Durr,
C.J.C.:—The
consideration
of
this
appeal
is
much
simplified
by
the
agreement
between
counsel
for
the
Minister,
who
appeals,
and
counsel
for
the
Molson
estate
that
the
question
of
liability
is
to
be
determined
solely
by
reference
to
the
assess-
ment
for
income
received
in
the
year
1930;
and
the
question
is
whether
or
not,
in
respect
of
that
assessment
for
the
taxation
period
1930,
the
reciprocal
rights
of
the
Crown
and
the
respondent
estate
are
governed
by
section
12
of
chapter
10
of
the
statutes
of
Canada
of
1926
which
came
into
foree
on
the
15th
of
June
of
that
year.
By
section
7
of
the
statute,
subsection
4
of
section
4
of
the
Income
War
Tax
Act
(chapter
28
of
1917)
was
repealed
and
for
that
subsection
a
new
subsection
was
substituted
in
these
terms
:
(4)
For
the
purposes
of
this
Act,—
(a)
Where
a
person
transfers
property
to
his
children
such
person
shall
nevertheless
be
liable
to
be
taxed
on
the
income
derived
from
such
property
or
from
property
substituted
therefor
as
if
such
transfer
had
not
been
made,
unless
the
Minister
is
satisfied
that
such
transfer
was
not
made
for
the
purpose
of
evading
the
taxes
imposed
under
this
Act.
(b)
Where
a
husband
transfers
property
to
his
wife,
or
vice
versa,
the
husband
or
the
wife,
as
the
case
may
be,
shall
nevertheless
be
liable
to
be
taxed
on
the
income
derived
from
such
property
or
from
property
substituted
therefor
as
if
such
transfer
had
not
been
made.”
It
is
not
necessary
to
consider
the
subsection
thus
repealed,
since,
in
the
view
we
take,
it
has
no
relevancy
to
the
question
before
us.
By
section
12
of
this
statute
of
1926
(chapter
10),
it
was
provided
that
section
7,
which
brought
into
force
the
substituted
subsection
(and,
consequently,
the
substituted
subsection
itself),
"‘shall
apply
to
the
year
1925
or
fiscal
periods
ending
therein
and
to
all
subsequent
years
or
fiscal
periods,
and
to
the
income
thereof.”
The
Revised
Statutes
of
Canada
of
1927
came
into
effect
on
the
1st
of
February,
1928,
in
virtue
of
a
proclamation
of
the
Governor
in
Council
made
pursuant
to
section
4
of
14
&
15
Geo.
V,
chapter
65,
entitled
‘‘An
Act
respecting
the
Revised
Statutes
of
Canada,
‘
‘
which
was
assented
to
on
the
19th
of
July,
1924.
In
the
Revised
Statutes
of
1927
the
Income
War
Tax
Act
is
chapter
97,
and
subsection
4
of
section
4,
chapter
28,
Statutes
of
1917,
as
introduced
(by
way
of
amendment)
into
that
Act
by
section
7
of
the
statute
of
1926,
appears
in
chapter
97
as
section
32,
and
under
the
caption
‘‘Transfers
to
evade
taxation.”
Section
12,
however,
of
this
statute
of
1926,
which
made
subsection
4
applicable
to
the
year
1925
and
subsequent
years
and
to
the
income
thereof,
stood
repealed
(on
the
date
on
which
the
Revised
Statutes
came
into
effect,
February
1,
1928)
by
force
of
section
5
of
the
statute
(of
1924),
already
mentioned,
(the
Act
respecting
the
Revised
Statutes),
and
the
proclamation
thereunder
;
and
that
section
(s.
12)
does
not
reappear
in
chapter
97
or
elsewhere
in
the
Revised
Statutes.
The
question
before
us
concerns
the
effect
of
this
repeal
in
the
circumstances
we
now
proceed
to
state.
On
the
28th
of
March,
1913,
Kenneth
Molson,
now
deceased,
entered
into
a
contract
of
marriage
with
his
future
wife,
Miss
Isabel
Graves
Meredith.
That
marriage
was
duly
solemnized
two
months
later.
By
clause
7
of
the
contract,
he
donated
the
sum
of
$20,000
to
his
future
wife
to
be
paid
in
one
sum
or
by
instalments
or
by
investments
in
the
name
of
his
said
future
wife
as
he
might
see
fit.
On
the
23rd
of
March,
1925,
Kenneth
Molson,
by
deed
executed
before
a
notary,
transferred
to
his
wife
certain
securities
therein
specified
in
fulfilment
of
this
obligation
under
his
marriage
contract;
and
these
securities
were
accepted
by
his
wife
in
full
payment
and
satisfaction
of
the
obligation.
It
is
not
disputed
that
after
this
transfer
all
dividends
and
revenues
accruing
from
the
securities
were
received
by
Mrs.
Molson
and
used
by
her
as
her
absolute
property
and
that
her
husband
had
no
interest
in
them
or
in
the
corpus.
Mr.
Molson
died
on
the
9th
of
April,
1932
;
and
by
notice
of
assessment
dated
April
11th,
1933,
the
Molson
estate
was
called
upon
to
pay
an
additional
income
tax
for
the
period
of
1930,
amounting
to
$302,
on
the
ground
that
the
income
received
by
Mrs.
Molson
from
the
securities
mentioned
should
have
been
included
in
her
husband’s
income
for
purposes
of
taxation
in
virtue
of
subsection
2
of
section
32
of
chapter
97
of
the
Revised
Statutes
of
Canada,
1927,
which,
as
explained
above,
was
originally
enacted
(by
way
of
amendment)
as
subsection
4
of
section
4
of
the
Income
War
Tax
Act
on
the
15th
of
June,
1926.
Since
by
the
law
of
the
Province
of
Quebec
the
transfer
of
1925
would
(in
the
absence
of
the
antecedent
marriage
contract
of
1913)
have
been
incompetent
as
between
spouses,
it
is
contended
on
behalf
of
the
respondent
estate
that
this
transfer
is
entirely
outside
the
purview
of
section
32
of
the
Income
War
Tax
Act.
It
is
also
contended,
and
the
learned
trial
Judge
has
acted
upon
this
contention,
that
the
heading
"Transfers
to
evade
taxation,’’
which
did
not
appear
in
the
statute
of
1926,
but
appeared
for
the
first
time
in
the
Revised
Statutes,
manifests
an
intention
that
section
32
should
have
no
application
except
to
transfers
made
with
such
intent;
and
that
in
this
case
such
intent
is
conclusively
negatived
by
the
fact
that
the
transfer
was
executed
pursuant
to
an
ante-nuptial
contract.
We
do
not
think
it
necessary
to
consider
either
of
these
questions.
We
express
no
opinion
upon
them.
