WALsH,
J.:—The
facts
in
this
case
are
not
in
dispute.
On
February
1,
1958
appellant
acquired,
as
a
result
of
his
efforts
as
a
prospector
with
one
Hutchison,
a
mining
property
known
as
the
mining
titles
and
interests
in
a
miner’s
certificate
and
development
licence
number
135725,
claim
number
Two
(2),
granted
by
the
Department
of
Natural
Resources
of
the
Province
of
Quebec,
for
gold
and
silver
only
in
and
on
the
Northwest
half
of
lot
number
Five
(5),
Range
Six
(6),
Southwest,
Stratford
Township,
in
the
County
of
Wolfe,
Province
of
Quebec
(hereinafter
referred
to
as
‘‘the
mining
property’’).
Appellant
and
Hutchison
had
agreed
that
any
consideration
received
on
the
sale
of
the
mining
property
was
to
be
shared
between
them
on
the
basis
of
an
80/20
ratio
respectively.
By
an
agreement
dated
October
6,
1966,
Hutchison,
acting
on
behalf
of
appellant
and
himself,
entered
into
an
agreement
with
Cupra
Mines
Limited
by
virtue
of
which
the
mining
property
was
sold
to
it
in
consideration
of
30%
of
the
average
net
smelter
returns
per
ton
for
gold
and
silver
for
each
ton
of
ore
extracted
from
the
claim,
the
term
‘‘net
smelter
returns’’
being
defined
in
the
agreement.
As
a
result
of
this,
appellant
received
the
sums
of
$33,266.27
and
$29,249.06
in
1967
and
1968
respectively
from
Cupra
as
consideration
for
the
mining
property
which
had
been
sold,
these
amounts
representing
80%
of
the
sums
paid
by
Cupra
in
1967
and
1968.
Appellant
did
not
include
these
amounts
in
his
1967
and
1968
income
for
the
reason
that
he
regarded
them
as
being
received
by
him
as
consideration
for
the
sale
of
his
interest
in
the
mining
property
and
therefore
excluded
from
income
by
virtue
of
Section
83(2)
of
the
Income
Tax
Act.
Respondent
re-assessed
and
included
the
amounts
on
the
basis
that
they
were
received
as
or
on
account
of
royalties
or
similar
payments
depending
upon
use
of
or
production
from
property
within
the
meaning
of
Section
6(1)(j)
and
Section
83(2)
of
the
Income
Tax
Act.
The
only
issue
between
the
parties
is
the
interpretation
of
the
agreement
in
the
light
of
these
provisions
of
the
Income
Tax
Act,
which
read
as
follows:
6.
(1)
Without
restricting
the
generality
of
section
3,
there
shall
be
included
in
computing
the
income
of
a
taxpayer
for
a
taxation
year
(j)
amounts
received
by
the
taxpayer
in
the
year
that
were
dependent
upon
use
of
or
production
from
property
whether
or
not
they
were
instalments
of
the
sale
price
of
the
property,
but
instalments
of
the
sale
price
of
agricultural
land
shall
not
be
included
by
virtue
of
this
paragraph;
83.
(2)
An
amount
that
would
otherwise
be
included
in
computing
the
income
of
an
individual
for
a
taxation
year
shall
not
be
included
in
computing
his
income
for
the
year
if
it
is
the
consideration
for
(a)
a
mining
property
or
interest
therein
acquired
by
him
as
a
result
of
his
efforts
as
a
prospector
either
alone
or
with
others,
or
(b)
shares
of
the
capital
stock
of
a
corporation
received
by
him
in
consideration
for
property
described
in
paragraph
(a)
that
he
has
disposed
of
to
the
corporation,
unless
it
is
an
amount
received
by
him
in
the
year
as
or
on
account
of
a
rent,
royalty
or
similar
payment.
This
is,
as
far
as
can
be
ascertained,
the
first
case
which
has
arisen
requiring
an
interpretation
of
Section
83(2)
of
the
Act
since
it
was
amended
in
1965
so
as
to
add
the
concluding
clause
“unless
it
is
an
amount
received
by
him
in
the
year
as
or
on
account
of
a
rent,
royalty
or
similar
payment”
(8.C.
1965,
c.
18,
Section
19(1)).
All
previous
jurisprudence
therefore,
while
of
some
help
in
its
discussion
of
the
meaning
of
‘‘rent,
royalty
or
similar
payment’’,
is
not
directly
in
point.
In
order
to
appreciate
the
background
of
this
section,
however,
and
its
place
in
the
scheme
of
the
Act
and,
in
particular,
its
relationship
to
Section
6(1)
(j),
it
is
of
interest
to
go
into
the
historical
origin
of
these
sections.
The
Supreme
Court
case
of
Catherine
Spooner
v.
M.N.R.,
[1928-34]
C.T.C.
171,
dealt
with
the
sale
of
property
and
mines
or
mineral
rights
in
it
to
an
oil
company
for
a
cash
consideration
upon
execution
of
the
agreement,
together
with
25,000
shares
of
the
capital
stock
of
the
purchaser,
and
as
further
consideration
10%
of
all
petroleum,
natural
gas
and
oil
produced
by
the
property.
This
case
had
to
decide
whether
these
royalty
payments
came
within
the
meaning
of
the
term
‘‘income’’
as
defined
in
Section
3(1)
of
the
Income
War
Tax
Act,
1917,
which
section
no
longer
exists
in
the
present
Income
Tax
Act.
In
rendering
the
judgment
of
the
Court
deciding
that
these
payments
did
not
constitute
income
within
the
meaning
of
Section
3(1),
Newcombe,
J.
stated
at
pages
181-82
:
.
.
.
It
is
by
the
agreement,
for
the
lack
of
an
apt
definition,
termed
a
“royalty”;
but,
whether
or
not
it
may
appropriately
be
named
a
royalty
or
an
annuity,
the
statute
does
not,
in
terms,
charge
either
royalties
or
annuities,
as
such;
and
here
the
appellant
has
converted
the
land,
which
is
capital,
into
money,
shares
and
ten
per
cent
of
the
stipulated
minerals
which
the
company
may
win.
What
the
appellant
will
realize,
under
the
covenant,
is,
of
course,
uncertain;
although
it
may
be
ascertained
in
the
event.
On
the
other
hand,
it
may
be
assumed
that
if
the
project
prove
unprofitable,
the
minerals
will
not
be
raised
and
that
circumstance,
as
well
as
the
uncertainty
of
the
extent
of
minerals
available,
contributes
to
the
speculative
character
of
the
appellant’s
interest;
but,
nevertheless,
the
appellant’s
receipts
come
from
a
potential
source
of
capital.
The
taxable
commodity
is
“income”,
which
means,
by
the
definition,
annual
profit
or
gain;
and
for
the
appellant,
there
is
no
question
of
profit
or
gain,
unless
it
be
as
to
whether
she
has
made
an
advantageous
sale
of
her
property.
In
the
Privy
Council
judgment
in
the
same
case
([1928-34]
C.T.C.
184)
Lord
Macmillan
said
(at
page
186)
:
The
question
whether
a
particular
sum
received
is
of
the
nature
of
an
annual
profit
or
gain
or
is
of
a
capital
nature
does
not
depend
upon
the
language
in
which
the
parties
have
chosen
to
describe
it.
It
is
necessary
in
each
case
to
examine
the
circumstances
and
see
what
the
sum
really
is,
bearing
in
mind
the
presumption
that
“it
cannot
be
taken
that
the
Legislature
meant
to
impose
a
duty
on
that
which
is
not
profit
derived
from
property,
but
the
price
of
it”
(per
Hanworth,
M.R.,
in
Perrin
v.
Dickson,
[1930]
1
K.B.
107
at
p.
119,
quoting
previous
authorities).
And
again,
at
page
187
:
.
.
.
But
the
share
which
the
respondent
became
entitled
to
receive
of
the
oil
from
the
land
which
she
had
sold
to
the
company
was
not
a
royalty
in
the
sense
of
s.
27,*
or
in
the
ordinary
sense
familiar
in
the
case
of
mining
leases
where
the
lessor
stipulates
for
payment
by
his
lessee
of
a
fixed
rate
per
ton
of
the
mineral
won.
Here
there
is
no
relation
of
lessor
and
lessee.
The
transaction
was
one
of
sale
and
purchase.
It
may
have
taken
the
form
which
it
did
because
of
the
uncertainty
whether
oil
would
be
found
by
the
purchaser
or
not;
as
the
value
of
the
land
depended
on
this
contingency
the
price,
not
unnaturally,
was
made
to
depend
in
part
on
the
event.
As
a
result
of
this
judgment,
Section
3(1)
(f)
of
the
Income
War
Tax
Act
was
enacted
by
S.C.
1934,
c.
55,
Section
1
to
read
as
follows:
3.
(1)
For
the
purposes
of
this
Act,
“income”
.
.
.
shall
include
.
..
(f)
rents,
royalties,
annuities
or
other
like
periodical
receipts
which
depend
upon
the
production
or
use
of
any
real
or
personal
property,
notwithstanding
that
the
same
are
payable
on
account
of
the
use
or
sale
of
any
such
property.
The
wording
of
this
section
is
not
identical
to
that
of
Section
6(1)
(j)
in
the
current
Income
Tax
Act
but
is
analogous
to
it
and
serves
the
same
purpose.
The
interpretation
to
be
given
to
Section
3(1)
(f)
was
dealt
with
at
length
by
Cameron,
J.
in
the
case
of
May
McDougall
Ross
v.
M.N.R.,
[1950]
C.T.C.
169.
That
case
dealt
with
a
lease
agreement
for
mineral
rights
including
oil
and
gas
with
the
option
to
buy
for
a
fixed
sum
plus
a
further
amount
of
$60,000
payable
out
of
10%
of
the
production
of
oil
and
gas,
the
said
payments
in
respect
of
production
being
referred
to
in
the
lease
as
‘‘royalties’’.
The
learned
trial
judge
carefully
considered
the
meaning
to
be
given
to
the
word
‘‘royalty’’
which
is
not
defined
in
the
Act
after
first
stating,
at
page
174:
.
.
.
I
take
it
to
be
well
settled
that
the
name
given
to
a
transaction
by
the
parties
concerned
does
not
necessarily
decide
the
nature
of
the
transaction
(I.R.C'.
v.
Wesleyan
Assurance
Society,
[1948]
1
All
E.R.
