Macdonald
Institute
referred
to
in
paragraph
1(a)
of
the
said
memorandum
of
trust
dated
September
15,
1963
is
‘‘an
organization
in
Canada’’
within
the
meaning
of
Section
7(1)
(d)
of
the
Estate
Tax
Act.
The
respondent,
however,
does
not
agree
that
the
educational
institutions’’
referred
to
in
paragraph
1(b)
of
the
memorandum
of
trust
to
which
the
trustees
of
The
Harshman
Foundation
might
pay
the
income
from
the
fund
that
they
administer,
instead
of
to
the
Institute
of
Citizenship
or
to
the
Macdonald
Institute,
are
necessarily
organizations
within
the
meaning
of
an
“organization
in
Canada’’
defined
in
Section
7(1)
(d)
of
the
Estate
Tax
Act.
The
appellant
in
his
pleadings
at
paragraph
1
states
that:
1.
The
Harshman
Foundation
(hereinafter
referred
to
as
the
“Foundation”)
was
established
by
Memorandum
of
Trust
entered
into
on
the
20th
day
of
September,
1963,
by
Hubert
Harry
Harshman
(the
deceased)
and
the
trustees
hereinafter
referred
to,
for
the
charitable
purpose
of
providing
fellowships
and
scholarships
to
deserving
and
qualified
young
men
and
women
so
that
they
might
improve
their
education
by
attending
suitable
institutions
of
learning.
Then
at
paragraphs
14,
15
and
16
it
sets
out
the
statutory
provisions
it
relies
on
and
the
reasons
for
its
appeal.
These
paragraphs
read
as
follows
:
14.
At
the
time
the
deceased
made
gifts
to
the
Foundation
during
his
lifetime
and
at
the
time
of
the
death
of
the
deceased
the
Foundation
was
an
organization
in
Canada
and
was
an
organization
that
had
been
constituted
exclusively
for
the
charitable
purposes
stated
in
paragraph
1
of
this
Notice
of
Appeal.
15.
At
all
times
the
resources
of
the
Foundation
have
been
devoted
to
the
charitable
activity
carried
on
by
it,
namely,
the
payment
of
scholarships
for
educational
purposes
and
no
part
of
the
resources
of
the
Foundation
were
payable
or
otherwise
available
for
the
benefit
of
any
member
thereof.
16.
The
gift
of
income
and
capital
made
by
the
deceased
to
the
Foundation
under
his
will
and
codicil
was
absolute
and
indefeasible
and
the
Foundation
was
at
the
time
the
said
inter
vivos
gifts
were
made
to
it
and
at
the
date
of
the
death
of
the
deceased
and
has
at
least
since
January
6,
1964,
been
an
organization
within
the
meaning
of
section
7(1)
(d)
of
the
Estate
Tax
Act.
The
value
of
the
said
inter
vivos
gifts
and
of
the
gift
made
to
the
Foundation
by
the
will
and
codicil
of
the
deceased
is
deductible
in
computing
the
aggregate
taxable
value
of
the
estate.
The
respondent’s
position
by
the
pleadings
at
paragraphs
6
in
part
is:
6.
The
Respondent
says
that
if
gifts
were
made
by
the
deceased,
either
during
his
lifetime
or
by
his
will
to
the
trustees
under
the
memorandum
of
trust
(which
is
not
admitted)
the
value
of
such
gifts
is
not
deductible
under
paragraph
(d)
of
subsection
(1)
of
Section
7
of
the
Estate
Tax
Act
for
the
purpose
of
computing
the
aggregate
taxable
value
of
the
property
passing
on
the
death
of
the
deceased
because
the
said
gifts
were
not
made
to
an
organization
in
Canada
that,
at
the
time
of
making
of
the
gift
and
of
the
death
of
the
deceased
was
an
organization
described
in
paragraph
(d)
of
subsection
(1)
of
Section
7
of
the
Estate
Tax
Act.
The
respondent
in
pleading
the
statutory
provisions
relied
on
and
the
reasons
for
resisting
this
appeal,
at
paragraph
9
pleads
as
follows
:
9.
