THURLOW,
J.:—The
issue
in
this
appeal,
which
is
from
reassessments
of
income
tax
for
the
years
1963
and
1964,
is
whether
the
appellant
and
Esson
Motors
Limited
were,
in
the
taxation
years
in
question,
""associated
with
each
other’’
for
the
purpose
of
Section
39
of
the
Income
Tax
Act,
R.S.C.
1952,
c.
148,
as
amended
by
1960,
c.
43.
The
issue
turns
on
whether
at
relevant
times
both
corporations
were
controlled
by
the
same
group
of
persons.*
For
each
of
the
years
in
question
the
appellant’s
fiscal
period
ended
on
March
31,
and
for
it
these
taxation
years
accordingly
ran
from
April
1,
1962
to
March
31,
1963
and
from
April
1,
1963
to
March
31,
1964.
Throughout
both
periods
the
whole
of
the
issued
share
capital
of
the
appellant
was
owned
and
registered
in
the
names
of
Miller
F.
Esson,
Sr.,
Miller
H.
Esson,
Jr.
and
John
F.
Esson,
the
three
of
whom
admittedly
constituted
a
related
group
which
controlled
the
company.
From
April
1,
1962
to
May
9,
1962,
that
is
to
say,
during
part
of
the
1963
fiscal
period
of
the
appellant
the
same
three
persons
were
the
registered
owners
of
all
the
issued
shares
of
Esson
Motors
Limited.
On
the
latter
date,
pursuant
to
a
contract
dated
May
7,
1962
and
made
between
the
members
of
the
group
and
Esson
Motors
Limited,
of
the
one
part,
and
Edward
Earle
McKenna,
Jr.,
of
the
other
part,
the
members
of
the
group
trans-
ferred
to
McKenna,
who
was
not
related
to
any
of
them,
50
per
cent
of
the
issued
shares
of
Esson
Motors
Limited
to
hold
as
his
own.
By
the
terms
of
the
contract
they
also
gave
McKenna
an
irrevocable
option
to
purchase
the
remaining
issued
shares
of
the
company
during
a
period
of
one
year
commencing
on
May
29,
1965
at
a
price
to
be
determined
according
to
a
formula
set
out
in
the
contract.
It
was
also
provided
that
if
McKenna
should
fail
to
exercise
the
option
the
shares
transferred
to
him
should
revert
to
and
again
become
the
property
of
the
members
of
the
group.
The
object
of
these
arrangements
was
to
induce
McKenna
to
undertake
the
management
of
the
company.
The
company
had
been
losing
money
and
by
May
1962
was
in
poor
financial
condition.
Its
property
was
heavily
mortgaged
and
in
addition
Miller
F.
Esson,
Sr.
had
given
personal
guarantees
of
its
indebtedness
to
the
extent
of
about
$100,000.
The
contract
provided
that
the
company
should
immediately
delegate
to
McKenna
complete
and
exclusive
authority
to
conduct
the
affairs
of
the
company
(with
certain
minor
exceptions
in
which
the
concurrence
of
McKenna
and
the
Essons
was
required)
during
the
three
year
term
of
the
contract.
The
Essons
as
shareholders,
directors
and
officers
of
the
company
also
waived
their
rights
to
allowances
to
be
paid
by
the
company
by
way
of
salary,
bonuses,
dividends,
directors’
fees
or
otherwise
during
the
term
and
they
further
undertook
not
to
cause
the
issue
of
any
new
shares.
That
the
contract
was
a
bona
fide
transaction
and
that
it
was
carried
out
in
accordance
with
its
terms
are
not
challenged.
Esson
Motors
Limited
had
been
incorporated
in
1953
by
letters
patent
issued
under
the
Companies
Act,
R.S.N.B.
1952,
©.
3.
of
the
Province
of
New
Brunswick
and
its
1963
and
1964
fiscal
periods
ran
in
each
year
from
January
1
to
December
31.
Section
192
of
the
Companies
Act
provided
that:
"‘In
the
absence
of
other
provisions
in
that
behalf
in
the
letters
patent
or
by-laws
of
the
company,
(ce)
all
questions
proposed
for
the
consideration
of
the
shareholders
at
such
meetings
shall
be
determined
by
the
majority
of
votes,
and
the
chairman
presiding
at
such
meetings
shall
have
the
casting
vote
in
ease
of
an
equality
of
the
votes.’’
The
letters
patent
and
by-laws
of
the
company
contained
no
"other
provisions
in
that
behalf’’
but
the
by-laws
did
provide
that
"The
President
shall
preside
at
meetings
of
the
board.
He
shall
act
as
Chairman
of
the
Shareholders’
meetings
if
present.’’
