CATTANACH,
J.:—This
is
an
appeal
from
the
assessment
to
income
tax
by
the
Minister
for
the
1963
taxation
year
by
Nassau
Leasings
Limited,
a
company
incorporated
pursuant
to
the
laws
of
the
Province
of
Ontario
by
letters
patent
dated
January
25,
1960
with
head
office
situate
at
Toronto,
Ontario.
By
order
dated
September
29,
1964
the
Provincial
Secretary
of
the
Province
of
Ontario
accepted
an
application
for
the
surrender
of
the
charter
of
Nassau
Leasings
Limited
and
declared
it
to
be
dissolved
as
of
November
16,
1964.
By
order
of
the
Supreme
Court
of
Ontario
dated
November
9,
1966
under
The
Trustee
Act,
R.S.O.
1960,
chapter
408,
it
was
ordered
that
the
right
of
appeal
from
this
assessment
by
the
Minister
with
respect
to
Nassau
Leasings
Limited
should
be
vested
in
Lea-Don
Canada
Limited,
named
as
appellant
in
the
style
of
cause,
which
at
the
date
of
the
order
was
known
as
Geo.
W.
Crothers
Limited
but
which
corporate
name
was
changed
by
supplementary
letters
patent
dated
November
10,
1966
to
Lea-Don
Canada
Limited.
Therefore,
to
all
intents
and
purposes,
Nassau
Leasings
Limited,
the
charter
of
which
is
surrender,
is,
in
actuality,
the
taxpayer
and
the
appellant
herein,
although
the
proceedings
are
being
carried
on
by
and
in
the
name
of
Lea-Don
Canada
Limited
in
lieu
and
stead
of
Nassau
Leasings
Limited.
In
the
pleadings
the
validity
of
the
order
of
the
Supreme
Court
of
Ontario
dated
November
9,
1966
and
the
consequences
which
flowed
therefrom
as
well
as
from
the
fact
that
Nassau
Leasings
Limited
was
dissolved
as
at
November
16,
1964
by
order
of
the
Provincial
Secretary
dated
September
29,
1964,
were
put
in
issue.
However
the
parties
agreed
to
a
question
of
law
being
raised
for
the
opinion
of
the
Court
by
special
case
pursuant
to
Rule
151
in
which
the
validity
of
the
order
and
the
effect
of
the
dissolution
of
Nassau
Leasings
Limited
were
not
put
in
issue.
The
Special
Case,
stated
by
consent
of
the
parties,
reads
as
follows
:
A.
STATEMENT
OF
FACTS
1.
The
Appellant
was
incorporated
under
the
name
“Geo.
W.
Crothers
Limited”
on
the
14th
day
of
June,
1934,
by
Letters
Patent
pursuant
to
the
provisions
of
The
Companies
Act,
R.S.C.
1927,
Chapter
27.
By
Supplementary
Letters
patent
dated
the
10th
day
of
November,
1966,
the
Appellant’s
name
was
changed
to
“Lea-
Don
Canada
Limited”.
2.
Nassau
Leasings
Limited
(hereinafter
referred
to
as
“Nassau”)
was
incorporated
on
the
25th
day
of
January,
1960,
by
Letters
Patent
pursuant
to
the
provisions
of
The
Corporations
Act,
1953,
Statutes
of
Ontario,
Chapter
19.
At
all
times
material
to
this
appeal,
(a)
the
issued
shares
of
both
the
Appellant
and
Nassau
were
beneficially
owned
by
Lea-Don
Corporation
Limited
(hereinafter
referred
to
as
the
“Parent”),
a
corporation
incorporated
under
the
laws
of
the
Bahama
Islands;
and
(b)
the
Appellant,
Nassau
and
the
Parent
were
corporations
which
did
not
deal
with
each
other
at
arm’s
length.
3.
In
1960,
Nassau
purchased
in
an
arm’s
length
transaction
an
aircraft
manufactured
by
Grumman
Aircraft
Engineering
Corporation,
and
known
as
“Model
G-159
Gulfstream”
(hereinafter
referred
to
as
“the
aircraft”).
The
purchase
price
of
the
aircraft
was
$786,232.17
and
during
1961
and
1962,
Nassau
modified
the
interior
and
installed
new
radio
and
electronic
equipment
at
an
additional
cost
of
approximately
$218,500.
This
additional
cost
was
“capitalized”
and
entered
in
the
books
of
Nassau
as
an
increase
in
the
capital
cost
of
the
aircraft.
4.
The
principal
business
of
Nassau
in
the
period
from
1960
to
May
31,
1963,
consisted
of
leasing
the
aircraft
at
a
monthly
rental
of
$14,000
to
the
Appellant
and,
at
all
times
material
to
this
appeal,
Nassau
was
resident
in
Canada.
5.
On
June
12,
1963,
Nassau
sold
the
aircraft
to
the
Parent
for
a
price
of
$615,500.
This
was
the
only
aircraft
ever
owned
by
Nassau
and,
at
the
time
of
the
sale,
the
undepreciated
capital
cost
of
the
aircraft
on
the
books
of
Nassau
was
$676,088.32.
In
computing
its
income
for
the
fiscal
period
January
1,
1963,
to
June
28,
1963,
Nassau
deducted
from
its
revenue
the
sum
of
$60,588.32
(being
the
difference
between
$676,088.32
and
$615,500.00)
as
a
“terminal
loss”
on
the
disposition
of
the
aircraft.
Attached
hereto
and
marked
as
Exhibit
1
is
a
copy
of
the
T2
Corporation
Income
Tax
Return
and
accompanying
financial
statements
of
Nassau
for
the
fiscal
period
ending
June
28,
1963.
6.
Following
the
sale
of
the
aircraft
by
Nassau
to
the
Parent
on
June
12,
1963,
the
Appellant
continued
to
lease
the
aircraft
at
a
monthly
rental
of
$14,000
until
the
1st
day
of
November,
1963,
the
lessor
after
June
12,
1963,
being
the
Parent.
During
that
period
in
1968
from
June
to
October
inclusive,
the
Appellant
paid
to
the
Parent
the
sum
of
$70,000
as
rental
for
the
aircraft.
Because
the
rental
payments
were
directed
to
a
non-resident,
the
Appellant
deducted
withholding
tax
from
those
payments
and
remitted
that
tax
to
the
Respondent
under
Part
III
of
the
Income
Tax
Act.
7.
By
an
Agreement
dated
the
24th
day
of
September,
1963,
the
Parent
agreed
to
sell
to
Denison
Mines
Limited
for
a
price
of
$892,000
the
aircraft
which
the
Parent
had
purchased
from
Nassau
and
the
actual
sale
of
the
aircraft
was
completed
on
the
1st
day
of
November,
1963.
The
Parent
and
Denison
Mines
Limited
are
corporations
which
deal
with
each
other
at
arm’s
length.
Attached
hereto
as
Exhibit
2
is
a
copy
of
the
Agreement
between
the
Parent
and
Denison
Mines
Limited
dated
the
24th
day
of
September,
1963,
and
attached
as
Exhibit
3
is
a
copy
of
an
Indenture
dated
the
1st
day
of
November,
1963,
between
the
same
two
parties.
8.
At
all
times
material
to
this
appeal,
the
Parent
was
not
resident
in
Canada
and
the
Parent
did
not
carry
on
business
in
Canada.
9.
