CAMERON,
J.:—This
is
an
appeal
from
income
tax
and
excess
profits
tax
assessments
for
the
year
1941,
1942
and
1943.
The
usual
returns
for
the
various
years
were
made
by
the
appellant,
and
notices
of
assessment
were
mailed
to
the
appellant
in
each
ease
on
March
12,
1945.
The
appellant
gave
notice
of
appeal
on
April
3,
1945,
and
on
November
2,
1945,
the
Minister
gave
his
decision
affirming
the
assessments
throughout.
On
November
26,
1945,
the
appellant
gave
notice
of
dissatisfaction,
and
on
June
12,
1946,
the
Minister
gave
his
reply
affirming
the
assessments
as
originally
made.
By
order
of
this
Court
pleadings
were
directed
and
a
statement
of
claim
and
statement
of
defence
were
later
delivered.
At
the
hearing
in
Vancouver
on
October
17,
1946,
no
evidence
was
taken,
the
parties
agreeing
that
the
allegations
in
the
statement
of
claim
admitted
in
the
statement
of
defence
should
be
accepted
as
the
agreed
facts.
While
the
notices
of
appeal
and
the
statement
of
claim
indicate
that
the
appeals
have
to
do
both
with
income
tax
and
excess
profits
tax,
I
am
informed
that
there
is
now
no
dispute
as
to
the
assessment
for
income
tax,
and
the
appeals,
therefore,
have
to
do
solely
with
assessments
for
excess
profits
tax
for
the
years
in
question.
It
was
agreed
by
counsel
for
both
parties
that
the
entire
prob-
.
lem
centred
around
the
interpretation
to
be
placed
on
sec.
15A
of
the
Excess
Profits
Tax
Act,
and
in
particular
on
the
proper
construction
of
the
words
‘‘controlling
interest
‘
’
in
that
section.
Sec.
15A
was
added
to
the
Act
by
sec.
7,
chap.
13,
statutes
of
1943-44,
and
was
made
applicable
to
the
profits
of
the
1942
taxation
period,
of
fiscal
periods
ending
therein,
and
of
all
subsequent
periods.
See.
15A
is
as
follows:
‘'Notwithstanding
anything
in
this
Act
contained,
in
any
case
where
a
company
has
a
controlling
interest
in
any
other
company
or
companies
(hereinafter
called
controlled
company
or
companies)
incorporated
in
1940
or
thereafter
(other
than
companies
incorporated
to
carry
out
a
contract
or
arrangement
negotiated
by
the
Minister
of
Munitions
and
Supply,
and
in
receipt
thereunder
of
a
management
fee
or
other
similar
compensation),
and
the
sum
of
the
capital
employed
by
such
company
and
such
controlled
company
or
companies
at
the
time
of
incorporation
is
not
in
the
opinion
of
the
Minister
of
Na-
tional
Revenue
substantially
greater
than
the
capital
employed
by
such
first-mentioned
company
prior
to
the
incorporation
of
such
controlled
company
or
companies,
the
standard
profits
of
all
such
controlled
companies
taken
together
shall
not
exceed
$5,000
in
the
aggregate,
and
shall
be
allocated
to
each
of
such
controlled
companies
in
such
amounts
as
the
Minister
of
National
Revenue
may
direct.
"
"
In
any
such
case
a
reference
to
the
Board
of
Referees
shall
not
be
made,
notwithstanding
the
provisions
of
sec.
5
of
this
Act.’’
It
is
admitted
that
the
appellant
company
was
incorporated
in
1940;
and
that
it
was
not
incorporated
to
carry
out
a
contract
or
arrangement
negotiated
by
the
Minister
of
Munitions
and
Supply.
It
is
also
admitted
that
the
sum
of
the
capital
employed
by
the
appellant
and
Vancouver
Tug
and
Barge
Co.
Ltd.,
and
Vancouver
Tug
Boat
Co.
Ltd.,
at
the
time
of
incorporation
of
appellant
is
not
substantially
greater
than
the
capital
employed
by
the
two
last
mentioned
companies
prior
to
the
incorporation
of
the
appellant
company.
I
shall
deal
first
with
the
assessment
to
excess
profits
tax
for
the
year
1941.
