Noël,
J.:—This
is
an
appeal
from
a
decision
of
the
Tax
Appeal
Board
(40
Tax
A.B.C.
39)
dismissing
the
appellant’s
appeal
from
a
re-assessment
of
the
appellant’s
liability
for
income
tax
under
Part
I
of
the
Income
Tax
Act
for
the
1959
taxation
year.
The
only
question
in
issue
is
whether
a
profit
($56,183.34)
made
by
the
appellant
in
1958
from
the
sale
of
an
option
to
purchase
for
$10,158,245.65
and
lease
back
the
Dominion
Square
Building
in
Montreal,
P.Q.,
was
non-taxable
as
a
capital
gain
because
an
investment
had
been
envisaged
and
its
interest
had
been
sold
due
to
a
disagreement
among
its
associates,
or
was
profit
or
income
from
an
adventure
in
the
nature
of
trade.
The
appellant
company,
incorporated
by
Irwin
Leopold,
of
Montreal,
and
three
associates
from
Toronto
(Simonds,
Candler
and
Robbins)
in
August
1958,
as
a
vehicle
nominee
(as
is
frequently
done
in
real
estate
deals)
to
start
the
present
transac-
tions
until
such
time
as
a
decision
could
be
taken
as
to
final
interest
and
ownership,
acquired
an
option
to
purchase
the
Dominion
Square
Building
from
Messrs.
Webb
and
Knapp,
and
Delaware
Montreal
Leasing
Corporation,
on
September
12,
1958.
The
terms
of
the
agreement
whereby
the
appellant
purchased
the
above
option
provided
for
an
immediate
deposit
of
$200,000
to
be
followed
some
one
hundred
days
later
prior
to
January
2,
1959,
the
closing
date,
by
an
amount
of
approximately
$4,250,000.
The
$200,000
would
be
confiscated
by
the
seller
if
this
amount
of
$4,250,000
was
not
paid
on
the
closing
date.
The
building
was
subject
to
a
first
mortgage
of
approximately
6
million
dollars
which,
at
the
time
of
the
purchase,
had
been
reduced
to
$5,908,000.
This
was
a
venture
which,
if
all
things
went
well,
could
represent
to
the
investors
a
return
of
some
11%
on
the
equity
monies
required
to
conclude
this
transaction
and
additional
revenue
could
be
expected
to
accrue
each
year
by
virtue
of
the
repayment
of
the
capital.
portion
of
the
mortgage.
The
transaction
provided
also
for
a
net
lease
back
to
the
vendors
Webb
and
Knapp
who
undertook
to
operate
the
building,
assume
the
expenses
of
maintenance,
insurance,
real
estate
taxes,
etc.
thereby
allowing
the
purchasers
to
receive
from
the
lessee
sufficient
funds
to
repay
the
capital
and
interest
portion
of
the
mortgage
together
with
the
expected
11%
return
of
invested
capital.
Leopold,
who
was
the
managing
director
of
the
appellant
company,
stated
that
he
did
not
have
the
$4,250,000
to
finance
the
complete
acquisition
of
this
property
and,
therefore,
immediately
joined
with
his
Toronto
partners,
Simonds,
Candler
and
Robbins
and
although
each
of
them
decided
they
were
prepared
to
invest
a
certain
amount
of
money
in
the
purchase
of
this
option
proceeded
also
to
seek
other
investors.
A
group
from
New
York,
Ira
J.
Heckler,
Howard
Weingrove
and
Robert
K.
Lipton
(operating
under
the
name
of
Robert
K.
Lipton
Inc.)
became
interested,
as
well
as
Joseph
Hopmeyer
and
Jack
Becker,
from
Montreal,
and
Arthur
Trott
(operating
under
the
name
of
Four
Winds
Apt.
Inc.)
from
Toronto,
and
at
some
time
after
the
purchase
of
the
option,
the
following
participants
had
deposited
the
amounts
listed
opposite
their
names
and
held
the
percentage
of
interest
therein
inscribed.
|
DEPOSIT
|
PARTICIPANTS
|
Percentage
|
IN
PROJECT
|
Interest
|
Amount
|
Ira
J.
Heckler
|
30
|
$
60,000.00
|
Robert
K.
Lipton
Inc.
|
|
(Howard
Weingrove,
N.Y.)
|
712
|
15,000.00
|
Lyall
Investment
Corporation
|
|
Limited
(Simonds)
|
6%
|
12,500.00
|
Wychwood
Investment
Corporation
|
|
Limited
(Candler)
|
614
|
12,500.00
|
Cleopatra
Investments
Limited
|
|
(Robbins)
|
614
|
12,500.00
|
Joseph
Hopmeyer
(Jack
Becker,
|
|
Montreal)
|
25
|
50,000.00
|
Leopold-Candler
Investments
Ltd
|
12
y
|
25,000.00
|
Four
Winds
Apt.
Inc.
|
|
(Trott
Arthur)
|
6%
|
12,500.00
|
|
100
|
$200,000.00
|
The
Toronto
group
was
brought
in
as
participants
at
the
date
of
the
option,
the
New
York
group,
sometime
later,
as
well
as
Joseph
Hopmeyer
and
Jack
Becker
and
Four
Winds
Apt.
Inc.
The
appellant,
Leopold-Candler
Investments
Ltd.,
originally
owned
1834%
of
the
option
but
three
days
after
the
signature
of
the
option
document
of
September
12th,
on
September
15th,
the
appellant
transferred
614%
of
its
interest
in
the
venture
to
one
Arthur
Trott
who
was
operating
under
the
firm
name
of
Four
Winds
Apt.
Inc.
Leopold
states
that
he
sold
the
64%
interest
to
Trott
because
he
felt
that
his
original
interest
of
18%%
with
the
deposit
and
the
final
monies
needed
at
closing
was
stretching
his
financial
resources
too
much.
