ANGERS,
J.:—This
is
an
appeal,
under
the
provisions
of
sec.
58
and
following
of
the
Income
War
Tax
Act,
1917,
and
amendments
thereto,
from
the
assessment
of
the
appellant
for
the
year
1930
in
respect
of
his
share
of
profits
in
Atlas
Coal
Company
Limited
for
the
said
year.
The
facts
are
briefly
as
follows:
National
Securities
Limited
was
incorporated
in
1914;
in
the
early
part
of
the
year
1925
the
appellant,
Dr.
Omer
H.
Patrick,
was
the
principal
shareholder
of
the
company.
In
1925,
the
shares
were
divided
among
the
members
of
the
appellant’s
family
and
allotted
as
follows:
625
to
the
appellant,
625
to
his
wife
(Lulu
F.
Patrick),
625
to
his
son
(Lorraine
Patrick),
and
625
to
his
daughter
(Frances
L.
Eaton).
From
that
time
National
Securities
Limited
was
assessed,
for
income
tax
purposes,
as
a
personal
corporation,
under
see.
21
of
the
Act.
For
some
years
prior
to
1930
the
Minister
of
National
Revenue
assessed
97.88
per
cent
of
the
income
of
the
company
to
the
appellant
and
2.12
per
cent
to
his
wife,
Lulu
F.
Patrick.
National
Securities
Limited
was
essentially
a
holding
company
;
its
assets
consisted
mainly
of
bonds
and
real
estate.
In
and
previous
to
1925
the
appellant
was
also
a
shareholder
in
a
company
known
as
Atlas
Coal
Company
Limited,
incorporated
by
virtue
of
letters
patent
of
the
Province
of
Alberta.
This
company,
in
1925,
held,
among
other
assets,
leases
of
certain
mining
properties
in
Alberta,
described
as
the
Murray
leases,
having
acquired
the
same
from
one
Isabella
Augusta
Murray.
In
the
early
part
of
that
year,
Atlas
Coal
Company
Limited
was
in
financial
difficuties
and
some
time
in
April
it
assigned
and
transferred
unto
National
Securities
Limited
all
its
right,
title
and
interest
in
and
to
the
said
leases
for
certain
considerations
which
have
no
materiality
herein
and
which
accordingly
I
need
not
relate.
By
an
agreement
dated
the
20th
of
July,
1929,
National
Securities
Limited
sublet
the
mine,
which
in
the
sublease
is
called
the
East
Coulee
Coal
Mine,
and
its
equipment
to
the
appellant,
his
wife
(Lulu
F.
Patrick),
his
son
(Lorraine
Patrick),
his
daughter-in-law
(Gertrude
U.
Patrick),
his
daughter
(Frances
L.
Eaton),
and
his
son-in-law
(George
E.
Eaton)
for
a
term
of
five
years
from
the
first
of
July,
1929,
for
and
in
consideration
of
a
rental
of
$10,000
a
year
and
a
royalty
of
ten
cents
per
ton
on
all
coal
mined.
A
company
was
incorporated
by
virtue
of
federal
letters
patent
under
the
name
of
Atlas
Coal
Company
Limited.
The
evidence
discloses
that
the
incorporation
was
somewhat
delayed
due
to
the
fact
that
the
provincial
corporation
bearing
the
same
name
had
not
been
definitely
wound
up.
On
August
18,
1930,
the
original
subtenants,
namely,
the
appellant,
his
wife,
his
son,
his
daughter-in-law,
his
daughter
and
his
son-in-law,
transferred.
their
interest
in
the
sublease
to
Atlas
Coal
Company
Limited
in
consideration
of
shares
in
the
company,
to
be
allotted
as
follows:
to
appellant
83
shares;
to
appellant’s
wife,
82
shares;
to
Lorraine
Patrick,
83
shares;
to
Gertrude
U.
Patrick
(Mrs.
Lorraine
aPtrick),
83
shares;
to
George
E.
Eaton,
82
shares,
and
to
Frances
L.
Eaton,
82
shares.
In
addition
to
the
shares
allotted
as
above
mentioned
one
share
each
was
acquired
by
Dr.