From
the
time
of
the
making
of
the
contract
with
McKenna
to
the
end
of
the
period
material
to
these
proceedings
the
three
Essons
continued
to
be
the
directors
of
the
company,
the
remaining
50
per
cent
of
the
issued
shares
continued
to
be
registered
in
their
names
and
Miller
13‘.
Esson,
Sr.
continued
to
be
the
president
of
the
company,
an
office
to
which
he
had
been
elected
in
1953.
It
thus
appears
that
Miller
I’.
Esson,
Sr.,
if
present,
was
entitled
to
act
as
chairman
of
any
meetings
of
the
shareholders
that
might
be
held
and
that
under
Section
102(c)
of
the
Act
he
was
entitled
to
exercise
a
casting
vote
in
case
of
a
tie
though
he
was
never
at
any
material
time
aware
that
he
had
a
casting
vote
and
he
never
had
occasion
to
cast
one.
As
the
re-assessments
are
based
solely
on
Section
39(4)
(b)
of
the
Income
Tax
Act
the
question
to
be
resolved
is
whether
the
three
Essons,
who
at
all
material
times
controlled
the
appellant,
also
controlled
Esson
Motors
Limited
at
material
times.
The
Minister’s
case
for
upholding
the
re-assessments
is
that
prior
to
May
9,
1962
Esson
Motors
Limited
was
controlled
by
the
three
Essons
by
reason
of
their
holding
100
per
cent
of
the
issued
shares
of
the
company
and
that
after
that
time
the
company
was
controlled
by
them
by
reason
of
their
holding
50
per
cent
of
the
issued
shares
coupled
with
the
power
of
Miller
F.
Esson,
Sr.,
as
chairman
of
shareholders’
meetings
to
exercise
a
casting
vote
in
the
case
of
a
tie
and
that
by
reason
of
such
control
by
the
Essons
of
Esson
Motors
Limited
and
their
admitted
control
of
the
appellant
the
two
companies
were
associated
with
each
other
for
the
purpose
of
Section
39
in
both
of
the
taxation
years
in
question.
In
support
of
his
position
counsel
for
the
Minister
raised
and
argued
three
submissions.
It
was
said
first
that
the
appellant
and
Esson
Motors
Limited
were
associated
for
the
1963
taxation
year
by
reason
of
the
admitted
control
of
both
companies
by
the
Essons
during
the
period
from
April
1,
1962
to
May
9,
1962.
Since
under
Section
39(4)
of
the
Income
Tax
Act,
R.S.C.
1952,
c.
148,
as
amended
by
1960,
e.
48,
s.
11(1),
corporations
are
associated
with
each
other’?
if
the
appropriate
control
exists
at
any
time
in
the
year”
this
submission
is
unanswerable
if
the
period
from
April
1,
1962
to
May
9,
1962
was
a
material
time
with
respect
to
the
1963
taxation
year.
Plainly
the
period
was
part
of
the
appellant’s
1963
fiseal
period
but
it
was
not
part
of
the
1963
fiscal
period
of
Esson
Motors
Limited.
What
then
is
the
material
period?
Counsel
for
the
Minister
urged
that
the
word
year”
in
the
expression
if
at
any
time
in
the
year’’
in
Section
39(4)
refers
to
the
expression
taxation
year’’
appearing
earlier
in
the
subsection,
that
the
latter
expression
can
refer
only
to
the
taxation
year
of
the
particular
corporation
whose
taxation
is
being
considered
and
that
it
is
immaterial
whether
the
period
of
association
is
also
within
the
fiscal
period
of
the
other
company
for
the
same
taxation
year.
While
the
manner
in
which
Section
39(4)
is
worded
lends
some
colour
to
the
submission,
particularly
when
the
subsection
is
read
by
itself,
in
my
opinion
the
submission
cannot
prevail.
In
Section
39(2)
and
Section
39(3)
two
or
more
corporations
are
referred
to
and
the
taxation
years
of
all
of
them
are
referred
to
by
the
expression
‘‘in
a
taxation
year’’.
Two
or
more
corporations
as
well
are
involved
in
the
allocations
of
$35,000
between
them
contemplated
by
Section
39(3)
and
Section
39
(3a)
for
the
purpose
of
fixing
the
taxation
of
their
incomes
for
the
same
taxation
year.
Two
corporations
also,
not
merely
one,
are
referred
to
by
the
expression
‘‘one
corporation
is
associated
with
another”
in
Section
39(4)
and
the
taxation
of
both
for
the
same
taxation
year
is
affected
thereby.
When
therefore
Section
39(4)
refers
to
‘‘any
time
in
the
[taxation]
year’’
it
is,
I
think,
to
be
interpreted
as
referring
to
any
time
that
is
in
the
taxation
year
of
both
corporations
and
where
their
fiscal
periods
do
not
coincide
the
subsection
can,
in
my
opinion,
refer
only
to
a
time
that
is
in
such
portion
of
the
fiscal
periods
of
the
two
corporations
for
the
taxation
year
as
is
common
to
both.