By
Notice
of
Assessment
dated
January
29,
1965,
the
Respondent
assessed
tax
with
respect
to
Nassau’s
1963
taxation
year;
disallowed
the
“terminal
loss”
in
the
amount
of
$60,588.32;
and
added
recaptured
capital
cost
allowance
in
the
amount
of
$239,411.68.
Attached
hereto
as
Exhibit
4
is
a
copy
of
the
Notice
of
Assessment
together
with
the
form
T7W-C
and
a
Capital
Cost
Allowance
Schedule
for
Nassau.
10.
By
an
Order
dated
the
29th
day
of
September,
1964,
the
Provincial
Secretary
and
the
Minister
of
Citizenship
for
the
Province
of
Ontario
accepted
the
surrender
of
the
charter
of
Nassau
and
declared
that
Nassau
was
to
be
dissolved
on
the
16th
day
of
November,
1964.
Attached
hereto
as
Exhibit
5
is
a
copy
of
the
said
Order
of
the
Provincial
Secretary
and
Minister
of
Citizenship.
11.
By
an
Order
dated
the
9th
day
of
November,
1966,
the
Supreme
Court
of
Ontario
vested
in
the
Appellant
(under
its
original
name)
the
right
to
appeal
from
any
assessment
made
against
Nassau.
Attached
hereto
as
Exhibit
6
is
a
copy
of
the
said
Order
of
the
Ontario
Supreme
Court.
B.
STATEMENT
OF
ISSUE
AND
STATUTORY
PROVISIONS
12.
When
preparing
its
financial
statements
for
the
fiscal
period
January
1
to
June
28,
1963,
and
when
filing
its
T2
Corporation
Income
Tax
Return
for
that
fiscal
period
(Exhibit
1),
Nassau
assumed
that
the
aircraft
had
been
disposed
of
under
such
circumstances
that
subsection
(4)
of
Section
20
of
the
Income
Tax
Act
was
applicable
to
determine
the
capital
cost
of
the
aircraft
to
the
Parent
for
the
purpose
of
Section
ll(l)(a).
13.
In
making
the
assessment
on
January
29,
1965
(Exhibit
4)
the
Respondent
assumed
that
subsection
(2)
of
Section
17
of
the
Income
Tax
Act
was
applicable
with
respect
to
the
disposition
of
the
aircraft
by
Nassau
to
the
Parent.
14.
The
relevant
provisions
of
the
Income
Tax
Act
include
the
following:
“11.
(1)
Notwithstanding
paragraphs
(a),
(b)
and
(h)
of
subsection
(1)
of
section
12,
the
following
amounts
may
be
deducted
in
computing
the
income
of
a
taxpayer
for
a
taxation
year:
(a)
such
part
of
the
capital
cost
to
the
taxpayer
of
property,
or
such
amount
in
respect
of
the
capital
cost
to
the
taxpayer
of
property,
if
any,
as
is
allowed
by
regulation;
17.
(2)
Where
a
taxpayer
carrying
on
business
in
Canada
has
sold
anything
to
a
person
with
whom
he
was
not
dealing
at
arm’s
length
at
a
price
less
than
the
fair
market
value,
the
fair
market
value
thereof
shall,
for
the
purpose
of
computing
the
taxpayer’s
income
from
the
business,
be
deemed
to
have
been
received
or
to
be
receivable
therefor.
17.
(7)
Where
depreciable
property
of
a
taxpayer
as
defined
for
the
purpose
of
section
20
has
been
disposed
of
under
such
circumstances
that
subsection
(4)
of
section
20
is
applicable
to
determine,
for
the
purpose
of
paragraph
(a)
of
subsection
(1)
of
section
11,
the
capital
cost
of
the
property
to
the
person
by
whom
the
property
was
acquired,
subsections
(2),
(5)
and
(6)
are
not
applicable
in
respect
of
the
disposition.
20.
(4)
Where
depreciable
property
did,
at
any
time
after
the
commencement
of
1949
belong
to
a
person
(hereinafter
referred
to
as
the
original
owner)
and
has,
by
one
or
more
transactions
between
persons
not
dealing
at
arm’s
length,
become
vested
in
a
taxpayer,
the
following
rules
are,
notwithstanding
section
17,
applicable
for
the
purposes
of
this
section
and
regulations
made
under
paragraph
(a)
of
subsection
(1)
of
section
11:
(a)
the
capital
cost
of
the
property
to
the
taxpayer
shall
be
deemed
to
be
the
amount
that
was
the
capital
cost
of
the
property
to
the
original
owner;
(b)
where
the
capital
cost
of
the
property
to
the
original
owner
exceeds
the
actual
capital
cost
of
the
property
to
the
taxpayer
the
excess
shall
be
deemed
to
have
been
allowed
to
the
taxpayer
in
respect
of
the
property
under
regulations
made
under
paragraph
(a)
of
subsection
(1)
of
section
11
in
computing
income
for
taxation
years
before
the
acquisition
thereof
by
the
taxpayer.
20.
(5)
In
this
section
and
regulations
made
under
paragraph
(a)
of
subsection
(1)
of
section
11,
(a)
‘depreciable
property’
of
a
taxpayer
as
of
any
time
in
a
taxation
year
means
property
in
respect
of
which
the
taxpayer
has
been
allowed,
or
is
entitled
to,
a
deduction
under
regulations
made
under
paragraph
(a)
of
subsection
(1)
of
section
11
in
computing
income
for
that
or
a
previous
taxation
year;
139.
(1)
In
this
Act,
(av)
‘taxpayer’
includes
any
person
whether
or
not
liable
to
pay
tax;”
C.
QUESTION
FOR
THE
COURT
15.
With
reference
to
the
sale
of
the
aircraft
by
Nassau
to
the
Parent,
and
with
reference
to
the
provisions
of
subsection
(7)
of
Section
17
of
the
Income
Tax
Act,
was
depreciable
property
of
a
taxpayer
as
defined
for
the
purpose
of
Section
20
“disposed
of
under
such
circumstances
that
subsection
(4)
of
Section
20
is
applicable
to
determine,
for
the
purpose
of
paragraph
(a)
of
subsection
(1)
of
Section
11,
the
capital
cost
of
the
property”
to
the
Parent?
D.
DISPOSITION
OF
SPECIAL
CASE
16.
If
the
Court
should
answer
the
question
in
paragraph
15
in
the
affirmative,
then
the
appeal
shall
be
allowed
with
costs
and
the
assessment
(Exhibit
4)
shall
be
varied
by
reducing
the
tax
assessed
from
$123,396.76
to
$396.74,
and
the
said
assessment
shall
be
further
varied
by
reducing
the
interest
proportionately.
17.
If
the
Court
should
answer
the
question
in
paragraph
15
in
the
negative,
then
the
appeal
shall
be
adjourned
to
a
later
date
when
the
Court
will
be
asked
to
determine
the
fair
market
value
of
the
aircraft
at
the
time
of
its
sale
from
Nassau
to
the
Parent;
but
the
Respondent
shall
be
entitled
to
his
costs
in
respect
of
this
special
case.
The
parties
hereto
concur
in
stating
in
the
form
of
a
special
case
the
above
question
of
law
for
the
opinion
of
the
Court.
DATED
this
26th
day
of
November
A.D.
1968.
The
issue,
as
outlined
in
paragraph
15
of
the
special
case,
thus
turns
upon
a
narrow
point
of
law
involving
the
interpretation
of
the
pertinent
sections
of
the
Income
Tax
Act.
