JACKETT,
P.:—This
has
been
a
hearing
of
appeals
by
a
company
incorporated
under
the
laws
of
Ontario
from
its
assessments
under
the
Income
Tax
Act
for
the
1961,
1962
and
1963
taxation
years.
The
sole
question
involved
in
each
of
the
appeals
is
whether
the
appellant
is
‘‘associated’’
with
another
company
known
as
Dworkin
Furs
Limited
(hereinafter
referred
to
as
‘‘
Dworkin’’)
within
the
meaning
of
the
word
‘‘associated’’
as
used
in
Section
39
of
the
Income
Tax
Act
so
as
to
authorize
the
Minister
of
National
Revenue
to
take
action
that
has
effect
to
deprive
the
appellant
of
the
lower
income
tax
rate
on
its
first
$35,000
of
income
in
each
of
the
years
in
question.
It
is
common
ground
that
the
question
whether
the
appellant
was
associated
with
Dworkin
depends
upon
the
application
of
paragraph
(a)
of
subsection
(4)
of
Section
39
to
the
relevant
facts.
The
relevant
part
of
subsection
(4)
of
Section
39
reads
as
follows:
“(4)
For
the
purpose
of
this
section,
one
corporation
is
associated
with
another
in
a
taxation
year
if,
at
any
time
in
the
year,
(a)
one
of
the
corporations
controlled
the
other,”’
If
counsel
for
the
respondent
has
not
succeeded
in
showing
that
the
facts
fall
within
paragraph
(a)
of
subsection
(4)
of
Section
39,
he
concedes
that
he
cannot
bring
them
within
any
of
the
other
paragraphs
of
that
subsection.
If
he
has
succeeded
in
bringing
them
within
paragraph
(a),
it
does
not
matter
whether
they
also
fall
within
some
of
the
other
paragraphs.
The
only
question
to
be
decided,
therefore,
is
whether
the
facts
fall
within
paragraph
(a)
of
subsection
(4)
of
Section
39
of
the
Income
Tax
Act.
The
only
basis
upon
which
counsel
for
the
Minister
has
attempted
to
bring
the
case
within
paragraph
(a)
of
subsection
(4)
of
Section
39
is
that
Dworkin
‘‘controlled’’
the
appellant
during
the
taxation
years
in
question.
According
to
paragraph
3
of
the
Reply
to
the
Notice
of
Appeal,
the
Minister
says
that
in
assessing
the
appellant
for
the
years
in
question,
he
assumed
‘‘that
Dworkin
Furs
Limited
had
vested
in
it
the
power
of
controlling
by
votes
the
decisions
which
would
bind
the
Appellant
in
the
shape
of
resolutions
passed
by
the
shareholders
at
its
annual
and
general
meetings,
and
therefore,
controlled
the
appellant
within
the
meaning
of
para.
(a)
of
ss.
(1)
[sic]
of
sec.
39
of
the
Income
Tax
Act’’.
If
this
assumption
were
correct,
I
should
have
no
doubt
that
the
assessments
appealed
from
were
correct.
It
remains
to
examine
the
admitted
facts
for
the
purpose
of
ascertaining
whether
this
assumption
was
correct.
As
I
understand
the
facts,
all
the
shares
in
Dworkin
belonged
to
Helen
Saipe,
who
owned
1,500,
her
husband
Roy
Saipe,
who
owned
one,
and
Roysay
Investments.
Roysay
Investments
was
controlled
by
Roy
Saipe
and
owned
the
remaining
999
shares
in
Dworkin.
As
far
as
the
appellant
is
concerned,
the
situation
is
that
there
were
100
shares,
50
of
which
belonged
to
Sadie
Harris,
who
was
unrelated
to
any
of
the
other
persons
that
I
have
mentioned.
The
other
50
belonged
to
Dworkin,
48
were
held
in
Dworkin’s
name
and
the
other
two
were
held
in
trust
for
Dworkin
by
Helen
Saipe
and
Roy
Saipe,
respectively.
The
situation
is
therefore
that
Dworkin
owned
50
per
cent
of
the
shares
in
the
appellant
company.
It
had
therefore
50
per
cent
of
the
votes
at
shareholders’
meetings
but
did
not
have
a
majority
of
such
votes.
Counsel
for
the
Minister
could
not
therefore
rest
his
case
solely
on
Dworkin’s
shareholdings
in
the
appellant.