Patrick,
his
wife,
his
son,
his
daughter
and
his
son-in-law,
and
so
during
the
taxation
period
with
which
we
are
concerned,
i.e.,
the
year
ending
December
31,
1930,
the
shares
of
Atlas
Coal
Company
Limited
were
distributed
as
follows:
|
Shares
|
Dr.
Patrick
(the
appellant)
|
-
|
84
|
Lulu
F.
Patrick
(the
appellant’s
wife)
|
83
|
Lorraine
Patrick
(the
appellant’s
son)
|
84
|
Gertrude
U.
Patrick
(the
appellant’s
daughter-in-law)
|
83
|
Frances
L.
Eaton
(the
appellant’s
daughter)
|
83
|
George
E.
Eaton
(the
appellant’s
son-in-law)
|
83
|
Atlas
Coal
Company
Limited
elected
to
be
assessed
as
a
family
corporation
under
sec.
22
of
the
Act.
Before
the
enactment
of
the
statute
20-21
George
V,
ch.
24,
intituled
"‘An
Act
to
amend
the
Income
War
Tax
Act,’’
sec.
22
was
thus
worded:—
"22.
The
shareholders
of
a
family
corporation
may
elect
that,
in
lieu
of
the
corporation
being
assessed
as
a
corporation,
the
income
of
the
corporation
be
dealt
with
under
this
Act
as
if
such
corporation
were
a
partnership,
and
each
shareholder
shall
then
be
deemed
to
be
a
partner
and
shall
be
taxable
in
respect
of
the
income
of
the
corporation
according
to
his
interest
as
a
shareholder.
^2.
In
order
that
the
provisions
of
this
section
shall
be
applicable
to
any
corporation
and
the
shareholders
thereof,
a
notice
in
writing
of
the
election
of
the
shareholders
to
have
the
same
applied
shall
be
mailed
to
the
Minister
by
registered
post
by
the
secretary
or
other
duly
authorized
officer
of
the
corporation
and
such
notice
shall
have
attached
thereto
a
duly
certified
copy
of
a
resolution
of
the
shareholders
electing
that
the
provision
apply.
"‘3.
Dividends
of
a
family
corporation
shall
be
subject
to
taxation
only
to
the
extent
that
the
dividends
are
in
excess
of
the
amount
of
the
income
of
the
corporation
which,
following
upon
election,
has
been
taxed
under
the
provisions
of
this
section.
‘4.
The
decision
of
the
Minister
upon
any
question
arising
under
this
section,
including
any
question
as
to
the
application
of
the
term
‘‘family,’’
shall
be
final
and
conclusive.”
By
sec.
5
of
ch.
24,
of
the
statute
20-21
George
V,
assented
to
on
the
30th
of
May,
1930,
subsee.
1
of
see.
22
of
the
Income
War
Tax
Act
was
repealed
and
the
following
substituted
therefor,
to
wit:—
"‘(1)
The
shareholders
of
a
family
corporation
may
elect
any
time
within
thirty
days
after
the
date
on
which
returns
of
income
by
corporations
are
to
be
made
that
in
lieu
of
the
corporation
being
assessed
as
a
corporation,
the
income
of
the
corporation
be
dealt
with
under
this
Act
as
if
such
corporation
were
a
partnership,
and
each
shareholder
resident
in
Canada
shall
then
be
deemed
to
be
a
partner
and
shall
be
taxable
in
respect
of
the
income
of
the
corporation
according
to
his
interest
as
a
shareholder:
Provided
however
that
the
corporation,
notwithstanding
any
such
election,
shall
continue
to
be
liable
in
respect
of
the
interest
of
any
non-resident
shareholder
in
the
income
of
the
corporation.’’
By
see.
7
of
ch.
24
of
20-21
George
V,
the
Act
was
given
a
retroactive
effect:
see.
7
reads
as
follows
:—
"‘This
Act
shall
be
deemed
to
have
come
into
force
at
the
commencement
of
the
1929
taxation
period
and
to
be
applicable
thereto
and
to
fiscal
periods
ending
therein
and
to
subsequent
periods,
except
section
4
hereof
which
shall
be
deemed
to
have
come
into
force
at
the
commencement
of
the
1930
taxation
period
and
to
be
applicable
thereto
and
to
fiscal
periods
ending
therein
and
to
all
subsequent
periods.’’