That
issue
can
best
be
brought
into
sharp
relief
by
summarizing
the
facts
set
forth
in
the
special
case
and
considering
the
pertinent
provisions
of
the
Income
Tax
Act
in
connection
therewith.
Nassau
Leasings
Limited,
hereinafter
called
Nassau,
was
resident
in
Canada.
In
1960
it
bought
an
aircraft,
in
an
arm’s
length
transaction,
at
a
cost
of
$786,232.17
and
made
alterations
to
it
costing
$218,500.
The
aircraft
was
carried
on
the
books
of
Nassau
at
a
capital
cost
of
$1,004,732.17.
Nassau
carried
on
business
in
Canada,
its
business
being
to
lease
the
aircraft
to
Lea-Don
Canada
Limited,
the
nominal
appellant
herein,
at
a
monthly
rental
of
$14,000.
This
Nassau
did
from
1960
to
May
1963.
On
June
12,
1963
Nassau
sold
the
aircraft
to
Lea-Don
Corporation
Limited,
its
parent
company
incorporated
and
resident
in
the
Bahamas,
for
$615,500.
At
the
time
the
undepreciated
capital
cost
of
the
aircraft
on
the
books
of
Nassau
was
$676,088.32.
In
computing
its
income
for
the
taxation
year
Nassau
deducted
the
amount
of
$60,588.32
as
a
terminal
loss
on
the
sale
of
the
aircraft
to
its
parent
under
Section
1100(2)
of
the
Income
Tax
Regulations.
Nassau
then
distributed
its
assets
and
surrendered
its
charter.
The
purchaser
of
the
aircraft,
Lea-Don
Corporation
Limited,
the
parent
company,
resident
in
the
Bahamas,
then
leased
the
aircraft
to
Lea-Don
Canada
Limited,
resident
in
Canada
and
also
a
wholly
owned
subsidiary
of
Lea-Don
Corporation
Limited,
as
was
Nassau.
Lea-Don
Canada
Limited,
because
the
rental
payments
were
made
to
a
non-resident,
deducted
the
withholding
tax
under
Part
III
of
the
Act
and
remitted
it
to
the
Minister.
On
November
1,
1963,
Lea-Don
Corporation
Limited,
the
parent,
sold
the
aircraft
in
an
arm’s
length
transaction
to
Denison
Mines
Limited
for
$892,000.
At
all
material
times,
Nassau,
Lea-Don
Corporation
Limited,
the
parent,
and
Lea-Don
Canada
Limited
were
corporations
which
did
not
deal
with
each
other
at
arm’s
length
within
the
meaning
of
that
term
as
defined
in
Section
139(5)
and
(5a)
of
the
Income
Tax
Act.
The
Minister
then
assessed
Nassau
for
its
taxation
year
by
adding
back
$300,000
to
its
declared
income,
being
(1)
by
disallowance
of
$60,558.32
terminal
loss
claimed
by
Nassau,
and
(2)
by
adding
back
the
recapture
of
capital
cost
allowance
of
$239,411.68
which
the
Minister
says
was
recaptured
by
Nassau.
The
appellant
takes
the
position
that
in
June
1963
when
Nassau
sold
the
aircraft
to
Lea-Don
Corporation
Limited,
its
parent,
the
fair
market
value
of
the
aircraft
was
$615,500,
whereas
the
Minister
takes
the
position
that
the
fair
market
value
of
the
aircraft
at
that
time
was
$915,500.
However
Nassau
says
that
the
fair
market
value
is
immaterial.
In
so
assessing
Nassau
the
Minister
did
so
for
the
following
reasons.
The
cost
of
the
aircraft
to
Nassau
was
$1,004,732.17.
Under
Section
11(1)
(a)
a
taxpayer
in
computing
his
income
is
entitled
to
that
part
of
the
capital
cost
of
property
(here
the
aircraft)
as
is
allowed
by
Regulations.
Under
Section
1100(1)
(a)
of
the
Income
Tax
Regulations
a
taxpayer
in
computing
his
income
may
claim
and
deduct,
for
each
taxation
year,
up
to
40%
of
the
undepreciated
capital
cost
to
him
as
of
the
end
of
the
taxation
year
of
property
in
Class
16
in
Schedule
“B”
to
the
Regulations,
which
makes
specific
mention
of
aircraft.
This
Nassau
had
done
in
the
taxation
years
prior
to
1963.
Nassau
had
so
deducted
$328,643.85
leaving
an
undepreciated
cost
of
$676,088.32
being
the
capital
cost
of
$1,004.732.17
less
the
depreciation
claimed
and
allowed
of
$328,643.85.
By
Section
20(5)
(e)
‘‘undepreciated
capital
cost’’
of
property
in
a
prescribed
class
means
capital
cost
of
all
property
in
that
class
minus
the
aggregate
of
(1)
depreciation
previously
claimed
and
allowed,
and
(2)
proceeds
of
disposition
from
any
sale
of
property
in
the
class
(up
to
but
not
exceeding
the
undepreciated
capital
cost
of
property
in
the
class
immediately
before
the
sale).
On
June
12,
1963
Nassau
sold
the
aircraft
to
Lea-Don
Corporation
Limited,
its
parent,
for
$615,500.
Applying
the
formula
in
Section
20(5)
(e)
Nassau
determined
the
‘‘undepreciated
capital
cost’’
as
follows:
By
Section
1100(2)
of
the
Regulations,
where,
in
a
taxation
year,
all
property
of
a
prescribed
class
has
been
disposed
of,
a
taxpayer
is
allowed
a
deduction
for
the
year
equal
to
the
amount.
that
would
otherwise
be
the
undepreciated
capital
cost
to
him
of
property
in
that
class
which
is
frequently
termed
the
“terminal
loss’’
provision.
Cost
of
Aircraft
|
|
$1,004,732.17
|
Less
|
(i)
|
depreciation
claimed
and
allowed
|
$328,643.85
|
|
|
(ii)
|
proceeds
of
disposition
|
|
615,000.00
|
944,143.85
|
Undepreciated
capital
cost
after
sale
|
200.00.
$
|
60,588.32
|
Nassau
therefore
deducted
the
amount
of
$60,588.32,
computed
as
above,
as
a
terminal
loss
in
computing
its
income
for
the
fiscal
period
ending
June
28,
1963
and
in
doing
so
relied
on
the
provisions
of
Section
1100(2)
of
the
Regulations.
However
Section
17(2)
of
the
Act
provides
that
where
a
taxpayer
has
sold
property
to
a
person
with
whom
he
was
not
dealing
at
arm’s
length
at
a
price
less
than
the
fair
market
value,
the
fair
market
value
shall
be
deemed
to
have
been
received
by
the
vendor.
Because
Nassau
and
its
parent,
Lea-Don
Corporation
Limited
were
not
dealing
at
arm’s
length
and
because
Lea-Don
Corporation
Limited
sold
the
aircraft
in
an
arm’s
length
transaction
on
November
1,
1963
for
$892,000
the
Minister
assumed
that,
(1)
the
fair
market
value
of
the
aircraft
on
June
12,
1963,
the
date
of
its
sale
by
Nassau
to
its
parent
was
$915,500
and
(2)
that
Nassau,
pursuant
to
Section
17(2)
had
received
the
sum
of
$915,500
as
proceeds
of
disposition
upon
the
sale
of
its
property.