In
our
opinion,
section
32
of
chapter
97
of
the
Revised
Statutes
of
Canada,
1927,
had
not
the
effect
of
making
the
late
Kenneth
Molson
liable
to
be
taxed
on
the
income
derived
in
1930
from
the
property
transferred
by
him
to
his
wife
in
1925,
in
the
circumstances
mentioned,
because
that
section,
as
it
stands
in
the
Revised
Statutes,
can
have
no
application
to
properties
transferred
prior
to
the
original
enactment
of
it
on
the
15th
of
June,
1926.
The
general
effect
of
the
Revision
of
1927
is
accurately
stated
(mutatis
mutandis)
in
the
following
passages
in
the
judgment
of
the
late
Chancellor
Boyd
in
Licence
Commissioners
of
Frontenac
v.
County
of
Frontenac
(1887)
14
O.R.
741,
at
745,
in
which
he
discusses
the
revision
of
1886
:
"
4
The
purpose
of
the
revision
was
to
revise,
classify,
and
consolidate
the
public
general
statutes
of
the
Dominion,
and
the
repeal
of
the
old
statutes
incorporated
in
the
revision
was
rather
for
convenience
of
citation
and
reference
by
giving
a
new
starting
point
than
with
a
view
of
abrogating
the
former
law.
That
is
manifest
from
a
study
of
the
scope
of
49
Vic.
ch.
4(D),
respecting
the
Revised
Statutes
of
Canada.
See.
5,
subsec.
2,
provides
for
the
repeal
of
the
Acts
mentioned
in
Schedule
A
above
mentioned.
But
this
repeal
is
not
to
affect
any
matter
pending
at
the
time
of
repeal
(sec.
7).
By
sec.
8
the
Revised
Statutes
are
not
to
be
held
to
operate
as
new
laws,
but
shall
be
construed
and
have
effect
as
a
consolidation
and
as
declaratory
of
the
law
in
the
Acts
repealed
for
which
the
Revised
Statutes
are
substituted;
but
if
on
any
point
the
provisions
of
the
revision
are
not
in
effect
the
same
as
the
earlier
Acts,
then
the
revision
shall
prevail
as
to
all
matters
subsequent
to
their
taking
effect,
and
as
to
all
prior
matters
the
provisions
of
the
repealed
Acts
remain
in
force.
See
also
Interpretation
Act,
R.S.C.,
ch.
1,
see.
7(51).
The
effect
of
the
revision,
though
in
form
repealing
the
Acts
consolidated,
is
really
to
preserve
them
in
unbroken
continuity.”
As
regards
the
enactments
reproduced
in
the
Revised
Statutes,
there
is
unbroken
continuity.
As
regards
enactments
repealed
by
virtue
of
section
5
of
the
Act
respecting
the
Revised
Statutes
(cap.
65
of
1924)
and
not
re-enacted
in
the
Revised
Statutes,
the
effect
of
the
revision
is
to
be
ascertained
from
sections
7
and
8
of
this
statute
of
1924
and
from
section
19
of
the
Interpretation
Act.
In
the
case
before
us,
subsection
4,
as
introduced
by
the
statute
of
1926,
though
repealed,
was
uno
flatu
re-enacted
as
section
32
of
chapter
97
of
the
Revised
Statutes
of
1927
and
is,
therefore,
preserved
in
unbroken
continuity;
while
section
12
of
the
statute
of
1926
is
repealed
and
disappears.
Subsection
4
(which
has
become
section
32
of
chapter
97
in
the
Revised
Statutes)
applies
only
to
the
income
of
property
transferred
after
the
day
on
which
it
was
originally
enacted,
June
15th,
1926.
The
result
would
appear
to
be
the
same,
for
our
present
purpose,
as
if
the
revision
had
not
taken
place
(that
is
to
say,
as
if
subsection
4
had
not
been
repealed
and
re-enacted
but
had
remained
in
force
continuously
in
form
as
well
as
in
substance),
while
section
12
had
been
repealed
on
the
1st
of
February,
1928.
It
is,
as
Boyd
C.
says,
‘‘the
Acts
consolidated’’
which
‘‘are
preserved
in
unbroken
continuity.’’
As
to
enactments
repealed
and
not
re-enacted
in
the
Revised
Statutes,
they
disappear
and
cease
to
have
effect
except
as
regards
matters
in
respect
of
which
their
effect
is
preserved
by
the
statutes
mentioned
:
sections
7
and
8
of
the
statute
of
1924
and
section
19
of
the
Interpretation
Act.
It
is
argued
that,
by
force
of
the
second
subsection
of
section
8,
section
12
of
the
Statutes
of
1926
continues
to
govern
the
rights
of
the
Crown
and
the
liability
of
the
taxpayer
because,
by
that
subsection,
“as
respects
all
transactions,
matters
and
things
anterior
to
the
said
time
[the
1st
of
February,
1928],
the
provisions
of
the
said
repealed
Acts
and
parts
of
Acts
shall
prevail.”
The
deed
of
the
year
1925
is
said
to
be
a
‘‘transaction,
matter
or
thing’’
within
the
meaning
of
this
provision.
It
is
further
argued
that,
by
force
of
section
19(1)
(c),
the
liability
of
the
taxpayer
is
preserved.
That
section
declares:
“19.
Where
any
Act
or
enactment
is
repealed,
or
where
any
regulation
is
revoked,
then,
unless
the
contrary
intention
appears,
such
repeal
or
revocation
shall
not,
save
as
in
this
section
otherwise
provided,
***
(c)
affect
any
right,
privilege,
obligation
or
liability
acquired,
accrued,
accruing
or
incurred
under
the
Act,
enactment
or
regulation
so
repealed
or
revoked.”
The
liability
in
question
in
these
proceedings
is
a
liability
alleged
to
have
arisen
in
respect
of
income
derived
in
the
taxing
period
1930,
that
is
to
say,
in
the
year
ending
December
31st,
1930,
from
the
securities
transferred
to
Mrs.
Molson
by
the
deed
of
1925.
The
first
point
concerns
the
contention
of
the
Crown
that
this
was
a
liability
in
esse
on
the
1st
of
February,
1928,
when
the
repeal
of
section
12
of
the
Act
of
1926
took
effect.
We
are
unable
to
perceive
the
existence
of
any
liability
in
respect
of
the
income
in
question
on
that
date
except
in
the
sense
that,
if
the
law
remained
unrepealed
and
the
conditions
of
statutory
liability
came
into
being,
the
taxpayer
could
be
called
on
to
pay.
We
do
not
think
that
"‘liability’’
in
this
sense
is
what
is
meant.
The
observations
of
Atkin
L.J.
in
Hamilton
Gell
v.
White
[1922]
2
K.B.