The
amendment
is
not
material
in
the
present
instance
:
the
validity
of
the
election
made
by
the
company
is
not
disputed
and,
on
the
other
hand,
all
its
shareholders
are
resident
of
Canada.
Before
going
into
the
merit
of
the
appeal,
it
seems
convenient
and
logical
to
dispose
at
first
of
an
objection
raised
by
the
respondent
against
the
right
of
the
taxpayer
to
appeal
from
the
decision
of
the
Minister
in
a
ease
of
this
nature.
Counsel
for
the
respondent
submitted
that,
in
view
of
subsec.
4
of
sec.
22,
no
appeal
lies,
the
decision
of
the
Minister
being
final
and
conclusive.
I
must
say
that,
after
considering
the
matter
carefully,
I
cannot
agree
with
this
contention.
I
do
not
think
that
subsec.
4
has
the
meaning
and
import
which
the
respondent
wishes
to
ascribe
to
it.
In
my
opinion,
subsec.
4
renders
the
decision
of
the
Minister
final
and
conclusive
solely
in
matters
involving
questions
of
fact;
it
does
not
vest
the
Minister
with
the
power
to
adjudicate
finally
on
questions
of
law,
to
the
exclusion
of
the
courts.
In
support
of
this
proposition,
the
following
decisions,
although
not
in
pari
materia,
may
be
profitably
consulted:
The
King
v.
Board
of
Education
[1910]
2
K.B.,
165
at
173
(in
fine)
and
178;
Board
of
Education
v.
Rice
[1911]
A.C,
179,
at
182;
In
re
Weir
Hospital
(1910)
L.J.
Ch.
723
at
732;
Wilford
v.
Yorkshire
(West
Riding)
County
Council
(1908)
77
L.J.K.B.,
436
at
445;
In
re
Hardy’s
Crown
Brewery
Limited
(1910)
79
L.J.K.B.,
806
at
809;
In
re
Campden
Charities
(1881)
90
L.J.
Ch.
646;
Dyson
v.
Attorney-General
(1911)
80
L.J.K.B.
531.
Having
reached
the
conclusion
that,
notwithstanding
subsec.
4
of
sec.
22,
the
Court
has
jurisdiction
to
take
cognizance
of
the
case
at
Bar,
it
is
unnecessary
for
me
to
deal
with
the
appellant’s
argument
that
the
respondent,
in
submitting
himself
to
the
jurisdiction
of
the
Court,
waived
the
right
to.
challenge
it.
The
taxable
income
of
Atlas
Coal
Company
Limited
for
the
year
1930
amounted
to
$137,906.95.
The
Minister
of
National
Revenue
assessed
all
of
the
said
income
against
four
of
the
shareholders
in
the
proportion
respectively
set
opposite
their
names,
to
wit
:—
The
appellant
contends
that
the
assessment
made
by
the
Minister
is
erroneous
and
that
the
shares
of
Atlas
Coal
Com-
pany
Limited
being
held
in
sixths
he
should
have
been
assessed
only
for
one-sixth.
Dr.
O.
H.
Patrick
(the
appellant)
|
31.22%
|
Lulu
F.
Patrick
(the
appellant’s
wife)
-
|
2.12%
|
Lorraine
Patrick
(the
appellant’s
son)
|
33.33%
|
Frances
L.
Eaton
(the
appellant’s
daughter)
|
33.33%
|
It
has
been
argued
on
behalf
of
the
appellant
that
sec.
22
is
complete
in
itself
and
that
accordingly
it
must
be
interpreted
independently
of
sees.
30
and
31
of
the
Act
dealing
with
partnerships.
I
feel
inclined
to
agree
with
this
view.
Subsec.
1
of
sec.
22,
after
stating,
as
we
have
seen,
that
the
shareholders
of
a
family
corporation—a
definition
of
a
family
corporation
is
contained
in
subsec.
(d)
of
sec.
2—may
elect
that
the
income
of
the
corporation
be
dealt
with
as
if
the
corporation
were
a
partnership,
goes
on
to
say
that
each
shareholder
shall
be
deemed
to
be
a
partner
and
that
he
shall
be
taxable
in
respect
of
the
corporation
according
to
his
interest
as
a
shareholder.
Nothing
is
said
about
secs.
30
and
31.
If
the
legislators
had
wished
to
have
the
first
subsee.
of
sec.