At
the
hearing
it
was
admitted
by
counsel
for
the
respondent
that
the
1941
assessment
as
made
was
made
in
error,
and
on
the
assumption
that
sec.
15A
above
recited
applied
to
that
taxation
year.
The
department,
in
making
the
assessment
for
1941,
did
allow
the
sum
of
$5,000
as
standard
profits
for
the
appellant
company,
although
no
fixation
of
standard
profits
had
then,
or
has
since,
been
made
by
the
Board
of
Referees.
Because,
therefore,
of
the
error
in
applying
sec.
15A
to
the
taxation
year
1941,
the
appellant
was
deprived
of
his
right
under
see.
5
of
the
Excess
Profits
Tax
Act
to
apply
to
the
Board
of
Referees
for
the
establishment
of
its
standard
profits.
I
think,
therefore,
that
in
respect
of
that
year,
the
appeal
must
succeed,
and
the
assessment
to
excess
profits
tax
for
the
year
be
set
aside.
In
respect
of
the
taxation
years
1942
and
1948,
the
appellant’s
argument
is
that
it
is
not
a
controlled
company
such
as
is
envisaged
in
sec.
15A,
that
the
control
of
the
appellant
is
not
in
the
Vancouver
Tug
and
Barge
Co.
or
the
Vancouver
Tug
Boat
Co.,
but
rather
in
one
Harold
A.
Jones,
the
managing
director
of
the
appellant
company.
This
argument
is
advanced
on
behalf
of
the
appellant
on
two
grounds.
It
is
alleged
first
that
the
articles
of
association
by
which
the
appellant
was
governed
were
the
regulations
contained
in
Table
A
of
the
first
Schedule
of
the
Companies
Act
as
amended
by
regulations
filed
and
registered
with
the
Registrar
of
Companies
on
January
29,
1940,
of
which
the
following
clauses
are
a
portion
of
the
amendments
:
""
(A)
Harold
A.
Jones
shall
be
the
Managing
Director
of
the
Company
until
he
resigns
his
office,
or
does,
or
ceases
to
hold
at
least
one
(1)
share
of
the
issued
share
capital
of
the
Company,
and
while
he
retains
the
said
office
he
shall
have
absolute
and
sole
authority
to
exercise
all
the
powers,
authorities
and
discretions
by
these
Articles
expressed
to
be
vested
in
the
Directors
generally,
and
all
the
other
Directors
(hereinafter
called
‘ordinary
Directors’),
if
any,
for
the
time
being
of
the
Company
shall
be
under
his
entire
and
absolute
control,
and
shall
be
bound
to
conform
to
his
directions
in
regard
to
the
Company’s
business.
(b)
If
the
said
Harold
A.
Jones
resigns
the
office
of
Managing
Director
or
shall
cease
to
hold
at
least
one
(1)
share
of
the
issued
share
capital
of
the
Company
he
shall
become
an
ordinary
Director.
(ce)
If
the
said
Harold
A.
Jones
dies
whilst
he
holds
the
office
of
Managing
Director,
the
executor
or
executors
for
the
time
being
of
his
Will,
or
such
other
person
as
the
said
Harold
A.
Jones
may
by
his
Will
appoint
as
Managing
Director
(so
long
as
one
(1)
share
of
the
issued
share
capital
of
the
Company
stands
in
the
name
of
Harold
A.
Jones,
or
in
the
name
of
such
executor
and
executors),
may
exercise
the
powers
vested
in
the
said
Harold
A.
Jones
by
paragraphs
13(a)
and
13(f)
hereof.
(d)
The
remuneration
of
the
Managing
Director
shall
from
time
to
time
be
determined
by
the
Directors
of
the
Company.
(e)
The
qualification
of
the
Managing
Director
and
any
ordinary
Director
shall
be
the
holding
of
at
least
one
(1)
share
of
the
issued
capital
of
the
Company.
(f)
The
said
Harold
A.
