HYNDMAN,
D.J.:—This
is
an
appeal
from
an
assessment
for
succession
duties
made
by
the
Minister
of
National
Revenue
dated
August
27,
1953.
The
amount
of
the
duty
charged
is
not
in
dispute.
The
only
question
is
as
to
the
liability
of
the
estate
to
pay
such
duties.
The
material
facts
may
be
simply
stated.
The
deceased
Henry
Herbert
Hilder
died
on
February
2,
1949,
testate,
leaving
him
surviving
his
widow,
Florence
Maude
Hilder,
and
three
sons,
Edwin
Albert
Hilder,
Herbert
Wilson
Hilder
and
John
William
Hilder,
all
of
whom
remain
alive.
Letters
Probate
of
his
will
were
granted
to
the
appellant
by
the
Surrogate
Court
of
the
County
of
Welland
on
April
13,
1949.
The
deceased’s
will
provided
for
certain
specific
bequests
to
his
widow,
for
payment
of
the
income
from
the
residue
of
the
estate
to
the
widow
for
life,
and
for
distribution
of
the
residue
amongst
his
children
after
the
death
of
his
widow.
In
due
course
the
succession
duties
were
levied
and
paid,
and
the
business
of
the
estate
was
in
due
course
settled.
Henrietta
Hilder,
sister
of
said
Henry
Herbert
Hilder,
died
on
or
about
September
4,
1950,
having
first
made
her
last
will
and
testament
dated
September
1,
1948,
that
is
about
five
months
prior
to
the
death
of
her
said
brother.
Letters
Probate
of
said
will
were
granted
to
Thomas
J.
Darby,
the
surviving
Executor
named
therein,
on
November
20,
1950,
and
all
succession
duties
were
duly
assessed
and
paid.
In
her
will,
said
Henrietta
Hilder
provided
for
the
payment
of
certain
legacies,
for
the
transfer
of
her
interest
in
a
furniture
business,
and
one-half
of
the
residue
of
her
estate
to
her
brother,
the
said
Henry
Herbert
Hilder,
and
the
remaining
half
of
the
residue
for
certain
religious
and
charitable
objects.
The
amount
of
the
bequest
to
the
said
Herbert
Henry
Hilder
was
about
$62,992.68.
In
view
of
the
said
bequest
to
Herbert
Henry
Hilder,
a
further
assessment
was
made
by
the
Minister
of
National
Revenue
and
mailed
August
27,
1953,
claiming
additional
succession
duties
with
respect
to
bequest
of
said
$62,992.68.
Notice
of
Appeal
was
lodged
with
the
respondent
and
rejected
on
July
7,
1954.
Appellant
lodged
with
the
respondent
a
Notice
of
Dissatisfaction
on
August
6,
1954,
but
on
January
11,
1955,
the
assessment
was
confirmed
by
the
Minister—hence
this
appeal
Notwithstanding
the
said
Henrietta
Hilder
was
aware
of
the
death
of
her
brother,
she
made
no
further
will,
nor
any
alteration
in
the
will
of
1948.
At
common
law
the
said
bequest
to
her
brother
would
lapse.
However,
Section
36
of
R.S.O.
1950,
c.
426,
enacts:
“36.
(1)
Where
any
person,
being
a
child
or
other
issue
or
the
brother
or
sister
of
the
testator
to
whom
any
real
estate
or
personal
estate
is
devised
or
bequeathed,
for
any
estate
or
interest
not
determinable
at
or
before
the
death
of
such
person,
dies
in
the
life-time
of
the
testator
either
before
or
after
the
making
of
the
will,
leaving
issue,
and
any
of
the
issue
of
such
person
are
living
at
the
time
of
the
death
of
the
testator,
such
devise
or
bequest
shall
not
lapse
but
shall
take
effect
as
if
the
death
of
such
person
had
happened
immediately
after
the
death
of
the
testator,
unless
a
contrary
intention
appears
by
the
will.’’
In
view
of
the
said
Section
36(1),
it
must
be
presumed
that
the
said
Henry
Herbert
Hilder
was
alive
at
the
time
of
death
of
his
said
sister,
and
therefore
such
bequest
would
not
lapse.
Section
6(1)
of
R.S.C.
1952,
c.
89,
of
the
Dominion
Succession
Duty
Act
provides:
“Subject
to
the
exemptions
mentioned
in
section
7
of
this
Act,
there
shall
be
assessed,
levied
and
paid
at
the
rate
provided
for
in
the
First
Schedule
of
this
Act
duties
upon
or
in
respect
of
the
following
successions,
that
is
to
say,—
(a)
where
the
deceased
was
at
the
time
of
his
death
domiciled
in
a
province
of
Canada,
upon
or
in
respect
of
the
succession
to
all
real
or
immovable
property
situated
in
Canada,
and
all
personal
property
wheresoever
situated
;
’
’
Section
2(m)
provides:
‘
‘succession’
means
every
past
or
future
disposition
of
property,
by
reason
whereof
any
person
has
or
shall
become
beneficially
entitled
to
any
property
or
the
income
thereof
upon
the
death
of
any
deceased
person,
etc.,
etc.”