The
Respondent
says
that
where
the
deceased
has
given
or
purported
to
give
property
to
trustees
under
a
trust
whereby
the
income
from
that
property
is
to
be
paid
in
the
discretion
of
the
trustees
either
to
persons
named
in
the
trust
document,
or,
in
the
trustees
discretion,
to
other
persons
not
named
therein,
the
value
of
the
property
so
transferred
may
not
be
deducted
under
Section
7(1)
(d)
of
the
Estate
Tax
Act
since:
(a)
neither
the
trust
nor
the
trustees
are
“an
organization
constituted
exclusively
for
charitable
purposes”
within
the
meaning
of
Section
7(1)
(d)
of
the
Estate
Tax
Act;
(b)
the
alleged
gift
to
the
trustees
is
not
in
law
a
gift
to
them
that
is
absolute
and
indefeasible
since
they
are
a
mere
conduit
pipe
or
vehicle
the
function
of
which
is
to
hold
the
property
subject
to
the
terms
of
trust
and
to
pay
the
income
therefrom
to
named
or
unnamed
recipients
in
their
discretion
;
(c)
to
the
extent
that
the
gift
may,
in
law,
properly
be
considered
to
be
a
gift
to
the
ultimate
recipients
or
beneficiaries
thereof,
it
is
not
absolute
and
indefeasible
since
there
is
no
assurance
that
any
of
them
will
receive
any
portion
of
the
alleged
gift.
The
respondent
in
argument,
submitted
that
“The
Harshman
Foundation’’
referred
to
in
these
proceedings
was:
(1)
a
chari-
table
trust
and
not
a
charitable
organization
within
the
meaning
of
Section
7(1)(d)
of
the
Estate
Tax
Act;
and
in
this
connection
referred
to
the
similarity
of
language
employed
in
Section
62(1)
(e)
of
the
Income
Tax
Act
which
exempts
from
taxation
the
income
of
certain
charitable
organizations
in
contradistinction
to
the
language
employed
in
Section
62(1)
(g)
of
the
Income
Tax
Act
which
is
concerned
with
the
exemption
from
taxation
of
the
income
of
certain
charitable
trusts;
and
(2)
that
the
gifts
either
in
lifetime
or
by
the
will
of
the
decedent
were
not
“absolute
and
indefeasible’’
within
the
meaning
of
Section
7(1)
(d)
of
the
Estate
Tax
Act.
The
appellant
in
argument,
submitted
that
“The
Harshman
Foundation
’
’
was
not
an
inter
vivos
or
testamentary
trust
in
the
same
way
as
was
held
in
M.N.R.
v.
Trusts
and
Guarantee
Company,
Limited
(Peter
Birtwistle
Trust),
[1938-39]
C.T.C.
371
(P.C.)
;
Executors
of
the
Wall
of
The
Honourable
Patrick
Burns,
deceased,
et
al.
v.
M.N.R.,
[1946]
C.T.C.
253;
and
The
Trustees
of
the
Estate
of
James
Cosman,
deceased
v.
M.N.R.,
[1941]
EX.C.R.
33;
[1940-41]
C.T.C.
340;
instead
because
of
the
wording
of
Section
7(1)
(d)
of
the
Estate
Tax
Act
since
the
1960
amendment,
there
is
nothing
to
rule
out
an
organization
in
Canada
structured
on
the
trust
basis.
In
other
words,
the
appellant
submitted
that
the
testator
using
a
trust
structure
in
fact
created
an
‘‘organization
in
Canada’’
within
the
meaning
of
Section
7(1)
(d)
;
and
in
this
connection,
the
appellant
relied
in
particular
on
the
concluding
words
of
the
subsection,
namely,
that
such
an
organization
in
Canada
may
itself
be
set
up
for
the
purpose
of
‘‘the
making
of
gifts
to
other
such
organizations
in
Canada
all
or
substantially
all
of
the
resources
of
which’’
are
devoted
to
charitable
activities
carried
on
or
to
be
carried
on
by
them.
The
issue
on
this
appeal
is
whether
or
not
the
so-called
“The
Harshman
Foundation
’
established
by
the
memorandum
of
trust
dated
September
15,
1963
and
operated
pursuant
to
its
terms
and
the
intention
of
the
decedent
‘‘at
the
time
of
the
making
of
the
gift
and
of
the
death
of
the
deceased’’
gives
to
the
trustees
of
it
the
capacity
or
quality
of
an
“organization
in
Canada”
within
the
meaning
of
the
words
contained
in
Section
7(1)
(d)
of
the
Estate
Tax
Act.
After
careful
consideration
of
the
whole
of
the
evidence,
in
my
view,
the
trustees
by
accepting
the
terms
of
the
trust
prescribed
by
the
settlor
in
the
trust
document
dated
September
15,
1963,
and
by
acting
as
fiduciaries
pursuant
to
it
during
the
lifetime
of
the
decedent
Hubert
Harry
Harshman,
and
by
carrying
out
his
intentions
as
evidenced
by
the
said
trust
document
and
by
his
communications
with
them,
constituted
‘‘at
the
time
of
the
making
of”
the
inter
vivos
gifts
referred
to
in
the
evidence,
an
“organization
in
Canada’’
and
at
the
time
‘‘of
the
death
of
the
deceased’’,
it
was
the
same
organization
in
Canada;
that
this
organization
at
the
time
of
the
making
of
the
inter
vivos
gifts
was
entitled
to
receive
them
and
at
this
latter
time,
was
legally
entitled
to
claim
the
capital
and
income
of
the
residue
of
the
estate
of
the
deceased
subject
to
the
provisions
for
encroachment
in
favour
of
the
widow
from
the
trustees
under
the
will
of
the
deceased;
that
this
organization
was
‘‘charitable’’
within
the
meaning
of
The
Commissioners
for
Special
Purposes
of
the
Income
Tax
v.