As
I
understand
him,
his
position
is
that
control
is
established,
on
the
facts
of
this
case,
by
the
50
per
cent
holding
by
Dworkin
of
the
appellant’s
shares
taken
with
the
following
circumstances:
first,
Roy
Saipe,
Helen
Saipe
and
Sadie
Harris
were
all
the
directors
of
the
appellant
company,
second,
as
Roy
Saipe
and
Helen
Saipe
held
their
qualifying
shares
as
trustees
for
Dworkin,
they
were
‘‘nominees’’
of
Dworkin
and,
in
their
capacity
as
directors
of
the
appellant,
were
subject
to
the
direction
of
Dworkin,
third,
Dworkin
could
keep
Roy
Saipe
and
Helen
Saipe,
as
such
nominees
of
Dworkin,
in
office
as
a
majority
of
the
appellant’s
directors
indefinitely
because,
under
the
relevant
corporation
law
and
the
appellant’s
constitution,
the
appellant’s
directors
continue
in
office
until
new
directors
are
elected
and,
with
its
50
per
cent
of
the
appellant’s
shares,
Dworkin
could
prevent
new
directors
being
elected.
(Alternatively,
counsel
for
the
Minister
says
that
such
indefinite
continuation
of
the
Saipes
as
directors
of
the
appellant
could
be
achieved
by
Dworkin
by
a
combination
of
ownership
of
50
per
cent
of
the
shares
and
the
fact
that
Roy
Saipe
had
a
casting
vote
at
general
meetings
of
the
appellant
company
as
president
of
the
appellant
company.)
I
make
no
finding
as
to
the
correctness
of
the
various
propositions
on
which
this
contention
is
constructed.
I
doubt
that
a
director
or
officer
of
a
company
can,
as
such,
be
regarded
as
an
alter
ego,
nominee,
or
representative
of
some
other
person,
merely
because
he
holds
the
share
that
qualifies
him
for
such
office
as
a
bare
trustee
for
that
other
person.
Even
assuming
the
correctness
of
all
such
propositions,
I
doubt
that
the
holding
of
a
veto
over
the
replacement
of
a
particular
board
of
directors
constitutes
control
in
any
of
the
possible
senses
in
which
that
word
may
have
been
used.
One
corporation
cannot,
in
my
view,
be
said
to
be
‘‘controlled’’
by
another
in
any
possible
sense
of
that
word
unless
that
other
can,
over
the
long
run,
determine
the
conduct
of
its
affairs.
The
mere
fact
that
one
corporation
can
prevent
a
change
in
some
or
all
of
the
directors
of
another
is
not
a
power
of
positive
control.
It
is
a
mere
veto
over
change
in
management.
After
giving
careful
attention
to
the
argument
of
counsel
for
the
Minister,
I
have
come
to
the
conclusion
that
I
adhere
to
a
view
that
I
expressed
in
Buckerfield’s
Limited
v.
M.N.R.,
[1965]
Ex.
C.R.
299;
[1964]
C.T.C.
504,
in
the
course
of
setting
out
the
point
that
I
had
to
decide
in
that
case.
I
cannot
do
better
than
repeat
that
view
here
and
adopt
it
for
the
decision
of
this
case.
“Many
approaches
might
conceivably
be
adopted
in
applying
the
word
control’
in
a
statute
such
as
the
Income
Tax
Act
to
a
corporation.
It
might,
for
example,
refer
to
control
by
management’,
where
management
and
the
board
of
directors
are
separate,
or
it
might
refer
to
control
by
the
board
of
directors.
The
kind
of
control
exercised
by
management
offi-
icals
or
the
board
of
directors
is,
however,
clearly
not
intended
by
Section
39
when
it
contemplates
control
of
one
corporation
by
another
as
well
as
control
of
a
corporation
by
individuals
(see
subsection
(6)
of
Section
39).
The
word
‘
control’
might
conceivably
refer
to
de
facto
control
by
one
or
more
shareholders
whether
or
not
they
hold
a
majority
of
shares.
I
am
of
the
view,
however,
that
in
Section
39
of
the
Income
Tax
Act,
the
word
‘controlled’
contemplates
the
right
of
control
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.
See
British
American
Tobacco
Co.
v.
I.R.C.,
[1943]
1
All
E.R.
13,
where
Viscount
Simon,
L.C.,
at
page
15,
says
:
‘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.’
See
also
M.N.R.
v.
Wrights
Canadian
Ropes
Ltd.,
[1947]
A.C.
109;
[1947]
C.T.C.
1,
per
Lord
Greene,
M.R.
at
page
118,
where
it
was
held
that
the
mere
fact
that
one
corporation
had
less
than
50
per
cent
of
the
shares
of
another
was
‘conclusive’
that
the
one
corporation
was
not
‘controlled’
by
the
other
within
Section
6
of
the
Income
War
Tax
Act.”’
The
appeals
are
allowed
and
the
assessments
are
referred
back
to
the
Minister
for
re-assessment
on
the
basis
that
the
appellant
was
not,
at
any
time
in
its
1961,
1962
and
1963
taxation
years
associated
with
any
other
corporation.
The
appellant
is
entitled
to
be
paid
by
the
respondent
the
costs
of
the
appeals
to
be
taxed.