422
at
431,
seem
to
be
apposite
:
"‘It
is
obvious
that
that
provision
was
not
intended
to
pre-
the
abstract
rights
conferred
by
the
repealed
Act,
*
*
*
It
only
applies
to
the
specific
rights
given
to
an
individual
upon
the
happening
of
one
or
other
of
the
events
specified
in
the
statute.
Here
the
necessary
event
has
happened,
because
the
landlord
has,
in
view
of
a
sale
of
the
property,
given
the
tenant
notice
to
quit.
Under
those
circumstances
the
tenant
has
“acquired
a
right,’’
which
would
“accrue”
when
he
has
quitted
his
holding,
to
receive
compensation.”
So
also
“liability”
in
section
19
of
the
Interpretation
Act
is
not
the
‘‘abstract’’
liability
to
taxation
under
the
statute
of
all
persons
to
whose
circumstances
the
terms
and
conditions
of
the
statute
apply.
It
would
be
a
distortion
of
language
to
say
that
on
the
1st
of
February,
1928,
a
liability
had
been
“incurred”
by
Mr.
Molson
to
be
taxed
under
the
statute
of
1926
in
respect
of
income
not
derived
from
the
transferred
property
until
1930.
The
like
considerations
apply
to
sections
7
and
8
of
the
Statute
of
1924
respecting
the
Revised
Statutes.
The
only
‘‘matter
or
thing’’
within
section
7(f),
and
the
only
“transactions,
matters
and
things’’
within
section
8,
that
are
pertinent
at
the
moment
are
those
which
are
relied
upon
as
constituting
the
liability
now
in
question,
the
liability
to
be
taxed
in
respect
of
the
income
derived
during
the
taxation
period
1930
from
the
property
transferred
in
1925.
It
is
perfectly
true
that
the
transfer
of
1925
was
a
condition
sine
qua
non
of
the
liability
of
Kenneth
Molson
in
respect
of
any
taxing
period
anterior
to
the
1st
of
February,
1928;
and
it
is
also
true
that,
as
regards
income
derived
from
that
property
prior
to
that
date,
he
had
incurred
a
liability
to
taxation,
and
the
Crown
had
acquired
a
correlative
right
(s.
10,
cap.
28,
Income
War
Tax
Act,
1917;
8.
55,
cap.
97,
R.S.C.,
1927);
but,
no
such
liability
was
‘‘incurred’’
(within
the
meaning
of
s.
7(a))
and
no
such
correlative
right
was
“acquired”
in
respect
of
the
income
of
1930
before
that
year.
Nor
can
it
be
said
that
any
right
to
receive
taxes
in
respect
of
the
income
of
that
year
was
on
the
1st
of
February,
1928,
“accruing”
to
the
Crown.
It
is
not
suggested
that
even.
the
income
of
that
year,
which
is
the
basis
of
the
assessment,
was
“accruing”
on
that
date.
Once
income
was
received,
the
liability
to
taxation
was
“incurred”
and
the
right
of
the
Crown
was
“acquired”;
but
the
right
would
not
strictly
accrue
before,
at
least,
the
day
fixed
by
the
statute
for
the
taxpayer’s
return
although,
in
the
meantime,
it
might
very
well
be
said
to
be
“accruing.”
But
that
could
not
be
affirmed
of
the
right
before
the
income
was
received.
The
appeal
will
be
dismissed
with
costs.
CANNON
J.:—The
Minister
of
National
Revenue
appeals
from
the
judgment
of
the
Honourable
Mr.
Justice
Angers,
rendered
on
the
9th
January,
1937,
allowing
the
respondents’
appeal
from
a
decision
of
the
appellant
affirming
an
assessment
for
additional
income
taxes.
The
additional
taxes
assessed
against
the
respondents’
estate
are
in
respect
of
income
received
between
the
23rd
March,
1925,
and
the
31st
December.
1931,
by
Mrs.
Isabel
Graves
Molson
on
some
stocks
which
she
received
on
or
before
the
23rd
day
of
March,
1925,
and
accepted
in
payment
or
execution
of
a
donation
inter
vivos
of
$20,000
which
her
deceased
husband.
made
to
her,
as
his
future
wife,
by
their
ante-nuptial
contract
of
marriage
before
Mtre.
Charles
Delagrave,
Notary,
at
the
City
of
Quebec
on
the
28th
day
of
March,
1913.
The
trial
Judge
maintained
the
appeal
and
found:
1.
That
the
gift
of
$20,000
made
by
the
deceased
to
his
future
wife
in
the
said
ante-nuptial
contract
of
marriage
was
a
valid
gift
under
the
law
of
Quebec
and
was
irrevocable;
2.
It
was
made
before
the
Income
War
Tax
Act
came
into
force
;
3.
The
delivery
of
these
stocks
to
Mrs.
Molson
by
the
deceased
on
or
before
the
23rd
day
of
March,
1925,
was
in
payment
and
in
satisfaction
of
the
obligation
he
had
undertaken
in
his
antenuptial
contract
of
marriage,
and
the
acceptance
of
the
said
stocks
by
Mrs.
Molson
in
satisfaction
of
the
said
gift
was
not
a
“transfer
of
property”
to
evade
taxation
within
the
meaning
of
the
Income
War
Tax
Act
of
1917
and
amendments
thereto.
The
clause
of
the
ante-nuptial
contract,
which
was
duly
registered
in
the
registry
office
of
Montreal
West
on
the
28th
day
of
May,
1913,
reads
as
follows
:
"
"
Seventh
In
view
of
there
being
no
Community
and
no
Dower
and
of
the
love
and
affection
of
said
future
husband
for
his
said
future
wife,
he
the
said
future
husband,
doth
by
these
presents
give
and
grant
by
way
of
donation
inter
vivos
and
irrevocably
unto
his
said
future
wife,
thereof
accepting
:
1.
The
sum
of
Twenty
Thousand
Dollars,
which
the
sard
future
husband
promises
and
obliges
himself
to
pay
to
the
said
future
wife
at
any
time
he
may
elect
after
the
solemnization
of
said
intended
marriage,
either
in
one
sum
or
by
instalments
or
by
investments
or
investment
in
the
name
of
the
said
future
wife,
and
in
such
securities
as
he
may
see
fit.
Any
investment
so
made
shall
operate
as
payment
however,
only
in
so
far
as
the
same
ma
be
accepted
by
the
future
wife,
and
any
payment
made
by
the
said
future
husband
to
the
said
future
wife
on
account
of
the
said
sum
of
Twenty
Thousand
Dollars,
or
any
investment
made
by
the
said
future
husband
in
the
name
of
tke
said
future
wife
on
account
of
the
said
sum
of
Twenty
Thousand
Dollars,
shall
be
evidenced
by
a
Declaration
to
that
effect
made
and
signed
by
the
said
future
husband
and
the
said
future
wife
before
a
Notary
Public
and
recorded
in
the
office
of
such
Notary.
