Garon
J.T.C.C.:
—
This
is
an
appeal
from
an
assessment
dated
December
22,
1995
issued
by
the
Minister
of
National
Revenue
pursuant
to
section
160
of
the
Income
Tax
Act.
By
this
assessment,
the
Minister
of
National
Revenue
assessed
tax
for
the
sum
of
$13,321.69
and
interest
in
the
amount
of
$1,897.87
in
respect
of
transfers
of
property
made
by
Mr.
John
Medland,
the
Appellant’s
spouse.
These
transfers
of
property
were
in
the
nature
of
payments
made
by
Mr.
Medland
to
the
mortgagee
from
September
28,
1990
to
August
31,
1993
in
respect
of
the
principal
of
a
mortgage
on
the
Appellant’s
residence.
A
“Statement
of
Agreed
Facts”,
to
which
various
documents
were
appended,
together
with
a
document
entitled
“Statement
of
Agreed
Facts
(Addendum)”
were
filed
at
the
hearing
of
this
appeal.
The
body
of
both
the
Statement
of
Agreed
Facts
and
of
the
Statement
of
Agreed
Facts
(Addendum)
reads
as
follows:
STATEMENT
OF
AGREED
FACTS
For
the
purposes
of
this
action,
the
parties
hereto,
by
their
undersigned
solicitors,
agree
to
the
following
facts:
1.
The
Appellant,
Susan
Jane
Medland,
and
her
spouse
John
Medland
(“Mr.
Medland”),
reside
in
Surrey,
British
Columbia.
2.
On
September
18th
,1985,
the
Appellant
and
Mr.
Medland
purchased
a
residence
at
14582
—
18th
Avenue,
Surrey,
British
Columbia
(the
“Property”)
for
a
purchase
price
of
$115,000.00.
A
copy
of
the
Agreement
of
Purchase
and
Sale
is
attached
as
Tab
I
hereto.
3.
At
all
material
times,
from
September
18th,
1985
until
April
8th,
1987,
the
Appellant
and
Mr.
Medland
held
the
Property
as
joint
tenants.
A
copy
of
the
Transfer
of
an
Estate
in
Fee
Simple
is
attached
as
Tab
2.
4.
The
purchase
of
the
Property
was
financed,
in
part,
using
the
proceeds
of
a
mortgage
loan
of
$102,500.00
granted
by
the
Toronto-Dominion
Bank
to
the
Appellant
and
Mr.
Medland
as
joint
mortgagors
for
a
term
of
one
year.
The
mortgage
was
secured
by
the
Property.
A
copy
of
the
mortgage
is
attached
as
Tab
3.
5.
The
Appellant
and
Mr.
Medland
renewed
the
mortgage
for
a
series
of
one-year
terms
for
the
periods
October
1st
to
September
30th,
1986-7,
1987-8,
and
1988-9.
Copies
of
the
Mortgage
Renewal
Agreements
for
those
three
renewal
periods
are
attached
as
Tabs
4,
5
and
6,
respectively.
6.
In
1989
and
1992,
the
Appellant
and
Mr.
Medland
renewed
the
mortgage
for
three
and
five
year
terms,
respectively.
Copies
of
the
Mortgage
Renewal
Agreements
for
those
renewal
periods
are
attached
as
Tabs
7
and
8,
respectively.
7.
On
April
8,
1987,
the
Appellant
and
Mr.
Medland,
as
joint
tenants,
transferred
the
property
to
the
Appellant
alone.
At
all
material
times
thereafter,
the
Appellant,
alone,
held
title
of
the
property.
A
copy
of
the
Transfer
of
an
Estate
in
Fee
Simple
is
attached
as
Tab
9.
8.
Mr.
Medland
made
all
mortgage
payments
in
the
years
in
question.
The
sum
of
the
mortgage
payments
made
by
Mr.
Medland
by
cheque
from
September
28,
1990
to
August
31,
1993
was
$39,979.74
as
set
out
in
the
schedule
in
Tab
10.
9.
The
sum
of
the
mortgage
payments
made
by
Mr.
Medland
from
September
28,
1990
to
August
31,
1993
that
were
attributable
to
the
principal
of
the
mortgage
was
$13,321.69
as
set
out
in
the
schedule
in
tab
10.
10.
Mr.
Medland
filed
his
1990,
1991,
1992
and
1993
taxation
returns
but
did
not
pay
the
full
amount
of
his
tax
liability
set
out
therein.
