Lord
THANKERTON
:—This
appeal
is
taken
from
a
judgment
of
the
Supreme
Court
of
Canada
(ante,
p.
401)
dated
December
12,
1938,
which
affirmed
a
judgment
of
the
Exchequer
Court
of
Canada
(ante,
p.
380),
dated
November
4,
1987,
where
the
appellant’s
appeal
from
a
decision
of
the
respondent,
affirming
an
assessment
of
the
appellant
to
income
tax
for
the
tax
year
ending
on
March
31,
1933,
was
dismissed.
The
question
in
the
appeal
relates
to
the
disallowance
by
the
respondent
of
certain
allowances
for
depreciation
claimed
by
the
appellant.
In
the
return
filed
by
the
appellant
in
July,
1933,
in
compliance
with
s.
33
of
the
Income
War
Tax
Act,
R.S.C.
1927,
c.
97,
for
the
fiscal
year
ending
March
31,
1933,
the
appellant
disclosed
gross
earnings
of
$171,122.04,
and
claimed
various
deductions
including
allowances
for
depreciation
as
follows:
‘
‘
Depreciation
:—
|
Per
cent
|
$
|
Machinery
and
Equipment
|
10
|
14,131.15
|
Automobiles
|
20
|
2,935.08
|
Horses
|
10
|
135.25
|
Furniture
and
Fixtures
|
10
|
074.07
|
|
$17,775.55”
|
On
February
19
the
Commissioner
of
Income
Tax
sent
to
the
appellant
a
notice
of
assessment,
in
which
the
appellant’s
claim
in
respect
of
depreciation
was
disallowed
except
to
the
extent
of
$255.08
under
the
second
item,
in
respect
of
two
coupés
and
a
truck
body,
which
will
be
referred
to
later.
The
appellant
appealed
to
the
respondent
under
s.
58
of
the
Act,
but
the
appeal
was
dismissed
by
the
respondent,
and,
the
appellant
having
filed
a
notice
of
dissatisfaction
under
s.
60,
the
respondent
transmitted
the
papers
to
the
Exchequer
Court
in
terms
of
s.
63.
Pleadings
were
ordered
and
filed,
and,
after
trial,
the
appeal
was
dismissed
by
the
Exchequer
Court
(Angers
J.)
on
November
4,
1937.
On
appeal
to
the
Supreme
Court
of
Canada,
the
case
was
heard
before
the
Chief
Justice
of
Canada
and
Crocket,
Davis,
Kerwin
and
Hudson
JJ.,
and
on
December
12,
1938,
the
Court
dismissed
the
appeal,
the
Chief
Justice
and
Davis
J.
dissenting.
The
relevant
facts
may
be
summarized
as
follows:
The
appellant
company
was
incorporated
on
March
238,
1932,
and
it
acquired
the
machinery
and
equipment,
etc.,
in
respect
of
which
the
claim
for
depreciation
has
been
disallowed
from
a
company
called
the
Home
Service
Co.
Ltd.,
at
a
price
fixed
by
the
independent
appraisal;
the
correctness
of
this
valuation
has
not
been
challenged
by
the
respondent.
The
three
items
in
respect
of
which
the
claim
was
admitted,
were
acquired
from
other
sources.
Home
Service
Co.
Ltd.
was
incorporated
also
on
March
23,
1932,
and
on
April
1,
1932,
it
acquired
all
the
physical
assets
of
seven
companies,
including
the
original
Pioneer
Laundry
&
Dry
Cleaners
Ltd.,
which
had
gone
into
voluntary
liquidation
on
March
30,
1932.
The
machinery
and
equipment
etc.,
here
in
question
were
among
the
assets
acquired
by
Home
Service
Co.
Ltd.
from
the
original
Pioneer
Laundry
&
Dry
Cleaners
Ltd.
At
this
time
all
the
outstanding
share
capital
of
the
seven
companies
above
referred
to,
was
owned
directly
or
through
nominees
by
a
company
called
Pioneer
Investment
Co.
Ltd.,
the
assets
of
which
were
also
acquired
by
Home
Service
Ltd.,
with
the
exception
of
(a)
shares
owned
by
the
former
company
i.e.
the
shares
of
the
seven
subsidiaries
which,
by
reason
of
the
liquidation,
became
unsalable,
and
(b)
amounts
owing
to
the
former
company
by
its
shareholders.
Pioneer
Investment
Co.
went
into
voluntary
liquidation
on
April
7,
1932.
The
machinery
and
equipment
etc.,
here
in
question
were
fully
written
off
by
depreciation
while
they
were
in
the
ownership
of
the
original
Pioneer
Laundry
&
Dry
Cleaners
Ltd.
All
the
share
capital
of
Home
Service
Co.,
except
40
shares
out
of
10,000
shares
of
par
value
of
$100
each,
was
issued
or
sold
to
the
liquidators
of
the
operating
subsidiary
companies
of
Pioneer
Investment
Co.,
in
consideration
for
the
transfer
of
the
assets
of
the
operating
companies
to
Home
Service
Co.