555
and
557)
x
The
dictionary
definitions
referred
to
by
him,
as
well
as
some
of
the
previous
jurisprudence
and
his
conclusions,
appear
on
pages
175-76
of
his
judgment
as
follows:
In
the
Shorter
Oxford
English
Dictionary,
Third
Edition,
“royalty”
is
defined
in
various
ways.
Excluding
those
which
have
reference
to
the
Sovereign,
these
definitions
include
the
following
:
“denoting
chiefly
rights
over
minerals”;
“A
payment
made
to
the
landowner
by
the
lessee
of
a
mine
in
return
for
the
privilege
of
working
it”;
“A
sum
paid
to
the
proprietor
of
a
patented
invention
for
the
use
of
it”;
“A
payment
made
to
an
author,
editor,
or
composer
for
each
copy
of
a
book,
piece
of
music,
etc.,
sold
by
the
publisher,
or
for
the
representation
of
a
play”.
Other
definitions
of
the
word
as
used
in
reference
to
oil,
gas
and
minerals
are
found
in
Words
and
Phrases,
Permanent
Edition,
Vol.
37,
at
p.
811,
including
the
following:
(a)
“As
relates
to
mining,
‘royalty’
is
a
share
of
the
product
or
profits
reserved
by
the
owner
for
permitting
another
to
use
the
property.”
(b)
‘Royalty’
in
connection
with
gas
and
oil
leases
is
a
certain
percentage
of
the
oil
after
it
is
found
or
so
much
per
gas
well
developed.”
Again,
in
Webster’s
New
International
Dictionary,
Second
Edition,
it
is
described
as
“a
share
of
the
product
or
profit
(as
of
a
mine,
forest,
etc.)
reserved
by
the
owner
for
permitting
another
to
use
the
property.”
Some
of
these
definitions
would
appear
to
give
some
support
to
appellant’s
argument
that
a
royalty
can
only
be
created
where
there
is
something
reserved
out
of
a
demise
or
grant
and
payable
to
an
owner.
I
have,
however,
been
unable
to
find
any
decision
which
says
that
such
is
the
case,
and
in
one
of
the
definitions
which
I
have
given
above
the
meaning
is
given
as
a
percentage
of
the
oil
or
gas
after
it
is
found,
without
any
reference
to
any
reservation
by
an
owner.
In
Mercer
v.
Attorney
General
for
Ontario
(1882),
5
S.C.R.
538,
Henry,
J.,
at
p.
66
said:
‘Royalties’
is
of
very
general
import
and
very
comprehensive
.
.
.
‘Royalties’
as
to
mines
is
well
understood
in
England
to
be
the
sums
paid
to
the
Sovereign
for
the
right
to
work
the
Royal
mines
of
gold
and
silver;
and
to
the
owner
of
private
lands
for
the
right
to
work
mines
of
the
inferior
metals,
coal,
etc.”
Assuming,
however,
(but
without
deciding)
and
for
the
purposes
of
this
case
only,
that
to
constitute
a
royalty
there
must
have
been
some
reservation
of
that
royalty
in
the
grant
or
demise,
and
assuming
also
that
in
this
case
there
was
not
in
form
any
such
reservation
(although
I
am
of
the
opinion
that
in
both
form
and
substance
there
was
such
a
reservation
in
the
documents
read
as
a
whole),
that
does
not
conclude
the
matter.
It
is
sufficient
to
bring
the
receipts
into
tax
if
they
are
“like”
rents,
royalties
or
annuities,
provided,
of
course,
they
fulfil
the
other
requirements
of
the
subsection.
Royalties,
in
reference
to
mines
or
wells
in
all
the
definitions,
are
periodical
payments
either
in
kind
or
money
which
depend
upon
and
vary
in
amount
according
to
the
production
or
use
of
the
mine
or
well,
and
are
payable
for
the
right
to
explore
for,
bring
into
production
and
dispose
of
the
oils
or
minerals
yielded
up.
All
these
conditions
exist
in
the
present
case.
Another
matter
which
may
not
exist
is
the
reservation
of
rights
at
the
time
of
the
grant
and
the
consequent
payment
to
the
appellant
as
owner
of
such
reserved
rights.
But
even
assuming
that
to
be
the
case
it
is
not
sufficient,
in
my
opinion,
to
prevent
the
“receipts”
here
being
like
or
similar
to
royalties,
all
other
essential
requirements
being
fulfilled.
It
may
well
be
that
the
concluding
words
of
the
subsection
“notwithstanding
that
the
same
are
payable
on
account
of
the
use
or
sale
of
such
property”
are
sufficient
in
themselves
to
do
away
with
any
requirement
that
the
receipts
must
be
paid
to
an
owner.
At
least
the
appellant
was
a
former
owner.
I
find,
therefore,
that
the
receipts
here
were
like
royalties,
if
not
royalties
themselves,
and
therefore
they
come
within
the
meaning
of
that
part
of
the
subsection.
Dealing
with
the
question
that
a
fixed
price
was
specified
in
the
agreement,
following
which
the
payments
would
cease,
he
states,
at
page
179:
.
.
.
It
is
submitted
that
as
payments
to
her
were
limited
to
the
sum
of
$60,000.00,
that
by
itself
establishes
that
her
receipts
were
part
of
the
purchase
price
and
therefore
capital
in
her
hands.
That
fact
might
have
been
of
some
importance
prior
to
the
enactment
of
subsection
(f).
But
having
found
that
the
receipts
were
either
royalties
or
like
royalties,
I
am
unable
to
find
that
they
ceased
to
be
such
merely
because
they
stopped
when
an
agreed
maximum
amount
had
been
paid.
It
must
be
noted,
however,
that
in
this
judgment
he
does
not
actually
make
a
finding
that
the
payments
were
royalties
despite
the
fact
that
this
was
the
term
used
but
rests
his
judgment
finding
the
payments
taxable
on
the
fact
that
they
were,
in
any
event,
‘‘like
royalties”.
This
question
was
again
considered
in
the
Supreme
Court
in
M.N.R.
v.
Wain-Town
Gas
and
Oil
Company,
Limited,
[1952]
C.T.C.
147.
That
case
dealt
with
the
sale
of
a
franchise
to
supply
gas
to
a
municipality,
the
sale
price
agreed
on
being
a
percentage
of
the
gross
sales
of
gas
by
the
purchaser
set
out
in
the
agreement,
such
payments
to
be
made
‘‘by
way
of
royalty’’.
It
was
held,
reversing
the
judgment
of
the
Exchequer
Court,
with
Mr.
Justice
Locke
dissenting,
that
the
payments
received
were
royalties
or
like
periodical
receipts
depending
upon
the
use
of
the
property
within
the
meaning
of
Section
3(1)(f).
Rand,
J.
in
his
judgment,
after
stating
that
it
seemed
to
be
beyond
serious
doubt
that
the
payments
came
within
the
expression
‘‘royalties
or
other
like
periodical
receipts’’
within
the
meaning
of
Section
3(1)
(f)
of
the
Act
and
that
they
depended
upon
the
production
or
use
of
the
property,
concluded
at
pages
154-55:
Are
the
payments,
then,
constituting
as
they
do
part
of
the
consideration
for
the
sale
of
the
franchise,
to
be
excluded
from
tax
as
being
capital
in
their
nature?
In
Wilder
v.
The
Minister,
a
decision
of
this
Court,
as
yet
reported
only
in
[1952]
1
D.L.R.
401;
[1951]
C.T.C.
304,
it
was
held
that
an
annuity
of
$1,000.00
a
month
for
the
life
of
the
annuitant,
which
was
part
of
the
price
for
the
transfer
of
a
business
from
an
individual
to
a
company,
was
of
a
capital
nature
and
not
within
the
definition
of
“income”
in
Section
3(1)
(b)
;
but
under
paragraph
(f)
of
the
section
that
ground
seems
to
be
expressly
met
by
the
language
“notwithstanding
that
the
same
are
payable
on
account
of
the
use
or
sale
of
any
such
property”.
Now,
the
property
is
the
franchise;
the
royalty
is
payable
on
account
of
the
sale
of
it;
and
the
payment
depends
upon
its
exercise.
The
paragraph
seems
to
me
to
be
satisfied
completely
by
the
terms
of
the
transaction,
and
I
must
hold
the
respondent
to
come
within
it.
It
must
be
noted
that
Section
3(1)
(f)
and
subsequently
Section
6(1)
(j)
both
refer
to
property
generally,
and,
at
the
time
the
above-quoted
judgments
were
rendered,
Section
83(2)
was
not
part
of
the
Act.
This
section,
which
first
appeared
in
the
Income
Tax
Act
in
1952
(R.S.C.
1952,
ce.
148),
made
an
exception
for
an
amount
that
would
otherwise
have
been
included
if
it
was
the
consideration
for
a
mining
property
or
interest
therein
acquired
by
the
taxpayer
as
a
result
of
his
efforts
as
a
prospector.
The
section
did
not
at
this
time
have
the
concluding
clause
“unless
it
is
an
amount
received
by
him
in
the
year
as
or
on
account
of
a
rent,
royalty
or
similar
payment”
and
without
this
concluding
clause
it
is
clear
that
for
mining
property
it
was
intended
to,
and
did,
create
an
exception
to
the
general
rule
of
Section
6(1)
(j).
This
section,
as
it
originally
read,
was
dealt
with
by
the
Tax
Appeal
Board
in
the
case
of
Bertrand
Bolduc
v.
M.N.R.,
30
Tax
A.B.C.
392.
In
that
case
the
taxpayer
entered
into
an
agreement
giving
an
option
on
his
mining
property
in
return
for
$5,000
on
execution
of
the
agreement,
$5,000
every
six
months
until
$40,000
had
been
paid
at
which
time
he
would
transfer
the
title,
and
a
royalty
of
50^
per
pound
on
ore
extracted
when
the
property
was
brought
into
production.
In
rendering
judgment,
rejecting
the
Minister’s
contention
that
it
was
Section
6(1)
(j)
that
applied,
the
Chairman,
Cecil
L.
Snyder,
Q.C.
stated
at
page
396
:
Since
the
Parliament
of
Canada
saw
fit
to
include
Section
83(2)
in
the
Income
Tax
Act
it
would
seem,
particularly
from
a
study
of
the
wording
of
that
section,
that
payments,
received
by
persons
engaged
in
prospecting
for
minerals
who
are
successful
in
staking
claims
to
properties
which
yield
marketable
volumes
of
ore,
are
not
to
be
included
as
taxable
income
to
those
persons.