The
appellant
had
prior
to
the
signature
of
the
option
document,
borrowed
the
amount
of
$37,500
(which
covered
the
1834%
interest
it
originally
held)
from
the
bank
and
three
days
later,
upon
receiving
Trott’s
contribution
of
$12,500,
reimbursed
the
bank
in
this
amount.
The
appellant,
therefore,
together
with
the
Toronto
and
American
groups
owned
75%
of
the
option
and
Joseph
Hop-
meyer
and
Jack
Becker,
of
Montreal,
owned
the
remaining
25%.
The
appellant’s
commitment
with
regard
to
the
payment
to
be
made
on
January
2,
1959,
at
the
time
of
closing,
on
the
basis
of
his
holding
of
an
interest
of
12^%
was
still
in
an
amount
of
$500,000.
Leopold
states
that
around
the
beginning
of
November
1958,
it
was
decided,
as
the
closing
was
scheduled
for
January
2,
1959,
that
all
the
various
principals
should
meet
in
order
to
set
up
a
programme
for
the
final
financing
required
and
at
the
same
time
decide
upon
a
number
of
general
administration
policies.
Such
policies
were
required
according
to
Leopold
and
Hopmeyer
because
to
the
latter’s
minority
interest
of
25%
in
the
venture
and
because
one
of
the
conditions
he
had
set
down
to
enter
into
the
transaction
was
that
a
contract
be
entered
into
with
the
other
principals
in
which,
although
he
retained
a
minority
equity
interest
only,
he
would
have
an
equal
say
with
the
other
people
in
the
group
in
the
manner
in
which
the
building
would
be
administered
or
operated.
The
meeting
was
convened
in
Toronto
and
was
attended
by
Leopold,
Hopmeyer
and
Becker
from
Montreal,
Simonds
and
Candler
from
Toronto
and
Lipton
and
Heckler,
from
New
York.
Leopold
says
that
there
was
an
immediate
clash
of
personalities
between
Lipton
and
Hopmeyer,
some
very
heated
words
ensued
and
at
the
first
meeting
of
the
members
of
the
group,
there
seemed
to
be
a
complete
breakdown
between
these
two
people.
Leopold
had
difficulty
in
putting
his
finger
on
what
the
differences
were
between
them
and
referred
to
Hopmeyer’s
evidence
before
the
Tax
Appeal
Board
whom
[sic],
he
said,
went
into
the
disagreement
in
detail.
Hopmeyer
at
the
time
stated
(p.
47)
that
there
were
a
lot
of
words
that
morning
and
described
the
meeting
as
follows
:
We
were
not
fighting,
there
were
no
boxing
gloves,
but
there
were
a
lot
of
words.
It
wasn’t
a
pleasant
atmosphere.
I’ll
be
frank
with
you.
I
realized
we
had
to
deal
with
American
people
and
others,
and
I
sized
it
up
and
figured
the
best
thing
for
me
was
to
try
to
buy
them
all
out.
because
I
had
serious
intentions.
He
then
made
up
his
mind
that
the
best
thing
to
do
was
to
make
them
an
offer
to
buy
them
all
out
and
he
arranged
for
funds
with
others
in
Montreal.
Hopmeyer
then,
together
with
Becker,
purchased
the
interests
of
the
other
associates
including
the
appellant
for
the
sum
of
$400,000,
reimbursed
each
one
of
them
the
amounts
they
had
contributed
to
the
$200,000
deposit,
thus
expending
an
amount
of
$150,000,
and
the
amount
of
the
profit
realized
was
then
distributed
amongst
the
associates
as
follows:
GROSS
PROFIT
Percentage
Amount
Interest
Ira
J.
Heckler
|
40
|
$160,000.00
|
Robert
K.
Lipton
Inc.
|
|
(Howard
Weingrove,
N.Y.)
|
10
|
40,000.00
|
Wychwood
Investments
Corporation
|
|
Limited
(Candler)
|
81,
|
33,333.33
|
Lyall
Investment
Corporation
|
|
Limited
(Simonds)
|
814
|
33,333.33
|
Cleopatra
Investments
Ltd.
|
813
|
33,333.33
|
Joseph
Hopmeyer
(Jack
Becker,
|
|
Montreal)
|
—
|
—
|
Leopold-Candler
Investments
Ltd.
|
17%
|
71,183.34
|
Four
Winds
Apt.
Inc.
|
|
(Trott
Arthur)
|
1%
|
28,816.66
|
|
100
|
$400,000.00
|
The
appellant
therefore
received
a
gross
profit
of
$71,183.34
and
a
net
profit
of
$56,183.34
which
was
added
by
the
Minister
to
the
appellant’s
income
for
the
1959
taxation
year.
The
individuals
who
negotiated
this
transaction,
Simonds
and
Candler,
are
real
estate
developers
in
Toronto
and
Leopold
who,
immediately
prior
to
the
purchase
of
the
option,
was
in
the
hat
business,
had
shortly
prior
thereto
abandoned
this
business
and
had
also
become
a
real
estate
developer.
The
appellant’s
position,
as
expressed
by
Irwin
Leopold,
is
that
its
sole
intention
when
it
entered
into
this
deal
in
August
and
September
1958
was
to
invest
in
the
purchase
of
this
building
and
that
its
interest
had
been
sold
only
because
of
a
disagreement
among
its
associates.
He
further
stated
that,
although
at
the
time
of
the
signing
of
the
option
he
had
no
monies
to
invest
and
even
had
to
borrow
from
the
bank
the
amount
of
$25,000
to
cover
the
appellant’s
share
of
the
original
deposit
required
and
had
no
definite
assurance
that
he
could
obtain
the
$500,000
additional
monies
to
cover
its
share
of
the
closing
deal
on
January
2,
1959,
he
felt
that
he
could
have
obtained
a
loan
of
$200,000
from
a
branch
of
the
Canadian
Imperial
Bank
of
Commerce,
situated
at
the
corner
of
Ste-Catherine
and
St.
Alexander
streets
in
the
city
of
Montreal,
which,
according
to
a
Mr.