Jones
whilst
he
helds
the
office
of
Managing
Director
may
from
time
to
time,
and
at
any
time,
appoint
any
other
person
or
persons
to
be
an
ordinary
Director
or
ordinary
Directors
of
the
Company,
and
may
define,
limit
and
restrict
his,
her,
or
their
powers,
and
may
define,
limit
and
restrict
his,
her,
or
their
remuneration,
and
duties,
and
may
at
any
time
remove
any
director
howsoever
appointed,
and
may
at
any
time
convene
a
general
meeting
of
the
Company.
Every
such
appointment
or
removal
must
be
in
writing
under
the
hand
of
the
said
Harold
A.
Jones.’’
It
will
be
seen
from
the
above
that
the
managing
director,
Harold
A.
Jones,
by
the
regulations
above
recited,
has
what
appears
to
be
absolute
control
over
the
actions
of
the
directors
of
the
appellant
company,
and
throughout
the
years
in
question,
he
was
at
all
time
qualified
to
act
as
managing
director
as
required
by
the
said
regulations.
Secondly,
it
is
alleged
that
the
said
Harold
A.
Jones
has
the
controlling
interest
in
the
appellant
company
by
reason
of
the
large
shareholdings
of
Vancouver
Tug
and
Barge
Co.
and
Vancouver
Tug
Boat
Co.
in
the
appellant
company.
At
all
material
times
there
were
only
357
shares
of
the
capital
stock
of
the
appellant
allotted
or
issued,
and
they
were
held
as
follows:
Harold
A.
Jones
|
|
3
shares
|
M.
T.
MeLaurin
|
1
|
1
share
|
Endorsed
to
and
held
by
the
said
Mc
|
|
Laurin
as
nominee
for
Harold
A.
Jones
|
|
and
controlled
by
him.
|
|
Vancouver
Tug
and
Barge
Co.
-
|
218
shares
|
Vancouver
Tug
Boat
Co.
|
|
185
shares
|
|
357
shares
|
It
will
be
seen
from
the
above
that
the
Vancouver
Tug
and
Barge
Co.
holds
218
shares
out
of
357
shares
issued
by
the
appellant
company,
being
more
than
a
majority
of
the
said
shares.
The
Vancouver
Tug
and
Barge
Co.
was
incorporated
in
1957,
and
at
all
material
times
only
2
shares
of
its
capital
were
allotted
or
issued,
and
they
were
held
as
follows
:
Harold
A.
Jones
|
1
share
|
Coldini
Webster
|
1
share
|
Endorsed
in
blank
and
held
by
the
said
|
|
Webster
as
nominee
for
Harold
A.
Jones
|
|
and
controlled
by
him.
|
|
It
is
clear,
therefore,
that
in
so
far
as
the
Vancouver
Tug
and
Barge
Co.
is
concerned,
the
said
Harold
A.
Jones
has
what
could
be
called
absolute
control,
and
it
is
argued
by
counsel
on
behalf
of
the
appellant
that
as
Vancouver
Tug
and
Barge
Co.
has
the
majority
of
issued
shares
in
the
appellant
company,
and
that
as
Harold
A.
Jones
is
in
virtual
control
of
Vancouver
Tug
and
Barge
Co.,
that,
therefore,
Harold
A.
Jones
has
a
controlling
interest
in
the
appellant
company,
and
not
Vancouver
Tug
and
Barge
Co.
Some
reference
should
also
be
made
to
the
Vancouver
Tug
Boat
Co.
which
holds
135
shares
in
the
appellant
company.
That
company
was
incorporated
in
1924
and
at
all
material
times
the
said
Harold
A.
Jones
had
more
than
a
majority
of
its
allotted
or
issued
shares.
A
further
argument
of
the
appellant,
therefore,
is
that
since
Harold
A.
Jones
has
the
controlling
interest
in
the
Vancouver
Tug
Boat
Co.
and
the
Vancouver
Tug
and
Barge
Co.,
that
therefore,
having
control
of
their
353
shares,
and
three
shares
issued
in
his
own
name,
in
the
appellant
company,
that
he
has
the
controlling
interest
in
the
appellant
company,
and
that
therefore
the
appellant
company
is
not
such
a
controlled
company
as
is
referred
to
in
sec.
15A.
The
problem,
therefore,
for
decision
is
to
ascertain
the
true
meaning
of
the
words
"‘controlling
interest’’
in
sec.