The
section
states
“amounts
that
would
otherwise
be
included
in
computing
the
income
of
an
individual
shall
not
be
included
.
.
.”.
Had
these
provisions
not
been
inserted
in
the
Act
the
argument
advanced
on
behalf
of
the
Minister
would
no
doubt
prevail.
However,
since
Section
83(2)
specifically
exempts
from
taxation
an
amount
which
is
the
consideration
for
a
taxpayer’s
interest
in
a
mining
property
it
should
be
found
that
the
payments
received
in
1957
and
1958
in
consideration
of
the
interest
which
the
appellant
retained
in
the
mineral
claims
are
not
subject
to
income
tax.
This
decision
was
not
appealed
and
I
would
agree
with,
it
and
readily
make
the
same
finding
in
the
present
case
were
it
not
for
the
subsequent
addition
to
Section
83(2)
in
1965
of
the
concluding
clause
‘
‘
unless
it
is
an
amount
received
by
him
in
the
year
as
or
on
account
of
a
rent,
royalty
or
similar
payment’’.
It
would
appear
that
this
amendment
was
made
as
a
result
of
the
Bolduc
decision.
If
Section
83(2)
is
an
exception
to
Section
6(1)
(j)
for
the
benefit
of
mining
property,
the
question
which
must
now
be
decided
is
whether
this
concluding
clause
accomplishes
the
purpose
which
apparently
it
was
intended
to,
and
itself
constitutes
an
exception
to
Section
83(2)
when
the
amounts
paid
as
consideration
are
received
as
or
on
account
of
a
rent,
royalty
or
similar
payment,
so
as
to
bring
such
payments
back
within
the
provisoins
of
the
taxing
Section
6(1)
(j).
It
should
be
noted
that
Section
6(1)
(j)
does
not
use
the
terms
‘
rents,
royalties,
annuities
or
other
like
periodical
receipts’’
used
in
Section
3(1)
(f)
of
the
Income
War
Tax
Act
but
instead
uses
the
single
word
‘‘amounts’’.
Similarly,
Section
83(2)
uses
the
words
‘‘an
amount’’.
However,
the
1965
amendment
in
excepting
from
Section
83(2)
‘‘an
amount’’
received
‘Cas
or
on
account
of
a
rent,
royalty
or
similar
payment”
brings
us
back
again
to
the
problem
considered
in
the
earlier
jurisprudence
of
whether
an
amount
paid
on
account
of
the
purchase
price
of
a
property
should
nevertheless
be
considered
as
“
a
rent,
royalty
or
similar
payment’’
when
the
calculation
and
payment
of
it
is
dependent
on
the
use
or
production
of
the
property.
It
is
conceded
by
respondent
that
in
the
present
case
there
is
no
question
of
the
payments
made
being
in
the
nature
of
a
rent,
so
unless
they
are
a
‘‘royalty
or
similar
payment’’
they
would
not
fall
within
the
exception
in
the
concluding
clause
of
Section
83(2).
In
addition
to
the
definitions
of
‘‘royalty’’
in
the
dictionaries
and
jurisprudence
quoted
(supra)
some
consideration
should
be
given
to
the
manner
in
which
it
is
used
in
the
Income
Tax
Act.
Although
it
is
not
defined
therein,
the
word
“royalty”
is
used
in
several
sections.
Subsections
(3)
and
(4)
of
Section
17,
dealing
with
non-arm’s
length
payments
between
residents
and
non-residents,
refer
to
the
payment
of
a
‘price,
rental,
royalty
or
other
payment
for
use
or
reproduction
of
any
property’’.
This
section
certainly
implies
that
the
property
is
retained
by
the
person
receiving
the
payment,
since
the
payment
is
made
for
the
use
of
or
the
reproduction
of
the
property.
Section
106(1)
(d)
(v)
reads
as
follows:
106.
(1)
Every
non-resident
person
shall
pay
an
income
tax
of
15%
on
every
amount
that
a
person
resident
in
Canada
pays
or
credits,
or
is
deemed
by
Part
I
to
pay
or
credit,
to
him
as,
on
account
or
in
lieu
of
payment
of,
or
in
satisfaction
of,
(d)
rent,
royalty
or
a
similar
payment,
including,
but
not
so
as
to
restrict
the
generality
of
the
foregoing,
any
payment
(v)
that
was
dependent
upon
the
use
of
or
production
from
property
in
Canada
whether
or
not
in
was
an
instalment
on
the
sale
price
of
the
property,
but
not
including
an
instalment
on
the
sale
price
of
agricultural
land,
This
section,
which
makes
taxable
such
income
in
Canada
of
non-resident
persons,
clearly
corresponds
to
Section
6(1)
(j)
and
makes
all
such
royalty
payments
taxable
whether
or
not
they
were
instalments
on
the
sale
price
of
the
property.
It
is
evident
that,
in
order
to
make
an
instalment
payment
on
the
sale
price
of
a
property
taxable
as
income
in
the
hands
of
the
recipient,
when
such
payments
would
not
normally
be
taxable,
special
sections
of
the
Act,
such
as
6(1)
(j)
or
106(1)
(d)
(v),
are
required.
An
examination
of
the
wording
of
Section
83(2)
discloses
that
it
refers
to
‘‘an
amount’’
that
is
‘‘the
consideration
for’’
but
it
does
not
specify
whether
the
amount
is
the
consideration
for
the
sale
of,
rental
of,
or
simply
use
of
the
mining
property
in
question.
Appellant
contends
that
when
the
payment
is
consideration
for
the
sale
of
the
property
then
the
concluding
clause
does
not
apply
since
the
amount
is
not
received
‘‘as
or
on
account
of
a
rent,
royalty
or
similar
payment’’
but
rather
on
account
of
instalments
of
the
purchase
price.
The
fact
that
no
specific
amount
was
fixed
for
the
purchase
price
but
that
annual
payments
will
carry
on
indefinitely
and
that
they
are
based
on
the
production
of
the
property
does
not
alter
this
(see
quotation
from
judgment
of
Cameron,
J.
in
the
Ross
case
(supra)
at
page
179).
He
contends
therefore
that
the
concluding
clause
applies
only
when
the
amounts
are
received
as
a
consideration
for
the
rental
or
use
of
property
in
which
the
taxpayer
still
retains
title,
in
which
event
the
payments
are
then
‘‘as
or
on
account
of
a
rent,
royalty
or
similar
payment’’.
In
that
event
he
remains
the
owner
of
the
property
and
the
payments
he
is
receiving
are
clearly
income
and
should
be
taxed
as
such.
However,
in
the
event
of
the
sale
of
mining
property
acquired
by
the
taxpayer
as
a
result
of
his
efforts
as
a
prospector
either
alone
or
with
others
he
would
be
exempt
from
taxation
on
the
payments,
which
for
other
types
of
property
would
be
taxed
under
Section
6(1)
(j),
even
if
these
payments
were
deemed
to
be
royalties
or
similar
payments
dependent
upon
the
use
of
or
production
from
the
property.
In
my
view,
while
the
concluding
clause
of
Section
83(2)
takes
out
of
this
exception
amounts
paid
which
are
received
as
royalties
or
similar
payments,
it
does
not
go
so
far
as
to
bring
back
into
full
application
Section
6(1)
(j)
since
it
does
not
make
such
amounts
taxable
‘
whether
or
not
they
were
instalments
of
the
sale
price
of
the
property’’.
We
are
thus,
for
this
particular
type
of
sale,
put
back
in
the
position
which
existed
before
Section
6(1)
(j)
and
its
predecessor
3(1)
(f)
were
passed
and
the
Spooner
case
(supra)
would
apply.
This
would
seem
to
be
a
more
reasonable
interpretation
of
Section
83(2)
than
it
would
be
to
conclude
that
because
the
amounts
of
the
annual
payments
were
based
on
production
from
the
property
they
must
be
considered
as
a
‘
‘
royalty
or
similar
payment’’
even
though
the
taxpayer
had
divested
himself
of
all
proprietary
interests
in
the
property.
It
also
avoids
what
would
otherwise
be
an
apparent
injustice
to
the
prospector
whom
Section
83(2)
is
intended
to
favour
in
that
if
he
hold
his
property
on
the
basis
that
he
would
receive
annual
payments
of
a
fixed
amount
(even
though
the
purchaser
might
well
have
estimated
the
amount
of
these
annual
payments
on
the
basis
of
what
he
anticipated
the
annual
production
of
the
property
would
be)
he
would
be
exempt
from
taxation
on
such
payments,
whereas,
on
the
other
hand,
if,
instead
of
the
annual
payments
being
fixed
in
amounts
they
were
based
on
a
percentage
of
the
actual
production
of
the
property,
which
is
a
reasonable
way
of
making
such
an
agreement
as
was
pointed
out
by
Lord
Macmillan
in
the
passage
cited
from
page
187
of
the
case
of
M.N.R.
v.
Catherine
Spooner
(supra),
the
prospector
would
be
obliged
to
pay
tax
on
the
sum
so
received.
I
find,
therefore,
that,
while
the
amounts
received
by
the
taxpayer
in
the
present
case
may
have
been
in
the
nature
of
‘‘royalties
or
similar
payments’’
they
were
not
received
by
him
as
such,
but
rather
as
instalments
on
account
of
the
purchase
price
of
the
property,
though
calculated
on
the
basis
of
production
from
the
property,
and
that
the
concluding
clause
of
Section
83(2)
does
not
take
him
out
of
the
exemption
provided
in
that
section
of
the
Act
or
have
the
result
of
making
him
taxable
under
Section
6(1)
(j)
since
the
amounts
were
received
as
consideration
for
the
sale
of
mining
property
acquired
by
him
as
a
result
of
his
efforts
as
a
prospector,
and
not
as
royalties
or
similar
payments
for
the
use
of
same.
The
appeal
is
therefore
maintained
with
costs
and
the
reassessments
of
appellant’s
income
with
respect
to
his
1967
and
1968
taxation
years
are
referred
back
to
the
Minister
for
reassessment
in
order
to
delete
therefrom
the
sums
of
$33,266.27
and
$29,249.06
added
to
his
income
for
those
years
respectively.