The
Minister,
therefore,
applied
the
‘‘recapture
of
capital
cost’’
provisions
of
Section
20(1)
to
the
effect
that
where
property
of
a
taxpayer
in
a
prescribed
class
has
been
sold
and
the
proceeds
of
disposition
exceed
the
undepreciated
capital
cost
of
the
property
immediately
prior
to
the
sale,
then
the
excess
(up
to
the
original
capital
cost)
shall
be
included
in
computing
the
taxpayer’s
income.
This
resulted
in
the
Minister
including
in
Nassau’s
income
for
1963
the
sum
of
$239,411.68.
This
sum
was
arrived
at
by
taking
the
capital
cost
of
the
aircraft,
$1,004,732.17
and
deducting
therefrom
the
capital
cost
claimed
and
allowed
in
the
sum
of
$328,643.85
thereby
giving
an
undepreciated
capital
cost
of
$676,088.32.
The
undepreciated
capital
cost
of
$676,088.32
was
then
deducted
from
$915,500
assumed
by
the
Minister
to
have
been
the
fair
market
value
and
deemed
to
have
been
received
by
Nassau
by
virtue
of
Section
17(2)
resulting
in
the
above
sum
of
$239,411.68.
When
the
amount
of
$60,588.32
claimed
by
Nassau
as
a
‘‘terminal
loss”?
and
disallowed
by
the
Minister
is
added
to
the
sum
of
$239,411.68
added
to
Nassau’s
income
as
recaptured
capital
cost
allowance,
the
net
result
is
that
Nassau’s
income
was
increased
by
$300,000
and
it
was
assessed
accordingly.
The
appellant
submitted
that
the
provisions
of
Section
17
(2)
are
not
applicable
in
respect
of
the
disposition
of
the
aircraft
by
Nassau
because
by
Section
17(7),
Section
17(2)
is
made
not
applicable
to
a
transaction
to
which
Section
20(4)
applies.
As
might
be
expected
the
appellant
contended
that
Section
20(4)
was
applicable
to
determine
the
capital
cost
of
the
aircraft
to
Lea-Don
Corporation
Limited,
the
parent
of
Nassau.
On
the
other
hand,
as
also
might
be
expected,
the
Minister
contended
that
Section
20(4)
was
not
applicable
to
determine
for
the
purposes
of
the
regulations
made
under
Section
11(1)
(a)
the
capital
cost
of
the
aircraft
to
Nassau’s
parent,
Lea-Don
Corporation
Limited
and
accordingly
the
provisions
of
Section
17
(7)
do
not
apply
to
exclude
the
operation
of
Section
17(2)
by
virtue
of
which
the
Minister
assessed
Nassau
as
he
did.
Therefore
whether
Section
17(7)
applies
is
dependent
on
whether
or
not
the
circumstances
contemplated
by
Section
20(4)
are
existing
in
the
circumstances
of
the
present
case.
This,
in
turn,
gives
rise
to
the
question
posed
for
the
Court
in
paragraph
15
of
the
stated
special
case
which
for
the
purpose
of
convenience
I
repeat
here
:
15.
With
reference
to
the
sale
of
the
aircraft
by
Nassau
to
the
Parent,
and
with
reference
to
the
provisions
of
subsection
(7)
of
Section
17
of
the
Income
Tax
Act,
was
depreciable
property
of
a
taxpayer
as
defined
for
the
purpose
of
Section
20
“disposed
of
under
such
circumstances
that
subsection
(4)
of
Section
20
is
applicable
to
determine,
for
the
purpose
of
paragraph
(a)
of
subsection
(1)
of
Section
11,
the
capital
cost
of
the
property”
to
the
Parent?
The
purpose
of
Section
20(4)
is
twofold:
(1)
to
ensure
that
the
depreciable
base
of
capital
assets
cannot
be
raised
upon
the
transfer
by
one
taxpayer
to
another
in
a
transaction
not
at
arm’s
length,
and
(2)
to
ensure
that
the
recapture
of
capital
cost
allowance
cannot
be
avoided,
the
recapture
is
merely
postponed
until
the
property
is
sold
to
a
stranger,
presumably
at
the
fair
market
value
to
the
transferee.
The
effect
of
Section
20(4)
by
stating
that,
in
a
non-arm’s
length
transaction,
the
capital
cost
of
depreciable
property
to
a
new
owner
cannot
exceed
what
was
the
previous
owner’s
capital
cost,
despite
the
fact
that
the
fair
market
value
of
the
property
may
be
greater,
is
the
opposite
to
Section
17(2)
when
the
fair
market
value
must
be
taken
as
the
capital
cost
to
the
vendor
and
his
income
computed
accordingly.
This
conflict
is
resolved
by
Section
17(7)
which
provides
that
when
Section
20(4)
applies
then
Section
17(2)
does
not
apply
and
this
gives
rise
to
the
dispute
in
the
present
case.
Whether
Section
20(4)
applies
gives
rise
to
two
crucial
questions
:
(1)
is
the
purchaser
of
the
aircraft,
Lea-Don
Corporation
Limited,
the
parent
of
the
vendor,
a
taxpayer,
and
(2)
was
the
property
depreciable
property
in
the
hands
of
the
parent?
As
I
understood
the
argument
by
counsel
for
the
appellant
it
was
that,
(1)
the
parent
was
clearly
a
‘‘taxpayer’’
which
word
is
defined
in
Section
139(1)
(av)
as
including
‘‘any
person
whether
or
not
liable
to
pay
tax’’.
In
any
event
the
parent
was
a
taxpayer
because
it
paid
the
withholding
tax
of
15%
on
the
amount
that
Nassau
paid
to
it
as
rent
for
the
use
of
property
in
Canada,
in
accordance
with
Section
106(1)
(d)
which
was
remitted
to
the
Minister
by
Nassau;
(2)
that
the
parent
had
income
from
rent
even
though
it
was
a
non-resident.
He
pointed
out
that
Section
2(2)
provides
that
income
tax
shall
be
paid
upon
the
income
of
a
non-resident
employed
or
carrying
on
business
in
Canada
and
that
under
Section
31(1)
a
non-resident
may
have
sources
of
income
from
outside
Canada
and
inside
Canada.
He
argued
that
revenue
earned
inside
Canada
is
subject
to
those
deductions
as
are
applicable
thereto.
He
also
referred
to
Section
110
by
which
a
non-resident
may
elect
to
file
an
income
tax
return
under
Part
I
of
the
Act
as
prescribed
for
residents
and
be
taxed
as
a
resident
subject
to
the
conditions
set
forth
in
the
section.
Sections
2(2)
and
31(1)
are
applicable
to
income
of
a
nonresident
employed
in
Canada
or
carrying
on
business
in
Canada.
The
appellant
[sic]
was
not
employed
in
Canada,
nor
was
it
carrying
on
business
in
Canada.
Its
income
was
derived
from
property
situate
in
Canada.
With
respect
to
the
parent
being
able
to
elect
under
Section
110,
that
section
is
only
applicable
to
income
from
rent
on
real
property
or
a
timber
royalty
situate
in
Canada.
The
aircraft
is
not
realty.
However
he
referred
to
Section
1102(3)
of
the
Regulations
to
the
effect
that
where
the
taxpayer
is
non-resident
the
classes
of
property
described
in
Part
XI
and
Schedule
“B”
shall
be
deemed
not
to
include
property
that
is
situate
outside
Canada.
He
therefore
concluded
that
the
converse
is
such
property
situated
within
Canada
is
subject
to
allowances
in
respect
of
capital
cost.