On
the
winding-up
of
the
operating
companies
these
shares
were
distributed
to
the
parent
company,
Pioneer
Investment
Co.,
and,
on
the
winding-up
of
that
company,
were
distributed
to
its
own
shareholders,
with
the
admitted
result
that
the
shareholders
of
Home
Service
Co.
are
the
same
as
were
the
shareholders
of
Pioneer
Investment
Co.,
and
their
respective
holdings
in
the
new
company
are
the
same
or
substantially
the
same
as
were
their
respective
holdings
in
the
old
company.
The
40
shares
referred
to
were
allotted
to
Pioneer
Investment
Co.
in
part
payment
of
the
assets
acquired
from
that
company.
It
is
further
agreed
that
during
the
fiscal
year
ended
March
31,
1933,
the
shareholders
of
the
appellant
company
were
as
follows,
namely
:
|
Shares.
|
Home
Service
Company
Limited
|
-
|
97
|
Charles
H.
Wilson
|
-
|
|
1
|
Mary
E.
Stewart
|
|
1
|
Thomas
H.
Kirk
|
.
|
|
1
|
|
100
|
and
that
the
three
persons
named
were
during
such
fiscal
year
shareholders
of
the
Home
Service
Co.
The
amount
of
depreciation
claimed
by
the
appellant
company
in
its
statutory
return
was
in
conformity
with
the
rates
stated
in
certain
circulars
issued
by
the
respondent
to
local
officers
of
the
department
(exs.
3,
4,
5
and
6),
and
the
appellant
sought,
because
of
their
being
made
available
to
the
public,
to
have
them
treated
as
an
exercise
by
the
respondent
of
his
statutory
discretion
as
to
depreciation.
Their
Lordships
agree
with
the
view
of
Crocket
and
Hudson
J
J.
that
these
departmental
circulars
are
for
the
general
guidance
of
the
officers
and
cannot
be
regarded
as
the
exercise
of
his
statutory
discretion
by
the
respondent
in
any
particular
case.
The
other
learned
Judges
of
the
Supreme
Court
express
no
opinion
on
this
point;
the
trial
Judge
had
expressed
a
contrary
view.
The
main
question
in
the
appeal
relates
to
the
discretion
conferred
on
the
respondent
as
to
allowances
for
depreciation
by
the
Income
War
Tax
Act,
R.S.C.
1927,
c.
97,
the
material
provisions
of
which
are
as
follows:
"3.
For
the
purposes
of
this
Act,
‘
income
‘
means
the
annual
net
profit
or
gain
or
gratuity,
whether
ascertained
and
capable
of
computation
as
being
wages,
salary,
or
other
fixed
amount,
or
unascertained
as
being
fees
or
emoluments,
or
as
being
profits
from
a
trade
or
commercial
or
financial
or
other
business
or
calling,
directly
or
indirectly
received
by
a
person
from
any
office
or
employment,
or
from
any
profession
or
calling,
or
from
any
trade,
manufacture
or
business,
as
the
case
may
be
whether
derived
from
sources
within
Canada
or
elsewhere;
.
.
.
"5.
"
Income
‘
as
hereinbefore
defined
shall
for
the
porposes
A
of
this
Act
be
subject
to
the
following
exemptions
and
deductions
:—
(a)
Such
reasonable
amount
as
the
Minister,
in
his
discretion,
may
allow
for
depreciation,
and
the
Minister
in
determining
the
income
derived
from
mining
and
from
oil
and
gas
wells
and
timber
limits
shall
make
such
an
allowance
for
the
exhaustion
of
the
mines,
wells
and
timber
limits
as
he
may
deem
just
and
fair;
.
.
.
“6.
In
computing
the
amount
of
the
profits
or
gains
to
be
assessed,
a
deduction
shall
not
be
allowed
in
respect
of
.
.
.
"‘(b)
any
outlay,
loss
or
replacement
of
capital
or
any
payment
on
account
of
capital
or
any
depreciation,
depletion
or
obsolescence,
except
as
otherwise
provided
in
this
Act;
.
.
.’’
In
the
first
place,
as
to
the
nature
of
the
discretion
thus
conferred
on
the
Minister,
Crocket
and
Hudson
JJ.
state
(ante,
p.
401)
:
"‘Reading
these
sections
by
themselves
and
without
reference
to
any
outside
authorities,
it
would
seem
fairly
plain
that
it
was
the
intention
of
Parliament
that
there
should
be
no
depreciation
allowance
unless
the
Minister,
in
his
sole
discretion,
decided
that
there
should
be.
There
is
nothing
anywhere
to
indicate
the
principle
or
basis
on
which
the
depreciation
allowance
is
to
be
ascertained.
It
might
vary
according
to
different
accounting
methods,
different
economic
theories,
different
general
business
conditions
in
the
country.