John
Walling,
the
manager
of
the
bank
at
the
time,
the
latter
would
have
been
prepared
to
advance
him.
The
balance
of
$300,000,
he
says,
he
could
have
obtained
from
his
mother
who
was
wealthy
and
his
father-in-law,
who
was
also
a
person
of
means.
Counsel
for
the
appellant
pointed
out
that
there
was
further
indication
that
the
intent
of
the
taxpayer
herein
upon
purchasing
its
rights
under
the
option
was
to
realize
an
investment
in
that
there
was
some
risk
in
undertaking
to
supply
its
share
of
the
$200,000
deposit
required
at
the
signing
of
the
option
and
that
three
days
later
the
taxpayer
sold
at
cost
614%
of
its
share
of
the
option
rights
which
the
taxpayer
claims
could
only
be
consistent
with
an
intention
to
pursue
the
investment.
Had
the
appellant,
he
says,
intended
to
sell
its
rights
under
the
option,
at
a
profit,
it
would
have
retained
the
original
amount
of
its
share
and
thus
made
a
greater
profit.
The
evidence
also
discloses
that
the
associates
paid
a
lawyer
$25,000
of
which
the
appellant’s
share
was
$6,250
to
draft
a
net
lease
and
this
also,
according
to
appellant’s
counsel,
is
not
indicative
of
an
urge
to
speculate.
The
above
would
indeed
seem
to
indicate
an
intent
to
invest
although
it
appears
to
me
that
the
risk
assumed
by
the
appellant
in
supplying
$25,000
as
its
share
of
the
deposit,
was
not
very
great
considering
the
interest
engendered
in
the
Dominion
Square
Building
as
an
attractive
investment
at
the
time
as
Leopold
was
prone
to
point
out
in
his
evidence.
The
evidence
indeed
discloses
that
Leopold
and
his
Toronto
partners
knew
that
Hop-
meyer
had
been
trying
to
purchase
this
building
for
some
considerable
time
prior
to
the
signing
of
the
option.
There
would,
because
of
this,
be
very
little
danger
of
any
of
the
partners
losing
whatever
deposit
they
would
make.
The
appellant
did
sell
614%
of
its
participation
in
the
option
rights
to
Four
Winds
Apt.
Inc.,
and
thereby
did
reduce
the
profit
it
could
have
made
upon
selling
its
rights.
This
also
was
not,
however,
necessarily
inconsistent
with
an
intent
to
sell
these
rights
in
view
of
the
fact
that
the
appellant
at
the
time
having
no
capital
of
its
own
had
borrowed
$37,500
from
the
bank
and
apparently
was
eager
to
reduce
its
indebtedness
to
$25,000
as
it
did
three
days
after
the
signing
of
the
option
document.
By
doing
this
it
merely
reduced
whatever
risk
it
had
undertaken
by
one
third,
and
retained
a
two-thirds
interest
which
was
still
large
enough
to
assure
it
an
interesting
profit.
The
appellant
did
cause
a
net
lease
to
be
prepared
at
a
cost
of
$25,000
and
although
this
was
also
in
line
with
an
intent
to
pursue
the
investment,
it
was
not
inconsistent
with
an
intent
to
sell
off
its
rights
as
it
would
still
be
useful
to
the
purchaser,
was
in
fact
used
by
Hopmeyer
and
associates
and
the
amount
expended
to
prepare
this
document
was
eventually
deducted
from
the
profit
made
by
the
associates.
The
profit
realized
by
the
taxpayer
under
the
above
described
circumstances
could
still,
however,
have
been
held
to
be
a
non-
taxable
capital
gain
were
it
not
for
a
number
of
other
factors
which
lead
one
to
conclude
that
the
rights
under
the
option
were
purchased
by
the
taxpayer
for
the
purpose
of
selling
them
at
a
profit
which
it
did
a
month
after
their
acquisition.
How
indeed
is
it
possible
to
come
to
any
other
conclusion
when
the
taxpayer,
at
the
time
it
acquired
the
option
had
only
$700
in
its
bank
account,
needed
$25,000
(which
it
borrowed
from
the
bank)
and
its
share
of
the
$200,000
deposit
and
some
$500,000
at
the
closing
date
and
had
no
assurance
of
obtaining
these
amounts
even
if
the
evidence
of
Walling
seems
to
indicate
that
Leopold
might
have
obtained
a
loan
of
$200,000
from
the
bank
and
Leopold
says
that
there
were
possibilities
of
obtaining
$300,000
from
his
father-in-law
and
mother.
Such
possibilities
were
far
from
certain
at
the
time
of
the
signing
of
the
option
and
were
discounted
shortly
thereafter
as
the
associates
including
the
taxpayer
admitted
in
Exhibit.
R9,
the
document
where
they
sold
their
rights
to
Hopmeyer
and
associates,
that
the
reason
for
selling
their
rights
was
because
All
of
the
selling
parties
(including
the
appellant)
with
the
exception
of
Joseph
Hopmeyer
were
and
are
unable
to
raise
and
provide
for
their
respective
proportions
of
the
said
sum
of
$4.050,000’’.
Leopold
stated
that
the
investment
transaction
was
not
pursued
by
the
appellant
and
its
associates
because
of
a
conflict
of
personality
between
Hopmeyer
and
Lipton,
one
of
the
American
associates.
There
was
no
conflict,
however,
with
Leopold
and
his
Toronto
associates,
yet
there
is
no
insistence
or
perseverance
as
there
could
have
been
if
the
appellant
had
really
wanted
to
make
an
investment
to
remain
in
the
transaction
with
Hopmeyer
and
his
associates
and
proceed
to
take
over
the
building.
Leopold
and
his
Toronto
associates,
Simonds
and
Candler,
were
real
estate
developers
and
as
such
were
in
a
position
to
run
across
this
sort
of
a
transaction
which
is
closely
allied
to
their
every
day
activities.