In
my
opinion
therefore
since
the
period
from
April
1,
1962
to
May
9,
1962
was
not
within
the
fiscal
period
of
Essen.
Motors
Limited
for
the
1963
taxation
year
the
control
of
both
that
corporation
and
the
appellant
by
the
Essons
during
that
period
is
immaterial.
The
Minister’s
submission
accordingly
fails.
The
second
submission
was
that
the
fact
that
Section
139
(5d)(b)
might,
because
of
Section
39(4a)(c),
be
applicable
to
McKenna
so
as
to
cause
it
to
be
deemed
that
he
had
the
same
position
in
relation
to
the
control
of
Esson
Motors
Limited
as
if
he
owned
the
shares
which
he
had
an
option
to
purchase
in
the
future,
could
not
affect
the
application
of
Section
39(4)
when
considering
whether
the
Essons
‘‘controlled’’
Essen
Motors
Limited
for
the
purpose
of
Section
39.
This
submission
was
raised
in
answer
to
the
main
submission
of
the
appellant
that
the
effect
of
Section
39
(4a)
(ce)
coupled
with
Section
139
(5d)
(b)
was
that
McKenna
must
be
deemed
to
have
been
in
control
of
Esson
Motors
Limited
at
all
material
times
from
which
it
followed
that
the
Essons
could
not
be
regarded
as
having
“controlled”
the
company
for
the
purpose
of
Section
39.
I
am
not
persuaded
that
the
appellant’s
position
on
this
point
is
sound
but
in
view
of
the
conclusion
which
I
have
reached
on
the
first
and
third
submissions,
which
are
sufficient
to
dispose
of
the
appeal,
it
is
not
necessary
to
decide
the
point.
The
third
submission
was
that
the
Essons
continued
to
control
Esson
Motors
Limited
at
all
material
times
after
May
9,
1962
by
reason
of
their
ownership
of
50
per
cent
of
the
issued
shares
and
the
right
of
Miller
F.
Esson,
Sr.,
if
present,
to
preside
as
chairman
of
shareholders’
meetings
which,
having
regard
to
Section
102(c)
of
the
Companies
Act
and
to
the
letters
patent
and
by-laws
of
the
company,
conferred
on
him
power
to
exercise
a
casting
vote
in
case
of
a
tie.
A
similar
contention
was
put
forward
in
this
Court
in
Pender
Enterprises
Limited
v.
M.N.R.,
[1965]
C.T.C.
343
at
357,
where
Noel,
J.,
after
referring
to
the
judgment
of
the
President
of
this
Court
in
Buckerfield’s
Limited
v.
M.N.R.,
[1965]
1
Ex.
C.R.
299;
[1964]
C.T.C.
504,
dealt
with
the
point
as
follows:
“Now
although
this
interpretation
was
given
in
connection
with
Section
39
of
the
Income
Tax
Act,
I
can
see
no
reason
why
it
should
not
apply
as
well
to
Section
139
(5a)
of
the
Act
in
which
case
Lee
could
not
have
control
of
the
appellant
corporation
as
he
held
only
50%
of
its
shares
and,
therefore,
could
not
be
said
to
have
a
number
of
shares
such
that
he
carries
with
it
the
right
to
a
majority
of
the
votes
in
the
election
of
the
board
of
directors
or
that
his
shareholding
in
the
company
was
such
that
‘he
was
more
powerful
than
all
the
other
shareholders
in
the
company
put
together
in
general
meeting’
as
set
down
by
Cameron,
J.
in
Vancouver
Towing
Company
Limited
v.
M.N.R.,
[1946]
Ex.
C.R.
623
at
632;
[1947]
C.T.C.
18.
It
indeed
appears
to
be
clearly
settled
that
control
of
a
corporation
requires
at
least
a
bare
majority
in
shareholding
and
as
Lee
here
has
not
this
majority,
he
cannot
be
considered
as
controlling
the
appellant
and
I
say
this
notwithstanding
the
articles
of
association
adopted
by
the
appellant
which
gives
its
president
a
preponderant
vote
in
the
case
of
an
equality
of
votes
at
every
general
meeting
of
the
company.
Indeed,
such
a
power
given
to
the
president
of
the
present
corporation,
in
view
of
the
particular
circumstances
of
the
instant
case,
could
not,
in
my
view,
give
Lee
effective
control
over
the
appellant
corporation
which
he
would
not
otherwise
have
by
virtue
of
his
shareholdings
because
any
control
he
would
wish
to
exercise
by
virtue
of
his
preponderant
vote
could
not,
in
practice,
be
implemented.