15A.
Does
control
of
the
board
of
directors
mean
the
same
as
a
controlling
interest?
Does
control
by
Jones
of
the
Vancouver
Tug
and
Barge
Co.
(the
registered
owner
of
the
majority
of
shares
in
the
appellant
company)
give
him
a
controlling
interest
in
the
appellant
company?
Or
is
the
share
register
of
the
appellant
company
conclusive
against
the
appellant
in
that
it
shows
the
Vancouver
Tug
and
Barge
Co.
to
have
the
majority
of
the
shares
and
that
therefore
that
company
has
a
controlling
interest
in
the
appellant
company?
I
have
not
been
referred
to
any
cases
in
our
Courts
where
the
words
"‘controlling
interest’’
as
used
in
see.
15A
have
received
judicial
interpretation,
nor
have
I
been
able
to
find
any.
But
there
are
several
cases
in
the
English
Courts
to
which
I
have
been
referred
and
which
are
of
assistance
in
arriving
at
my
conclusion.
In
B.
W.
Noble
Ltd.
v.
Commissioner
of
Inland
Revenue
(1917)
12
T.C.
926
the
assessment
to
corporation
profits
tax
had
been
made
by
reference
to
sec.
53(2)
(e)
of
the
Finance
Act,
1920,
to
include
any.
remuneration
in
excess
of
£1,000
per
annum
paid
to
a
director
who
has
a
controlling
interest
in
the
company
;
and
on
behalf
of
the
company
it
was
contended
that
none
of
the
directors
had
a
controlling
interest
in
the
company
within
the
meaning
of
the
provision
referred
to.
Rowlatt,
J.
in
giving
judgment
says:
I
think
that
the
contention
of
the
Crown
is
correct.
It
has
been
argued
by
Mr.
Konstam
with
a
great
deal
of
ingenuity
and
industry
that
the
first
decision
was
right,
for
two
reasons.
First
of
all,
pointing
to
a
number
of
the
sections,
he
says
that
this
gentleman
was
not
in
a
position
to
control
the
Company
as
regards
the
passing
of
special
resolutions.
That
is
true.
Then,
secondly,
he
says
that
he
was
not
in
a
position,
by
virtue
of
his
interest,
to
control
the
Board
of
Directors
in
the
exercise
of
the
powers
given
to
them
by
the
Articles
in
that
behalf.
I
do
not
think
this
sub-section
(sub-section
(2)
(c)
of
section
53
of
the
Finance
Act,
1920),
is
referring
to
that
class
of
consideration
at
all.
It
seems
to
me
that
‘controlling
interest
‘
4s
a
phrase
that
has
a
certain
well
known
meaning:
it
means
the
man
whose
shareholding
in
the
Company
is
such
that
he
is
the
shareholder
who
is
more
powerful
than
all
the
other
shareholders
put
together
in
General
Meeting.
That
is
really
what
it
comes
to.
Now,
this
gentleman
has
just
half
the
number
of
shares,
but
those
shares,
in
the
circumstances
of
this
case,
are
reinforced
by
the
position
that
he
occupies
of
Chairman,
a
position
which
he
occupies
not
merely
by
the
votes
of
the
other
shareholders
or
of
his
Directors
elected
by
the
shareholders
but
by
contract:
and,
so
reinforced,
inasmuch
as
he
has
a
casting
vote,
he
does
control
the
General
Meetings—there
is
no
question
about
that—and
in
as
much
as
he
does
possess
at
least
half
of
the
shares
he
can
prevent
any
modifications
taking
place
in
the
constitution
of
the
Company
which
would
undermine
his
position
as
Chairman.”
The
above
case
was
referred
to
in
British
American
Tobacco
Co.
V.
Inland
Revenue
Commissioners
where
the
judgment
of
Lawrence,
J.
in
the
King’s
Bench
Division
is
reported
in
[1941]
2
All
E.R.
86.
In
this
case
the
appellant
company
held
shares
in
eleven
companies
operating
outside
the
United
Kingdom
which
were
therefore
not
liable
to
be
assessed
to
the
national
defence
contribution.