They
had,
as
a
matter
of
fact,
done
something
very
similar
a
few
months
prior
to
the
present
transaction
in
the
case
of
the
Norgate
Shopping
Center
which
they
had
bought
and
which
they
sold
immediately
after
its
purchase
thus
making
a
quick
profit.
They
were
assessed
on
this
profit,
appealed
to
the
Tax
Appeal
Board
where
they
were
successful
in
obtaining
what
Leopold
calls
a
favourable
consent
Judgment.
This
transaction,
the
appellant
claims,
was
similar
to
the
present
one
and
he
sees
no
reason
why
the
latter
should
not
be
dealt
with
in
the
same
manner.
The
answer
of
course
is
that
the
facts
in
the
first
case
could
have
been
different
than
in
the
present
instance
but
even
if
they
were
similar
it
may
well
be
that
as
this
was
their
first
bite
no
inference
of
trading
could
be
drawn.
We
are
now,
however,
dealing
with
a
situation
where
the
taxpayer
has
now
taken
a
second
bite
which
now
happens
to
be
sufficient
to
make
one
conclude
or
infer
that
having
sold
a
similar
right
at
a
profit
a
few
months
before,
he
saw
from
this
previous
experience
a
possibility
of
a
similar
quick
profit
and
was,
therefore,
motivated
here
when
the
option
was
signed
by
considerations
of
a
business
or
trading
nature.
It
is
interesting
to
note
that
the
appellant
even
charged
and
was
paid
by
its
associates
a
commission
fee
of
$17,500
for
its
services
in
arranging
for
the
profit
realized
by
the
parties
in
selling
their
rights
under
the
option.
Finally,
as
the
respondent
in
this
case
had
the
right
to
and
did
assume
that
the
appellant
acquired
an
interest
in
the
said
option
with
a
view
to
trading,
dealing
or
otherwise
turning
it
to
account,
the
appellant
had
the
burden
of
rebutting
this
assumption.
From
a
consideration
of
the
above
circumstances
and
the
totality
of
the
factors
concerning
this
transaction,
I
must.
conclude
that
it
has
not
succeeded
in
destroying
the
above
assumption
by
establishing
as
it
had
to
that
it
did
not
when
it
acquired
its
rights
under
the
option,
intend
to
sell
these
rights
at
a
profit.
The
appeal
is
dismissed
with
costs.
SHULAMIT
ELFRIEDE
VASKEVITCH,
EXECUTRIX
OF
THE
estate
OF
THEODORE
VASKEVITCH,
Appellant,
and
MINISTER
OF
NATIONAL
REVENUE,
Respondent.
Exchequer
Court
of
Canada
(Cattanach,
J.),
January
3,
1969,
on
appeal
from
an
assessment
of
the
Minister
of
National
Revenue.
Estate
tax—Federal—Estate
Tax
Act,
S.C.
1958,
c.
29—Section
3(1)
(j)
—Accident
insurance—Whether
accident
insurance
was
“purchased
or
provided”
by
deceased
“in
concert
or
by
arrangement
with”
his
wife.
In
issue
was
whether
the
proceeds
of
two
air
flight
policies
for
$95,000
purchased
at
the
airport
were
properly
included
in
the
estate
of
the
deceased
under
Section
3(1)
(j)
as
“any
annuity
or
other
interest
purchased
or
provided
by
the
deceased
either
by
himself
alone
or
in
concert
or
by
arrangement
with
any
other
person”.
The
evidence
showed
that
the
two
policies,
though
issued
on
the
formal
application
of
the
deceased,
were
in
fact
purchased
by
his
wife
with
her
own
money
($8)
and
that
her
husband’s
consent
had
been
passive.
HELD:
There
was
no
doubt
that
an
accident
insurance
policy
was
an
“other
interest”
within
the
meaning
of
Section
3(1)(j).
However,
the
policies
were
not
purchased
or
provided
by
the
deceased
either
alone
or
in
concert
or
by
arrangement
with
any
other
person.
“In
concert”
presupposed
some
form
of
active
participation
rather
than
passive
consent
to
a
decision
taken
by
another:
person.
Appeal
allowed.
Wolfe
D.
Goodman,
for
the
Appellant.
N.
A.
Chalmers,
for
the
Respondent.
CASE
REFERRED
TO:
Lethbridge
v.
Attorney
General,
[1907]
A.C.
19.
CATTANACH,
J.:—This
is
an
appeal
from
an
assessment
dated
March
22,
1967
under
the
Estate
Tax
Act,
chapter
29,
Statutes
of
Canada,
1958
whereby
the
Minister
assessed
the
appellant
as
executrix
of
the
estate
of
her
late
husband,
Theodore
Vaskevitch,
by
adding
to
the
aggregate
net
value
of
that
estate
the
sum
of
$95,000
being
the
proceeds
of
two
policies
of
accident
insurance.
The
facts
giving
rise
to
the
assessment
are
relatively
simple
and
straightforward
and
are,
in
the
main,
agreed
upon
between
the
parties
with
the
exception
of
one
major
particular
upon
which
I
shall
comment
in
detail
later.
On
Friday,
February
25,
1966,
Theodore
Vaskevitch,
the
husband
of
the
appellant,
departed
from
Malton
Airport
at
Toronto,
Ontario
by
Canadian
Pacific
Airlines
for
the
Orient.
Mr.
Vaskevitch
was
an
engineer
engaged
in
the
manufacture
of
electronics
on
his
own
account
and
in
the
course
of
his
business
he
frequently
flew
to
Europe
and
to
Japan
and
Hong
Kong.
Immediately
prior
to
his
departure,
two
policies
of
flight
insurance
were
obtained,
one
being
policy
No.
DC-11091668
issued
by
Fidelity
and
Casualty
Company
of
New
York
in
the
principal
sum
of
$75,000
(hereinafter
called
the
Fidelity
Policy)
and
the
second
being
policy
No.