Therefore
he
said
the
test
is
not
whether
the
taxpayer
is
carrying
on
business
in
Canada,
but
that
it
is
whether
the
nonresident
taxpayer
owns
property
situate
in
Canada.
Accordingly
he
submitted
that
capital
cost
allowance
is
deductible
in
computing
the
income
and
that
there
is
no
distinction
between
a
resident
and
non-resident
taxpayer
in
computing
income
except
as
to
property
owned
by
a
non-resident
situated
outside
Canada
and
that
if
a
non-resident
has
property
in
Canada
which
falls
within
Schedule
‘‘B’’
(as
the
aircraft
here
involved
does)
then
it
is
depreciable
property
within
the
definition
of
those
words
in
Section
20(5)
(a)
for
the
purposes
of
Section
20
and
the
regulations
under
Section
11(1)
(a).
‘Depreciable
property’’
of
a
taxpayer
is
defined
under
Section
20(5)
(a)
as
meaning
property
in
respect
of
which
the
taxpayer
has
been
allowed,
or
is
entitled
to
be
allowed
a
deduction
under
the
regulations
under
Section
11(1)
(a)
in
computing
income.
For
these
reasons
he
contended
that
the
aircraft
is
depreciable
property
in
the
hands
of
the
parent
company,
Lea-Don
Corporation
Limited
and
if
that
be
so
then
Section
20(4)
applies
as
does
Section
17(7)
and
Section
17(2)
does
not,
so
that
the
question
posed
for
the
Court
in
paragraph
15
of
the
special
case
must
be
answered
in
the
affirmative.
As
I
understood
the
argument
of
counsel
for
the
appellant
it
is
based
on
two
propositions.
His
first
proposition
is
that
if
a
non-resident
has
income,
that
income
is
to
be
computed
under
the
Income
Tax
Act.
With
this
proposition
I
fully
agree
if
the
computation
of
a
non-resident’s
income
is
necessary
to
compute
the
tax.
Here,
however,
the
parent
company
was
paying
a
tax
under
Part
III
of
the
Act,
on
a
gross
amount
and
accordingly
the
tax
payable
is
not
computed
under
Division
B
of
Part
I
of
the
Act
because
there
is
no
need
to
do
so.
The
clear
inference
from
Section
2(2)
is
that
for
a
nonresident
to
be
taxable
under
Part
I
he
must
be
employed
in
Canada
or
carrying
on
business
in
Canada
neither
of
which
apply
to
the
parent
company.
Under
Section
3
the
income
of
a
taxpayer
is
for
the
purpose
of
Part
I
that
from
all
sources
inside
or
outside
Canada
including
that
from
business,
property
and
employment,
but
Section
31
is
a
special
provision
restricting
a
non-resident’s
income
to
that
earned
in
Canada
from
employment
or
business
subject
to
the
appropriate
deductions
attributable
thereto.
In
Section
1100(1)
of
the
Regulations
there
is
allowed
to
a
taxpayer
[a
deduction]
in
respect
of
capital
cost
in
computing
income
from
property,
but
Section
110
makes
it
clear
that
a
non-resident
taxpayer
may
only
elect
to
file
a
return
and
pay
tax
under
Part
I
with
respect
to
rent
on
real
property
or
a
timber
royalty.
Therefore,
the
complete
answer
to
the
appellant’s
first
proposition
is
a
computation
of
the
parent’s
Canadian
income
is
neither
necessary,
nor
relevant
to
assess
tax
under
Part
III
for
which
the
parent
was
liable.
The
second
proposition
of
the
appellant,
as
I
understood
it,
was
that
the
parent
company
was
entitled
to
a
deduction
under
the
Regulations
under
Section
11(1)
(a)
of
the
Act.
Counsel
placed
particular
reliance
on
Section
1102(3)
of
the
Regulations
to
the
effect
that
where
the
taxpayer
is
a
non-resident
person
the
classes
of
property
set
forth
are
deemed
not
to
include
property
outside
Canada.
Here
the
non-resident
parent’s
property,
the
aircraft,
is
situate
in
Canada
and
it
is
depreciable
property
in
the
sense
that
it
depreciates
but
the
question
is,
is
it
property
with
respect
to
which
the
parent
is
entitled
to
claim
deductions
of
a
capital
cost
allowance
in
accordance
with
the
Regulation
under
Section
11(1)(a).
By
Section
1100(1)
of
the
Regulations
allowances
in
respect
of
capital
cost
are
deductible
in
computing
income
from
property
at
the
rates
of
the
classes
set
out
in
Schedule
“B”.
Under
Section
1102(3)
for
non-residents
the
classes
of
property
are
deemed
not
to
include
property
situate
outside
Canada.
The
reason
is
readily
apparent
because
a
non-resident
taxpayer
is
not
taxed
on
world
income
but
only
on
income
in
Canada.
Therefore
a
non-resident’s
property
situate
outside
Canada
is
excluded
from
any
class,
but
for
a
Canadian
resident
his
outside
property
is
included
in
a
class.
I
think
the
inference
that,
because
a
non-resident’s
property
in
Canada
is
not
excluded
from
classes,
the
property
is
“depreciable
property’’
is
an
unwarranted
one.
In
my
opinion
the
Regulation
means
that
a
class
is
available
for
such
non-resident
owned
property
situated
in
Canada
if
the
non-resident
taxpayer
is
otherwise
entitled
to
claim
a
capital
cost
allowance
by
reason
of
carrying
on
business
in
Canada
or
if
the
income
from
prop-
erty
in
Canada
brings
the
non-resident
taxpayer
within
Section
110
of
the
Act
and
allows
him
to
elect
to
file
a
return
under
Part
I
and
compute
his
taxable
income
accordingly.
In
my
opinion,
therefore,
the
parent
is
not
entitled
to
a
deduction
under
regulations
made
under
Section
11(1)
(a)
of
the
Act
in
computing
its
income.
It
follows
that
I
answer
the
question
posed
for
the
Court
in
paragraph
15
of
the
special
case
in
the
negative
and
dispose
of
the
matter
as
indicated
in
paragraph
17
thereof,
that
is
to
say,
the
appeal
shall
be
adjourned
to
a
later
date
when
the
Court
will
be
asked
to
determine
the
fair
market
value
of
the
aircraft
at
the
time
of
its
sale
from
Nassau
to
the
parent
and
the
Minister
shall
be
entitled
to
his
costs
in
respect
of
this
special
case.
DONALD
APPLICATORS
LTD.,
GODFREY
BUILDING
PRODUCTS
LIMITED,
WHITEMUD
BUILDING
SUPPLIES
LTD,
GRAHAM
EXCAVATING
&
EQUIPMENT
LTD.
SAWYER
BUILDING
SUPPLIES
LTD.,
McKINNEY
PLUMBING
&
HEATING
LTD.
CYPRUS
BUILDING
PRODUCTS
LTD.,
HIGGS
CEMENT
&
MASONRY
LTD.
BOREAS
BUILDING
SUPPLIES
LTD.
and
CHAPPELL
BUILDING
SUPPLIES
LTD.,
Appellants,
and
MINISTER
OF
NATIONAL
REVENUE,
Respondent.
Exchequer
Court
of
Canada
(Thurlow,
J.),
February
20,
1969,
on
appeal
from
assessments
of
the
Minister
of
National
Revenue.
Income
tax—Federal—Income
Tax
Act,
R.S.C.