Should
the
death
of
the
future
husband
occur
before
the
said
sum
has
been
fully
paid,
the
unpaid
balance
shall
become
due
and
exigible
at
his
death,
should
the
said
future
wife
be
then
living,
and
it
is
also
further
agreed
between
the
parties
that
should
the
said
future
husband
during
the
existence
of
said
intended
marriage
become
Insolvent,
without
having
first
paid
the
sum
of
Twenty
Thousand
Dollars,
in
its
entirety,
then
in
such
case
the
said
future
wife
shall
have
the
right
to
claim
and
demand
the
same
or
any
part
thereof
then
upaid.
To
have
and
to
hold
the
said
sum
of
Twenty
Thousand
Dollars
unto
the
said
future
wife
as
her
absolute
property,
but
it
is
specially
stipulated
and
agreed
that
in
the
event
of
her
predeceasing
her
said
future
husband
without
having
received
payment
in
full
of
the
said
sum,
the
balance
of
the
said
sum
of
Twenty
Thousand
Dollars
which
shal
not
have
been
paid
by
the
said
future
husband
to
the
said
future
wife
during
her
lifetime
shall
belong
to
the
child
or
children
issue
of
the
said
intended
marriage,
and
in
default
of
such
child
or
children
the
said
unpaid
balance
of
the
said
sum
of
Twenty
Thousand
shall
revert
to
the
said
future
husband
or
his
heirs.’’
The
Income
War
Tax
Act
was
first
enacted
by
chapter
28
of
the
Statutes
of
1917.
Subsection
4
of
section
4
of
said
chapter
reads
as
follows
:
"‘Transfer
of
|
(4)
A
person
who,
after
the
first
day
of
|
property
to
|
August,
1917,
has
reduced
his
income
by
the
|
evade
taxa-
|
transfer
or
assignment
of
any
real
or
personal,
|
tion.
|
movable
or
immovable
property,
to
such
per-
|
|
son
‘s
wife
or
husband,
as
the
case
may
be,
or
to
|
any
member
of
the
family
of
such
person,
shall,
nevertheless,
be
liable
to
be
taxed
as
if
such
transfer
or
assignment
had
not
been
made,
unless
the
Minister
is
satisfied
that
such
transfer
or
assignment
was
not
made
for
the
purpose
of
evading
the
taxes
imposed
under
this
Act
or
any
part
thereof/
‘
While
this
provision
was
in
force,
and
pursuant
to
the
provisions
of
the
marriage
contract,
Kenneth
Molson
appeared
before
Marchessault,
Notary
Public,
on
the
23rd
day
of
March,
1925,
and
declared
that,
to
fulfil
the
conditions
of
the
said
contract
in
so
far
as
the
sum
of
$20,000
was
concerned,
he
transferred
to
his
wife,
duly
accepting,
certain
shares
of
capital
stock
of
different
corporations
therein
enumerated
in
full
payment
and
satisfaction
of
his
pre-nuptial
donation.
From
the
date
of
the
execution
of
the
deed
of
the
23rd
of
March,
1925,
all
dividends
or
revenues
accruing
from
these
securities
were
received
by
the
wife
and
used
as
her
absolute
property,
Molson
having
no
interest
whatever
in
said
dividends
or
revenues.
The
original
subsection
4
of
section
4
of
c.
28
of
the
statutes
of
1917,
concerning
transfer
of
propery
to
evade
taxation,
was
repealed
on
the
15th
June,
1926,
by
sec.
7
of
ce.
10
of
the
statutes
of
that
year,
and
the
following
subsection
was
substituted
therefor
:
"‘Transfer
of
|
(4)
For
the
purposes
of
this
Act,—
|
property.
|
(a)
Where
a
person
transfers
property
to
his
|
|
children
such
person
shall
nevertheless
be
liable
|
to
be
taxed
on
the
income
derived
from
such
property
or
from
property
substituted
therefore
as
if
such
transfer
had
not
been
made,
unless
the
Minister
is
satisfied
that
such
transfer
was
not
made
for
the
purpose
of
evading
the
taxes
imposed
under
this
Act.
(b)
Where
a
husband
transfers
property
to
his
wife,
or
vice
versa,
the
husband
or
the
wife,
as
the
case
may
be,
shall
nevertheless
be
liable
to
be
taxed
on
the
income
derived
from
such
property
or
from
property
substituted
therefor
as
if
such
transfer
had
not
been
made.”
By
section
12
of
said
chapter
10
of
1926,
it
was
provided
that
section
7
of
the
said
Act
:—
"‘shall
apply
to
the
year
1925
or
fiscal
periods
ending
therein
and
to
all
subsequent
years
or
fiscal
periods,
and
to
the
income
thereof.
‘
‘
When
the
Revised
Statutes
of
Canada
of
1927
were
brought
into
force
on
the
1st
February,
1928,
the
above
enactments
were
consolidated
and
the
statutes
repealed
and
were
replaced
by
the
following
section
32,
where
they
appear
as
follows
:—
|
"‘Transfers
to
Evade
‘Taxation.
|
Transfer
of
|
32.
Where
a
person
transfers
property
to
his
|
property.
|
children
such
person
shall
nevertheless
be
liable
|
|
to
be
taxed
on
the
income
derived
from
such
|
property
or
from
property
substituted
therefor
as
if
such
transfer
had
not
been
made,
unless
the
Minister
is
satisfied
that
such
transfer
was
not
made
for
the
purpose
of
evading
the
taxes
imposed
under
this
Act.
2.
Where
a
husband
transfers
property
to
his
wife,
or
vice
versa,
the
husband
or
the
wife,
as
the
case
may
be,
shall
nevertheless
be
liable
to
be
taxed
on
the
income
derived
from
such
property
or
from
property
substituted
therefore
as
if
such
transfer
had
not
been
made.’’
Prior
to
the
institution
of
the
appeal,
it
was
agreed
between
the
parties
that
the
decision
of
the
Exchequer
Court
with
reference
to
the
notice
of
assessment
no.
88893
for
the
taxation
period
for
1930
shall
apply
to
and
include
six
similar
notices
of
assessment,
all
bearing
date
the
11th
April,
1933,
and
covering
the
other
taxation
periods
included
from
the
23rd
March,
1925,
to
the
31st
December,
1951.
For
that
period
of
1930,
we
must
apply
to
the
above
facts
para.
2
of
sec.
32,
R.S.C.,
1927,
c.
97,
which
says:
"‘Where
a
husband
transfers
property
to
his
wife,
or
vice
versa,
the
husband
or
the
wife,
as
the
case
may
be,
shall
nevertheless
be
liable
to
be
taxed
on
the
income
derived
from
such
property
or
from
property
substituted
therefor
as
if
such
transfer
had
not
been
made.’’