There
being
two
shareholders
only,
Lee
could
not
hold
a
general
meeting
of
the
appellant
corporation
without
Wong’s
consent
and
as
one
director
cannot
constitute
a
meeting,
he
could
not
use
his
preponderant
vote.’’
The
contention
was
again
raised
in
the
Aaron
cases,
[1966]
C.T.C.
330,
where
though
it
was
unnecessary
to
decide
the
point
I
expressed
a
doubt
as
to
its
validity.
More
recently
in
Alpine
Drywall
&
Decorating
Ltd.
v.
M.N.R.,
[1966]
C.T.C.
359,
Cattanach,
J.,
while
expressing
doubt
that
there
was
any
basic
distinction
between
the
case
before
him
and
that
of
B.
W.
Noble
Ltd.
v.
C.I.R.
(1926),
12
T.C.
923,
held
the
contention
invalid
on
the
basis
of
the
earlier
expressions
of
opinion
in
this
Court,
including
that
of
the
President
in
the
Buckerfield’s
case
as
to
the
meaning
of
‘‘controlled’’
in
Section
39(4)
of
the
Act.
In
view
of
the
decision
of
Cattanach,
J.,
and
in
the
absence
of
any
expression
of
opinion
to
the
contrary
by
the
Supreme
Court
I
think
that
in
this
Court
the
matter
should
be
taken
as
decided
but
it
may
be
useful
nevertheless
to
make
some
further
comment
on
the
point.
The
meaning
of
‘‘controlled’’
in
Section
39(4)
of
the
Income
Tax
Act
was
considered
in
Buckerfield’s
Limited
v.
M.N.R.,
[1965]
1
Ex.
C.R.
299;
[1964]
C.T.C.
504,
where
the
President
of
this
Court
said
at
pp.
302,
507:
‘“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
officials
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.
C.I.R.,
[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
pages
118,
6,
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.
Where,
in
the
application
of
Section
39(4)
a
single
person
does
not
own
sufficient
shares
to
have
control
in
the
sense
to
which
I
have
just
referred,
it
becomes
a
question
of
fact
as
to
whether
any
‘group
of
persons’
does
own
such
a
number
of
shares.
’
’
The
definition
of
control
as
that
arising
from
shareholding
is
supportd
by
the
opinion
of
the
House
of
Lords
in
British
American
Tobacco
Co.
Ltd.
v.
C.I.R.,
[1943]
1
All
E.R.
13,
a
decision
which
has
on
several
occasions
been
referred
to
and
applied
in
decisions
of
this
Court*
both
in
cases
arising
under
the
Income
War
Tax
Act
and
in
cases
arising
under
the
Income
Tax
Act.
In
the
British
American
Tobacco
case
Lord
Simon,
L.C.,
in
considering
the
meaning
of
‘‘controlling
interest’?
said
at
p.
19:
“It
is
true
that
in
such
circumstances
company
No.
1
owns
none
of
the
assets
of
company
No.
2,
and
a
fortiori
owns
none
of
the
assets
of
company
No.
3,
and
that
in
that
sense
neither
owns,
nor
has
an
interest
in,
company
No.
3.
But
that
is
to
treat
the
phrase
‘controlling
interest’
as
capable
of
connoting
only
a
proprietary
right,
that
is,
an
interest
in
the
nature
of
ownership.
The
word
‘interest’,
however,
as
pointed
out
by
Lawrence,
J.,
is
a
word
of
wide
connotation,
and
I
think
the
conception
of
‘controlling
interest’
may
well
cover
the
relationship
of
one
company
towards
another,
the
requisite
majority
of
whose
shares
are,
as
regards
their
voting
power,
subject,
whether
directly
or
indirectly
to
the
will
and
ordering
of
the
first-mentioned
company.
If,
for
example,
the
appellant
company
owns
one-third
of
the
shares
in
company
X,
and
the
remaining
two-thirds
are
owned
by
company
Y,
the
appellant
company
will
none
the
less
have
a
controlling
interest
in
company
X
if
it
owns
enough
shares
in
company
Y
to
control
the
latter.
In
my
opinion
this
is
the
meaning
of
the
word
‘interest’
in
the
enactment
under
consideration,
and,
where
one
company
stands
in
such
a
relationship
to
another,
the
former
can
properly
be
said
to
have
a
controlling
interest
in
the
latter.
This
view
appears
to
me
to
agree
with
the
object
of
the
enactment
as
it
appears
on
the
face
of
the
Act.
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.
’
’
The
definition
of
‘‘controlling
interest’’
as
referring
to
the
man
whose
shareholding
is
such
that
he
is
more
powerful
than
all
the
other
shareholders
put
together
in
general
meeting
seems
to
me
to
coincide
precisely
with
the
definition
of
“controlled”
formulated
by
the
President
of
this
Court
in
the
Buckerfield’s
case
and
to
be
inapt
to
describe
the
position
of
the
Essons
as
a
group
with
respect
to
Esson
Motors
Limited
during
the
material
period.