The
Minister
of
National
Revenue
(the
“Minister”)
assessed
the
said
returns
as
set
out
in
tab
11.
Mr.
Medland
did
not
object
to
nor
appeal
the
assessments
for
those
taxation
years.
11.
On
June
10,
1994
the
Minister
assessed
the
Appellant
$38,857.48
pursuant
to
section
160
of
the
Income
Tax
Act
representing
the
lesser
of:
a)
Mr.
Medland’s
unpaid
liability
under
the
Income
Tax
Act,
the
Income
Tax
Act-British
Columbia
and
section
36
of
the
Canada
Pension
Plan,
and
b)
the
value
of
property
allegedly
transferred
by
Mr.
Medland
to
the
Appellant
when
he
made
the
mortgage
payments
referred
to
in
paragraph
8
herein
without
consideration
paid
by
the
Appellant
to
Mr.
Medland.
A
copy
of
the
notice
of
assessment
is
attached
at
Tab
12.
12.
By
notice
dated
September
4,
1994,
the
Appellant
objected
to
the
assessment
(tab
13)
and
by
notice
dated
December
22,
1995
the
Minister
reassessed
the
Appellant
thereby
reducing
the
amount
assessed
from
$38,857.48
to
$15,219.56
on
the
basis
that
the
value
of
the
property
allegedly
transferred
to
the
Appellant
by
Mr.
Medland
without
consideration
was
not
more
that
the
sum
of
the
mortgage
payments
attributable
to
the
principal,
namely
$13,321.69.
A
copy
of
the
reassessment
is
attached
as
tab
14.
13.
For
the
purposes
of
subsection
160(l)(e)
the
Appellant
agrees
that
she
provided
no
consideration
to
Mr.
Medland.
14,
At
no
time
did
the
Mortgagee
make
a
demand
for
payment
or
advise
the
Appellant
or
Mr.
Medland
that
the
mortgage
was
in
default.
Statement
of
Agreed
Facts
(Addendum)
For
the
purposes
of
this
Appeal,
the
parties
hereto,
by
their
undersigned
solicitors,
agree
to
this
addendum
to
the
Agreed
Statement
of
Facts.
1.
Mr.
Medland
has
been
the
spouse
of
the
Appellant
at
all
relevant
times
in
this
Appeal.
2.
Mr.
Medland
is
indebted
to
the
Minister
in
excess
of
$49,000.00
as
of
June
10,
1994,
in
respect
of
his
1990,
1991,
1992
and
1993
taxation
years,
of
which
$24,288.83
of
this
amount
was
in
respect
of
federal
taxes.
3.
The
mortgage
payments
were
made
by
Mr.
Medland
issuing
cheques
to
the
Toronto-Dominion
Bank
from
his
personal
and
business
accounts
and
directing
that
the
funds
from
those
cheques
be
used
to
make
the
mortgage
payments.
4.
The
Minister
of
National
Revenue
assessed
Mr.
Medland’s
income
tax
returns
as
filed
for
the
years
1990,
1991,
1992
and
1993.
Appellant’s
submissions
It
was
submitted
that
Mr.
Medland
did
not
transfer
property
to
the
Appellant.
The
mortgage
payments
were
made
by
Mr.
Medland
directly
to
the
Bank,
the
mortgagee.
Also,
Mr.
Medland
paid
his
own
liability
to
the
Bank.
Thus,
there
was
no
indirect
transfer.
Counsel
for
the
Appellant
stressed
that
following
the
transfer
by
the
Appellant
and
Mr.
Medland
of
the
subject
property
to
the
Appellant
alone
on
April
8,
1987,
Mr.
Medland
remained
fully
liable
to
the
Mortgagee,
as
appears
from
the
mortgage
renewal
agreements
in
the
same
way
as
he
was
under
the
original
mortgage
agreement
dated
September
18,
1985.
Mr.
Medland’s
liability
under
the
mortgage
in
question
is
joint
and
several
with
the
Appellant.
Counsel
for
the
Appellant
pointed
out
that
as
result
of
the
mortgage
payments
made
during
the
period
referred
to
earlier
by
Mr.
Medland
to
the
Bank,
no
additional
property
vested
in
her;
she
already
was
the
sole
owner
of
the
equity
of
redemption
of
the
subject
property.
Nor
was
there
a
transfer
of
the
economic
interest
in
the
property
to
the
Appellant.