22
read
in
conjunction
with
secs.
30
and
351,
it
seems
to
me
that
they
would
have
said
so:
it
would
have
been
a
simple
thing
indeed
to
add
at
the
end
of
subsec.
1
the
words
"‘subject
however
to
the
provisions
of
sees.
30
and
31’’
or
others
words
to
the
same
effect.
The
absence
of
reference
to
secs.
30
and
31
indicates,
to
my
mind,
the
intention
of
the
legislators
to
have
the
status
of
family
corporations
with
regard
to
income
tax
governed
exclusively
by
the
stipulations
of
see.
22.
If
there
were
any
doubt
as
to
the
meaning
of
subsec.
1
of
see.
22,
this
doubt
would
disappear
upon
reading
subsec.
1
of
sec.
31,
the
only
one
which
might
be
liable
to
have
any
bearing
on
the
question
at
issue
and
the
one
under
which
the
Minister
is
in
fact
endeavouring
to
bring
the
case
of
the
appellant.
Sec.
30,
in
my
opinion,
has
no
relevancy
in
the
case
now
pending
and
there
is
accordingly
no
need
to
discuss
it.
Subsee.
1
of
sec.
31
is
in
the
following
words
:—
"Where
a
husband
and
wife
are
partners
in
any
business
the
total
income
from
the
business
may
in
the
discretion
of
the
Minister
be
treated
as
income
of
the
husband
or
the
wife
and
taxed
accordingly.”
‘The
words
‘‘total
income
from
the
business’?
seem
to
me
to
imply
that
subsee.
1
of
sec.
31
applies
only
to
cases
where
the
partnership
is
composed
solely
of
the
husband
and
wife,
exclusive
of
any
other
member.
I
may
repeat
here
what
I
have
said
in
connection
with
the
interpretation
of
sec.
22,
viz.,
that
it
would
have
been
a
simple
matter
for
the
legislators
to
draft
subsec.
1
differently
had
they
intended
to
have
it
apply
to
all
partnerships
having
among
their
members
a
husband
and
his
wife.
Surely
if
the
legislators
had
in
view
partnerships
in
which
there
were
members
other
than
a
husband
and
his
wife,
they
would
not
have
used
the
expression
‘‘the
total
income
from
the
business,’’
but
would
rather
have
said
‘‘the
total
income
(or
‘‘the
combined
income’’)
of
the
husband
and
of
the
wife
from
the
business,’’
or
other
words
having
a
similar
meaning.
As
it
is
drafted,
I
am
unable
to
give
to
subsec.
1
the
meaning
which
the
respondent
is
seeking
to
attribute
to
it.
The
motive
of
the
legislators
in
being
more
drastic
toward
a
partnership
consisting
solely
of
a
man
and
his
wife
than
toward
a
partnership
comprising
one
or
more
members
in
addition
to
a
husband
and
his
wife
is
indifferent,
but,
as
was
suggested
by
counsel
for
the
appellant,
it
may
be
that
the
legis-
lators
thought
that
in
the
first
case
it
would
be
easier
to
defeat
the
aim
and
purpose
of
the
Act
than
in
the
second
one.
Be
that
as
it
may,
the
words
‘‘total
income
from
the
business’’
are
not
apt
to
describe
income
received
by
some
of
the
members
of
a
partnership.
Even
if
I
adopted
the
respondent’s
view
that
sec.
22
must
be
read
with
sec.
31
and
that
the
first
is
not
complete
without
the
second,
I
would
still
think
that
the
assessment
made
by
the
Minister
is
incorrect.
The
Minister
had
two
alternatives:
(1)
of
assessing
the
appellant
proportionately
to
his
interest
in
the
Atlas
Coal
Company
Limited,
namely
one
sixth,
or
(2)
of
assessing
him
or
his
wife
for
one
third,
representing
the
appellant’s
share
and
that
of
his
wife.
The
Minister
did
neither;
he
assessed
the
appellant
for
51.22
per
cent
and
the
appellant’s
wife
for
2.12
per
cent.
The
assessment
is,
in
my
opinion,
illegal.
“A
Taxing
Act
must
be
construed
strictly,’’
as
Lord
Cairns
said
in
Cox
v.
Rabbits
(1877-78)
3
App.