Their
shareholding
plainly
was
not
such
that
they
were
more
powerful
than
McKenna
in
general
meetings.
Moreover,
Viscount
Simon’s
expression
‘‘the
owners
of
the
majority
of
the
voting
power’’
also
seems
inappropriate
to
characterize
the
casting
vote
of
a
chairman
since
it
is
not
a
subject
of
ownership
at
all
but
is,
as
I
view
it,
a
mere
adjunct
of
the
office
exercisable,
not
as
his
personal
interest
alone
may
dictate,
but
bona
fide
in
the
interest
of
the
company
as
a
whole.
Its
nature
is
also
such
that
it
is
exercisable
by
whoever
happens
to
occupy
the
chair
at
a
meeting
when
the
occasion
to
exercise
such
a
vote
arises
and
it
is
then
exercisable
only
by
the
person
himself
and
not
by
anyone
on
his
behalf.
I
do
not
think
it
was
intended
by
Parliament
to
make
the
taxation
of
corporations
vary
according
to
exigencies
of
that
nature
and
reading
the
provisions
of
Section
39
and
giving
the
word
“controlled”
in
Section
39(4)
what
appears
to
me
to
be
its
ordinary
meaning
I
do
not
think
that
anything
but
a
sufficient
number
of
votes
arising
from
shareholding
to
dictate
decisions
to
be
taken
by
the
company
can
be
regarded
as
within
the
generally
understood
meaning
of
control
in
the
sense
in
which
the
word
‘‘controlled’’
is
used
in
the
statute.
Moreover,
even
if
the
matter
were
regarded
as
doubtful
in
the
sense
that
the
word
used
in
the
statute
was
such
that
it
might
or
might
not
have
been
intended
to
cover
a
case
of
this
kind
the
situation
would
seem
to
me
to
be
one
for
the
application
of
the
principle
that
clear
words
are
required
to
authorize
taxation
and
that
any
doubt
as
to
the
meaning
of
the
expression
used
should
be
resolved
in
favour
of
the
taxpayer.
The
principal
case
relied
on
by
the
Minister
in
support
of
his
position
was
that
of
B.
W.
Noble
Limited
v.
C.I.R.
(1926),
12
T.C.
923,
a
decision
of
Rowlatt,
J.,
rendered
in
1926
on
the
meaning
of
‘‘controlling
interest’’
in
Section
53
of
the
Finance
Act,
1920.
In
that
case
the
appellant
company
had
been
formed
to
acquire
and
operate
an
insurance
business
carried
on
by
Noble.
Half
of
the
company’s
voting
shares
were
held
by
Noble
and
the
remainder
by
two
others
but,
under
a
contract
made
at
the
time
when
the
company
was
organized
and
to
which
all
three
shareholders
and
the
company
itself
were
parties,
Noble
was
entitled
as
against
the
other
shareholders
and
the
company
itself
to
be
chairman
of
shareholders’
meetings
and
thus
under
the
articles
of
the
company
to
a
casting
vote
in
case
of
a
tie.
Rowlatt,
J.,
said
[(1926),
12
T.C.
at
926]
:
“It
seems
to
me
that
‘controlling
interest’
is
a
phrase
that
has
a
certain
well
known
meaning;
it
means
the
man
whose
shareholding
in
the
Company
is
such
that
he
is
the
shareholder
who
is
more
powerful
than
all
the
other
shareholders
put
together
in
General
Meeting.
That
is
really
what
it
comes
to.
Now,
this
gentleman
has
just
half
the
number
of
shares,
but
those
shares,
in
the
circumstances
of
this
case,
are
reinforced
by
the
position
that
he
occupies
of
Chairman,
a
position
which
he
occupies
not
merely
by
the
votes
of
the
other
shareholders
or
of
his
Directors
elected
by
the
shareholders
but
by
contract
;
and,
so
reinforced,
inasmuch
as
he
has
a
casting
vote,
he
does
control
the
General
Meetings—there
is
no
question
about
that
—and
inasmuch
as
he
does
possess
at
least
half
of
the
shares
he
can
prevent
any
modifications
taking
place
in
the
constitution
of
the
Company
which
would
undermine
his
position
as
Chairman.
Therefore,
on
the
whole,
giving
what
I
think
is
the
most
obvious
meaning
of
these
words
in
the
Sub-section
and
having
regard
to
the
object
of
the
Section,
I
think
the
contention
of
the
Crown
is
right,
.
.
.”?
It
will
be
observed
that
Rowlatt,
J.
did
not
hold
that
as
a
general
proposition
half
the
shares
of
a
company
plus
the
right
to
be
chairman
and
to
exercise
a
casting
vote
in
case
of
a
tie,
would
give
a
‘‘controlling
interest’’
in
the
company.