John
Frederick
Pemsel,
[1891]
A.C.
531;
that
the
evidence
established
that
the
alternative
“educational
institutions”
which
the
trustees
of
The
Harshman
Foundation
could
select
for
the
purpose
of
paying
them
the
income
from
the
fund
of
The
Harshman
Foundation
instead
of
to
either
or
both
of
the
Institute
of
Citizenship
or
the
Macdonald
Institute,
were
intended
by
the
deceased
to
be
only
educational
institutions
in
Canada*
;
and
that
the
purposes
of
the
gifts
inter
vivos
and
by
the
will
in
this
case
were
‘‘absolute
and
indefeasible’’
within
the
meaning
of
Section
7(1)
(d)
of
the
Estate
Tax
Act
as
judicially
considered
in
the
Guaranty
Trust
Company
of
Canada
in
the
capacity
of
Executor
of
the
Will
of
Dorothy
Elgin
Towle,
deceased
v.
M.N.R.
case
(supra).
The
cases
referred
to
by
the
respondent
of
The
Executors
of
the
Will
of
The
Honourable
Patrick
Burns,
deceased,
and
The
Royal
Trust
Company
v.
M.N.R.,
[1946]
EX.C.R.
229;
[1946]
C.T.C.
13;
[1947]
S.C.R.
132;
[1946]
C.T.C.
253;
M.N.R.
v.
Trusts
and
Guarantee
Company,
Limited
(Peter
Birtwistle
Trust),
[1938]
Ex.C.R.
95;
[1938-39]
C.T.C.
356;
[1939]
S.C.R.
125;
[1938-39]
C.T.C.
363;
[1940]
A.C.
138;
[1938-39]
C.T.C.
371;
and
Trustees
of
the
Estate
of
James
Cosman
v.
M.N.R.,
[1941]
Ex.C.R.
33;
[1940-41]
C.T.C.
330,
were
all
cases
where
the
Court
held
that
under
the
relevant
statutory
provisions
being
considered
in
each,
the
trust
was
not
a
“charitable
institution”.
Section
7(1)
(d)
of
the
Estate
Tax
Act,
as
amended
in
1960,
substantially
enlarged
the
number
of
organizations
in
Canada
to
which
inter
vivos
or
testamentary
gifts
could
be
made
which
would
qualify
for
deductions
for
the
purpose
of
computing
the
aggregate
taxable
value
of
property
passing
on
the
death
of
a
deceased
donor
for
the
purposes
of
estate
tax
by
the
addition
of
the
words
‘‘or
to
the
making
of
gifts
to
other
such
organizations
in
Canada
all
or
substantially
all
of
the
resources
of
which
were
so
devoted
’
’.
This
subsection
does
not
prescribe
how
such
an
organization
in
Canada
must
be
created.
In
my
view,
it
may
be
created
in
many
possible
ways,
one
of
which,
as
found,
was
the
way
it
was
done
in
this
case.
In
the
result,
therefore,
the
said
trust
document
does
purport
to
create
and
from
other
evidence
adduced,
there
was
in
fact
created
and
in
existence
for
the
objects
and
purposes
and
pursuant
to
its
terms,
an
organization
in
Canada
that,
‘‘at
the
time
of
the
making
of
the
gift
and
of
the
death
of
the
deceased,
was
an
organization
constituted
exclusively
for
charitable
purposes,
all
or
substantially
all
of
the
resources
of
which,
.
.
.
were
devoted
to
charitable
activities
carried
on
or
to
be
carried
on
by
it
or
to
the
making
of
gifts
to
other
such
organizations
in
Canada
all
or
substantially
all
of
the
resources
of
which
were
so
devoted
;
and
no
part
of
the
resources
of
which
was
payable
to
or
otherwise
available
for
the
benefit
of
any
proprietor,
member
or
shareholder
thereof’’.
The
appeal
is
allowed
with
costs
and
the
matter
is
sent
back
for
reassessment
not
inconsistent
with
these
Reasons.
Counsel
for
the
appellants
may
prepare
in
both
official
languages
an
appropriate
judgment
to
implement
the
foregoing
conclusions
and
may
move
for
judgment
in
accordance
with
Rule
172(1)
(b).