In
the
case
of
four
of
these
companies
the
appellant
itself
controlled
more
than
50%
of
the
votes.
In
the
ease
of
the
remaining
seven
companies
more
than
50%
of
the
votes
were
controlled
by
the
appellant
company
in
conjunction
with
a
company
or
companies
in
which
the
appellant
company
controlled
more
than
50%
of
the
votes.
It
was
held
that
on
the
proper
construction
of
the
section
in
the
Finance
Act,
1937,
‘
‘
controlling
interest’’
in
a
company
included
an
indirect
as
well
as
a
direct
controlling
interest
and
that
the
appellant
company
was
subject
to
the
national
defence
contribution.
In
his
judgment
Lawrence,
J.
stated
at
page
90
:
‘“The
Attorney-General,
on
the
other
hand,
contended
that
the
word
‘interest’
is
a
word
of
wide
connotation.
He
cited
Lanish
v.
Braithwaite
[1926]
A.C.
275
and
Skinner
v.
A.-G.
[1940]
A.C.
350,
and
contended
that
the
words
‘controlling
interest’
must
be
interpreted
together,
that
there
can
be
no
reason
which
could
have
induced
the
legislature
to
exclude
the
case
of
an
indirect
controlling
interest,
that
the
Finance
Act,
1920,
shows
that
the
words
can
equally
well
be
used
to
include
an
indirect
or
a
direct
controlling
interest,
and
that
in
their
ordinary
meaning
they
include
both.
“I
have
come
to
the
conclusion
that
the
contention
of
the
Crown
is
correct.
I
do
not
think
that
it
is
a
proper
inference
that,
because
the
Finance
Act,
1920,
mentions
expressly
a
controlling
interest,
direct
or
indirect,
when
the
legislature
spoke
of
‘a
controlling
interest’
simpliciter
in
1937,
it
meant
only
a
direct
controlling
interest.
The
word
‘controlling’
is
not
a
term
of
art,
nor
is
the
word
‘interest’
necessarily
so,
and,
when
the
word
‘controlling’
is
used
to
qualify
‘interest’
I
think
that
the
phrase
in
its
ordinary
meaning
covers
both
direct
and
indirect
control.
Counsel
for
the
appellants
in
the
second
appeal
also
argued
that
companies
which
held
only
91
per
cent,
and
less
than
75
per
cent,
of
the
shares
in
a,
company
have
not
a
controlling
interest
in
such
company,
but
it
was
conceded
that
upon
this
point
I
am
bound
by
the
decision
of
Rowlatt,
J.,
in
Mitchell
v.
Noble
(B.W.)
Ltd.
[1928]
1
K.B.
719.
The
Crown’s
appeal
will,
therefore,
be
allowed,
and
the
British
American
Tobacco
Co.’s
appeal
will
be
dismissed
with
costs.
’
’
This
judgment
was
upheld
in
the
Court
of
Appeal,
reported
in
[1941]
2
All
E.R.
561.
There
it
was
held
that
the
word
‘‘interest””
must
be
interpreted
liberally
and
that
when
it
is
used
with
the
word
‘‘controlling’’
it
covers
an
indirect
as
well
as
a
direct
controlling
interest.
The
appeal
to
the
House
of
Lords
was
dismissed,
[1943]
1
All
E.R.
14.
In
the
judgment
of
Viscount
Simon,
L.C.
(conerrred
in
by
all
the
other
judges)
it
is
there
stated
:
“But
that
is
to
treat
the
phrase
‘controlling
interest’
as
capable
of
connoting
only
a
proprietary
right,
that
is,
an
interest
in
the
nature
of
ownership.
The
word
‘interest’,
however,
as
pointed
out
by
Lawrence,
J.,
is
a
word
of
wide
connotation,
and
I
think
the
conception
of
‘controlling
interest’
may
well
cover
the
relationship
of
one
company
towards
another,
the
requisite
majority
of
whose
shares
are,
as
regards
voting
power,
subject,
whether
directly
or
indirectly,
to
the
will
and
ordering
of
the
first-mentioned
company.