I
take
it
that
the
""transfer
of
property”
means
and
contemplates
a
valid
and
real
transfer.
This
section,
when
property
is
transferred
gratuitously
between
husband
and
wife
or
vice
versa,
cannot
apply
to
consorts
governed
by
the
Quebec
law,
because,
under
section
1265
of
the
Civil
Code,
"‘After
marriage,
the
marriage
covenants
contained
in
the
contract
cannot
be
altered
(even
by
the
donation
of
usufruct,
which
is
abolished),
nor
can
the
consorts
in
any
other
manner
confer
benefits
inter
vivos
upon
each
other,
except
in
conform-
ity
with
the
provisions
of
the
law,
under
which
a
husband
may,
subject
to
certain
conditions
and
restrictions,
insure
his
life
for
his
wife
and
children.”
In
order
to
favour
and
encourage
marriages,
article
1257
of
the
Code
says:
‘*
All
kinds
of
agreements
may
be
lawfully
made
in
contracts
of
marriage,
even
those
which,
in
any
other
act
inter
vivos,
would
be
void;
such
as
the
renunciation
of
successions
which
have
not
yet
devolved,
the
gift
of
future
property,
the
conventional
appointment
of
an
heir,
and
other
dispositions
in
contemplation
of
death.”
Article
778
reads
as
follows:
"Present
property
only
can
be
given
by
acts
inter
vivos.
All
gifts
of
future
property
by
such
acts
are
void,
as
made
in
contemplation
of
death.
Gifts
comprising
both
present
and
future
property
are
void
as
to
the
latter,
but
the
cumulation
does
not
render
void
the
gift
of
the
present
property.
The
prohibition
contained
in
this
article
does
not
extend
to
gifts
made
in
a
contract
of
marriage.”
Both
litigants
have
considered
the
transfer
as
valid
and
binding
on
the
parties.
It
appears
from
the
above
quotations
that,
in
order
to
be
valid
and
binding,
the
transfer
made
in
1925
must
necessarily
be
related
and
linked
to
the
ante-nuptial
contract
of
March,
1913,
whereby
was
created
the
obligation
and
indebtedness
of
the
future
husband
to
his
future
wife,
and
the
deed
of
conveyance
of
the
28th
March,
1925,
which
evidences
the
payments,
satisfaction
and
discharge
of
this
pre-nuptial
obligation
cannot
be
considered
apart
from
the
other,
as
they
must,
to
be
valid
and
legal
under
the
law
of
Quebec,
form
but
one
complete
non-severable
transaction.
The
legislation
which
is
now
sought
to
be
applied
originated
in
1917,
years
after
the
ante-nuptial
contract;
and
subsection
4
of
section
4
of
7
&
8
Geu.
V,
c.
28,
applied
only
to
a
person
who,
"‘after
the
first
day
of
August,
1917,
has
reduced
his
income’’
by
the
transfer
of
any
movable
or
immovable
property
to
such
person’s
wife
or
husband,
as
the
case
may
be,
if
the
Minister
was
satisfied
that
such
transfer
or
assignment
was
made
for
the
purpose
of
evading
the
taxes
imposed
under
the
Act.
In
order
to
transfer
validly
the
securities
to
his
wife,
Molson
had
to
act
by
force
and
under
the
exceptional
authority
of
the
deed
of
1913,
which
clearly
is
not
governed
by
the
provisions
of
the
Act
of
1917
and
amendments
thereto.
I
would,
therefore,
dismiss
the
appeal
with
costs.
KERWIN
J.:—On
March
28th,
1913,
Kenneth
Molson
and
his
future
wife,
Isabel
Graves
Meredith,
entered
into
an
antenuptial
contract
by
which
Mr.
Molson
"‘doth
by
these
presents
give
and
grant
by
way
of
donation
inter
vivos
and
irrevocably
unto
his
said
future
wife,
thereof
accepting,
‘
‘
the
sum
of
twenty
thousand
dollars,
which
the
future
husband
promised
and
obliged
himself
to
pay
to
the
future
wife
at
any
time
he
might
elect
after
the
solemnization
of
the
intended
marriage,
either
in
one
sum
or
by
instalments,
or
by
investments
or
investment
in
the
name
of
the
future
wife,
and
in
such
securities
as
he
might
see
fit.
Any
investment
was
to
operate
as
payment
only
in
so
far
as
the
same
might
be
accepted
by
his
future
wife.
Some
time
after
the
marriage
of
these
parties,
viz.,
on
March
23rd,
1925,
certain
securities
of
a
total
market
value
of
approximately
twenty
thousand
dollars
were
transferred
by
deed
of
conveyance
by
Mr.
Molson
to
his
wife.
He
had
previously
included
the
income
on
these
investments
in
his
income
tax
returns
but
after
the
transfer
made
no
further
reference
to
it.
Mr.
Molson
died
on
April
9th,
1932,
and
in
April,
1933,
assessments
for
income
were
made
against
the
executors
of
his
estate,
including
therein
as
income
of
the
deceased
the
income
from
the
securities
transferred
by
him
to
his
wife
by
the
conveyance
of
March
23,
1925.
One
assessment
notice
stated
that,
under
the
provisions
of
the
Income
War
Tax
Act
and
amendments,
notice
was
given
that
for
the
1930
taxation
period
the
amount
of
tax
assessed
and
levied
upon
Mr.
Molson’s
income
for
that
period
was
as
indicated.
There
was
a
similar
notice
with
reference
to
each
of
the
other
taxation
periods
of
1925
to
1931
inclusive.
Believing
that
the
estate
was
not
subject
to
taxation
in
respect
of
the
income
from
the
securities,
the
executors
appealed
to
the
Minister
of
National
Revenue,
and,
upon
the
latter
affirming
the
assessments,
required
their
appeal
to
be
set
down
for
trial
by
the
Exchequer
Court.
It
is
alleged
in
the
statement
of
claim,
which
deals
only
with
the
assessment
for
the
year
1930,
and
admitted
in
the
statement
of
defence,
that
the
parties
had
agreed
that
the
decision
of
the
court
with
reference
to
that
assessment
would
apply
to
the
assessments
for
the
other
years.
The
appeal
was
allowed,
the
assessments
set
aside,
and
the
Minister
now
appeals
to
this
court.
In
accordance
with
the
agreement
inter
partes,
we
confine
our
consideration
of
respondents’
liability
to
the
year
19380.
That
question
depends
upon
the
construction
of
several
statutory
enactments.
At
the
time
the
notice
of
assessment
was
given,
subsection
2
of
section
32
of
a
consolidating
statute,
the
Income
War
Tax
Act,
R.S.C.,
1927,
chap.
97,
provided
:—
“2.