T18BAC-29826-A
issued
by
Mutual
of
Omaha
Insurance
Company
in
the
principal
sum
of
$20,000
(hereinafter
called
the
Omaha
Policy).
The
term
of
the
Fidelity
policy
was
for
the
duration
of
Mr.
Vaskevitch’s
flight
to
the
Orient
and
for
the
duration
of
his
return
flight,
whereas
the
term
of
the
Omaha
policy
was
for
a
period
of
14
days
from
February
25,
1966.
In
each
case
the
principal
sum
was
payable
in
the
event
of
the
death
of
Theodore
Vaskevitch
and
in
the
event
of
the
loss
of
hands,
eyes
or
feet
and
a
lesser
sum
in
respect
of
a
loss
of
a
single
eye,
hand
or
foot.
The
appellant
was
named
the
beneficiary
in
both
policies.
It
was
agreed
by
both
parties
that
these
policies
were
policies
of
accident
insurance.
The
aircraft
in
which
Mr.
Vaskevitch
was
a
passenger
crashed
at
Mount
Fuji,
Japan
on
March
5,
1966
killing
him
and
many
other
passengers
and
members
of
the
crew.
The
principal
sums
payable
under
the
policies
of
insurance
were
promptly
paid
to
the
appellant
by
the
insurers,
but
the
appellant,
in
completing
an
Estate
Tax
Return,
did
not
include
those
amounts
in
her
declared
total
value
of
the
estate
of
the
deceased.
The
Minister,
by
his
Notice
of
Assessment,
dated
March
22,
1967
did
so.
The
appellant
filed
a
Notice
of
Objection.
The
Minister
confirmed
the
assessment
on
the
ground
that
the
proceeds
of
the
two
policies
above
mentioned
was
property
passing
on
the
death
of
the
late
Theodore
Vaskevitch
and
the
value
of
such
property
was
properly
included
in
computing
the
aggregate
net
value
of
the
property
so
passing,
pursuant
to
the
provisions
of
Section
3(1)
(j)
of
the
Estate
Tax
Act.
The
said
Section
3(1)
(j)
reads
as
follows:
3.
(1)
There
shall
be
included
in
computing
the
aggregate
net
value
of
the
property
passing
on
the
death
of
a
person
the
value
of
all
property,
wherever
situated,
passing
on
the
death
of
such
person,
including,
without
restricting
the
generality
of
the
foregoing,
(j)
any
annuity
or
other
interest
purchased
or
provided
by
the
deceased,
either
by
himself
alone
or
in
concert
or
by
arrangement
with
any
other
person,
to
the
extent
of
the
beneficial
interest
therein
arising
or
accruing
by
survivorship
or
otherwise
on
the
death
of
the
deceased;
Under
Section
3(1)
(j)
there
are
three
conditions
which
must
be
present
to
give
rise
to
estate
tax
being
exigible
on
this
part
of
the
deceased’s
estate:
(1)
there
must
be
an
annuity
or
other
interest,
(2)
it
must
have
been
purchased
or
provided
by
the
deceased
either
by
himself
alone
or
in
concert
or
by
arrangement
with
any
other
person,
and
(3)
a
beneficial
interest
therein
must
accrue
or
arise
by
survivorship
or
otherwise
on
the
death
of
the
deceased.
There
is
no
doubt
in
my
mind
and
it
was
accepted
by
both
parties
that
an
accident
policy
is
an
‘‘other
interest’’
in
property
and
the
subject
of
duty,
but
the
two
other
conditions
above
mentioned
must
also
be
present
if
the
proceeds
of
these
two
particular
accident
insurance
policies
are
to
be
taxable
as
part
of
the
aggregate
net
value
of
the
appellant’s
husband’s
estate.
Counsel
for
the
appellant
submitted
that,
(1)
the
policies,
here
involved,
were
not
purchased
by
the
deceased
alone
or
in
concert
or
by
arrangement
with
the
appellant
and
that
even
if
such
had
been
the
case,
which
he
vigorously
denied,
then,
(2)
there
was
no
beneficial
interest
therein
arising
or
accruing
by
survivorship
or
otherwise
on
the
death
of
the
deceased.
It
is
with
respect
to
the
facts
upon
which
the
appellant
bases
the
first
of
the
two
above
contentions
that
a
controversy
arises
between
the
parties.
Therefore
it
is
incumbent
upon
me
to
examine
the
evidence
adduced
in
this
regard
with
care.
On
all
previous
business
flights
taken
by
the
deceased
the
appellant
had
made
all
of
her
husband’s
arrangements
such
as
the
flight
booking,
hotel
reservations
and
the
withdrawal
of
money
for
expenses.
However
the
appellant
was
opposed
to
her
husband
going
to
the
Orient.
She
had
a
prejudice
against
the
country
to
which
her
husband
was
going.
She
thought
it
to
be
uncivilized,
subject
to
earthquakes,
tidal
waves
and
like
disasters.
Furthermore,
she
had
a
premonition
that
her
husband
would
not
return
from
this
particular
trip.
Her
husband
did
not
share
the
appellant’s
apprehensions
and
apparently
felt
that
this
trip
was
necessary
for
his
business
interests
To
alleviate
domestic
friction
he
made
the
necessary
arrangements
himself
which
was
contrary
to
their
usual
custom.
It
had
also
been
the
custom
of
the
appellant
and
the
deceased
to
take
out
flight
insurance
in
the
amount
of
$75,000.
The
appellant
knew
that
her
husband
was
going
to
take
this
trip,
but
he
had
kept
his
departure
date
secret
from
her
in
the
interest
of
harmony
and
to
postpone
his
wife’s
inevitable
protestations
until
the
last
possible
moment.
On
Wednesday,
February
28,
1966,
the
appellant
had
received
a
cheque
from
the
German
Government
in
the
amount
of
5,000
marks
in
restitution
of
war
damage
suffered
by
her.
During
the
morning
of
Thursday,
February
24,
1966
the
appellant
cashed
this
cheque,
rather
than
depositing
it,
the
cheque
having
been
drawn
on
a
bank
other
than
her
own,
and
she
received
therefor
approximately
$1,300
in
Canadian
funds.