What
he
appears
to
me
to
have
said
is
that
half
the
shares
plus
the
right
arising
by
contract
with
both
the
company
itself
and
the
other
shareholders
to
be
chairman
and
thus
to
exercise
a
casting
vote
in
the
case
of
a
tie
in
the
circumstances
enabled
Noble
to
control
general
meetings
of
the
company,
that
in
the
circumstances
he
was,
because
of
his
shareholding,
in
a
position
to
prevent
constitutional
changes
that
might
undermine
his
position
and
that
on
the
whole
and
having
regard
to
the
object
of
the
section
under
consideration
he
was
of
the
opinion
that
Noble
had
a
“controlling
interest’’
in
the
company.
The
statement
of
Rowlatt,
J.
with
respect
to
the
meaning
of
‘‘controlling
interest’’
was
approved
by
the
House
of
Lords
in
the
British
American
Tobacco
case*
already
referred
to
but
so
far
as
I
am
aware
his
application
of
it
to
the
facts
of
the
particular
case
has
not
been
discussed
in
any
higher
court.
It
does
seem
to
me
that
after
stating
the
meaning
of
“controlling
interest”
by
reference
to
shareholding
Rowlatt,
J.
proceeded
to
his
conclusion
by
taking
into
account
additional
facts
chief
among
which
was
that
of
the
contract
between
Noble
and
the
company
and
the
other
shareholders
under
which
Noble
was
entitled
to
be
chairman
of
the
company
and
thus
to
exercise
a
casting
vote.
As
I
view
the
matter
it
is
not
necessary
to
decide
in
the
present
case
whether
it
is
permissible
in
cases
arising
under
Section
39
of
the
Income
Tax
Act
to
take
into
account
the
casting
vote
of
a
chairman
where
the
chairman
is
entitled
by
contract
to
exercise
such
a
vote
because
here
there
was
no
contract
giving
Miller
F,
Esson,
Sr.,
any
such
right.
However,
if
the
implication
of
the
decision
on
its
particular
facts
of
the
Noble
case
is
that
a
casting
vote
is
to
be
taken
into
account
and
I
am
thus
faced
with
a
choice
between
the
decision
in
the
Noble
case
and
the
principles
to
which
I
have
referred
including
those
which
have
been
established
by
this
Court
and
by
the
House
of
Lords
since
the
decision
in
the
Noble
case
I
think
the
principles
so
established
should
be
followed
rather
than
the
implication
from
a
decision
on
its
own
particular
facts.!
Another
case
relied
on
was
C.I.R.
v.
Monmck
Lid.
(1949),
29
T.C.
379,
where
in
the
course
of
holding
on
particular
facts
that
the
respondent
company
was
not
one
of
the
directors
whereof
had
a
controlling
interest:
therein,
though
two
persons
who
for
the
purpose
of
the
statute
under
consideration
were
to
be
regarded
as
directors
held
half
the
shares,
Croom-Johnson,
J.
said
at
page
385
;
It
is
perfectly
true
that
if
this
Company
had
a
board
of
directors—and
it
has
not—and
if
that
board
of
directors
had
appointed
a
chairman,
and
if
that
chairman
had
happened
to
be
Mr.
Mark
Monnickendam,
the
result
would
no
doubt
have
been
that
he
would
have
been
in
control.
I
do
not
shut
my
eyes
to
that
as
a
possibility.”
To
my
mind
this
was
no
more
than
a
description
for
purposes
of
illustration
of
a
possible
situation
which
was
not
then
before
the
Court
and
though
the
learned
Judge
at
one
point
used
the
expression
no
doubt’’
it
is
noticeable
that
he
also
referred
to
“a
possibility”.
Accordingly,
apart
from
the
statement
being:
obiter,
I
do
not
think
that
it
should
be
regarded
as
expressing
a
concluded
opinion
on
the
point.
I
am
accordingly
of
the
opinion
that
the
proposition
that
the
casting
vote
of
the
chairman
in
a
situation
such
as
the
present
confers
control
of
the
company
is
not
sustainable
as
a
general
proposition
in
view
of
the
principles
which
have
been
established
for
determining
control
in
cases
arising
under
Section
39
of
the:
Income
Tax
Act
and
that
the
shareholding
of
the
Essons,
upon
which
control
for
the
purpose
of
‘Section
39
depended,
was
not
sueh
as
to
afford
them
control
of
Esson
Motors
Limited
at
any
time
material
to
these
proceedings.
The
Minister’s
submission
therefore
fails.
The
appeal
will
be
allowed
with
costs
and
the
re-assessment
will
be
referred
back
to
the
Minister
for
re-assessment
on
the
basis
that
the
appellant
and
Esson
Motors
Limited
were
not
BRITISH
COLUMBIA
POWER
CORPORATION,
LIMITED,
.....