Where
a
husband
transfers
property
to
his
wife,
or
vice
versa,
the
husband
or
the
wife,
as
the
case
may
be,
shall
nevertheless
be
liable
to
be
taxed
on
the
income
derived
from
such
property
or
from
property
substituted
therefor
as
if
such
transfer
had
not
been
made/’
The
Revised
Statutes
of
1927
were
brought
into
force
on
February
1st,
1928,
by
proclamation
of
the
Governor
General
in
Council,
and
as
the
transfer
of
securities
occurred
before
that
date
it
is
apparent
that
the
income
on
the
securities
would
not
be
taxable
by
this
subsection.
However,
chapter
65
of
the
1924
Statutes
intituled
‘‘An
Act
respecting
the
Revised
Statutes
of
Canada”
(hereinafter
referred
to
as
the
Revised
Statutes
Act),—after
providing
by
section
5
that
from
and
after
the
date
of
the
coming
into
force
of
the
Revised
Statutes
the
enactments
in
schedule
A
to
the
Roll
of
the
Commissioners
appointed
to
revise
the
statutes
should
stand
and
be
repealed
to
the
extent
mentioned
in
the
third
column
of
schedule
A,—further
provided
by
subsection
1
of
section
7
:—
‘“The
repeal
of
the
said
Acts
and
parts
of
Acts
shall
not
defeat,
disturb,
invalidate
nor
affect
any
*
*
*
liability
*
*
*
incurred
before
the
time
of
such
repeal;”
and
by
subsection
2
thereof,
that
every
such
liability
“may
and
shall
remain
and
continue
as
if
no
such
repeal
had
taken
place,
and,
so
far
as
necessary,
may
and
shall
be
continued,
prosecuted,
enforced
and
proceeded
with
under
the
said
Revised
Statutes,
and
other
the
statutes
and
laws
having
force
in
Canada,
and
subject
to
the
provisions
of
the
said
several
statutes
and
laws,
as
if
no
such
repeal
had
taken
place.’’
Fortified
with
this
enactment,
the
appellant
accordingly
rests
his
claim
upon
the
provisions
of
subsection
4
of
section
4
of
the
Income
War
Tax
Act
as
enacted
by
section
7
of
chapter
10
of
the
1926
statutes
and
upon
section
12
of
the
last
mentioned
Act.
So
far
as
material,
subsection
4
of
section
4
as
so
enacted
is
as
follows
:—
“
(4)
For
the
purposes
of
this
Act,—
(b)
Where
a
husband
transfers
property
to
his
wife,
or
vice
versa,
the
husband
or
the
wife,
as
the
case
may
be,
shall
nevertheless
be
liable
to
be
taxed
on
the
income
derived
from
such
property
or
from
property
substituted
therefor
as
if
such
transfer
had
not
been
made.”
Section
12
of
the
1926
Act
provides
that
section
7
thereof
"
"
shall
apply
to
the
year
1925
or
fiscal
periods
ending
therein
and
to
all
subsequent
years
or
fiscal
periods,
and
to
the
income
thereof.
‘
‘
The
contention
of
the
appellant
is
that
these
sections,
7
and
12,
by
their
terms
embrace
the
transfer
of
March
23rd,
1925,
and
that
a
liability
to
taxation
had
been
incurred
within
the
meaning
of
section
7
of
the
Revised
Statutes
Act
which
was
preserved
by
its
provisions.
This
argument
requires
the
consideration
of
other
matters.
Schedule
A
to
the
Commissioners’
Roll
already
mentioned
appears
at
the
end
of
Volume
IV
of
the
Revised
Statutes
of
1927,
and
under
the
heading
"1926''
in
the
three
columns
headed
respectively
'Chap.,”
‘‘Title
of
Act’’
and
"Extent
of
Repeal,’’
appear
the
following:—
"10.
An
Act
to
Amend
The
Income
War
|
The
whole,
except
|
Tax
Act,
1917.
|
s.
2,
the
first
|
|
sentence
of
par.
(f)
|
|
of
s.
3,
the
last
eigh
|
|
teen
words
of
ss.
11
|
|
of
s.
3,
and
s.
6.”
|
By
force
of
subsection
2
of
section
5
of
the
Revised
Statutes
Act,
both
section
7
and
section
12
of
chapter
10
of
the
1926
Act
stand
repealed.
While
not
having
similar
statutory
force,
Appendix
1,
printed
at
the
commencement
of
Volume
V
of
the
Revised
Statutes
of
1927,
contains
a
table
of
Acts
of
R.S.C.,
1906,
and
Acts
passed
thereafter,
showing
how
each
has
been
dealt
with;
and
at
page
50
under
the
year
1926,
with
reference
to
chapter
10
under
the
heading
"Disposal,”
is
the
following
:—
"Consolidated,
except
s.
2,
the
first
sentence
of
para.
(f)
of
s.
3
"10,”
the
last
eighteen
words
of
s.
3,
"11,”
not
repealed
nor
consolidated;
s.
4,
(1A)
(c),”
repealed
1927,
c.
31,
s.
3;
ss.
2
of
s.
4,
spent;
s.
6,
not
repealed
nor
consolidated;
s.
12,
spent.
‘
‘
From
this
it
is
evident
that,
in
the
opinion
of
the
Commissioners,
the
effect
of
section
12
of
the
1926
Act
was
exhausted.
The
first
point
to
be
determined
is
as
to
whether,
at
the
time
of
the
coming
into
force
of
the
Revised
Statutes
of
1927,
any
liability
had
been
incurred
within
the
meaning
of
section
7
of
the
Act
respecting
the
Revised
Statutes.
I
know
of
no
decision
in
our
own
courts
in
which
the
meaning
of
these
words
as
so
used
has
been
determined,
but
in
Heston
and
Isleworth
Urban
District
Council
v.
Grout
[1897]
2
Ch.
306,
the
Court
of
Appeal
in
England
dealt
with
the
effect
of
an
identical
expression
as
used
in
paragraph
(c)
of
subsection
2
of
section
38
of
the
1889
Interpretation
Act.
The
decision
there
was
that
a
certain
statute
of
1892
did
not
affect
the
validity
or
effect
of
a
notice
given
by
the
plaintiff,
while
section
150
of
the
Public
Health
Act,
1875,
was
in
force
in
the
district,
although
after
the
adoption
of
the
1892
Act
no
fresh
notice
could
be
given
under
section
150;
and
that,
if
there
would
otherwise
have
been
any
doubt
on
the
point,
it
was
removed
by
section
38,
subsection
2,
of
the
1889
Interpretation
Act,
which
saves
everything
duly
done,
etc.,
and
every
right,
obligation
or
liability
acquired,
accrued,
or
incurred
under
it
before
the
repeal,
etc.,
and
that
the
subsequent
proceedings
of
the
local
authority
under
the
notice
were
sufficient.