That
evening
the
husband
revealed
his
plan
to
leave
for
the
Orient
by
air
the
next
morning.
He
had
exhausted
his
Canadian
funds.
Therefore
the
appellant
gave
him
an
uncertain
amount
of
Canadian
money
from
the
proceeds
of
the
cheque
she
had
cashed
that
morning
so
that
upon
her
husband’s
return
he
would
have
Canadian
funds
in
case
she
was
prevented
from
meeting
him
at
the
Toronto
airport
because
of
the
winter
weather.
While
she
did
not
know
the
precise
amount
she
gave
her
husband,
nevertheless,
she
did
know
that
the
smallest
denomination
of
the
bills
she
gave
him
was
$20.
This
was
confirmed
by
the
contents
of
the
deceased’s
wallet
which
was
returned
to
the
appellant
after
his
death
in
the
crash
and
which
contained
no
Canadian
currency
in
smaller
denominations
than
$20.
The
appellant,
as
was
her
custom,
drove
her
husband
to
the
airport,
all
the
while
continuing
her
objections
to
him
going
on
the
trip.
After
her
husband
had
checked
in
for
his
flight
at
the
Canadian
Pacific
Airlines
counter
and
he
and
the
appellant
were
on
their
way
to
the
departure
gate
they
stopped
at
the
insurance
counter.
Her
husband,
to
placate
the
appellant
and
to
allay
her
fears
of
disaster,
suggested
that
he
should
take
out
a
flight
insurance
policy
for
$300,000,
an
amount
greatly
in
excess
of
the
amount
of
$75,000
normally
taken
out.
The
appellant
rejected
her
husband’s
suggestion
that
he
should
take
out
a
policy
in
such
a
large
amount
on
the
ground
that,
as
she
put
it,
“it
would
put
a
jinx
on
the
flight
and
I
was
against
that’’.
She
then
said
to
her
husband,
‘‘I
don’t
want
such
a
large
policy.
I
will
take
out
$75
myself.’’
(By
$75
she
meant
$75,000.)
This
culmination
of
the
dispute
between
the
appellant
and
her
husband
took
place
as
they
made
their
way
from
the
airline
counter
to
the
insurance
counter.
As
they
approached
the
counter
the
appellant
preceded
her
husband
and
announced,
“I
will
take
out
$75,000.’’
Her
husband
said
that
she
should
do
as
she
pleased.
At
the
insurance
counter
there
was
another
customer
being
served
by
the
attendant.
While
waiting
the
appellant
in
her
own
handwriting
filled
in
a
portion
of
the
Fidelity
policy
for
$75,000.
The
document
which
is
admitted
in
evidence
is
a
photostatic
copy
of
the
original.
The
original
was
surrendered
to
The
Fidelity
and
Casualty
Company
of
New
York
at
the
time
that
the
claim
for
payment
was
made
and
it
was
retained
by
that
Company
for
18
months
and
then
destroyed.
The
copy
in
evidence
was
made
by
the
solicitor
for
the
appellant
immediately
prior
to
sending
it
to
the
Company
with
his
request
for
payment.
In
my
opinion
this
is
a
clear
case
in
which
secondary
evidence
is
properly
admitted.
The
appellant
printed
the
first
two
lines
in
the
spaces
provided
in
a
box
at
the
top
of
the
document.
On
the
left-hand
side
of
the
first
line
she
printed
her
husband’s
name
as
the
‘‘name
of
the
applicant’’
and
on
the
right-hand
side
of
the
same
line
her
own
name
as
the
‘‘name
of
the
beneficiary’’.
The
second
line
sets
out
their
addresses
which
are
the
same
and
which
were
printed
by
the
appellant.
The
information
in
the
two
bottom
lines
in
the
box
was
completed
by
the
attendant
at
the
insurance
counter,
except
at
the
extreme
right
the
deceased
signed
his
name
in
the
space
entitled,
‘‘
Personal
signature
of
the
Applicant”.
It
is
specifically
stated
at
the
end
of
the
policy
that
the
policy
‘‘shall
not
be
binding
on
the
Insurer
unless
the
application
is
signed
personally
by
the
Applicant’’.
On
a
previous
policy
for
a
prior
trip,
the
deceased
and
the
appellant
had
noticed
that
the
deceased
had
failed
to
sign
thereby
avoiding
liability
on
the
part
of
the
insurer.
On
this
occasion
they
were
careful
not
to
repeat
the
former
omission.
Furthermore,
they
were
informed
at
this
time
by
the
attendant
that
it
was
mandatory
for
the
traveller
to
personally
sign
the
application
and
the
policy
was
placed
before
the
deceased
for
that
purpose.
In
the
spaces
filled
in
by
the
attendant
it
is
indicated
that
the
policy
was
taken
out
at
9
o’clock
a.m.
and
that
the
premium
was
$2.50.
A
second
policy
was
also
taken
out
at
this
time
which
was
the
Mutual
of
Omaha
policy
for
the
principal
sum
of
$20,000.
The
appellant
testified
that
this
was
done
because
of
her
aversion
to
the
country
her
husband
would
visit.
She
was
anxious
to
provide
hospital
expenses
and
the
like
against
the
event
of
injury
befalling
her
husband
in
the
“uncivilized”
lands
he
would
visit.
As
in
the
former
policy
the
appellant
also
printed
and
wrote
the
information
required
in
a
box
entitled
‘‘Schedule’’
at
the
beginning
of
the
document.
However
in
this
policy
her
husband
is
described
as
the
‘‘insured’’
rather
than
as
the
‘‘applicant’’
as
in
the
Fidelity
policy.
The
attendant
filled
in
the
balance
of
the
information
which
indicated,
among
other
things,
that
the
premium
was
$5.50
and
that
the
policy
was
effective
from
9:55
o’clock
a.m.
of
that
day.