In
the
same
vein,
it
was
further
argued
that
if
a
benefit
was
conferred
on
the
Appellant,
it
was
not
covered
by
section
160
of
the
Income
Tax
Act
because
there
was
no
property
transferred
to
the
Appellant,
not
even
indirectly.
Counsel
for
the
Appellant
referred
the
Court
to
the
definition
of
the
terms
“property”
and
“amount”
in
section
248
of
the
Income
Tax
Act
and
pointed
out
that
in
section
160
of
the
Income
Tax
Act
reference
is
made
to
the
transfer
of
“property”
and
not
to
the
transfer
of
an
“amount”.
In
this
connection,
he
contended
that
the
additional
value
of
the
Appellant’s
equity
of
redemption
is
not
property
in
itself.
Counsel
for
the
Appellant
submitted
that,
in
his
view,
the
transfer
referred
to
in
section
160
must
be
of
the
same
property.
He
even
suggested
that
Mr.
Medland
in
effecting
the
mortgage
payments
has
not
conferred
a
benefit
on
the
Appellant
but
simply
discharged
his
own
liability.
Respondent's
submissions
Counsel
for
the
Respondent
began
by
pointing
out
that
the
principal
of
the
mortgage
was
reduced
by
the
portion
of
the
mortgage
payments
that
was
on
account
of
the
said
principal.
The
Appellant’s
liability
to
the
mortgagee
was
therefore
reduced
to
that
extent.
Mr.
Medland
by
making
the
payments
in
question
divested
himself
of
money.
As
a
result
of
mortgage
payments
made
by
Mr.
Medland,
it
was
contended
on
behalf
of
the
Respondent
that
the
value
of
the
Appellant’s
equity
of
redemption
has
increased.
Consequently,
he
said,
there
has
been
a
change
in
the
Appellant’s
rights
and
in
the
value
of
her
estate
in
land.
In
this
connection,
Counsel
for
the
Respondent
advanced
the
broad
proposi-
tion
that
anything
of
value
is
property.
In
this
context,
he
added,
a
change
in
value
involves
a
transfer
of
property.
It
was
also
submitted
on
behalf
of
the
Respondent
that
section
160
would
be
rendered
ineffective
if
the
potential
liability
on
the
part
of
the
person
making
the
transfer
to
a
third
party
could
be
raised
as
a
ground
for
defence.
In
brief,
he
suggested
that
the
transferor’s
potential
liability
to
a
third
party
is
not
relevant
to
the
application
of
section
160.
ANALYSIS
The
question
in
issue
in
general
terms
is
whether
or
not
Mr.
Medland
has
transferred
property
to
the
Appellant
within
the
purview
of
section
160
of
the
Income
Tax
Act.
For
the
present
purposes,
it
is
sufficient
to
refer
to
subsection
160(1)
of
the
Act
which
reads
thus:
(1)
Where
a
person
has,
on
or
after
the
1st
day
of
May,
1951,
transferred
property,
either
directly
or
indirectly,
by
means
of
a
trust
or
by
any
other
means
whatever,
to
(a)
his
spouse
or
a
person
who
has
since
become
his
spouse,
(b)
a
person
who
was
under
18
years
of
age,
or
(c)
a
person
with
whom
he
was
not
dealing
at
arm’s
length,
the
following
rules
apply:
(d)
the
transferee
and
transferor
are
jointly
and
severally
liable
to
pay
a
part
of
the
transferor’s
tax
under
this
Part
for
each
taxation
year
equal
to
the
amount
by
which
the
tax
for
the
year
is
greater
than
it
would
have
been
if
it
were
not
for
the
operation
of
sections
74
to
75.1,
in
respect
of
any
income
from,
or
gain
from
the
disposition
of,
the
property
so
transferred
or
property
substituted
therefor,
and
(e)
the
transferee
and
transferor
are
jointly
and
severally
liable
to
pay
under
this
Act
an
amount
equal
to
the
lesser
of
(i)
the
amount,
if
any,
by
which
the
fair
market
value
of
the
property
at
the
time
it
was
transferred
exceeds
the
fair
market
value
at
that
time
of
the
consideration
given
for
the
property,
and
(ii)
the
aggregate
of
all
amounts
each
of
which
is
an
amount
that
the
transferor
is
liable
to
pay
under
this
Act
in
or
in
respect
of
the
taxation
year
in
which
the
property
was
transferred
or
any
preceding
taxation
year,
but
nothing
in
this
subsection
shall
be
deemed
to
limit
the
liability
of
the
transferor
under
any
other
provision
of
this
Act.