MONTREAL
TRUST
COMPANY,
EXECUTOR
UNDER
THE
LAST
WILL
AND
Codicil
OF
JOHN
STEWART
DONALD
TORY,
Appellant,
and
MINISTER
OF
NATIONAL
REVENUE,
Respondent.
Federal
Court—Trial
Division
(Walsh,
J.),
June
25,
1971,
on
appeal
from
an
asssesment
of
the
Minister
of
National
Revenue.
Income
tax—Federal—Income
Tax
Act,
R.S.C.
1952,
c.
148—Section
64(2),
(3)—Deceased
taxpayer—Value
of
rights
or
things
on
death—
Transfer
or
distribution
of
rights
or
things
to
beneficiary—Rights
or
things
acquired
by
beneficiary
as
purchaser
for
value
rather
than
qua
beneficiary.
On
the
death
of
the
deceased,
a
solicitor,
amounts
totalling
$483,350
were
owing
to
him
by
clients
and
it
was
common
ground
that
these
represented
“rights
or
things”
the
value
of
which
would
ordinarily
be
required
by
Section
64(2)
to
be
included
in
computing
his
income
for
the
year
of
death.
However,
within
the
time
allowed
by
Section
64(3)
for
so
doing,
the
executors
purported
to
transfer
these
accounts
receivable
to
the
deceased’s
daughter,
who
was
one
of
the
beneficiaries.
This
transfer
was
effected
in
part
as
on
account
of
a
$90,000
specific
legacy
in
favour
of
the
daughter
and
in
part
by
an
undertaking
by
the
daughter
to
pay
$380,000
in
cash
to
the
executors
within
one
year.
It
was
conceded
that
this
arrangement
was
designed
to
avoid
tax
on
the
value
of
the
rights
or
things,
inasmuch
as
the
daughter,
being
non-resident
at
the
time
of
realization,
was
not
liable
to
tax
in
Canada.
The
Minister
accepted
this
arrangement
only
to
the
extent
of
the
$90,000
owing
to
the
daughter
as
a
specific
legacy
and
contended
that
to
the
extent
of
the
remainder
the
rights
or
things
so
acquired
by
the
daughter
were
acquired
by
her
merely
as
a
purchaser
for
value
and
not
in
her
capacity
as
beneficiary,
and
were
therefore
outside
the
ambit
of
Section
64(3).
HELD:
Section
64(3)
could
not
be
interpreted
as
applying
to
all
rights
or
things
which
might
be
transferred
or
distributed
by
way
of
a
sale
for
value
to
a
purchaser
who
also
happened
to
be
a
beneficiary
or
other
person
beneficially
interested
in
an
estate
or
trust
irrespective
of
how
small
his
benefit
or
beneficial
interest
might
be.
To
the
extent
that
the
value
of
rights
so
transferred
or
distributed
to
a
beneficiary
exceeded
the
value
of
his
beneficial
interest,
the
beneficiary
was
simply
a
purchaser
for
value
and
the
estate
or
trust
was
taxable
under
Section
64(2)
on
such
excess.
Appeal
dismissed.
F,
W.
Callaghan,
Q.C.
and
R.
J.
Gathercole
for
the
Appellant.
G.
W.
Ainslie,
Q.C.
and
M.
J.
Bonner
for
the
Respondent.
CASES
REFERRED
to
:
David
Fasken
Estate
v.
M.N.R.,
[1948]
Ex.
C.R.
580;
[1948]
C.T.C.
265;
Roy
Otto
German
v.
M.N.R.,
[1957]
C.T.C.
291;
Donald
F.
Campbell
v.
M.N.R.
(1963),
32
Tax
A.B.C.
203:
Joseph
B.
Dunkelman
v.
M.N.R.,
[1960]
Ex.
C.R.
73;
[1959]
C.T.C.
375;
Hugh
Hawk
Estate:v.
M.N.R.
(1957),
17
Tax
A.B.C.
71;
Gathercole
v.
Smith
(1880-81),
17
Ch.
D.
1;
Ernest
George
Willis
Estate
v.
M.N.R.,
[1968]
Tax
A.B.C.
177
;
Commissioner
of
Stamp
Duties
(Queensland)
v.
Hugh
Duncas
Livingston,
[1965]
A.C.
694;
M.N.R.
v.
Fitzgerald
(George
V.
Steed
Estate),
[1949]
S.C.R.
453;
[1949]
C.T.C.
101;
Bennett
v.
Ogston
(1930),
15
Tax
Cas.
374;
Gospel
v.
Purchase,
[1951]
2
All
E.R.
1071;
Frankel
Corporation
Limited
v.
M.N.R.,
[1959]
S.C.R.
713;
[1959]
C.T.C.
244;
Crompton
(Inspector
of
Taxes)
v.
Reynolds
and
Gibson,
[1952]
1
All
E.R.
888;
Highway
Sawmills
Limited
v.
M.N.R.,
[1966]
S.C.R.
384;
[1966]
C.T.C.
150;
M.N.R.
v,
Pillsbury
Holdings
Limited,
[1965]
1
Ex.
C.R.
676;
[1964]
C.T.C.
294.
WALSH,
J.:—This
is
an
appeal
from
a
notice
of
re-assessment
in
respect
of
the
1965
taxation
year
of
the
taxpayer
wherein
$380,000
was
included
in
his
income
for
that
year.
The
taxpayer
died
on
August
27,
1965
in
Ontario
where
he
had
formerly
carried
on
the
practice
of
law
in
the
City
of
Toronto
and
at
the
date
of
his
death
amounts
totalling
$483,350
were
owed
to
him
by
various
clients:
His
daughter,
Mrs.
Mary
Virginia
Denton,
was
a
beneficiary
under
the
terms
of
his
last
will
and
codicil,
and
on
or
about
February
11,
1966
the
right
to
receive
these
amounts
was
transferred
to
her
under
an
arrangement
whereby
she
released
the
estate
of
the
taxpayer
from
its
liability
to
pay
her
the
$90,000
balance
of
a
legacy
payable
to
her
under
his
last
will
and
codicil
and
agreed
to
pay
the
estate
the
sum
of
$380,000
Canadian
funds
within
one
year
from
the
date
of
the
transfer.
The
appellant
did
not
include
in
the
income
of
the
taxpayer
the
amount
so
transferred
to
Mrs.
Denton
on
the
basis
that
the
right
to
receive
same
had
been
transferred
to
a
beneficiary
of
the
estate
of
the
taxpayer
within
the
time
prescribed
by
Section
64(3)
of
the
Income
Tax
Act.
In
making
the
re-assessment,
the
Minister
did
so
on
the
basis
that
the
amounts
totalling
$483,350
owed
to
the
taxpayer
by
his
clients
at
the
date
of
his
death
were
rights
or
things,
the
amount
whereof
when
realized
would
have
been
included
in
computing
his
income,
that
of
this
amount
an
amount
of
$103,350
was
transferred
or
distributed
to
Mrs.
Mary
Virginia
Denton,
a
beneficiary
of
his
estate
prior
to
the
time
for
making
an
election
under
the
provisions
of
Section
64(2)
of
the
Income
Tax
Act,
leaving
a
balance
of
$380,000
of
rights
or
things
not
so
transferred
or
distributed.
In
the
agreed
statement
of
facts
the
parties
admit,
inter
alia,
that
the
appellant
is
executor
of
the
last
will
and
testament
of
the
taxpayer
and
codicil
thereto
for
which
letters
probate
were
duly
granted
and
a
true
copy
filed
as
an
exhibit;
that
on
or
about
November
10,
1965
appellant
paid
the
sum
of
$10,000
to
Mary
Virginia
Denton,
one
of
the
three
children
of
the
deceased
taxpayer,
representing
part
payment
of
the
legacy
of
$100,000
made
to
her
in
paragraph
3(h)
of
the
will;
and
that
the
value
of
the
accounts
receivable
to
the
taxpayer
at
the
date
of
his
death
as
reported
in
his
estate
tax
return
was
$483,350.
On
February
4,
1966
appellant
sent
the
said
Mary
Virginia
Denton
a
letter
offering
to
transfer
the
accounts
to
her,
which
concluded
:
This
transfer
would
be
made
to
you
in
consideration
of
your
releasing
the
Estate
from
its
liability
to
pay
you
the
$90,000
balance
of
the
legacy
payable
to
you
under
your
late
father’s
Will
and
in
consideration
of
your
agreement
to
pay
the
Estate
the
sum
of
$380,000
(Canadian
funds),
such
payment
to
be
made
within
one
year
from
the
effective
date
of
the
transfer
of
the
foregoing
amounts
to
you.
Would
you
kindly
confirm
the
foregoing
arrangement
by
signing
and
returning
to
us
the
enclosed
copy
of
this
letter.
Mrs.
Denton
did
so
on
February
5,
1966.
She
then,
on
February
7,
1966,
sent
letters
to
the
debtors
of
the
said
accounts
advising
them
of
the
transfer
and
requesting
that
the
settlement
cheque
be
sent
to
her
at
the
Lucayan
Beach
Hotel
in
Freeport,
Bahamas.
On
February
11,
1966
appellant
sent
letters
to
each
of
the
debtors
advising
them
of
the
transfer,
enclosing
copies
of
the
probate
and
Ontario
and
federal
succession
duty
and
estate
tax
releases
and
authorizing
them
to
make
the
payments
to
Mrs.
Denton
in
Freeport
as
requested.
It
is
further
agreed
that
on
February
11,
1966
Mrs.
Denton
left
Canada
with
her
children
to
join
her
husband
who
had
accepted
employment
in
the
United
States
of
America
and
that
she
has
remained
a
non-resident
of
Canada
since
that
date,
and
that
the
appellant,
in
an
endeavour
to
realize
the
assets
of
the
estate
in
a
manner
most
beneficial
thereto,
discussed
with
Mrs.
Denton
a
proposal
that
the
said
arrangement
be
entered
into,
the
intention
being
to
utilize
the
provisions
of
Section
64(3)
of
the
Income
Tax
Act
and
to
preclude
the
inclusion
under
Section
64(2)
in
the
computation
of
the
taxpayer’s
income
for
the
taxation
year
in
which
he
died
of
the
value
of
the
said
accounts
receivable
at
the
time
of
his
death.
Mrs.