Again
the
deceased
personally
signed
the
policy
as
the
‘‘insured’’
at
the
request
of
the
attendant.
In
this
instance
the
original
policy
was
introduced
in
evidence.
Apparently
Mutual
of
Omaha
Insurance
Company
did
not
require
the
production
of
the
original
policy
and
its
surrender
as
a
condition
precedent
to
payment
thereof
as
was
the
case
with
Fidelity,
although
both
policies
were
sold
over
the
same
counter
by
the
same
attendant.
The
premiums
for
both
policies
totalled
$8.
The
appellant
tendered
the
payment
of
that
amount
by
producing
a
$10
bill
from
her
purse,
being
part
of
the
funds
she
had
received
upon
cashing
the
cheque
payable
to
her
which
she
had
received
two
days
previously
from
the
German
government
as
restitution
of
war
damages
which
she
had
incurred.
The
proffered
$10
bill
was
accepted
by
the
attendant
who
gave
the
appellant
a
$2
bill
as
change
and
the
two
policies
were
delivered
to
her
which
she
kept
and
stored
in
a
drawer
at
her
home.
The
appellant
did
not
ask
for
nor
obtain
a
receipt
for
the
$8
she
paid
the
attendant,
nor
did
she
have
her
husband
execute
a
form
of
assignment.
The
attendant
who
sold
these
policies
was
called
as
a
witness.
She
testified
that
the
form
of
assignment
was
conclusive
evidence
that
the
assignee
was
the
owner
of
the
policy
and
that
both
forms,
the
receipt
form
and
the
form
of
assignment
were
available
at
the
desk
for
persons
who
requested
them,
but
that,
as
a
matter
of
practice,
she
did
not
advise
customers
that
such
forms
were
available.
It
is
only
to
the
statement
by
the
attendant
that
she
neither
advised
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Vaskevitch
that
such
forms
were
available
nor
proffered
them
to
them
that
I
attach
particular
significance.
In
my
opinion
it
is
quite
understandable
that
the
appellant
would
not
request
a
receipt
for
the
premiums
paid
unless
prompted
to
do
so.
She
had
possession
of
the
effective
policies
and
a
receipt
would
not
be
necessary
to
her.
As
to
the
form
of
assignment,
it
should
be
borne
in
mind
that
these
policies
are
usually
purchased
in
a
hurry
with
an
aircraft
standing
by
to
take
off.
I
think
it
is
understandable
that
the
appellant,
in
the
time
available
to
her,
would
not
think
of
requesting
a
form
of
assignment
to
be
completed
by
her
husband
and
the
attendant
did
not
offer
her
such
a
form.
I
do
not
think
it
would
have
occurred
to
the
attendant
to
do
so
because
(1)
she
would
not
have
been
aware
of
the
circumstances
leading
to
the
purchase
of
the
policies,
and
(2)
as
she
testified,
she
never
proffered
this
form
of
assignment
unless
requested
to
do
so
by
the
customer
as
she
was
not
requested
to
do
by
the
appellant
or
the
deceased
in
this
instance.
There
were
no
forms
available
to
cover
the
circumstance
where
a
person
other
than
the
traveller
took
out
the
policy.
There
are
discrepancies
in
the
appellant’s
testimony
to
which
counsel
for
the
Minister
referred
as
illustrative
of
the
unreliability
of
her
evidence
as
a
whole.
He
specifically
pointed
out
that
on
the
Fidelity
policy
the
time
of
purchase
inserted
by
the
attendant
as
9
a.m.
and
the
Mutual
of
Omaha
policy
indicated
it
was
effective
from
9:55
a.m.,
which
time
was
also
inserted
by
the
attendant.
The
appellant
insisted
that
the
second
policy
was
bought
immediately
following
the
first
and
that
in
her
recollection
9
o’clock
a.m.
would
be
approximately
the
correct
time.
She
could
offer
no
explanation
for
the
apparent
difference
of
fifty-five
minutes
between
the
purchase
of
the
two
policies.
Furthermore,
the
appellant
testified
that
the
aircraft
on
which
her
husband
travelled
took
off
at
9
:30
or
9
:35
a.m.,
so
it
would
have
been
impossible
for
her
husband
to
have
signed
the
second
policy
at
9
:55
a.m.
She
made
this
statement
in
her
examination
in
chief.
The
matter
arose
again
in
cross-examination.
Again
she
could
offer
no
explanation
for
the
difference
in
time.
She
volunteered
the
information
that
she
wished
to
establish
the
precise
time
of
take-off
so
she
called
Canadian
Pacific
Airlines
and
was
informed
that
it
was
between
9
:30
and
9
:35
a.m.
that
the
aircraft
took
off,
although
she
could
not
recall
which
of
the
two
times
she
was
told.
I
cannot
be
certain
how
far
the
appellant’s
first
evidence
as
to
the
departure
time
of
the
aircraft
was
influenced
by
the
information
she
received
pursuant
to
her
telephone
call
to
the
airline.
However
she
did
drive
her
husband
to
the
airport
and
she
would
have
known
the
departure
time
and
would
have
estimated
the
time
required
to
ge
there
with
some
accuracy.
To
the
best
of
the
appellant’s
recollection
the
attendant
at
the
insurance
counter
was
wearing
a
uniform
consisting
of
a
skirt
and
jacket.
The
appellant
said
in
response
to
a
question
put
to
her
in
cross-examination
she
thought
the
jacket
was
red
in
colour
and
that
the
attendant
was
blonde,
although
in
both
instances
she
prefaced
her
answers
by
stating
that
she
could
not
recall
with
certainty.
Her
answers
in
these
respects
were
only
guesses
on
her
part
as
she
indicated
they
could
only
be.
As
I
have
intimated
before,
the
attendant
was
called
as
a
witness.
She
testified
that
she
wore
a
uniform
consisting
of
a
skirt
and
jacket,
but
that
the
jacket
was
blue.