1952,
c.
148—Section
The
ten
appellant
corporations
were
admittedly
formed
for
the
purpose
of
ensuring
that
profits
realized
from
construction
supply
activities
would
obtain
a
maximum
benefit
from
the
low
tax
bracket
in
Section
39.
To
achieve
this
they
had
to
avoid
being
“associated
corporations”
within
the
meaning
of
that
section
and
in
the
Minister’s
view
they
failed
to
achieve
this
objective.
In
the
case
of
each
appellant
two
Class
A
shares,
out
of
an
authorized
200,
were
issued
and
were
held
by
different,
unrelated
members
of
a
law
firm
in
the
Bahamas,
and
490
Class
B
shares,
out
of
an
authorized
19,800,
were
issued
and
held
by
an
eleventh
company,
“Saje”.
The
Class
A
shares
carried
full
voting
rights
and
the
Class
B
shares
also
carried
full
voting
rights
except
the
right
to
elect
directors.
In
fact,
the
only
functions
carried
out
by
the
directors
were
to
appoint
a
manager
for
“Saje”
and
to
sign
financial
statements
and
minutes
of
meetings
which
were
prepared
and
submitted
to
them.
In
the
appellant’s
view
control
of
the
appellants
lay
with
Class
A
shareholders,
because
of
their
power
to
elect
the
directors.
The
Minister,
on
the
other
hand,
contended
that
in
the
somewhat
peculiar
setup
which
obtained,
the
de
jure
control
of
each
appellant
rested
in
the
Class
B
shareholder.
Alternatively,
the
Minister
contended
that
in
the
circumstances
de
facto
control
should
be
held
to
govern.
HELD:
It
was
settled
that
“control”
of
a
corporation
for
this
purpose
rested
in
de
jure
control,
not
de
facto
control.
Here,
however,
the
Class
B
shareholder
had
ample
voting
power
to
pass
or
defeat
any
special
resolution
or
extraordinary
resolution
that
might
be
proposed
and
could
therefore
change
the
articles
of
each
appellant
and
remove
the
directors’
authority
while
reserving
all
decision-making
power
for
the
shareholders
as
a
whole,
or
for
the
Class
B
shareholders,
only,
in
general
meeting.
In
these
circumstances
it
could
not
be
said
that
the
Class
B
shareholder
did
not
have
in
the
long
run
de
jure
control
of
each
appellant.
It
followed
that
each
appellant
was
controlled
by
“Saje”
and
all
were
“associated
corporations”.
Appeals
dismissed.
IT.
Howard
Stikeman,
Q.C.,
and
M.
A.
Régnier,
for
the
Appellants.
M.
A.
Mogan
and
R.
D.
Janowsky,
for
the
Respondent.
CASES
REFERRED
to
:
M.N.R.
v.
Dworkin
Furs
Ltd.
et
al.,
[1967]
S.C.R.
223;
[1967]
C.T.C.
50;
Vina-Rug
(Canada)
Ltd.
v.
M.N.R.,
[1968]
S.C.R.
193;
[1968]
C.T.C.
1;
Buckerfield’s
Ltd.
et
al.
v.
M.N.R.,
[1965]
1
Ex.
C.R.
299
;
[1964]
C.T.C.
504;
British
American
Tobacco
Co.
Ltd.
v.
C.I.R.,
[1943]
1
All
E.R.
13;
Aaron
Ladies
Apparel
Ltd.
v.
M.N.R.,
[1967]
S.C.R.
223;
[1967]
C.T.C.
50.
THURLOW,
J.:—The
issue
in
each
of
these
appeals,
which
are
from
re-assessments
of
income
tax,
in
some
cases
for
the
years
1961
and
1962
and
in
others
for
the
year
1962
alone,
is
whether
in
these
years
the
ten
appellant
companies
were
‘associated”
with
each
other
within
the
meaning
of
Section
39
of
the
Income
Tax
Act
and
thus
liable
to
tax
at
the
higher
rate
prescribed
by
that
section
rather
than
at
the
lower
rate
which
would
otherwise
be
applicable.
The
basis
relied
on
for
treating
the
appellant
companies
as
‘‘associated’’
was
that
each
of
them
was
controlled
at
the
relevant
times
by
another
corporation,
viz.
Saje
Management
Limited,
later
renamed
MacLab
Enterprises
Limited,
and
was
thus
associated
with
that
corporation,
from
which
it
followed
from
the
statutory
provisions
that
all
eleven
corporations
were
associated
with
each
other.
All
ten
appellant
companies
were
incorporated
in
1961
under
The
Companies
Act,
R.S.A.
1955,
c.
53,
of
the
Province
of
Alberta.
While
their
objects,
as
expressed
in
their
memoranda
of
association,
differed
somewhat
from
company
to
company
all
had
objects
concerned
with
some
phase
of
the
construction
or
construction
supply
business.
In
other
relevant
respects
the
memoranda
and
articles
of
association
of
the
appellant
companies
can
be
treated
as
alike.
Each
had
two
classes
of
common
shares,
consisting
of
200
Class
A
shares,
each
of
the
par
value
of
$1.00,
which
carried
the
right
to
vote
on
any
question
and
the
exclusive
right
to
vote
on
the
election
of
directors,
a
right
which
could
not
be
altered
without
the
unanimous
consent
of
the
Class
A
shareholders,
and
19,800
Class
B
no
par
value
shares
which
carried
the
right
to
vote
on
all
questions
except
the
election
of
directors.
In
each
case
the
memorandum
of
association
further
provided
that
no
share
or
shares
might
be
transferred
without
the
consent
of
the
directors
and
that
the
net
yearly
profits
of
the
company
should
in
each
year
be
divided
among
the
shareholders
in
dividends
payable
in
cash.
Each
company
adopted
Table
A
of
the
First
Schedule
to
The
Companies
Act
as
its
articles
of
association
with
certain
amendments
among
which
was
one
providing
that
no
share
should
be
issued
to
any
person
without
the
unanimous
consent
of
the
existing
shareholders
of
the
company.
In
each
company
during
the
relevant
period
two
Class
A
shares
had
been
issued
and
were
held
by
two
unrelated
persons
resident
in
Nassau
in
the
Bahamas
consisting
of
a
solicitor
and
one
of
his
partners
or
employees
or
of
two
of
such
persons
other
than
the
solicitor
himself.
In
no
ease,
however,
did
the
same
two
persons
hold
the
shares
in
more
than
one
of
the
companies.
In
each
case
the
Class
A
shareholders
had
elected
themselves
to
be
the
directors
of
the
company.
In
each
ease,
as
well,
498
Class
B
shares
had
been
issued,
at
10
cents
per
share,
to
Saje
Management
Limited.
Each
company
thus
had
a
nominal
issued
capital
of
$51.80.
The
directors
of
each
appellant
fixed
the
registered
office
of
the
company
at
502
MacLeod
Building,
Edmonton,
Alberta
and
appointed
Mr.
James
G.
Greenough,
the
controller
of
Saje
Management
Limited,
as
the
company’s
manager.
Mr.
Greenough
was
not
acquainted
with
the
directors
and
received
no
instructions
from
them
but
in
each
case
they
ultimately
approved
charges
in
the
company’s
accounts
for
management
services
supplied
to
the
company
by
Saje
Management
Limited
who
paid
Mr.
Greenough’s
salary.