Denton
sought
the
advice
of
counsel
as
to
the
effect
of
the
said
arrangement
on
her
United
States
income
tax
liability
and
it
was
as
a
result
of
such
advice
that,
upon
leaving
Canada,
she
went
to
Freeport,
Bahamas
where,
between
February
18,
1966
and
February
21,
1966,
she
received
payment
in
full
of
the
said
accounts
receivable.
On
February
16,
1967,
pursuant
to
the
arrangement
made,
Mrs.
Denton
paid
appellant
the
sum
of
$380,000.
This
payment
was
included
in
the
capital
account
of
the
estate,
the
entry
being
as
follows
:
Payment
for
purchase
of
$483,350
legal
fees
receivable
by
deceased
at
date
of
death—$470,000
less
$90,000—
|
balance
of
cash
legacy
payable
as
per
Clause
3(h)
|
|
|
of
The
Will
|
$380,000.00
|
On
June
1,
1966
respondent
assessed
tax
for
the
1965
taxation
year
of
the
taxpayer
on
the
basis
that
the
amount
properly
included,
pursuant
to
the
provisions
of
Section
64(2)
of
the
Income
Tax
Act,
in
computing
the
taxpayer’s
income
for
1965
in
respect
of
the
accounts
receivable
was
$483,350.
Appellant
duly
objected
to
the
assessment
and
served
on
the
respondent
a
notice
of
objection
dated
August
23,
1966,
as
a
result
of
which,
on
August
7,
1968,
pursuant
to
Section
58(3)
of
the
Income
Tax
Act,
respondent
re-assessed
tax
for
the
1965
taxation
year
of
the
taxpayer
on
the
basis
that
the
amount
properly
included
pursuant
to
the
provisions
of
Section
64(2)
of
the
Income
Tax
Act
in
computing
the
taxpayer’s
income
for
1965
in
respect
of
the
accounts
receivable
was
$380,000.
Appellant
then
commenced
this
appeal.
N
0
witnesses
were
called
by
either
party
and
no
explanation
was
given
as
to
the
discrepancy
of
$13,350
between
the
amount
of
the
accounts
collected
by
Mrs.
Denton
in
the
amount
of
$483,350
and
the
amount
of
$470,000
which
she
paid
for
them,
partly
by
accepting
same
in
lieu
of
the
balance
of
$90,000
owing
her
under
the
$100,000
legacy
to
which
she
was
entitled,
and
partly
by
the
cash
payment
by
her
of
the
sum
of
$380,000,
which
is
the
amount
for
which
the
taxpayer
has
now
been
re-assessed,
and
counsel
for
the
parties
conceded
that
this
was
not
an
issue
in
the
present
appeal.
Three
options
were
open
to
appellant
for
dealing
with
the
deceased
taxpayer’s
income
tax
liability
in
the
year
1965
with
respect
to
these
accounts
receivable
and
to
avoid
having
them
included
in
his
taxable
income
for
that
year
in
which
he
died
:
(a)
it
could
have,
within
one
year
from
the
date
of
his
death
or
within
90.
days
after
the
mailing
of
a
notice
of
assess-
ment
in
respect
of
his
tax
for
the
year
of
his
death,
whichever
was
later,
availed
itself
of
the
provisions
of
Section
64(2)
(a)
of
the
Income
Tax
Act
and
included
one-fifth
of
the
value
of
said
accounts
in
computing
his
income
for
each
of
his
last
five
taxation
years
including
the
year
of
death,
and
paid
the
resulting
additional
tax
for
any
year
other
than
the
year
in
which
he
died
within
thirty
days
from
the
day
of
mailing
of
the
notice
of
assessment
for
the
year
in
which
he
died;
or
(b)
it
could
have
filed
a
separate
return
of
the
value
of
these
accounts
and
paid
tax
thereon
for
the
taxation
year
in
which
he
died
as
if
he
had
been
another
person
entitled
to
the
same
deductions
to
which
he
was
entitled
under
Section
26
of
the
Act
for
that
year
(that
is
to
say
his
deductions
for
dependants)
;
(c)
the
third
option
and
that
which
it
adopted
forms
the
subject
of
the
present
appeal
and
results
from
the
wording
of
Section
64(3)
of
the
Act,
which
reads
as
follows:
64.
(3)
Where
before
the
time
for
making
an
election
under
subsection
(2)
has
expired,
a
right
or
thing
to
which
that
subsection
would
otherwise
apply
has
been
transferred
or
distributed
to
beneficiaries
or
other
persons
beneficially
interested
in
the
estate
or
trust,
(a)
subsection
(2)
is
not
applicable
to
that
right
or
thing,
and
(b)
an
amount
received
by
one
of
the
beneficiaries
or
other
such
persons
upon
the
realization
or
disposition
of
the
right
or
thing
shall
be
included
in
computing
his
income
for
the
taxation
year
in
which
he
received
it.
By
transferring’
the
accounts
receivable
to
a
beneficiary
who
was
not
herself
taxable
for
income
in
Canada
on
the
realization
by
her
of
these
accounts,
the
appellant
was
able
to
receive
from
her
an
amount
representing
nearly
the
full
value
of
them
without
the
estate
paying
income
tax
on
behalf
of
the
deceased
in
the
year
1965
for
the
amounts
received
in
payment
for
this
transfer.
The
fact
that
Mrs.
Denton
did
not
have
to
pay
income
tax
on
the
amount
of
the
accounts
so
purchased
when
she
received
payment
of
them,
since
she
was
not
at
that
time
a
beneficiary
resident
in
Canada
and
taxable
therein
when
these
accounts
were
realized’is
not,
of
course,
relevant
to
the
present
issue
which
merely
concerns:
the
applicability
of
Section
64(3)
to
the
determination
of
the
deceased’s
income
tax
liability.
The
whole
case
turns
on
the
interpretation
to
be
given
to
the
words:
“transferred
or
distributed
to
beneficiaries
or
other
persons
beneficially
interested
in
the
estate
or
trust’’.
The
word
“transferred”
used
by
itself
has
been
dealt
with
in
several
previous:
decisions.
In
rendering
judgment
in
the
case
of
David
Fasken
Estate
v.
M.N.R.,
[1948]
Ex.
C.R.
580;
[1948]
C.T.C.
265,
Thorson,
P.
referred
to
two
dictionary
definitions
of
the
word
‘‘transfer’’.
The
New
English
Dictionary
gives
the
meaning
2.
Law.
To
convey
or
make
over
(title,
right
or
property)
by
deed
or
legal
process.
Webster’s
New
International
Dictionary,
2nd
ed.,
says:
2.
To
make
over
the
possession
or
control
of,
to
make
transfer
of;
to
pass;
to
convey,
as
a
right,
from
one
person
to
another;
as,
title
to
land
is
transferred
by
deed.
At
page
592
[279]
he
states:
In
Gathercole
v.
Smith
(1880-81),
17
Ch.
D.
1
at
7,
James,
L.J.,
spoke
of
the
word
“transfer”
as
‘‘one
of
the
widest
terms
that
can
be
used”
and
Lush,
L.J.,
said,
at
page
9:
“The
word
‘transferable,’
I
agree
with
Lord
Justice
James,
is
a
word
of
the
widest
import
and
includes
every
means:
by
which
the
property
may
be
passed
from
one
person
to
another.”
The
word
“transfer”
is
not
a
term
of
art
and
has
not
a
technical
meaning.
It
is
not
necessary
to
a
transfer
of
property
from
a
husband’
to
his
wife
that
it
should
be
made
in
any
particular
form
or
that
it
should
be
made
directly.
All
that.
is
required
is
that
the
husband
should
so
deal
with
the
property
as
to
divest
himself
of
it
and
vest
it
in
his
wife,
that
is
to
say,
pass
the
property
from
himself
to
her.
The
means
by
which
he
accomplishes
this
result,
whether
direct
or
circuitous,
may
properly
be
called
a
transfer.
He
was
dealing
with
Section
32(2)
of
the
Income
War
Tax
Act
and
its
predecessor
Section
7
of
the
1926
Act
which
were
somewhat
analogous
to
Section
21(1)
of
the
present
Act
dealing
with
transfers
of
property
between
husband
and
wife.
Further
on
he
states,
at
pages
595-96
[282]
:
If
then
it
was
not
a
condition
of
liability
under
section
7
of
the
1926
Act
that
the
transfer
therein
referred
to
was
made
for
the
purpose
of
evading
taxation
there
can
be
no
such
condition
in
section
32(2)
of
the
1927
Revision.
Moreover,
quite
apart
from
any
statutory
provisions
relating
to
the
Revised
Statutes,
it
is
not
permissible,
where
the
words
in
a
taxing
Act
are
clear,
to
read
into
it
either
conditions
of
liability
thereunder
or
exemptions
therefrom
other
than
those
that
are
within
its
express
terms.
Full
effect
must
be
given
to
its
words
without
additions
or
subtractions.
In
my
opinion,
the
words
section
32(2)
of
the
1927
Revision,
and
the
corresponding
part
of
its
predecessor,
section
7
of
the
1926
Act,
are
free
from
any
ambiguity
and
liability
thereunder
is
not
confined
to
cases
where
the
transfer
of
property
was
made
for
the
purpose
of
evading
taxation,
nor
does
the
fact
that
the
transfer
was
made
in
good
faith
or
for
valuable
consideration
place
it
outside
the
scope
of
the
sections.
This
judgment
was
referred
to
and
followed
in
the
case
of
Roy
Otto
German
v.
M.N.R.,
[1957]
C.T.C.
291,
by
Mr.
Justice
Thurlow
who
stated
at
page
295
:
In
my
opinion,
the
expression
“has
transferred”
in
Section
21(1)
of
the
Income
Tax
Act
has
a
similar
meaning.
I
read
that
expression
as
referring
to
an
act
whereby
the
husband
has
divested
himself
of
property
and
vested
it
in
his
wife;
that
is
to
say,
has
passed
the
property
from
himself
to
her.
Had
the
appellant
in
this
case
deeded
a
share
of
his
homestead
property
to
his
wife,
whether
for
consideration
or
not,
there
would
undoubtedly
have
been
a
transfer
of
such
share
to
her.
Had
he
deeded
his
property
to
a
purchaser
and
directed
the
purchaser
to
pay
the
price
to
his
wife,
again
in
my
opinion
there
would
have
been
a
transfer.
In
such
a
transaction,
the
property
having
been
his,
the
price
paid
for
it
would
also
have
been
his,
but
for
the
transfer
of
it
to
his
wife
accomplished
by
his
direction
to
the
purchaser
to
pay
it
to
her.