Cas.
473
at
p.
478;
he
added
that
one
“must
find
words
to
impose
the
tax,
and
if
words
are
not
found
which
impose
the
tax,*
it
is
not
to
be
imposed.
’
The
same
learned
judge
expressed
a
similar
opinion
in
the
case
of
Partington
v.
The
Attorney-General
(1869-70)
L.R.
4
H.L.
100
at
p.
122,
where
he
said
:
“If
the
person
sought
to
be
taxed
comes
within
the
letter
of
the
law
he
must
be
taxed,
however
great
the
hardship
may
appear
to
the
judicial
mind
to
be.
On
the
other
hand,
if
the
Crown,
seeking
to
recover
the
tax,
cannot
bring
the
subject
within
the
letter
of
the
law,
the
subject
is
free,
however
apparently
within
the
spirit
of
the
law
the
case
might
otherwise
appear
to
be.
In
other
words,
if
there
be
admissible,
in
any
statute,
what
is
called
an
equitable
construction,
certainly
such
a
construction
is
not
admissible
in
a
taxing
statute,
where
you
can
simply
adhere
to
the
words
of
the
statute.’’
See
also:
Tennant
v.
Smith
(1892)
61
L.J.
P.
11
at
p.
13;
Coltness
Iron
Co.
v.
Black
(1881-82)
45
L.T.,
145
at
p.
148;
Secretary
of
State
in
Council
of
India
v.
Scoble
[1903]
A.C.
299
at
p.
302;
Gould
v.
Gould
245
U.S.
151
at
p.
153.
In
Tennant
v.
Smith,
(loc.
cit.)
Lord
Halsbury
expressed
himself
as
follows,
at
p.
13
:
“In
various
cases
the
principle
of
construction
of
a
Taxing
Act
‘has
been
referred
to
in
various
forms
;
but
I
believe
they
may
be
all
reduced
to
this:
that,
inasmuch
as
you
have
no
right
to
assume
that
there
is
any
governing
object
which
a
Taxing
Act
is
intended
to
attain
other
than
that
which
it
has
expressed
by
making
such
and
such
objects
the
intended
subjects
for
taxation,
you
must
see
whether
a
tax
is
expressly
imposed.
"Cases,
therefore,
under
the
Taxing
Acts
always
resolve
themselves
into
a
question
whether
or
not
the
words
of
the
Act
have
reached
the
alleged
subject
of
taxation.
Lord
Wen-
sleydale
said,
In
re
Micklethwaite
(11
Exch.
Rep.
456;
25
Law.
J.
Rep.
Exch.
19)
;
"
It
is
a
well-established
rule
that
the
subject
is
not
to
be
taxed
without
clear
words
for
that
purpose,
and
also
that
every
Act
of
Parliament
must
be
read
according
to
the
natural
construction
of
its
words’.’’
I
do
not
think
that
sec.
31
is
applicable
to
the
question
at
issue;
the
case
comes
exclusively
within
the
ambit
of
sec.
22;
the
appellant,
in
my
opinion,
can
only
be
assessed
according
to
his
interest
in
the
Atlas
Coal
Company
Limited.
The
appeal
must
therefore
be
maintained,
and
the
assessment
and
the
decision
of
the
Minister
confirming
it
must
be
set
aside.
The
respondent,
at
the
opening
of
the
trial,
moved
to
amend
his
statement
of
defence
by
adding
a
paragraph
thereto,
viz.
paragraph
3(a),
setting
forth
that
the
Court
had
no
jurisdiction
to
hear
the
appeal,
inasmuch
as
the
decision
of
the
Minister
having
been
made
under
subsec.
4
of
sec.
22
of
the
Act,
was
final
and
conclusive.
I
reserved
judgment
on
this
motion.
I
think
the
respondent
was
entitled
to
amend
his
statement
of
defence
so
as
to
plead
explicitly
the
lack
of
jurisdiction.
Although
the
matter
may
not
be
of
great
importance,
seeing
the
conclusion
I
have
reached
concerning
the
merits
of
the
appeal,
I
must
dispose
of
the
motion;
it
is
granted,
with
costs
against
the
respondent.
The
appellant
will
be
entitled
to
his
costs
of
the
appeal
against
the
respondent.
Appeal
allowed.