Appellant,
and
MINISTER
OF
NATIONAL
REVENUE,
Respondent.
Exchequer
Court
of
Canada
(Sheppard,
D.J.),
July
6,
1966,
on
a
motion
by
the
appellant
to
have
a
portion
of
the
Minister's
Reply
to
the
Notice
of
Appeal
struck
out.
Income
tax—Federal—Income
Tax
Act,
R.S.C.
1952,
c.
148—Sections
At
the
opening
of
this
appeal
(which
is
reported
at
p.
454)
the
appellant
brought
a
motion
to
have
three
paragraphs
of
the
Minister’s
Reply
to
the:
Notice
of
Appeal
struck
out
on
the
ground
that
because
the
appeal
was
from
an
assessment
[as
contemplated
by
Section
60(2)]
rather
than
from
a
decision
of
the
Tax
Appeal
Board
[as
contemplated
by
Section
60(1)]
the
Minister
did
not
have
any
right
of
appeal
{which
was
the
substance
of
the
disputed
paragraphs
of
the
Minister’s
Reply].
The
relevant
paragraphs
of
the
Minister’s
Reply
to
the
Notice
of
Appeal
are’
reproduced
below
and
the
motion
brought
by
the
appellant
was
to
have
paragraphs
14,
15
and
19
struck
out.
Paragraphs
12,
14,
15
and
19
of
the
Reply
to
the
Notice
of
Appeal
were
as
follows:
**12.
B.
C.
Power
in
its
taxation
year
1963
received
the
sum
of
$4,286,233
in
lieu
of
interest
on
the
purchase
price
of
its
shares
in
British
Columbia
Electric
Company
Limited
for
the
period
August
1st,
1961
to
September
16th,
1963,
and
did
not
include
the
said
sum
in
computing
its
income
for
its
1963
taxation
year.
The
assessment
for
the
1963
taxation
year
of
B.C.
Power
referred
to
in
the
Notice
of.
Appeal
did
not
include
the
said
sum
in
the
income
of
B.C.
Power.
14.
As
to
the
amount
of
$233,
779.11
described
in
the
foregoing
paragraph
11
as
‘Payments
for
loss
of
office’,
the
said
sum
represents
two-thirds
of
a
total
amount
of
$330,112.00
paid
by
B.C.
Power
and
claimed
by
it
as
a
deduction
in
computing
its
income
for
its
1963
taxation
year
in
respect
of
payments
to
officers
and
‘employees.
of
B.C.
Power
on
termination
of
their
employment
upon
the
winding
up
of
B.C.
Power,
and
the
Respondent
says
that
the
whole
of
the
said
sum.
should
be
disallowed.
as
a
deduction
because
_,
no
part
of
it
was
an
outlay
or
expense
made
or
incurred
by
B.C.
Power
for
the
purpose
of
gaining
or
producing
income
from
property
or
a
business
of
B.C.
Power.
15.
The
Respondent
further
says
that
the
sum
of
$4,286,233.
00
referred
to
in
the
foregoing
paragraph
12
is
to
be
included
in
computing
the
income
of
B.C.
Power
for
its
1963
taxation
year
and
submits
that
the
assessment
for
the
1963
taxation
year
of
the
Appellant
should
be
referred
back
to
him
for
reassessment
in
accordance
with
this
and
the
foregoing
paragraph.
19.
The
Respondent:
says
that
the
amount
of
$4,
286,
233.00
referred
to
in
the
foregoing
paragraph
12
should
be
included
in
computing
the
income
of
B.C.
Power
for
its
taxation
year
1963.”
HELD:
Section
99(la)
was
merely
procedural
and
was
subordinate
to
Section
98(1).
The
latter
section
conferred
on
the
taxpayer
and
the
Minister
alike
the
right
of
appeal
from
an
assessment.
It
followed
that
the
Minister
had
the
right
to
appeal
from
his
own
assessment.
Motion
dismissed.
CASES
REFERRED
to
:
Harris
v.
M.N.R.,
[1964]
C.T.C.
562;
[1966]
C.T.C.
226;
Farris
v.
M.N.R.,
[1963]
C.T.C.
345;
Distillers
Corporation
Seagram’s
Ltd.
v.
M.N.R.,
[1958]
C.T.C.
305.
Douglas
McK.
Brown,
Q.C.,
for
the
Appellant.
P.
N.
T
horst
einsson,
for
the
Respondent.
SHEPPARD,
D.J.:—Dealing
with
the
motion
to
strike
out
paragraphs
14,
15
and
19
of
the
Minister’s
reply
the
ground
is
raised
that
the
Minister
has
no
right
or
jurisdiction
to
appeal
against
assessment
by
the
Minister.