The
word
‘‘transfer’’
was
also
discussed
in
the
Tax
Appeal
Board
case
of
Donald
F.
Campbell
v.
M.N.R.
(1963),
32
Tax
A.B.C.
208,
where,
at
page
204,
the
Assistant
Chairman,
after
referring
to
the
exhaustive
examination
of
the
meaning
of
‘‘transfer’’
by
Thorson,
P.
in
the
Fasken
Estate
case
(supra)
stated:
‘‘That
term
embraces
any
passing
of
ownership.’’
In
the
case
of
Joseph
B.
Dunkelman
v.
M.N.R.,
[1960]
Ex.
C.R.
73;
[1959]
C.T.C.
375,
Thurlow,
J.,
considering
the
taxability
of
income
from
property
transferred
or
from
property
substituted
for
property
transferred
by
the
appellant
to
a
person
under
19
years
of
age
within
the
meaning
of
Section
22(1)
of
the
Act
again
referred
to
the
Fasken
Estate
case
(supra)
and
then
went
on
to
say
at
page
78
[380]
:
And
in
St.
Aubyn
v.
Attorney-General,
[1952]
A.C.
15,
Lord
Radcliffe
put
the
matter
in
almost
the
same
way
when
he
said
at
p.
53
:
“If
the
word
‘transfer’
is
taken
in
its
primary
sense,
a
person
makes
a
transfer
of
property
to
another
person
if
he
does
the
act
or
executes
the
instrument
which
divests
him
of
the
property
and
at
the
same
time
vests
it
in
that
other
person.”
The
expression
“has
transferred”
in
Section
22(1)
has,
in
my
opinion,
a
similar
meaning.
All
that
is
necessary
is
that
the
taxpayer
shall
have
so
dealt
with
property
belonging
to
him
as
to
divest
himself
of
it
and
vest
it
in
a
person
under
19
years
of
age.
The
means
adopted
in
any
particular
case
to
transfer
property
are
of
no
importance,
as
it
seems
clear
that
the
intention
of
the
subsection
is
to
hold
the
transferor
liable
for
tax
on
income
from
property
transferred
or
on
property
substituted
therefor,
no
matter
what
means
may
have
been
adopted
to
accomplish
the
transfer.
He
concludes
that
the
making
of
a
loan
is
not
a
transaction
within
the
meaning
of
the
expression
“has
transferred
prop-
erty’’.
With
regard
to
the
question
of
taxation
of
income
of
one
person
in
the
hands
of
another,
he
says,
at
page
77
[379]
:
.
.
.
It
goes
without
saying
that,
if
the
rule
set
out
in
Section
22(1)
applies,
the
appellant
will
be
liable
for
tax
on
the
income
in
question,
regardless
of
how
harsh
or
unjust
the
result
may
appear
to
be.
But,
as
it
is
not
within
the
purview
of
the
general
taxing
provisions
of
the
statute
to
tax
one
person
in
respect
of
the
income
of
another,
the
subsection
must,
in
my
opinion,
be
regarded
as
an
exception
to
the
general
rule,
and
while
it
must
be
given
its
full
effect
so
far
as
it
goes,
it
is
to
be
strictly
construed
and
not
extended
to
anything
beyond
the
scope
of
the
natural
meaning
of
the
language
used,
regardless
again
of
how
much
a
particular
case
may
seem
to
fall
within
its
supposed
spirit
or
intendment.
All
of
the
above
cases
dealt
with
a
different
section
of
the
Act
where
the
words
‘‘has
transferred’’
were
used
alone
and
not
in
conjunction
with
the
words
‘‘or
distributed’’,
but
in
the
case
of
the
Hugh
Hawk
Estate
v.
M.N.R.
(1957),
17
Tax
A.B.C.
71,
it
was
Section
64(3)
itself
which
was
considered.
In
that
case
the
deceased
and
his
three
sons
operated
their
own
farms
under
an
arrangement
whereby
grain
and
livestock
were
sold
under
a
partnership
name
and
the
proceeds
divided
amongst
them
in
certain
proportions.
After
the
deceased’s
death
an
agreement
was
reached
by
his
widow
and
sons,
although
never
put
in
writing,
whereby
all
the
interests
of
the
deceased
in
grain
or
livestock
became
the
property
of
the
sons
in
return
for
which
certain
payments
were
to
be
made
to
the
widow.
It
was
held
that
the
cattle
and
grain
which
formed
part
of
the
deceased’s
estate
were
‘‘transferred
or
distributed’’
to
his
sons
as
beneficiaries,
within
the
meaning
of
Section
64(3),
and
therefore
their
value
was
not
taxable
in
the
hands
of
the
executors
under
Section
64(2).
In
his
judgment,
W.
S.
Fisher,
Q.C.,
after
referring
to
the
meaning
of
the
word
‘‘transfer’’
as
defined
in
the
case
of
Gathercole
v.
Smith
{supra)
and
the
quotation
from
the
judgment
of
Thorson,
P.
in
the
Fasken
Estate
case
(supra),
concluded
that
as
the
three
sons
were
beneficiaries
of
their
father’s
estate,
together
with
their
mother,
transfer,
even
though
de
facto
in
nature,
was
sufficient
to
bring
it
within
the
provisions
of
Section
64(3)
of
the
Act.
In
another
Tax
Appeal
Board
case
dealing
with
Section
64(3),
namely
that
of
Ernest
George
Willis
Estate
v.
M.N.R.,
[1968]
Tax
A.B.C.
177,
a
contrary
conclusion
was
reached.
In
that
case
the
finding
was
based
on
the
fact,
however,
that
the
company
which
had
acquired
assets
of
the
deceased
in
exchange
for
paid
up
shares
pursuant
to
a
court
order
following
his
death
to
give
effect
to
an
arrangement
he
had
made
during
his
lifetime
but
had
not
carried
into
effect,
was
not
a
person
beneficially
interested
in
the
estate
merely
because
it
had
paid
the
estate
tax
assessed
against
the
estate,
but
was
merely
a
creditor
of
the
estate.
The
decision
of
W.
O.
Davis,
Q.C.
refers,
at
page
185,
to
the
argument
of
counsel
for
the
Minister,
which
is
similar
to
the
argument
made
in
the
present
case,
as
follows:
Counsel
for
the
respondent
urged
that,
inasmuch
as
the
word
“transfer”
is
used
in
conjunction
with
the
word
“distributed”
in
Section
64(3),
it
was
evidently
intended
to
connote
something
in
the
nature
of
a
bequest
as
opposed
to
a
sale
such
as
had
occurred
in
the
instant
matter,
the
word
“distributed”
carrying
with
it
no
element
of
payment
for
value
received
but
suggesting
a
distribution
of
something
to
someone
who
was
already
entitled
to
that
something
as,
for
example,
a
beneficiary
under
a
will.
It
also
refers,
at
page
184,
to
a
definition
of
“beneficial
interest’’
taken
from
Black’s
Law
Dictionary
as
‘‘profit,
benefit,
or
advantage
resulting
from
a
contract’’,
pointing
out,
however,
that
the
definition
goes
on
to
say:
When
considered
as
designation
of
character
of
an
estate,
is
such
an
interest
as
a
devisee,
legatee,
or
donee
takes
solely
for
his
own
use
or
benefit,
and
not
as
holder
of
title
for
use
and
benefit
of
another.
People
v.
Northern
Trust
Co.,
330
111.
238,
161
N.E.
525,
528.
In
conclusion,
at
page
187,
he
states:
Having
given
careful
consideration
to
all
the
facts
and
circumstances
involved
herein
and
to
the
authorities
referred
to
by
counsel,
I
have
reached
the
conclusion
that
the
said
rights
and
things
were
not
transferred
or
distributed
within
the
terms
of
Section
64(3)
but
were
sold
by
the
executor
of
the
estate
to
Princeton
Stock
Ranch
Ltd.
for
good
and
valuable
consideration,
namely,
98
shares
of
the
company
stock.
Respondent’s
contention
in
the
present
case
is
that
the
transaction
in
form
and
substance
really
breaks
down
into
two
separate
transactions:
(a)
a
transfer
by
consent
of
book
debts
having
a
value
of
at
least
$90,000
in
satisfaction
of
the
balance
of
the
legacy
payable
to
Mrs.
Denton
under
the
will
of
her
late
father
;
and
(b)
a
sale
of
book
debts
having
a
value
of
at
least
$380,000
for
full
and
valuable
consideration
made
by
the
executor
in
the
course
of
the
administration
of
the
estate
to
Mrs.
Denton,
whose
title
thereto
was
acquired
not
as
a
legatee
or
beneficiary
under
the
will
of
her
father
but
rather
as
a
purchaser
for
value.
Respondent’s
counsel
argued
that
the
use
of
the
word
“distributed”
in
connection
with
the
word
‘‘transferred’’
in
Section
64(3)
in
a
cognate
sense
has
the
effect
of
narrowing
the
meaning
of
the
word
‘‘transferred’’,
quoting
as
authority
for
this
Maxwell
on
Statutes,
12th
ed.,
at
page
289:
When
two
or
more
words
which
are
susceptible
of
analogous
meaning
are
coupled
together,
noscuntur
a
sociis,
they
are
understood
to
be
used
in
their
cognate
sense.
They
take,
as
it
were,
their
colour
from
each
other,
the
meaning
of
the
more
general
being
restricted
to
a
sense
analogous
to
that
of
the
less
general.
He
contended
that
both
words
had
to
be
used
because,
while
the
word
‘‘transfer’’
would
apply
to
the
distribution
of
a
specific
asset
to
a
beneficiary
who
had
an
equitable
interest
in
the
asset
transferred,
‘‘distributed’’
has
reference
to
a
distribution
of
the
assets
of
the
estate
of
the
deceased
to
those
who
are
entitled
thereto
but
who
during
the
course
of
the
administration
thereof
do
not
have
any
equitable
interest
in
any
specific
asset.
In
this
connection
he
referred
to
the
case
of
Commissioner
of
Stamp
Duties
(Queensland)
v.
Hugh
Duncas
Livingston,
[1965]
A.C.
694,
which
held
that
in
the
case
of
an
unadministered
estate
the
assets
as
a
whole
were
in
the
hands
of
the
executor,
his
property,
and
until
administration
was
completed,
it
could
not
be
said
of
what
the
residue,
when
ascertained,
would
consist
or
what
its
value
would
be.