Nor
is
there
anything
in
the
statute
which
denies
a
right
in
the
Minister
to
look
beyond
the
legal
facade
for
the
purpose
of
ascertaining
the
realities
of
ownership
or
the
possibilities
of
schemes
to
avoid
taxation,
and
it
would
seem
to
me
that
it
was
the
intention
of
Parliament
that
the
Minister,
and
he
alone,
could
properly
estimate
these
different
factors.
"‘The
authorities
cited
on
behalf
of
the
appellant
are
mostly
of
statutes,
somewhat
differently
worded
from
ours,
and
in
effect
hold
no
more
than
that
where
the
statute
gives
a
discretion
to
administrative
officers
and
provides
an
area
in
time
or
space
for
the
exercise
of
such
discretion,
the
Commissioners
must
take
that
into
account.
In
the
present
case,
the
Minister
has
exercised
his
discretion,
and,
as
already
stated,
the
statute
does
not
define
or
limit
the
field
for
operation
of
such
discretion.
‘
‘
Kerwin
J.
expressed
a
similar
opinion.
Their
Lordships
are
unable
to
agree
with
these
views,
and
they
agree
with
the
opinion
of
Davis
J.
in
which
the
Chief
Justice
concurred,
and
in
which
he
states
(ante,
p.
404)
:
"‘The
appellant
was
entitled
to
an
exemption
or
deduction
in
‘such
reasonable
amount
as
the
Minister,
in
his
discretion,
may
allow
for
depreciation.’
That
involved,
in
my
opinion,
an
administrative
duty
of
a
quasi-judicial
character—a
discretion
to
be
exercised
on
proper
legal
principles.’’
In
their
Lordships
‘
opinion,
the
taxpayer
has
a
statutory
right
to
an
allowance
in
respect
of
depreciation
during
the
accounting
year
on
which
the
assessment
in
dispute
is
based.
The
Minister
has
a
duty
to
fix
a
reasonable
amount
in
respect
of
that
allow-
ance
and,
so
far
from
the
decision
of
the
Minister
being
purely
administrative
and
final,
a
right
of
appeal
is
conferred
on
a
dissatisfied
taxpayer;
but
it
is
equally
clear
that
the
Court
would
not
interfere
with
the
decision,
unless—as
Davis
J.
states—"‘it
was
manifestly
against
sound
and
fundamental
principles.’’
The
decision
of
the
Commissioner
of
Income
Tax
in
the
present
ease,
which
is
accepted
by
the
respondent
as
his
statutory
decision,
makes
clear
the
point
of
principle
which
the
appellant
claims
to
have
been
thereby
contravened;
it
is
as
follows
:
"‘The
honourable
the
Minister
of
National
Revenue,
having
duly
considered
the
facts
as
set
forth
in
the
Notice
of
Appeal
and
matters
thereto
relating
hereby
affirms
the
said
assessment
on
the
ground
that
while
the
company
was
incorporated
and
commenced
operations
during
the
year
1932
there
was
no
actual
change
in
ownership
of
the
assets
purchased
or
taken
over
from
Pioneer
Investment
Company
Limited
by
Home
Service
Company
Limited
(of
which
the
taxpayer
is
a
subsidiary)
and
set
up
in
the
books
of
the
taxpayer
at
appreciated
values;
that
in
the
exercise
of
the
statutory
discretion,
a
reasonable
amount
has
been
allowed
for
depreciation
and
that
the
assessment
is
properly
levied
under
the
provisions
of
the
Income
War
Tax
Act.’’
Their
Lordships
agree
with
the
Chief
Justice
and
Davis
J.
that
the
reason
given
for
the
decision
was
not
a
proper
ground
for
the
exercise
of
the
Minister’s
discretion,
and
that
he
was
not
entitled,
in
the
absence
of
fraud
or
improper
conduct,
to
disregard
the
separate
legal
existence
of
the
appellant
company
and
to
enquire
as
to
who
its
shareholders
were
and
its
relation
to
its
predecessors.
The
taxpayer
is
the
company,
and
not
its
shareholders.
Their
Lordships
agree
with
the
reasons
given
by
these
learned
Judges,
and
their
application
of
the
authorities
cited
by
them,
and
it
is
unnecessary
to
repeat
them.
It
follows
that
the
assessment
should
be
set
aside,
and
the
matter
should
be
referred
back
to
the
respondent.
It
becomes
unnecessary
to
consider
a
further
question
which
was
debated,
namely,
as
to
whether
a
taxpayer,
who
has
already
received
in
previous
tax
years
allowances
for
depreciation
amounting
to
100%
of
the
book
value
of
the
assets,
is
entitled
to
any
further
allowances.
Their
Lordships
will
therefore
humbly
advise
His
Majesty
that
the
decisions
appealed
from
should
be
set
aside,
and
that
the
assessment
should
be
set
aside
and
the
matter
referred
back
to
the
Minister.
The
appellant
will
have
the
costs
of
this
appeal
and
the
costs
in
the
Courts
below.
Appeal
allowed.