If,
for
example,
the
appellant
company
owns
one-
third
of
the
shares
in
company
X,
and
the
remaining
two-thirds
are
owned
by
company
Y,
the
appellant
company
will
none
the
less
have
a
controlling
interest
in
company
X
if
it
owns
enough
shares
in
company
Y
to
control
the
latter.
“In
my
opinion
this
is
the
meaning
of
the
word
‘interest’
in
the
enactment
under
consideration,
and,
where
one
company
stands
in
such
a
relationship
to
another,
the
former
can
properly
be
said
to
have
a
controlling
interest
in
the
latter.
This
view
appears
to
me
to
agree
with
the
object
of
the
enactment
as
it
appears
on
the
face
of
the
Act.
I
find
it
impossible
to
adopt
the
view
that
a
person
who,
by
having
the
requisite
voting
power
in
a
company
subject
to
his
will
and
ordering,
can
make
the
ultimate
decision
as
to
where
and
how
the
business
of
the
company
shall
be
carried
on,
and
who
thus
has,
in
fact,
control
of
the
company’s
affairs,
is
a
person
of
whom
it
can
be
said
that
he
has
not
in
this
connection
got
a
controlling
interest
in
the
company.
’
’
Counsel
for
the
appellant
in
the
instant
case
urged
upon
me
that
this
portion
of
the
judgment
was
authority
for
finding
that
Jones,
in
full
control
of
the
Vancouver
Tug
and
Barge
Co.,
which
in
turn
had
more
than
a
majority
of
the
shares
in
the
appellant
company,
had,
therefore,
the
controlling
interest
in
the
appellant
company.
But
it
must
be
kept
in
mind
that
the
sole
question
in
the
Tobacco
case
was
whether
the
controlling
interest
must
be
direct
ownership
or
whether
indirect
ownership
of
shares
would
give
such
controlling
interest
as
would
make
the
company
liable
to
tax
on
dividends
received
by
the
Tobacco
Co.
from
the
other
companies
controlled
indirectly
by
shareholding.
In
the
example
used,
where
the
appellant
company
owned
one-third
of
the
shares
in
company
X
and
the
remaining
two-thirds
were
owned
by
company
Y
it
is
stated
that
the
appellant
company
would
none
the
less
have
a
controlling
interest
in
company
X
if
it
owns
enough
shares
in
company
Y
to
control
the
latter.
In
my
view
that
illustration
means
only
that
an
indirect
controlling
interest
would
make
the
appellant
there
liable
to
tax,
as
well
as
holding
of
sufficient
shares
in
its
own
name
to
give
it
a
direct
controlling
interest.
I
can
find
nothing
in
the
judgment
which
states
that
there
is
not
also
a
direct
controlling
interest
in
a
company
which
has
registered
in
its
own
name
a
majority
of
shares
in
the
appellant
company.
I
am
strengthened
in
my
view
that
this
is
the
proper
interpretation
of
this
judgment
by
the
concluding
words
of
the
judgment
itself
which
are
as
follows:
‘
'As
to
what
may
be
the
requisite
proportion
of
voting
power,
I
think
a
bare
majority
is
sufficient.
The
appellant
company
has,
in
respect
of
each
of
the
foreign
companies
referred
to
in
the
case,
the
control
of
the
majority
vote.
I
agree
with
the
interpretation
of
‘controlling
interest’
adopted
by
Rowlatt,
J.
in
Noble
v.
Commissioners
of
Inland
Revenue
(1926)
2
T.C.
911,
when
construing
that
phrase
in
the
Finance
Act,
1920,
s.
63(2)
(0).
He
said
at
p.
926
that
the
phrase
had
a
well-
known
meaning
and
referred
to
the
situation
of
a
man
whose
shareholding
in
the
company
is
such
that
he
is
more
powerful
than
all
the
other
shareholders
put
together
in
general
meeting.
"The
owners
of
the
majority
of
the
voting
power
in
a
company
are
the
persons
who
are
in
effective
control
of
its
affairs
and
fortunes.
It
is
true
that
for
some
purposes
a
75
per
cent
majority
vote
may
be
required,
as,
for
instance
(under
some
company
regulations)
for
the
removal
of
directors
who
oppose
the
wishes
of
the
majority;
but
the
bare
majority
can
always
refuse
to
re-elect
and
so
in
the
long
run
get
rid
of
a
recalcitrant
board.