North,
J.,
before
whom
the
matter
came
in
the
first
instance,
states
at
page
309
:—
"‘the
matter
stands
in
this
way—proceedings
had
been
taken
long
before
the
adoption
of
the
Act
under
s.
150
of
the
Act
of
1875;
those
proceedings
were
in
active
progress
at
the
time
when
the
Act
was
adopted.”
In
the
Court
of
Appeal,
Lindley,
L.J.,
with
whom
Lopes,
L.J.,
and
Rigby,
L.J.,
agreed,
was
of
opinion
that
the
plaintiffs
were
entitled
to
succeed
without
the
aid
of
the
Interpretation
Act.
He
thought,
however,
that
the
Act
applied,—referring
as
well
to
clause
(b)
as
to
clause
(c)
of
subsection
2
of
section
38.
As
this
subsection
has
already
been
mentioned
and
will
be
referred
to
again,
it
is,
perhaps,
advisable
to
reproduce
it
so
far
as
material
:—
""
(2)
Where
this
Act
or
any
Act
passed
after
the
commencement
of
this
Act
repeals
any
other
enactment,
then,
unless
the
contrary
intention
appears,
the
repeal
shall
not
*
*
*
(b)
affect
the
previous
operation
of
any
enactment
so
repealed,
or
anything
duly
done
or
suffered
under
any
enactment
so
repealed;
or
(c)
affect
any
right,
privilege,
obligation,
or
liability
acquired,
accrued
or
incurred
under
any
enactment
so
repealed.”
The
position
here
is
quite
different.
At
the
time
of
the
repeal,
by
the
Revised
Statutes
(February
1st,
1928),
of
the
only
enactments
by
virtue
of
which
it
is
suggested
the
respondents
could
possibly
be
assessed
for
the
income
on
the
transferred
securities,
no
liability
to
taxation
had
been
incurred,
since
the
only
assessment
period
in
question
had
not
arrived.
This
proposition
appears
so
obvious
that
no
authority
would,
I
apprehend,
be
required
to
substantiate
it.
Saunders
v.
Newbold
[1905]
1
Ch.
260,
cited
by
Mr.
Plaxton,
does
not
assist
the
appellant.
At
page
277
of
the
report
appears
a
discussion
of
the
meaning
of
the
word
"‘liable’’
in
a
section
of
a
statute
which
provided
:—
‘““Any
court
*
*
*
may,
at
the
instance
of
the
borrower
or
surety
or
other
person
liable,
exercise
the
like
powers
as
may
be
exercised
under
this
section,
where
proceedings
are
taken
for
the
recovery
of
money
lent.
‘
‘
The
legislation
there
referred
to
is
so
different
in
form
and
intent
that
no
analogy
exists
between
it
and
the
section
at
present
under
review.
The
expression
"‘right
accrued”
or
"‘right
acquired”
in
paragraph
(c)
of
subsection
2
of
section
38
of
the
English
Interpretation
Act
has
been
considered
in
several
cases,
some
of
which
are
reviewed
in
Hosie
v.
County
Council
of
Kildare
and
Athy
[1928]
Ir.
R.
47.
Although
decided
on
the
provisions
of
a
special
statute,
Abbott
v.
The
Minister
for
Lands
[1895]
A.C.
425
is
cited
in
this
connection
as
the
leading
authority.
There,
a
statute
repealing
an
earlier
one
contained
the
following
saving
proviso
:—
"‘Provided
always
that
notwithstanding
such
repeal—
(b)
All
rights
accrued
and
obligations
incurred
or
imposed
under
or
by
virtue
of
any
of
the
said
repealed
enactments
shall
subject
to
any
express
provisions
of
this
Act
in
relation
thereto
remain
unaffected
by
such
repeal.’’
It
was
held
that
the
mere
right,
existing
at
the
date
of
the
repealing
statute,
to
take
advantage
of
the
provisions
repealed
was
not
a
"right
accrued.”
In
In
re
The
Tithe
Act,
1891,
Roberts
v.
Potts
[1893]
2
Q.B.
33,
it
is
stated,
at
page
37,
that
the
court
doubted
whether
the
general
provisions
of
the
Interpretation
Act
could,
consistently
with
the
context
of
the
Act
of
1891,
be
read
into
it
so
as
to
override
the
special
provisions
therein
contained,
but
that
even
if
the
Interpretation
Act
was
to
be
taken
as
modifying
the
Act
of
1891,
the
provisions
of
the
former
would
not
seem
to
cover
the
case.
The
judgment
continues
:—
"‘In
the
present
case,
until
the
notices
were
given
or
some
steps
taken
to
enforce
payment
of
the
rates
by
the
occupiers,
there
could
not
be
even
an
inchoate
right
on
the
part
of
the
occupiers
to
deduct
the
rates
they
had
not
paid
from
payments
due
to
the
landlord
or
to
anyone
else.
As
no
notice
was
given
nor
steps
taken
to
demand
the
rates
from
the
occupiers
until
long
after
the
passing
of
the
Act
of
1891,
there
were
no
existing
rights
to
be
preserved
by
the
saving
clause
in
the
Interpretation
Act/’
Starey
v.
Graham
[1899]
1
Q.B.
406,
decided
that
a
patent
agent
who
had
been
bona
fide
in
practice
prior
to
the
passing
of
the
Patents,
Designs,
and
Trade-Marks
Act,
1888,
and
who
was
consequently
entitled
under
section
1,
subsection
3,
of
that
Act
to
be
registered
as
a
patent
agent,
must
pay
before
registration
the
fee
prescribed
by
The
Register
of
Patents
Agents
Rules,
1889
;
and
that
the
right
which
a
person
had
prior
to
the
passing
of
the
1888
Act,
to
practise
as
a
patent
agent
and
describe
himself
as
such,
was
not
a
°
right
acquired’’
which
was
saved
from
the
operation
of
the
Act
by
section
27
thereof
which
provided
:—
"
"
Nothing
in
this
Act
shall
affect
the
validity
of
any
act
done,
right
acquired
or
liability
incurred
before
the
commencement
of
this
Act.
’
’
In
Hamilton
Gell
v.
White
[1922]
2
K.B.
422,
the
landlord
of
an
agricultural
holding,
being
desirous
of
selling,
had
given
his
tenant
notice
to
quit.
By
an
Act
of
1914,
when
a
tenancy
was
determined
by
a
notice
to
quit,
given
in
view
of
a
sale,
the
notice
was
treated
as
an
unreasonable
disturbance
within
an
Act
of
1908,
and
the
tenant
was
entitled
to
compensation
upon
the
terms
and
subject
to
the
conditions
of
that
Act.
One
of
the
conditions
of
the
tenant’s
right
to
compensation
thereunder
was
that
he
should
within
two
months
after
the
receipt
of
the
notice
to
quit
give
the
landlord
notice
of
his
intention
to
claim
compensation
;
and
another
condition
was
that
he
should
make
his
claim
for
compensation
within
three
months
after
quitting
the
holding.