I
observe
that
Section
98,
which
is
the
initial
section
under
Division
J,
or
98(1)
in
particular,
deals
with
appeals
to
the
Exchequer
Court
by
either
the
taxpayer
or
the
Minister
and
the
latter
part
of
the
section
reads
:
‘‘And
if
the
appeal
is
from
the
Tax
Appeal
Board.”
The
use
there
of
the
conjunctive
necessarily
implies
that
the
first
part
of
the
section
deals
with
something
other
than
an
appeal
from
the
Tax
Appeal
Board
and
that
that
right
of
appeal
is
given
both
to
the
taxpayer
and
to
the
Minister.
Now,
what
is
the
other
matter
which
falls
within
the
first
part
of
Section
98(1)?
I
think
that
necessarily
includes
an
assessment
by
the
Minister
and
therefore
the
section
provides
for
an
appeal
by
the
Minister
or
by
the
taxpayer
from
an
assessment
by
the
Minister.
It
has
this
result,
that
the
Minister
would
appear
to
have
various
remedies
in
respect
of
his
own
assessment.
(1)
He
can
re-assess,
(2)
he
can
appeal
to
the
Exchequer
Court
under
Section
98(1),
or
(3)
he
can
appeal
to
the
Tax
Appeal
Board
under
the
second
part
of
Section
98(1),
and
that
that
appeal
is
given
by
the
second
part
of
Section
98(1)
is
shown
by,
or
shown
and
affirmed
by
99(la)
which
reads:
“Instead
of
filing
a
notice
of
appeal
under
Section
98”—
Hence
it
definitely
speaks
of
Section
98
as
having
given
the
Minister
a
right
of
appeal
and,
therefore,
a
right
of
appeal
from
his
own
assessment.
Now,
it
follows
that
99(la)
which
provides
for
a
cross-appeal
in
the
event
of
an
appeal
from
a
decision
of
the
Tax
Appeal
Board,
should
therefore
be
regarded
as
procedural,
otherwise,
if
it
is
construed
as
conferring
a
right
of
appeal
or
jurisdiction,
it
would
be
mere
surplusage
having
regard
to
the
effect
of
Section
98(1).
I
think
that
the
only
importance
of
Section
99(la)
in
this
particular
motion
depends
upon
the
application
of
the
principle
expressio
unius
est
exclusio
alterius,
and
that
expressly
providing
for
a
cross-appeal
on
appeal
from
the
Tax
Appeal
Board
impliedly
excludes
a
cross-appeal
under
other
occasions.
I
do
not
think
that
principle
can
here
apply
for
several
reasons.
In
the
first
place
99
(la),
being
regarded
as
procedural,
must
be
read
as
subordinate
to
Section
98.
Secondly,
Section
99(la)
is
expressly
made
subordinate
to
Section
98,
that
is,
by
reason
of
the
words
‘instead
of
filing
a
notice
of
appeal
under
Section
98”
and
also,
thirdly,
the
use
of
the
word
“may”,
the
verb
used
in
Section
99(la),
is
permissive.
I
think,
therefore,
that
99(la)
should
be
read,
not
only
as
procedural,
but
also
as
subordinate
to
Section
98,
and,
being
procedural,
the
provision
for
a
cross-appeal
can
be
regarded
as
merely
provided
ex
abundanti
cautela,
not
as
indicating
it
is
the
only
method,
but
providing
that,
in
that
particular
instance,
there
may
be
that
provision
and
leaving
to
stand
the
question
of
whether
there
is
a
cross-appeal
under
other
occasions.
As
there
is
a
right
of
appeal
and
jurisdiction
in
the
Minister
from
his
own
assessment,
the
question
is
whether
or
not
this
cross-appeal
complies
with
the
rules.
It
is
not
a
matter
of
right
or
jurisdiction;
and
complying
with
the
rules
is
not
the
point
of
this
motion.
I
find
nothing
in
the
cases,
either
in
the
Harris
case,
[1964]
C.T.C.
562;
[1966]
C.T.C.
226,
nor
in
the
Farris
case,
[1963]
C.T.C.
345,
which
assists.
Neither
does
the
Distillers
Corporation
Seagram
case,
[1958]
C.T.C.
305,
help
me.
There
the
reference,
as
pointed
out
by
Mr.
Brown,
was
in
respect
of
items
raised
by
the
taxpayer’s
own
appeal.
It
seems
not
to
be
this
case.
And
in
any
event
that
case
seems
to
fall
within
Section
99
(la)
as
a
procedural
section.
However,
for
the
reasons
which
I
have
given,
I
think
that
the
Minister
has
jurisdiction
to
appeal
from
his
own
assessment.
That
is
conferred
by
Section
98(1).
For
that
reason
the
motion
is
refused.