In
fact
the
only
functions
carried
out
by
the
directors
as
such
were
to
sign
financial
statements
and
minutes
of
directors’
and
shareholders’
meetings
all
of
which
were
prepared
from
time
to
time
in
Edmonton
and
brought
to
Nassau
by
Mr.
Sandy
MacTaggart
or
his
associate
Mr.
Jean
de
la
Bruyere
for
the
directors’
signatures.
That
these
companies
were
incorporated
and
these
arrangements
were
made
for
the
purpose
of
securing
that
profits
realized
from
the
construction
and
construction
supply
activities
carried
out
by
Saje
Management
Limited,
which
carried
on
its
business
in
Edmonton,
Alberta,
would
be
realized
by
several
corporations
who
were
not
associated
within
the
meaning
of
the
Act
and
thus
attract
less
tax
was
not
merely
not
disputed
but
was
frankly
stated
by
the
appellants’
counsel
in
his
opening
and
by
Mr.
MacTaggart,
the
principal
witness
called
on
behalf
of
the
appellants
who,
with
his
associate,
Mr.
de
la
Bruyere,
were
the
holders
of
all
the
shares
of
Saje
Management
Limited.
However,
no
case
was
made
out
of
any
trust
or
other
arrangement
by
which
Saje
Management
Limited
or
its
shareholders
might
be
said
to
be
in
a
position
to
exercise
de
jure
control
of
the
voting
rights
of
the
Class
A
shares
of
the
appellant
companies
held
by
the
Nassau
solicitor
or
his.
several
partners
or
employees
and
the
evidence
negatives
the
existence
of
any
such
arrangement.
Nor
was
any
attempt
made
to
establish
the
case
as
one
of
dummy
corporations
whose
fictitious
legal
personalities
could
be
ignored.
On
the
contrary,
the
very
foundation
of
the
taxation
appealed
from
is
the
assumption
of
the
reality
of
these
corporations
and
of
their
having
made
the
profits
in
respect
of
which
they
have
been
assessed.
The
case
therefore
falls
to
be
decided,
despite
the
stark
unreality
of
the
situation,
as
disclosed
by
the
evidence,
on
the
basis
that
these
appellants
were
corporations
which
it
fact
engaged
in
business
and
thereby
realized
the
profits
in
question.
The
question
for
determination,
thus,
as
I
see
it,
is
simply
whether
Sa
je
Management
Limited
by
reason
of
its
holding
of
498
Class
B
shares,
in
each
case,
controlled
the
corporation.
The
appellants’
position,
as
I
have
apprehended
it,
was
basically
that
the
Class
A
shareholders,
by
reason
of
their
exclusive
right
to
elect
the
directors,
in
each
case
controlled
the
corporation
from
which
it
followed
that
Saje
Management
Limited
did
not
control
it.
I
do
not
think,
however,
that
it
is
necessary
to
reach
a
conclusion
either
on
the
broad
question
‘‘who
controlled
the
company”
or
on
the
narrower
question
whether
the
Class
A
shareholders
controlled
it
since
the
answer
would
not
necessarily
be
conclusive
in
either
case.
What
the
appellants
require
in
order
to
succeed
is,
as
I
see
it,
in
each
case
a
determination
that
Saje
Management
Limited
did
not
control
the
corporation.
Counsel
for
the
Minister
on
the
other
hand
took
two
alternative
positions.
He
submitted
first
that,
notwithstanding
the
exclusive
right
of
Class
A
shareholders
to
elect
the
directors,
in
the
somewhat
peculiar
setup
of
the
appellant
companies,
the
de
jure
control
of
each
of
the
companies
rested
in
the
ownership
by
Saje
Management
Limited
of
its
498
Class
B
shares.
Alternatively,
he
submitted
that
even
if
there
was
an
element
of
control
vested
in
the
Class
A
shareholders
by
reason
of
their
exclusive
right
to
elect
directors
there
was
also
an
element
of
control
vested
in
the
Class
B
shareholder
since
that
shareholder
had
overwhelming
voting
power
on
any
other
question
that
might
come
before
a
shareholders’
meeting
and
since
the
directors
of
the
appellant
companies
did
not
have
all
the
powers
commonly
exercised
by
directors,
in
that
they
had
no
authority
to
accumulate
profits
or
to
issue
the
unissued
shares.
He
went
on
to
submit
that
in
this
situation
the
Court
should
take
into
account
the
de
facto
control
which,
in
respect
of
each
of
these
appellants,
was
admittedly
and
undoubtedly
exercised
entirely
by
Saje
Manage-
ment
Limited
through
its
employee
Mr.
Greenough
under
the
direction
of
its
two
shareholders,
and
should
hold
that
Saje
Management
Limited
controlled
the
appellant
corporations.
I
can
deal
with
the
alternative
submission
by
saying
that
in
my
opinion
de
facto
control
is
not
to
be
taken
into
account,
that
de
jure
control
is
what
is
contemplated
by
the
statute*
and
that
in
determining
association
for
the
purposes
of
the
statute
control
itself
and
not
some
mere
element
or
fragment
of
it
is
required
to
support
a
conclusion
that
corporations
are
in
fact
associated.
This
submission,
in
my
opinion,
accordingly
fails.
The
first
submission,
however,
calls
for
closer
examination.
In
the
Dworkin
Furs
case,
[1967]
S.C.R.
228;
[1967]
C.T.C.
50,
and
other
cases
and
in
the
Vina-Rug
case,
[1968]
S.C.R.
193;
[1968]
C.T.C.
1,
as
well
as
in
the
Buckerfield
s
case,
[1965]
1
Ex.
C.R.
299;
[1964]
C.T.C.
504,
and
the
British
American
Tobacco
case,
[1943]
1
All
E.R.
18,
therein
referred
to
the
problem
presented
and
considered
was
essentially
one
of
the
quantity
of
voting
power
required
to
afford
control
of
the
particular
corporation.
As
the
votes
in
these
cases
were
all
exercisable
in
respect,
of
any
question
that
might
arise
no
question
of
the
quality
or
characteristics
of
voting
power
attaching
to
different
classes
of
shares
was
involved.
This
applied
as
well
in
the
Aaron’s
Ladies
Apparel
Ltd.
case,
[1967]
S.C.R.
223
at
231;
[1967]
C.T.C.
50
at
53,
where
unanimity
rather
than
a
majority
vote
was
required.
Nor
was
there
involved
in
these
cases
any
question
as
to
the
functions
and
authority
of
directors
when
elected,
it
having
been,
I
think,
assumed
that
the
directors
had
the
usual
general
authority
to
exercise
the
powers
of
the
company.
It
therefore
appears
to
me
that
while
these
cases
afford
principles
by
which
one
may
be
guided
they
offer
no
foregone
conclusion
for
a
case
such
as
the
present.
Thus,
while
in
an
ordinary
situation
control
may
reside
in
the
voting
power
to
elect
directors
such
power
to
choose
directors
in
my
opinion
would
not
afford
control
of
a
company
in
which,
by
the
memorandum
and
articles,
the
directors
have
been
shorn
of
authority
to
make
decisions
binding
upon
the
company
and
such
decisions
had
been
reserved
for
the
shareholders
in
general
meeting.
If,
therefore,
in
an
ordinary
situation
control
of
a
company
rests
in
the
voting
power
to
elect
directors
but
in
the
suggested
situation
does
not
rest
in
such
voting
power
it
seems
to
me
that
when
the
situation
is
not
ordinary
the
question
of
de
jure
control
of
the
company
must
be
resolved
as
one
of
fact
and
degree
depending
on
the
voting
situation
in
the
particular
company
and
the
extent
and
effect
of
any
restrictions
imposed
by
the
memorandum
and
articles
on
the
decision
making
powers
of
the
directors.