I
observed
that
the
attendant’s
hair
was
raven
black
and
she
said
that
she
had
never
been
a
blonde.
The
attendant
did
not
recall
the
sale
of
these
two
particular
policies,
but
she
was
adamant
in
her
insistence
that
she
would
have
inserted
the
correct
time
in
the
second
policy
because
it
was
her
invariable
practice
to
do
so.
I
accept
the
appellant’s
testimony
as
to
the
time
of
purchase
of
the
policies
and
there
are
good
and
valid
reasons
for
doing
so.
This
was
an
event
of
paramount
importance
in
the
appellant’s
life
whereas
to
the
attendant
it
was
merely
a
routine
sale
of
two
of
many
policies.
Neither
do
I
think
that
the
attendant
was
infallible
in
inserting
the
times
in
the
policies.
A
few
minutes
either
way
would
be
of
no
great
significance
to
her.
I
am
therefore
certain
that
the
attendant
made
a
mistake
and
inserted
the
wrong
time
in
the
second
policy
purchased.
Neither
do
I
think
that
the
appellant’s
vague
and
incorrect
recollections
of
the
colour
of
the
attendant’s
garb
and
hair
is
of
particular
significance.
The
appellant’s
mind
was
directed
to
other
matters
of
far
more
importance
to
her
with
respect
to
which
I
accept
her
testimony.
I
think
it
is
clear
that
it
was
the
intention
of
the
insurer,
under
both
contracts
of
insurance
herein,
to
enter
into
agreements
only
with
the
actual
traveller,
in
this
instance
Mr.
Vas-
kevitch.
There
is
no
ambiguity
in
the
language
of
the
policies
as
to
the
parties
thereto.
In
the
Fidelity
policy
Mr.
Vaskevitch
is
described
as
the
applicant
and
he
personally
signed
the
application
in
that
capacity.
Similarly
in
the
Mutual
of
Omaha
policy
he
is
described
as
the
insured
and
he
signed
the
application
as
such.
It
would
appear
that
the
insurer
was
willing
to
contract
only
with
the
actual
traveller
as
is
indicated
by
the
form
of
the
application
and
by
the
fact
that
it
was
a
condition
to
the
validity
of
the
policies
that
the
traveller
should
personally
sign
the
applications.
Therefore
as
between
the
insurers
and
Mr.
Vaskevitch
there
is
no
doubt
that
the
insurer
consider
him
to
be
the
other
contracting
party,
but
this
circumstance
does
not
resolve
the
question
of
the
ownership
of
the
policies
as
between
the
appellant
and
her
husband.
As
I
have
accepted
the
appellant’s
testimony
it
follows
that
she
purchased
both
these
accident
policies
on
her
husband’s
life
for
which
she
paid
the
premiums
with
her
own
money.
Because
those
monies
were
paid
to
a
third
party
there
can
be
no
presumption
of
a
loan
to
her
husband
and
furthermore
the
evidence,
in
my
view,
effectively
rebuts
any
presumption
of
a
loan
or
gift
to
her
husband
if
such
should
exist.
Section
3(1)
(j)
of
the
Estate
Tax
Act
is
enacted
in
language
identical
to
that
used
in
Section
2(1)
(d)
of
the
Finance
Act
of
the
United
Kingdom.
Therefore
the
English
decisions
on
that
section
are
applicable
and
helpful.
Lord
Loreburn,
L.C.
said
in
Lethbridge
v.
Attorney
General,
[1907]
A.C.
19
at
28,
that
the
general
purpose
of
the
section
is
“to
prevent
a
man
escaping
estate
duty
by
subtracting
from
his
means,
during
life,
money
or
money’s
worth
which
when
he
dies
are
to
reappear
in
the
form
of
a
beneficial
interest
accruing
or
arising
on
his
death”.
The
facts
as
I
have
found
them
to
be
in
the
present
case
show
that
Theodore
Vaskevitch
did
not
‘‘subtract
from
his
means’’
for
the
purpose
of
paying
the
premiums
in
question.
This
was
done
by
the
appellant
alone
out
of
her
own
free
property.
Accordingly
it
follows
that
the
deceased,
Theodore
Vaskevitch,
did
not
‘‘purchase
or
provide’’
the
two
accident
policies
‘‘by
himself
alone’’
within
the
meaning
of
the
above
quoted
words
as
they
appear
in
Section
3(1)
(j).
However
the
question
remains
whether
he
‘‘
purchased
or
provided”
those
policies
‘‘in
concert
or
by
arrangement
with
any
other
person’’
that
is
in
the
present
instance,
his
wife,
the
appellant.
While
it
is
true
that
the
deceased
initiated
the
discussion
with
his
wife
concerning
the
purchase
of
an
accident
policy
for
the
substantial
amount
of
$300,000
that
suggestion
was
rejected
by
the
appellant
and
from
that
point
forward,
as
I
view
the
evidence,
all
decisions
and
steps
taken
were
those
of
the
appellant
to
which
the
deceased
merely
consented
and
acquiesced.
To
act
“in
concert”
or
“by
arrangement
with
another
person’’,
in
my
opinion,
presupposes
some
form
of
active
participation
rather
than
passive
consent
to
a
decision
taken
by
another
person.
It
follows
that
the
deceased
did
not
purchase
or
provide
the
policies
in
question
‘‘
either
by
himself
alone
or
in
concert
or
by
arrangement
with
any
other
person’’
which
is
a
condition
of
the
proceeds
of
these
two
particular
accident
insurance
policies
being
properly
included
as
part
of
the
aggregate
net
value
of
the
appellant’s
husband’s
estate.
Because
of
the
conclusion
I
have
reached
it
is
not
necessary
for
me
to
consider
the
second
submission
on
behalf
of
the
appellant
that
there
was
no
beneficial
interest
in
the
two
accident
insurance
policies
arising
or
accruing
by
survivorship
or
otherwise
on
the
death
of
the
deceased.
Accordingly
the
appeal
is
allowed
with
costs.