The
tenant
duly
gave
notice
of
his
intention
to
claim
compensation,
but
before
the
tenancy
had
expired
and,
therefore,
before
he
could
satisfy
the
second
condition,
the
relevant
provisions
of
the
1908
Act
were
repealed.
He
subsequently
made
his
claim
within
the
three
months
limited
thereby
and
it
was
held
that
notwithstanding
the
repeal
he
was
entitled
to
claim
compensation
under
section
38
of
the
Interpretation
Act
because,
as
soon
as
the
landlord
had
given
the
tenant
notice,
the
latter
‘
‘
acquired
a
right’’
to
compensation
for
disturbance,
subject
to
his
satisfying
the
conditions
of
the
repealed
provisions.
In
the
Court
of
Appeal,
Lord
Justice
Bankes
distinguished
Abbott
v.
The
Minister
for
Lands
[1895]
A.C.
425,
pointing
out
that
there
the
tenant’s
right-depended
upon
some
act
of
his
own,
while
in
the
Gell
case,
[1922]
2
K.B.
422,
it
depended
upon
the
act
of
the
landlord.
Lord
Justice
Scrutton
stated
that,
as
soon
as
the
tenant
had
given
notice
of
his
intention
to
claim
compensation,
he
was
entitled
to
have
that
claim
investigated
by
an
arbitrator,
although
in
the
course
of
the
arbitration
he
would
have
to
prove
that
that
right
in
fact
existed,
i.e.,
that
the
notice
to
quit
was
given
in
view
of
a
sale.
Lord
Justice
Atkin
stated
that
section
38
of
the
Interpretation
Act
was
not
intended
to
preserve
the
abstract
rights
conferred
by
the
repealed
Act
but
that
it
applied
only
to
the
specific
rights
given
to
an
individual
upon
the
happening
of
one
or
other
of
the
events
specified
in
the
statute;
that
the
necessary
event
had
happened
and,
therefore,
the
tenant
had
acquired
a
right,
which
would
accrue
when
he
had
quitted
his
holding,
to
receive
compensation.
He
referred
to
the
Abbott
ease,
[1895]
A.C.
425,
pointing
out
that
the
Privy
Council
there
determined
that
"‘the
mere
right
(assuming
it
to
be
properly
so
called)
existing
in
the
members
of
the
community
or
any
class
of
them
to
take
advantage
of
an
enactment,
without
any
act
done
by
an
individual
towards
availing
himself
of
that
right,
cannot
properly
be
deemed
to
be
a
‘‘right
accrued’’
within
the
meaning
of
the
enactment.''
None
of
these
decisions
is
precisely
in
point
but
a
review
of
the
principles
enunciated
in
them
rather
strengthens
than
otherwise
the
conclusion
at
which
I
have
arrived
that
no
liability
to
taxation
had
been
incurred.
In
view
of
the
statement
in
section
13
of
the
Revised
Statutes
Act
that
“
“
This
Act
*
*
*
shall
be
subject
to
the
same
rules
of
construction
as
the
said
Revised
Statutes,”
reliance
was
also
placed
on
section
19
of
the
Interpretation
Act,
R.
S.
C.,
1927,
chapter
1,
by
which
the
repeal
of
any
Act
shall
not
((c)
affect
any
*
*
*
liability
*
*
*
accruing
*
*
*
under
the
Act
*
*
*
so
repealed.”
In
my
opinion
no
liability
was
accruing.
Not
merely
had
the
time
for
Mr.
Molson
to
make
a
return
not
arrived
nor
the
time
for
the
Government
officials
to
make
an
assessment,
but
the
value
of
the
securities
might
depreciate
or
vanish
before
1930.
The
remarks
of
Lord
Tomlin,
speaking
for
the
Judicial
Committee,
in
Dominion
Building
Corporation
Limited
v.
The
King
[1933]
A.C.
533,
are,
I
think,
apposite.
After
referring,
at
page
549,
to
the
provisions
of
the
Ontario
Interpretation
Act,
R.S.O.,
1927,
c.
1,
s.
10,
whereby
it
was
provided
that
no
Act
should
affect
the
rights
of
His
Majesty,
his
heirs
or
successors,
unless
it
was
expressly
stated
therein
that
His
Majesty
should
be
bound
thereby,
his
Lordship
declared
that
the
expression
“the
rights
of
His
Majesty’’
in
the
context
meant
the
accrued
rights,
and
did
not
cover
mere
possibilities,
such
as
rights
which,
but
for
the
alterations
made
in
the
general
law
by
the
enactment
under
consideration,
might
have
thereafter
accrued
to
His
Majesty
under
some
future
contract.
There
is
another
obstacle
in
the
way
of
applying
section
19
of
the
Interpretation
Act
to
the
case
at
Bar.
By
section
2
of
the
same
statute
section
19,
in
common
with
the
other
provisions
of
the
Act,
extends
and
applies
to
the
Revised
Statutes
Act
""
except
in
so
far
as
any
such
provision
(i)
is
inconsistent
with
the
intent
or
object
of
such
Act.
‘
‘
It
appears
to
me
that,
even
if
there
were
an
accruing
liability,
the
object
and
intent
of
the
Revised
Statutes
Act
are
inconsistent
with
a
determination
that
the
statute
meant
to
preserve
it.
And
for
this
reason.
Section
3
of
chapter
10
of
the
1926
Act,
amending
the
Income
War
Tax
Act
by
adding
subsection
10
and
other
subsections
to
section
3
of
the
main
Act,
dealt
with
what
were
known
as
"‘personal
corporations,
‘
‘
and
the
first
sentence
of
paragraph
(f)
of
that
section
provides
:
“This
subsection
shall
be
applicable
to
income
of
the
year
1925
and
fiscal
periods
ending
therein
and
to
each
year
or
period
thereafter.”
This
sentence
is
not
repealed
according
to
the
note
under
"‘ex-
tent
of
repeal,’’
which
statement,
as
has
already
been
shown,
has
the
sanction
of
Parliament.
Applying
the
maxim
expressio
unius
est
exclusio
alterius,
the
conclusion
seems
inescapable
that
it
was
not
the
intention
of
Parliament
to
preserve
the
suggested
accruing
liability.
For
these
reasons,
I
am
of
opinion
that
the
respondents
are
not
liable
to
assessment
on
the
specified
income
for
the
year
1930,
and
by
reason
of
the
consent
between
the
litigants
the
same
result
follows
with
respect
to
the
income
for
the
other
years.
In
this
view
of
appeal,
it
is
unnecessary
to
deal
with
the
other
points
mentioned
in
the
argument.
The
appeal
should
be
dismissed
with
costs.
Appeal
dismissed
with
costs.