The
statement
of
the
President
of
this
Court
in
Buckerfield’s
case,
[1965]
1
Ex.
C.R.
299
at
803;
[1964]
C.T.C.
504
at
507,
when
he
said,
“I
am
of
the
view,
however,
that
in
Section
39
of
the
Income
Tax
Act,
the
word
‘‘controlled’’
contemplates
the
right
that
rests
in
ownership
of
such
a
number
of
shares
as
carries
with
it
the
right
to
a
majority
of
the
votes
in
the
election
of
the
board
of
directors’’
should,
I
think,
be
read
and
understood
as
applying
to
a
case
where
the
directors
when
elected
have
the
usual
powers
of
directors
to
guide
the
destinies
of
the
company.
In
the
present
situation,
as
I
see
it,
the
authority
of
the
directors
of
the
appellant
companies
has
been
only
slightly
restricted
or
modified
from
that
ordinarily
applicable
in
companies
which
have
adopted
Table
A
of
the
First
Schedule
to
the
Companies
Act
as
their
articles
and
I
should
not
have
thought
that
such
restrictions
as
have
been
imposed
had
any
serious
effect
on
the
authority
of
the
directors
to
govern
the
business
of
the
company
and
generally
to
direct
its
affairs.*
The
directors
of
these
companies,
as
I
see
it,
had,
for
example,
ample
authority
to
commit
them
to
contracts
for
the
supply
of
materials
or
the
construction
of
buildings
anywhere
in
the
world
or
to
discharge
Mr.
Green-
ough
and
make
other
arrangements
for
the
conduct
of
the
companies’
businesses
whenever
they
might
have
seen
fit
to
do
so.
I
would
not,
therefore,
on
this
account
alone
conclude
either
that
control
of
these
companies
did
not
rest
in
the
owners
of
the
Class
A
shares
or
that
control
rested
in
the
voting
power
of
the
Class
B
shareholders.
There
is,
however,
another
aspect
of
the
situation
in
each
of
these
companies
which
appears
to
me
to
require
consideration
and
which
was
not
involved
in
any
of
the
cases
cited.
Here,
in
the
case
of
each
appellant
company,
Saje
Management
Limited
as
the
holder
of
498
Class
B
shares
had
ample
voting
power,
not
merely
to
pass
or
to
defeat
any
ordinary
resolution
(other
than
one
electing
directors),
but
to
pass
or
defeat
any
special
resolution
or
any
extraordinary
resolution
that
might
be
proposed.
That
shareholder
thus
had
the
voting
power
to
change
the
articles
of
the
company.*
As
I
see
it,
it
had
the
power
to
repeal
Article
55
and
any
other
article
conferring
upon
the
directors
authority
to
bind
the
company,
and
thus
to
reduce
the
directors
to
the
status
of
errand
boys,
while
reserving
all
decision
making
power
not
specifically
conferred
on
the
directors
by
the
statute
or
by
the
memorandum
of
association
for
the
shareholders
as
a
whole,
or
of
Class
B
shares
only,
in
general
meeting.
It
had
the
voting
power
to
remove
the
directors
from
office.
It
had
as
well
the
voting
power
to
pass
a
special
resolution
to
eliminate
the
need
for
unanimous
consent
of
all
shareholders
to
the
issue
of
additional
shares
and
to
vest
in
the
Class
B
shareholders
authority
to
issue
additional
Class
A
shares
in
sufficient
numbers
to
outvote
the
two
shares
held
by
the
Nassau
residents.
In
these
circumstances
can
it
be
said
that
Saje
Management
Limited
did
not
have
de
jure
control
of
the
appellant
companies?
So
far
as
I
am
aware
there
is
no
decided
case
in
which
such
a
situation
has
been
considered
but
there
is,
I
think,
some
guidance
to
be
found
for
the
decision
in
the
British
American
Tobacco
case,
[1943]
1
All
E.R.
13
at
15,
where
Lord
Simon,
L.C.
said
:
I
find
it
impossible
to
adopt
the
view
that
a
person
who,
by
having
the
requisite
voting
power
in
a
company
subject
to
his
will
and
ordering,
can
make
the
ultimate
decision
as
to
where
and
how
the
business
of
the
company
shall
be
carried
on,
and
who
thus
has,
in
fact,
control
of
the
company’s
affairs,
is
a
person
of
whom
it
can
be
said
that
he
has
not
in
this
connection
got
a
controlling
interest
in
the
company.
As
to
what
may
be
the
requisite
proportion
of
voting
power,
I
think
a
bare
majority
is
sufficient.
The
appellant
company
has,
in
respect
of
each
of
the
foreign
companies
referred
to
in
the
case,
the
control
of
the
majority
vote.
I
agree
with
the
interpretation
of
“controlling
interest”
adopted
by
Rowlatt,
J.,
in
Noble
v.
Commissioners
of
Inland
Revenue,
when
construing
that
phrase
in
the
Finance
Act,
1920,
s.
53(2)
(c).
He
said
at
p.
926
that
the
phrase
had
a
well-known
meaning
and
referred
to
the
situation
of
a
man
.
.
.
whose
shareholding
in
the
company
is
such
that
he
is
more
powerful
than
all
the
other
shareholders
put
together
in
general
meeting.
The
owners
of
the
majority
of
the
voting
power
in
a
company
are
the
persons
who
are
in
effective
control
of
its
affairs
and
fortunes.
It
is
true
that
for
some
purposes
a
75
per
cent
majority
vote
may
be
required,
as,
for
instance
(under
some
company
regulations)
for
the
removal
of
directors
who
oppose
the
wishes
of
the
majority;
but
the
bare
majority
can
always
refuse
to
re-elect
and
so
in
the
long
run
get
rid
of
a
recalcitrant
board.
Nor
can
the
articles
of
association
be
altered
in
order
to
defeat
the
wishes
of
the
majority,
for
a
bare
majority
can
always
prevent
the
passing
of
the
necessary
resolution
(italics
added).
While
the
present
is
a
converse
case
in
that
a
particular
shareholder
has
the
voting
power
to
pass
a
special
resolution
but
no
immediate
right
to
elect
directors,
it
seems
to
me
that
the
same
guiding
principle
can
be
applied.
A
shareholder
who,
though
lacking
immediate
voting
power
to
elect
directors,
has
sufficient
voting
power
to
pass
any
ordinary
resolution
that
may
come
before
a
meeting
of
shareholders
and
to
pass
as
well
a
special
resolution
through
which
he
can
take
away
the
powers
of
the
directors
and
reserve
decisions
to
his
class
of
shareholders,
dismiss.
directors
from
office
and
ultimately
even
secure
the
right
to
elect
the
directors
is
a
person
of
whom
I
do
not
think
it
can
correctly
be
said
that
he
has
not
in
the
long
run
the
control
of
the
company.
Such
a
person
in
my
view
has
the
kind
of
de
jure
control
contemplated
by
Section
39
of
the
Act.
It
follows
that
Sa
je
Management
Limited
had
control
of
all
ten
appellant
companies
at
the
material
times
and
that
they
were
all
“associated”
with
one
another
within
the
meaning
of
Section
39.
The
appeals
will
be
dismissed
with
costs.