It
is
necessary
to
determine
what
is
encompassed
within
the
concept
of
transfer
of
property
referred
to
in
the
opening
portion
of
subsection
160(1).
First,
the
term
property
is
given
a
wide
import
by
section
248
of
the
Act;
it
is
defined
as
follows:
“property”
means
property
of
any
kind
whatever
whether
real
or
personal
or
corporeal
or
incorporeal
and,
without
restricting
the
generality
of
the
foregoing,
includes
(a)
a
right
of
any
kind
whatever,
a
share
or
a
chose
in
action,
(b)
unless
a
contrary
intention
is
evident,
money,
(c)
a
timber
resource
property,
and
(d)
the
work
in
progress
of
a
business
that
is
a
profession.
The
concepts
of
“property”
and
“transfer”
were
carefully
considered
in
the
leading
decision
of
President
Thorson
of
the
Exchequer
Court
of
Canada
involving
the
Income
War
Tax
Act
in
the
case
of
Fasken
v.
Minister
of
National
Revenue^
In
that
case,
certain
property
was
transferred
by
a
husband
to
a
trust
of
which
the
wife
was
a
beneficiary.
One
of
the
issues
was
whether
or
not
that
constituted
a
transfer
of
property.
With
respect
to
the
meaning
of
property,
President
Thorson
referred
to
the
case
of
Jones
v.
Skinner
(1836),
5
L.J.
Ch.
87,
where
Lord
Langdale
M.R.
said:
It
is
well-known,
that
the
word
“property”
is
the
most
comprehensive
of
all
the
terms
which
can
be
used,
inasmuch
as
it
is
indicative
and
descriptive
of
every
possible
interest
which
the
party
can
have.
Regarding
the
meaning
of
the
word
“transfer”
in
the
context
of
a
transfer
of
property,
President
Thorson
commented
as
follows,
at
page
497:
The
word
“transfer”
is
not
a
term
of
art
and
has
not
a
technical
meaning.
It
is
not
necessary
to
a
transfer
of
property
from
a
husband
to
his
wife
that
it
should
be
made
in
any
particular
form
or
that
it
should
be
made
directly.
All
that
is
required
is
that
the
husband
should
so
deal
with
the
property
as
to
divest
himself
of
it
and
vest
it
in
his
wife,
that
is
to
say,
pass
the
property
from
himself
to
her.
The
means
by
which
he
accomplishes
this
result,
whether
direct
or
circuitous,
may
properly
be
called
a
transfer.
Later
on
he
added
the
following
observations,
at
the
same
page:
If
David
Fasken
had
conveyed
this
piece
of
property
directly
to
his
wife
by
a
deed
such
conveyance
would
clearly
have
been
a
transfer.
The
fact
that
he
brought
about
the
same
result
by
indirect
or
circuitous
means,
such
as
the
novation
referred
to
by
counsel
involving
the
intervention
of
trustees,
cannot
change
the
essential
character
of
the
fact
that
he
caused
property
which
had
previously
belonged
to
him
to
pass
to
his
wife.
In
my
opinion,
there
was
a
transfer
of
property
from
David
Fasken
to
his
wife
within
the
meaning
of
the
Act.
The
concept
of
“transfer
of
property”
in
the
attribution
rule
set
out
in
subsection
74(1),
as
it
then
read
before
its
repeal
in
1986,
was
examined
in
a
decision
of
the
Federal
Court
of
Appeal
in
the
case
of
Kieboom
v.
Minister
of
National
Revenue?'
The
taxpayer
in
that
case
incorporated
a
company
which
issued
shares
to
the
taxpayer
and
his
wife.
Following
an
increase
in
the
authorized
capital,
the
company
issued
further
shares
so
that
the
equity
position
of
the
taxpayer
and
his
wife
changed
from
90%
and
10%
respectively
to
50%
for
each.
Later
on,
the
company
issued
more
shares
to
the
children
of
the
taxpayer
and
his
wife
with
the
result
that
at
the
end
of
the
operation
the
taxpayer
and
his
wife
each
owned
21.5%
and
each
of
his
three
children
owned
19%
of
the
shares.