And
Section
3(1)
(i)
provides:
“A
‘succession’
shall
be
deemed
to
include
the
following
dispositions
of
property
and
the
beneficiary
and
the
deceased
shall
be
deemed
to
be
the
‘successor’
and
‘predecessor’
respectively
in
relation
to
such
property
:—
(i)
property
of
which
the
person
dying
was
at
the
time
of
his
death
competent
to
dispose
;’’
The
contention
of
the
appellant
is
in
effect,
that
the
estate
of
the
said
Henry
Herbert
Hilder
was
merely
a
“conduit
pipe”,
that
the
real
and
immediate
successors
or
beneficiaries
of
Henrietta
Hilder
were
the
beneficiaries
under
the
will
of
Henry
Herbert
Hilder
and
that,
therefore,
no
succession
duties
can
properly
be
chargeable
against
his
estate,
which
had
been
closed
before
the
death
of
his
said
sister.
The
Minister
of
National
Revenue,
however,
assessed
the
brother’s
estate
on
the
ground
that
the
said
bequest
became
part
of
his
estate
or
assets
and
therefore
would
be
subject
to
succession
duties,
first
as
against
the
estate
of
Henry
Herbert
Hilder,
and
subsequently
against
the
beneficiaries
of
his
estate.
After
the
best
consideration
I
have
been
able
to
give
the
matter,
I
have
come
to
the
conclusion
that
the
contention
of
the
appellant
cannot
be
sustained.
Although
Henry
Herbert
Hilder
died
before
his
sister,
under
the
law
and
interpretation
of
said
Section
36(1)
the
legacy
from
his
sister
devolved
upon
him.
In
its
ordinary
natural
meaning
it
must
be
assumed
that,
at
the
time
of
Henrietta
Hilder’s
death,
her
brother
although
in
fact
dead
was
still
alive,
and
consequently
became
a
successor
to
the
property
involved.
Many
authorities
were
cited,
but
I
need
only
refer
to
the
reasoning
in
the
case
of
Re
Scott,
[1900]
1
K.B.
378;
[1901]
1
K.B.
228,
which
in
my
opinion
applies
equally
to
the
present
case.
At
page
223
of
[1901]
1
K.B.,
A.
L.
Smith,
M.R.,
said:
“I
do
not
agree
with
Mr.
Joseph
Walton
when
he
says
on
behalf
of
the
appellants
that
the
Wills
Acts,
1837,
(similar
to
Sec.
36(1)
of
Chap.
426,
R.S.O.
above)
has
nothing
to
do
with
the
case
in
hand,
for,
in
my
judgment,
it
has,
and
it
must
be
looked
at
to
ascertain
what
it
was
that
the
son
at
the
time
of
his
death
was
competent
to
dispose
of.
For
instance,
it
must
be
looked
at
to
see
whether
the
son
was
competent
to
dispose
only
of
property
of
which
he
was
possessed
at
the
date
of
his
will,
as
was
the
case
as
to
real
estate
before
the
Wills
Act,
or
of
which
he
was
possessed
at
the
time
of
his
death,
which
is
the
case
since
the
passing
of
the
Wills
Act.
When
ascertaining
what
real
estate
he
was
competent
to
dispose
of,
and
upon
which
taxation
is
to
take
place,
surely
the
Wills
Act
must
be
looked
at,
for
it
plays
a
very
important
part
in
the
investigation.
Now
s.
24
of
the
Wills
Act
enacts
that
every
will
shall
‘take
effect’
as
if
it
had
been
executed
immediately
before
the
death
of
the
testator,
unless
a
contrary
intention
shall
appear
by
the
will;
in
other
words,
by
the
Wills
Act
a
testator
is
competent
to
dispose
of
all
the
real
and
personal
estate
he
possesses
at
the
time
of
his
death,
and
not
only,
as
before
the
Wills
Act,
of
the
real
estate
he
possessed
at
the
date
of
his
will.
This
may
make
a
great
difference
when,
for
the
matter
of
taxation,
it
has
to
be
determined,
as
in
this
case,
what
the
deceased
was
competent
to
dispose
of;
for
this
is
made
the
subject
of
estate
duty.
Again,
to
see
whether
the
son
took
anything
under
his
father’s
will
of
which
he
was
competent
to
dispose,
the
Wills
Act
must
also
be
looked
at,
in
order
to
see
whether
it
has
any
effect
upon
what
the
son
was
competent
to
dispose
of.
And
what
do
we
find?
We
find,
by
s.
33,
that
in
a
case
like
the
present,
although
the
son
should
die
in
the
lifetime
of
his
father,
a
bequest
of
the
father
to
the
son
shall
not
lapse,
but
shall
4
take
effect’
as
if
the
son
had
died
immediately
after
the
death
of
his
father,
unless
the
contrary
intention
should
appear
by
the
will.