It
was
further
held
that
what
the
widow
was
entitled
to
in
respect
of
her
rights
under
the
testator’s
will
was
a
chose
in
action,
capable
of
being
invoked
for
any
purpose
connected
with
the
proper
administration
of
her
husband’s
estate.
A
similar
finding
was
made
by
the
Supreme
Court
in
the
case
of
M.N.R.
v.
Fitzgerald
(George
V.
Steed
Estate),
[1949]
8.C.R.
453;
[1949]
C.T.C.
101,
in
which
Kerwin,
J.
at
page
460
[125]
refers
to
a
proprietary
interest
either
legal
or
such
an
equitable
interest
as
is
recognized
by
our
courts,
which
Steed
did
not
have,
stating:
.
.
.
All
that
devolved
upon
his
death
was
a
right
to
have
the
estate
of
Bonnie
Steed
administered;
and
that
right
was
a
chose
in
action
properly
enforceable
.
.
.
In
the
present
case,
while
Mrs.
Denton
had
an
equitable
interest
in
the
legacy
left
her
in
her
father’s
will,
she
only
had
an
eventual
interest
in
her
share
of
the
residue
of
the
estate
when
same
would
be
distributed
on
the
death
or
remarriage
of
certain
of
the
income
beneficiaries.
He
contended,
therefore,
that
Mrs.
Denton
was
not
‘‘a
beneficiary
or
other
person
beneficially
interested’’
in
the
estate
or
trust
save
to
the
extent
of
the
balance
due
her
under
the
legacy,
and
that
beyond
this
her
right
only
consisted
in
a
right
to
have
the
estate
administered
so
ultimately
she
would
obtain
her
proper
share
in
the
residue
when
same
was
distributed.
With
respect
to
the
sum
of
$380,000,
therefore,
she
was
simply
a
purchaser
for
value
from
the
trustees
of
the
accounts
due
to
the
estate,
and
to
this
extent
the
accounts
could
not
be
considered
as
having
been
transferred
to:
her
qua
beneficiary
or
person
beneficially
interested.
He
contended
that
this
interpretation
conforms
to
the
apparent
scheme
of
Parliament
in
enacting
Section
64(3).
Section
85F
gives
a
special
privilege
to
taxpayers
who
carry
on
a
profession
or
the
business
of
farming
by
permitting
them
to
compute
their
income
on
a
Cash
basis
rather
than
a
current
earnings
basis.
As
a
consequence
of
this,
if
there
had
not
been
any
specific
statutory
provision,
then
on
the
cessation
of
business,
the
amounts
subsequently
received
would
not
be
subject
to
tax
since
they
would
no
longer
be
income
from
a
source.
In
support
of
his
contention
he
quoted
the
British
case
of
Bennett
v.
O
g
st
on
(1930),
15
Tax
Cas.
374
at
378,
approved
by
Lord
Simonds,
L.C.
in
Gospel
v.
Purchase,
[1951]
2
All
E.R.
1071
at
1074D,
in
which
Rowlatt,
J.
stated
:
When
a
trader
or
a
follower
of
a
profession
or
vocation
dies
or
goes
out
of
business
.
.
.
and
there
remain
to
be
collected
sums
owing
for
goods
supplied
during
the
existence
of
the
business
or
for
services
rendered
by
the
professional
man
during
the
course
of
his
life
or
his
business,
there
is
no
question
of
assessing
those
receipts
to
income
tax;
they
are
the
receipts
of
the
business
while
it
lasted,
they
are
arrears
of
that
business,
they
represent
money
which
was
earned
during
the
life
of
the
business
and
are
taken
to
be
covered
by
the
assessment
made
during
the
life
of
the
business,
whether
that
assessment
was
made
on
the
basis
of
bookings
or
on
the
basis
of
receipts.
Similarly,
in
the
case
of
Frankel
Corporation
Limited
v.
M.N.R.,
[1959]
S.C.R.
713;
[1959]
C.T.C.
244,
where
a
profit
made
on
the
sale
of
a
business
operation,
including
inventory,
was
held
to
be
not
taxable,
it
was
found
that
the
sale
of
the
inventory
was
not
a
sale
in
the
business
of
the
appellant
but
was
made
as
a
part
of
a
sale
of
a
business
of
the
appellant
and
consequently
the
proceeds
of
the
sale
were
not
income
from
a
business
within
the
meaning
of
Section
4
of
the
Income
Tax
Act.
A
similar
finding
was
made
in
the
case
of
Crompton
(Inspector
of
Taxes)
v.
Reynolds
and
Gibson,
[1952]
1
All
E.R.
888,
where
a
firm
purchased
a
business,
including
a
book
debt
which
was
acquired
at
a
written-down
figure
but
which
was
later
collected
in
full
and
a
profit
of
£50,000
thereby
being
made
by
the
new
firm.
It
was
held
that
although
the
debt
was
a
trading
debt
in
the
hands
of
the
old
firm
its
acquisition
by
the
new
firm
and
its
subsequent
collection
was
not
a
transaction
within
the
scope
of
its
business
but
produced
an
accretion
of
value
analogous
to
the
profit
made
by
the
sale
of
a
fixed
asset
and
this
was
therefore
not
taxable.
In
line
with
this
reasoning
he
argued,
therefore,
that
Section
64
was
necessary
to
provide
for
the
taxation
of
income
from
book
debts
which,
on
the
death
of
the
deceased,
had
never
entered
into
his
computation
of
profit.
The
scheme
of
the
legislation
is
that
these
debts
are
then
to
be
taxed
either
in
the
hands
of
the
deceased
or
of
the
beneficiary.
If
they
have
been
transferred
or
distributed
to
a
beneficiary
in
this
quality
then
they
will
be
included
in
the
beneficiary’s
income
if
and
when
realized.
If
the
extent
to
which
the
purchaser
for
value
is
also
beneficiary
is
not
to
be
taken
into
consideration
in
the
interpretation
of
Section
64(3),
this
would
lead
to
some
peculiar
results.
F'or
example,
a
professional
man
might
leave
a
substantial
sum
of
accounts
receivable,
as
in
the
present
case,
and
a
token
legacy
of
perhaps
only
$1,000
to
a
trusted
servant
or
friend
who
would
then
be
a
beneficiary,
although
only
to
this
extent.
By
arranging
for
the
sale
of
the
receivables
to
such
a
beneficiary
(which
sale
could
readily
be
financed
by
a
short
term
loan
when
the
accounts
are
as
readily
collectable
as
in
the
present
case)
then
even
if
the
sale
were
made
at
a
discount,
taking
into
consideration
the
taxation
which
the
purchaser
would
have
to
pay
on
collection
of
these
accounts,
the
estate
might
nevertheless
save
substantial
sums
if
the
recipient
were
in
a
much
lower
tax
bracket
than
the
deceased.
The
appellant’s
attorney
was
very
frank
in
the
present
case
in
admitting
that
after
payment
of
50%
estate
tax
on
these
accounts
and
income
tax
at
the
rate
of
approximately
70%
on
the
balance,
the
total
sum
paid
in
taxation
would
have
amounted
to
85%
of
the
value
of
the
accounts
and
arrangement
worked
out
with
Mrs.
Denton
was
an
attempt
to
avoid
this.
Avoidance
of
taxation
that
can
be
done
within
the
provisions
of
the
governing
statute
is
perfectly
permissible
and
respectable
as
has
frequently
been
stated
by
courts
both
in
England
and
Canada.
However,
when
the
interpretation
of
the
meaning
of
the
words
used
in
a
section
of
the
Income
Tax
Act
is
in
doubt,
it
is
preferable
to
adopt
an
interpretation
which
brings
a
result
which
conforms
to
the
apparent
scheme
of
the
legislation,
rather
than
one
which
will
defeat
it.
In
the
case
of
Highway
Sawmills
Limited
v.
M.N.R.,
[1966]
8.C.R.
384;
[1966]
C.T.C.
150,
Cartwright,
J.
stated
at
page
393
[157-158]
:
The
answer
to
the
question
what
tax
is
payable
in
any
given
circumstances
depends,
of
course,
upon
the
words
of
the
legislation
imposing
it.
Where
the
meannig
of
those
words
is
difficult
to
ascertain
it
may
be
of
assistance
to
consider
which
of
two
constructions
contended
for
brings
about
a
result
which
conforms
to
the
apparent
scheme
of
the
legislation.
The
case
of
M.N.R..
v.
Pillsbury
Holdings
Limited,
[1965]
1
Ex.
C.R.
676
;
[1964]
C.T.C.
294,
in
interpreting
Section
8(1)
(c)
of
the
Act,
held
that
it
was
intended
to
sweep
into
income,
payments,
distributions,
benefits
and
advantages
that
flow
from
a
corporation
to
a
shareholder
by
some
route
other
than
the
dividend
route,
which
payments
might
be
expected
to
reach
the
shareholder
by
the
more
orthodox
dividend
route
if
the
cor-
poration
and
the
shareholder
were
dealing
at
arm’s
length,
but
that
there
could
be
no
question
of
conferring
a
benefit
or
advantage
within
the
meaning
of
Section
8(l)(c)
on
a
shareholder
where
a
corporation
enters
into
a
bona
fide
transaction
with
him.
In
rendering
judgment,
Cattanach,
J.
stated
at
page
687
[303]
:
.
To
come
within
that
paragraph,
it
must
be
an
arrangement
or
device
whereby
a
corporation
confers
a
benefit
or
advantage
on
a
shareholder
qua.
shareholder.
I
believe
a
similar
distinction
should
be
made
in
the
present
case.
Section
64(3)
applies
to
transfers
or
distributions
of
the
right
or
thing
to
a
beneficiary
or
other
person
beneficially
interested
in
the
estate
or
trust
only
when
such
transfer
or
distribution
has
been
made
to
him
qua
beneficiary,
and
not
to
the
extent
that
he
has
acquired
it
as
a
purchaser
for
value.
Therefore,
had
Mrs.
Denton
been
a
legatee
of
an
amount
equal
to
or
in
excess
of
$483,350
and
had
accepted
the
accounts
in
satisfaction
of
this
legacy,
no
tax
would
have
been
collectable
from
the
estate
of
the
deceased
when
these
accounts
were
paid,
and
since
Mrs.