One
of
the
two
questions
in
issue
was
whether
there
was
a
transfer
of
property
so
as
to
bring
into
play
the
attribution
provisions
of
subsection
74(1)
of
the
Income
Tax
Act.
Justice
Linden,
speaking
for
the
Court,
made
the
following
observations,
at
pages
65-6
(D.T.C.
6386):
In
this
case,
therefore,
the
taxpayer
transferred
property
to
his
wife,
that
is,
he
gave
a
portion
of
his
ownership
of
the
equity
in
his
company
to
his
wife.
The
40%
capital
interest
in
his
company
which
he
gave
to
his
wife
was
clearly
property.
His
beneficial
interest
in
his
company
was
reduced
by
40%
and
hers
was
increased
by
40%.
The
fact
that
this
transfer
of
property
was
accomplished
through
causing
his
company
to
issue
shares
makes
no
difference.
Subsection
74(1)
covers
transfers
that
are
made
“directly
or
indirectly”
and
“by
any
other
means
whatever.”
The
transfer,
which
in
this
case
was
indirect,
in
that
the
taxpayer
arranged
for
his
company
to
issue
shares
to
his
wife,
is
nevertheless
a
transfer
from
the
husband
to
the
wife.
There
is
no
need
for
shares
to
be
transferred
in
order
to
trigger
this
provision
of
the
Act,
as
was
erroneously
concluded
by
the
Tax
Court
judge.
By
this
transfer
of
property
to
his
wife,
he
divested
himself
of
certain
rights
to
receive
dividends
should
they
be
declared.
Hence,
when
the
dividends
were
paid
to
the
wife
in
1982,
that
was
income
from
the
transferred
property
and
was
rightly
attributable
to
the
taxpayer.
The
present
case
is
similar
to
some
extent
to
White
v.
R?
In
the
latter
case,
the
taxpayer
and
his
common
law
spouse
purchased
a
house
in
Toronto
at
a
cost
of
$172,750.
In
order
to
purchase
this
house,
a
mortgage
in
the
amount
of
$123,000
was
taken
out
by
the
taxpayer
and
his
spouse.
Some
time
after
the
taxpayer
and
the
common
law
spouse
were
married,
the
house
was
transferred
into
the
taxpayer’s
name
alone.
The
mortgage
remained
on
title
with
both
the
taxpayer
and
her
husband
as
mortgagors
and
subject
to
the
covenants
therein.
On
March
5,
1984,
the
taxpayer’s
spouse
deposited
into
the
couple’s
joint
account
a
cheque
in
the
amount
of
$126,000
payable
to
himself
from
his
company.
On
the
same
day,
the
taxpayer
issued
a
certified
cheque
in
the
amount
of
$126,037.74
out
of
the
joint
account
to
discharge
the
mortgage
on
the
house
which
she
owned
alone.
It
is
not
mentioned
in
this
judgment
if
the
liability
to
the
mortgagee
of
the
taxpayer
and
his
wife
was
joint
or
joint
and
several.
In
that
case,
Judge
Mogan
of
this
Court
expressed
himself
as
follows,
at
page
2542:
Applying
the
Fasken
decision
to
the
facts
of
this
case,
Howard
White
divested
himself
of
$126,000
and
that
amount
vested
in
the
appellant
(his
wife)
as
the
sole
owner
of
the
house
at
61
Shalimar
Boulevard.
Also,
the
words
of
subsection
160(1)
are
very
broad
concerning
the
transfer
of
property
“either
directly
or
indirectly,
by
means
of
a
trust
or
by
any
other
means
whatever”.
In
my
opinion,
and
having
regard
to
the
circumstances
of
the
transaction,
there
was
a
transfer
of
property
(i.e.,
$126,000)
from
Howard
White
to
the
appellant
in
1984
within
the
meaning
of
subsection
160(1).
When
issuing
the
assessment
to
the
appellant,
the
Minister
apparently
assumed
that
the
payment
from
Howard
White
on
March
5,
1984
went
directly
to
the
Toronto-Dominion
Bank
and
did
not
go
through
the
joint
account.
That
assumption
was,
of
course,
not
true.
Counsel
for
the
appellant
attempted
to
capitalize
on
the
Minister’s
erroneous
assumption
but,
in
the
view
which
I
take
of
both
the
law
and
the
transaction,
it
does
not
make
any
difference
whether
the
payment
went
directly
to
the
bank
or
through
the
joint
account.
The
joint
account
was
simply
a
conduct
through
which
the
funds
passed.