As
before
stated,
if
the
son
in
the
present
case
had
in
fact
died
immediately
after
the
death
of
his
father,
the
second
estate
duty
now
claimed
would
clearly
have
been
payable;
and,
if
there
had
been
no
Wills
Act,
the
son
would
have
nothing
to
dispose
of.
But
the
Wills
Act
enacts
that
the
will
of
the
father
shall
take
effect
as
if
the
son
had
died
immediately
after
his
father—i.e.,
that,
in
the
special
circumstances
to
which
the
section
applies,
the
son
shall
be
competent
to
dispose
of
what
is
left
to
him
by
his
father,
although
he
may
in
fact
die
before
his
father.
It
is
obvious
that
the
Wills
Act
must
be
resorted
to
by
the
appellants
to
get
rid
of
the
lapse
which
otherwise
would
have
taken
place
;
and
the
same
section
of
the
Act
by
which
the
appellants
get
rid
of
the
lapse
enacts
that
the
will
of
the
father
shall
‘take
effect’
as
if
the
son
had
died
immediately
after
his
father;
that
is,
that
the
son
in
his
case
was
competent
to
dispose
of
the
£80,000
of
property,
subject
to
his
father
revoking
his
will,
which
he
never
did.
If
the
appellants
take
the
benefit
of
s.
33,
which
they
do,
and
thus
obtain
the
£80,000
of
property,
they
must
take
the
burden
also—i.e.,
of
paying
the
estate
duty
chargeable
thereon.”
And
Collins,
L.J.,
at
page
234,
said
:
“This
case
appears
to
me
to
present
little
difficulty
when
s.
33
of
the
Wills
Act
is
construed
in
what
seems
to
me
its
obvious
prima
facie
meaning,
and
in
accordance
with
the
interpretation
which,
as
I
think,
it
has
received
through
a
series
of
authorities.
There
is
no
doubt
that,
under
s.
1,
s.
2,
sub-s.
1
and
s.
2,
sub-s.
1(a),
of
the
Finance
Act,
estate
duty
is
payable
upon
the
property
in
question,
if,
under
the
last
sub-section,
John
Scott,
junior,
was
at
the
time
of
his
death
‘competent
to
dispose
of
it.’
The
property
in
question
could
clearly
never
have
been
his
to
dispose
of
in
the
events
which
happened
but
for
the
operation
of
s.
33
of
the
Wills
Act.
The
property
was
devised
to
him
by
his
father,
and,
as
he
died
in
his
father’s
lifetime,
the
devise
would
have
lapsed,
and
could
not,
therefore,
have
come
under
any
disposition
made
by
him.
But
it
seems
to
me
equally
clear
that
the
effect
of
s.
33
of
the
Wills
Act
is
to
confer
upon
him
a
right
to
dispose
of
it.
’
And
Stirling,
L.J.,
at
page
238,
said:
“By
s.
1
of
the
Finance
Act,
1894,
there
is
imposed
in
the
case
of
every
person
dying
after
August
1,
1894,
estate
duty
‘upon
the
principal
value,
ascertained,’
as
in
the
Act
mentioned,
‘of
all
property,
real
or
personal,
which
passes
on
the
death
of
such
a
person.’
By
s.
2,
sub-s.
1,
‘property
passing
on
the
death
of
the
deceased
shall
be
deemed
to
include,
‘amongst
other
particulars,
(a)
property
of
which
the
deceased
was,
at
the
time
of
his
death,
competent
to
dispose.’
By
s.
22,
sub-s.
2(a),
‘a
person
shall
be
deemed
competent
to
dispose
of
property,
if
he
has
such
an
estate
or
interest
therein,
or
such
general
powers
as
would
if
he
were
sui
juris,
enable
him
to
dispose
of
the
property.’
It
is
contended
on
behalf
of
the
Crown
that,
regard
being
had
to
the
terms
of
the
Wills
Act,
s.
33,
John
Scott,
jun.,
had
such
a
general
power
as
enabled
him
to
dispose
of
the
property
devised
to
him
by
his
father’s
will,
and
consequently
that
this
property
fell
within
the
terms
of
s.
2,
sub-s.
1(a),
as
being
property
of
which
he
was
at
the
time
of
his
death
competent
to
dispose.
In
my
opinion
this
contention
is
right.’’
In
view
of
what
is
said
above
I
must
find
that
the
bequest
of
Henrietta
Hilder
to
her
said
brother
became
part
of
his
assets
and
estate,
and
properly
assessable
for
succession
duties
as
claimed
by
the
respondent,
and
therefore
this
appeal
must
be
dismissed
with
costs
payable
out
of
the
estate
of
said
Henry
Herbert
Hilder,
deceased.
Should
any
question
arise
as
to
the
amount
of
the
duty
the
matter
may
be
spoken
to.
Judgment
accordingly.