Denton
herself
was
not
taxable
in
Canada,
the
accounts
would
have
been
collected
without
payment
of
income
tax
on
them
by
anyone,
and
this
would
have
been
a
perfectly
proper
and
legitimate
application
of
Section
64(3)
of
the
Act.
I
cannot
interpret
this
section,
however,
as
applying
to
all
rights
or
things
which
may
be
transferred
or
distributed
by
way
of
a
sale
for
value
to
a
purchaser
who
also
happens
to
be
a
beneficiary
or
other
person
beneficially
interested
in
an
estate
or
trust
irrespective
of
how
small
his
benefit
or
beneficial
interest
in
same
may
be.
I
therefore
find
that
with
respect
to
the
rights
or
things
so
transferred
which
are
in
excess
of
the
amount
for
which
the
purchaser
is
a
beneficiary
or
person
beneficially
interested
in
the
estate
he
is
simply
VINELAND
QUARRIES
&
CRUSHED
STONE
LIMITED,
Appellant,
|
a.
purchaser
for
value
and
the
estate
or
trust
is
taxable
under
the
|
|
provisions
of
Section
64(2)
|
on
the
amounts
so
transferred.
|
The
|
|
appeal
:
1S
therefore
dismissed,
with
costs.
|
|
and
MINISTER
OF
NATIONAL
REVENUE,
Respondent.
Federal
Court—Trial
Division
(Noël,
A.C.J.),
June
29,
1971,
in
a
motion
by
the
Minister
for
an
order
quashing
appellant’s
appeal.
Income
tax—Federal—Income
Tax
Act,
R.S.C.
1952,
c.
148—Section
46(7)—Federal
Court
Act,
S.C.
1970-71,
c.
1—Section
11(3)—Appeals
—Purported
appeal
proceedings
not
authorized
by
appellant—Motion
to
quash.
Control
of
the
appellant
changed
hands
in
1967
and
a
few
months
later
the
re-assessment
appealed
from
was
made
by
the
Minister.
A
purported
notice
of
objection
was
filed
by
the
former
officers
of
the
appellant
while
the
shares
representing
the
controlling
interest
were
still
being
held
in
escrow
pending
payment
therefor.
These
shares
were
in
due
course
released
from
escrow
and
on
the
basis
of
an
affidavit
of
the
new
president
of
the
appellant
that
the
appellant
had
never
authorized
the
purported
appeal
proceedings
nor
filed
a
notice
of
objection
or
notice
of
appeal
the
Minister
applied
for
an
order
quashing
the
appeal.
The
counsel
of
record
for
the
appellant,
though
officers
of
the
court
by
virtue
of
Section
11(3)
of
the
Federal
Court
Act,
failed
to
appear
at
the
hearing.
HELD:
Application
to
quash
granted.
J.
D.
Cromarty,
Q.C.
for
the
Appellant.
M.
J.
Bonner
for
the
Respondent.
Noël,
A.C.J.:—By
notice
of
motion,
the
Minister
of
National
Revenue
applies
for
an
order
quashing
the
appeal
of
the
appellant
herein,
Vineland
Quarries
&
Crushed
Stone
Limited
(hereinafter
sometimes
called
‘‘Vineland’’)
from
an
income
tax
assessment
dated
September
15,
1967,
wherein
tax
in
the
sum
of
$2,268.43
was
levied
in
respect
of
income
for
the
taxation
year
1965,
on
the
basis
that:
(a)
Since
Vineland
Quarries
&
Crushed
Stone
Limited
has
not
served
a
notice
of
objection
to
the
assessment,
the
latter
is
by
virtue
of
Section
46(7)
of
the
Income
Tax
Act
valid
and
binding
and
no
appeal
lies
therefrom;
(b)
the
purported
appeal
herein
was
instituted
or
attempted
to
be
instituted
without
the
authority
of
Vineland
Quarries
&
Crushed
Stone
Limited
and
is
not
the
appeal
of
Vineland
Quarries
&
Crushed
Stone
Limited,
the
purported
appellant
herein.
With
this
application
was
filed
an
affidavit
of
Norris
Walker
who
has
been,
since
January
24,
1967,
the
president
and
director
of
Vineland
Quarries
Stone
Limited,
and
who
states
therein
that
the
notice
of
objection
of
Vineland,
signed
by
one
Ben
Sauder,
to
the
re-assessment
of
September
15,
1967
was
never
authorized
as
Vineland
did
not
object
to
the
said
re-assessment
nor
did
it
authorize
any
person
to
do
so
on
its
behalf,
nor
did,
according
to
Walker,
Vineland
authorize
the
appeal
to
this
Court,
nor
did
it
authorize
any
person
to
do
so
on
its
behalf
or
to
sign
the
notice
of
appeal,
dated
July
23,
1968,
which
is
signed
‘‘
Vineland
Quarries
&
Crushed
Stone
Limited’’
by
its
solicitors,
Goodman
&
Carr.
Walker
indeed
states
in
his
affidavit
that,
in
particular,
Vineland
did
not
authorize
Messrs.
Goodman
&
Carr,
counsel
of
record
in
these
proceedings,
to
institute
the
purported
appeal
herein.
From
Walker’s
affidavit
it
appears
that
St.
Catharines
Crushed
Stone
Limited
purchased
all
of
the
shares
of
the
capital
stock
of
Vineland
pursuant
to
an
agreement
in
writing
dated
January
5,
1967,
and
on
January
24,
1967
the
agreement
of
purchase
and
sale
was
closed.
The
four
persons
who
had
previously
been
directors
and
officers
of
Vineland
resigned,
Norris
Walker,
the
affiant,
was
elected
president
of
Vineland,
a
number
of
shares
were
transferred
to
the
new
directors
and
the
remainder
of
these
shares
were
lodged
with
Canada
Trust
in
escrow
pending
payment
of
the
purchase
price
under
the
agreement.
In
January
1970
the
shares
were
released
from
escrow
and
St.
Catharines
Crushed
Stone
Limited
was
registered
in
the
books
of
Vineland
as
owners
thereof.
The
names
of
four
persons
who,
on
January
24,
1967,
resigned
as
officers
and
directors
of
Vineland
and
the
positions
which
they
held
with
Vineland
at
the
time
of
their
resignations
were
as
follows:
|
Benjamin
Sauder
—
president
and
director
|
|
Shirley
Sauder
|
—
treasurer
and
director
|
|
Samuel
Taylor
|
—
vice-president
and
director
|
|
E.
A.
Bass
|
—
director
|
From
January
24,
1967
to
December
31,
1967
there
were
four
directors
of
Vineland,
namely,
Norris
Walker,
John
G.
Walker,
John
G.
Walker
II
and
Mamie
Z.
Klein.
Norris
Walker,
the
affiant,
states
that
he
has
shown
Exhibit
C
(the
notice
of
objection
signed
by
Ben
Sauder)
to
each
of
the
above
persons
who
all
say
that
the
signature
thereon
is
not
theirs.
The
Court
sat
in
Welland,
Ontario,
where
both
counsel
for
the
Minister,
Mr.
J.
Bonner,
and
counsel
for
Vineland,
Mr.
J.
D.
Cromarty,
Q.C.,
attended
but
where
no
one
appeared
for
or
on
behalf
of
counsel
of
record
for
the
appellant,
Messrs.
Goodman
&
Carr.
Mr.
Franklyn
E.
Cappell
of
this
firm
had,
however,
written
to
Mr.
M.
J.
Bonner,
counsel
for
the
Minister,
on
June
22,
1971,
as
follows:
Re:
Vineland
Quarries
&
Crushed
Stone
Limited
v.
M.N.R.
I
have
now
received
copies
of
the
Notice
of
Motion
and
supporting
Affidavit
returnable
on
Friday,
June
25,
1971
before
the
presiding
Judge
at
Welland.
We
do
not
propose
to
appear
for
the
Motion.
I
must
say
that
having
regard
to
the
very
serious
and
extraordinary
situation
and
averments
mentioned
in
Walker’s
affidavit,
and
the
fact
that
Messrs.
Goodman
&
Carr
are
the
solicitors
of
record
in
this
appeal,
their
absence
from
the
hearing
on
June
25,
1971
is
hard
to
explain
particularly
if
one
considers
that
under
the
Federal
Court
Act
(Section
11(3))
they
are
officers
of
this
Court.
Representations
were
made
at
this
hearing
on
behalf
of
the
Minister
by
Mr.
Bonner
and
they
were
endorsed
entirely
by
the
alleged
appellant,
Vineland,
through
its
counsel,
Mr.
Cromarty.
There
was,
however,
in
view
of
the
absence
of
anyone
representing
Messrs.
Goodman
&
Carr,
no
explanation
given
the
Court
as
to
how
this
appeal
could
have
been
taken
and
pursued
without
the
authorization
of
the
appellant.
The
sale
document
of
January
5,
1967
contains
a
clause
(U),
at
page
6,
where
it
is
stated
that
the
vendors
shall
have
the
responsibility
of
pursuing
an
appeal,
in
the
Supreme
Court,
whereby
the
appellant
was
held
to
be
a
company
related
to
another
company
in
which
the
vendors
had
an
interest
which,
of
course,
is
not
the
appeal
dealt
with
in
the
present
proceedings.
In
the
light
of
the
allegations
recited
in
Mr.
Walker’s
affidavit,
which
were
fully
supported
by
counsel
for
Vineland,
and
on
the
basis
of
the
representations
made
before
me
at
Welland
on
June
25,
1971
by
both
counsel
for
the
Minister
and
counsel
for
Vineland,
this
application
to
quash
should
be
granted
and
in
view
of
the
unexplained
unauthorized
proceedings
launched
by
Messrs.
Goodman
&
Carr,
the
costs
of
the
respondent
as
well
as
the
costs
of
the
counsel
for
Vineland
on
the
present
motion,
should
be
charged
to
Messrs.
Goodman
&
Carr.
I
intend
to
grant
the
present
application
and
to
hold
Messrs.
Goodman
&
Carr
liable
for
costs.
I
will,
however,
refrain
from
doing
so
until
July
8,
1971
in
order
to
give
Messrs.
Goodman
&
Carr
the
possibility
of
objecting
to
the
present
application
in
writing,
with
copies
to
be
sent
to
counsel
for
the
Minister
and
of
Vineland
and
of
showing
cause
why
they
should
not,
in
the
circumstances,
be
condemned
to
pay
the
costs
occasioned
by
these
unauthorized
proceedings.