In
the
present
case,
it
is
beyond
dispute
that
there
was
no
direct
transfer
of
property
to
the
Appellant
made
by
Mr.
Medland.
The
latter
made
his
payments
directly
to
the
mortgagee,
the
Bank.
No
payments
were
made
to
the
Appellant.
It
remains
to
examine
if
in
light
of
the
case
law
referred
to
above
there
was,
having
regard
to
the
circumstances
of
the
present
case,
an
indirect
transfer
of
property
to
the
Appellant
made
by
Mr.
Medland
within
the
meaning
of
section
160
of
the
Income
Tax
Act.
From
the
agreed
facts,
it
is
common
ground
that
the
Appellant’s
liability
to
the
Bank
was
reduced
by
the
portion
of
the
payments
made
by
Mr.
Medland
that
was
attributable
to
the
principal
of
the
debt.
It
was
agreed
that
no
consideration
was
given
by
the
Appellant
in
relation
to
the
payments
made
by
Mr.
Medland.
The
bundle
of
rights
that
the
Appellant
had
in
that
property
is
known
as
the
equity
of
redemption.
In
his
book
entitled
The
law
of
Real
Property,
Sir
Robert
Megarry^
says
that
“equity
of
redemption
is
an
equitable
interest
in
the
land
consisting
of
the
sum
total
of
the
mortgagor’s
rights
in
the
property”.
There
is
no
dispute
here
that
the
Appellant
was
the
sole
owner
of
the
equity
of
redemption
as
from
April
8,
1987.
Speaking
generally,
it
is
equally
clear
that
a
mortgagor
has
the
right
to
redeem
the
encumbered
property
after
the
day
fixed
by
the
mortgage.
If
the
mortgage
goes
into
default,
there
is
a
redemption
period
and
the
mortgagor
has
a
right
to
redeem
the
property.
On
making
the
last
payment,
the
mortgagor
has
the
right
to
have
title
conveyed
to
him.
The
Appellant
had
all
these
rights.
In
equity
she
was
the
owner
of
the
subject
land,
subject
to
the
mortgage.
Also,
because
the
mortgagor’s
equity
of
redemption
is
an
interest
in
land,
it
can
be
disposed
of
like
any
other
interests
in
land.
Obviously,
these
rights
possessed
by
the
Appellant
in
the
property
in
question
constitute
property
since
the
definition
of
property
in
section
248
of
the
Income
Tax
Act
includes
“a
right
of
any
kind
whatever”.
It
is
apparent
that
section
160
of
the
Income
Tax
Act
is
directed
only
at
transfers
of
property.
This
section
is
not
aimed
at
the
conferral
of
benefits,
as
correctly
pointed
out
by
Counsel
for
the
Appellant.
In
this
regard,
section
160
is
unlike
subsection
15(1)
of
the
Act
which
requires
the
inclusion
in
a
shareholder’s
income
of
any
benefit
he
may
receive
from
the
corporation
of
which
he
is
a
shareholder.
Section
160
deals
with
transfers
of
property
like
the
present
sections
74.1
and
74.2
which
set
out
the
attribution
rules.
The
wording
relating
to
the
circumstances
which
trigger
the
application
of
section
160
is
similar
to
some
extent
to
the
language
used
in
sections
74.1
and
74.2
of
the
Income
Tax
Act.
Having
regard
to
the
foregoing
observations
respecting
the
Appellant’s
rights
in
the
subject
property
and
the
ambit
of
section
160
of
the
Income
Tax
Act,
I
do
not
agree
with
the
proposition
advanced
by
the
Appellant
that
a
reduction
in
the
Appellant’s
liability
under
the
mortgage
to
the
extent
of
$13,321.69
as
a
direct
result
of
the
payments
made
to
the
mortgagee
by
Mr.
Medland
does
not
constitute
property.
The
examination
of
two
hypothetical
situations
leads
me
to
the
conclusion
that
such
a
reduction
in
the
Appellant’s
liability
amounts
to
an
indirect
transfer
of
property
made
by
Mr.
Medland
to
the
Appellant.
In
the
first
situation,
termed
Example
“A”,
I
am
assuming
that
Mr.
Medland,
instead
of
paying
a
little
over
$13,000
to
the
mortgagee
towards
the
principal
of
the
mortgage,
had
made,
with
the
agreement
of
the
mortgagee,
a
balloon
payment
when
he
was
indebted
to
the
Government
of
Canada
in
respect
of
federal
taxes
and
paid
the
full
amount
owing
under
the
mortgage.
In
such
an
eventuality,
there
is
no
doubt
that
this
payment
would
have
constituted
a
transfer
of
property
because
the
Appellant
would
have
acquired
the
right
to
redeem
the
property
because
a
“right
of
whatever
kind”
is
property,
according
to
the
definition
of
the
term
“property”
in
section
248
of
the
Income
Tax
Act.
One
can
imagine
another
case,
which
I
describe
as
Example
“B”,
where
a
person
in
Mr.
Medland’s
situation
would
have
made
just
a
few
regular
payments
to
the
mortgagee,
which
payments
happen
to
represent
the
last
payments
to
be
made
under
the
mortgage.
On
this
assumption,
an
individual
like
the
Appellant
would
be
entitled
to
redeem
the
property
and
would
be
left
with
an
unhampered
fee
simple
if,
of
course,
there
was
no
other
encumbrance
on
the
property.
Again
the
right
to
redeem
the
mortgage
would
constitute
property
within
the
meaning
of
section
248
of
the
Income
Tax
Act,
as
I
have
just
explained.
I
do
not
see
between
Examples
“A”
and
“B”
on
the
one
hand
and
the
present
case
on
the
other
hand
any
substantial
difference.
In
each
of
these
two
examples,
the
situation
is
simply
more
apparent,
more
conspicuous
because
the
right
to
redeem
property
and
to
secure
full
title
is
undoubtedly
property
having
regard
to
the
wide
import
of
the
term
“property”
in
section
248
of
the
Act.
It
would
be
highly
artificial,
if
not
absurd,
to
conclude
on
the
one
hand
that
in
Examples
“A”
and
“B”
the
payments
in
question
involve
the
transfer
of
property
and
on
the
other
hand
assert
that
the
making
of
regular
payments
owing
under
a
mortgage
over
a
given
period
is
not
property
because
these
payments
do
not
happen
to
include
the
last
payment
which
gives
rise
to
the
right
to
redeem
the
property.
Such
a
result
would
be
clearly
unintended.
The
matter
can
be
looked
at
in
a
very
simple
fashion.
If
Mr.
Medland
had
made
the
regular
payments
directly
to
his
wife
out
of
his
own
moneys
and
if
his
wife
had
each
time
immediately
thereafter,
used
these
moneys
to
make
payments
directly
to
the
mortgagee
it
could
not
be
challenged
that
these
payments
would
constitute
a
direct
transfer
of
property
to
his
wife.
Mr.
Medland,
instead
of
making
the
regular
payments
owing
under
the
mortgage
to
his
wife,
made
them
to
the
mortgagee
at
a
time
where
his
wife
was
the
sole
owner
of
equity
of
redemption.
This
in
my
view,
constitutes
an
indirect
transfer
of
property.
Looking
at
the
overall
situation,
I
am
persuaded
that
the
regular
payments
made
by
Mr.
Medland:
to
the
mortgagee
when
the
Appellant
was
the
sole
owner
of
the
equity
of
redemption
had
a
dual
effect
from
the
standpoint
of
Mr.
Medland
and
the
Appellant:
a)
Mr.
Medland
paid
his
own
liability
under
the
mortgage
and
b)
Mr.
Medland
transferred
property
indirectly
to
his
wife
with
respect
to
the
portion
of
the
payments
that
related
to
the
principal
of
the
mortgage.
These
two
results
are
inextricably
linked.
In
my
view,
the
Appellant
in
submitting
that
Mr.
Medland
simply
satisfied
his
own
liability
by
making
these
payments
is
ignoring
an
important
aspect
of
the
situation,
the
other
side
of
the
coin,
so
to
speak.
There
was
a
transfer
of
economic
interest
involving
the
equity
of
redemption
in
favour
of
his
wife,
as
in
the
Kieboom
decision.
I
am
therefore
of
the
view
that
Mr.
Medland
had
transferred
property
during
the
relevant
period
to
the
Appellant
in
an
indirect
way
within
the
purview
of
section
160
of
the
Income
Tax
Act.
Consequently,
the
assessment
made
by
the
Minister
of
National
Revenue
in
respect
of
this
transfer
of
property
is
confirmed.
For
these
reasons,
the
appeal
is
dismissed.
Appeal
dismissed.