Nor
can
the
articles
of
association
be
altered
in
order
to
defeat
the
wishes
of
the
majority,
for
a
bare
majority
can
always
prevent
the
passing
of
the
necessary
resolution.’’
It
is
to
be
observed
that
the
interpretation
of
the
words
"
1
controlling
interest’’
adopted
by
Rowlatt,
J.
in
the
Noble
case
(supra)
is
approved
in
the
House
of
Lords.
There
were
two
propositions
put
forward
by
the
appellant
before
the
House
of
Lords.
The
first
one
as
to
indirect
control,
I
have
already
referred
to.
The
second
point
was
that
in
any
event
the
controlling
interest
was
not
constituted
by
the
control
of
the
bare
majority
of
shares
(whether
directly
or
through
other
companies)
but
that
the
control
must
be
of
such
a
proportion
of
shares
as
would
secure
the
passing
of
a
special
resolution
for
which
a
special
majority
is
required
by
the
terms
of
the
constitution
of
the
company.
The
judgment
of
the
House
of
Lords
makes
it
abundantly
clear
that
the
requisite
portion
of
voting
power
to
give
a
controlling
interest
is
a
bare
majority.
And
following
the
judgment
of
Rowlatt,
J.
in
the
Noble
case
(supra)
it
seems
clear
that
the
man
(or
corporation)
whose
shareholding
in
the
company
is
such
that
he
is
more
powerful
than
all
the
other
shareholders
in
the
company
put
together
in
general
meeting
has
a
controlling
interest
in
the
company.
This
interpretation
of
‘‘controlling
interest’’
seems
to
be
a
proper
and
natural
one
to
put
on
those
words
as
used
in
the
enactment—sec.
15A.
Scott,
J.
in
the
Court
of
Appeal
judgment
in
the
Tobacco
case
(supra)
sets
forth
the
meaning
of
the
verb
"‘control’’
and
the
noun
‘‘interest’’
as
found
in
the
Oxford
English
Dictionary.
Moreover,
such
interpretation
seems
to
meet
the
situation
which
sec.
15A
was
intended
to
overcome.
Regardless
of
the
very
extended
powers
given
to
the
managing
director
of
the
appellant
company
as
above
set
forth,
and
of
the
fact
that
he,
by
control
of
the
Vancouver
Tug
and
Barge
Co.,
has
indirect
control
as
to
how
the
shares
held
by
the
latter
company
in
the
appellant
company
shall
be
voted,
it
is
abundantly
clear
to
me
that
at
a
general
meeting
of
the
shareholders
of
the
appellant
company
the
voting
power
is
in
accordance
with
the
share
register
and
that
the
Vancouver
Tug
and
Barge
Co.
is
more
powerful
than
all
the
other
shareholders
put
together.
It,
therefore,
has
a
controlling
interest
within
the
intent
and
meaning
of
sec,
15A.
It
should
be
noted
that
the
words
in
the
section
are
‘‘a
controlling
interest
‘
‘
not
‘‘the
controlling
interest
‘‘or’’
the
control
’.
Unquestionably
Jones
has
the
ultimate
control
in
the
appellant
company
and
has
complete
control
of
its
board
of
directors.
He
also
has
an
indirect
controlling
interest
in
the
company
itself
but
all
the
respondent
needs
to
show
is
that
the
Vancouver
Tug
and
Barge
Co.
has
a
controlling
interest
in
the
appellant
and
on
the
basis
of
the
interpretation
given
to
these
words
in
the
eases
I
have
cited
and
on
the
agreed
facts,
I
find
that
such
is
the
ease.
Reference
may
also
be
made
to
Glasgow
Expanded
Metal
Co.
v.
Commissioner
of
Inland
Revenue
(1926)
12
T.C.
573
and
to
Inland
Revenue
Commissioners
v.
J.
Bibby
c
Sons
Ltd.
[1945]
1
All.
E.R.
667.
In
the
latter
case
it
was
held
that
"‘controlling
interest’’
referred
to
the
power
of
controlling
by
votes
the
decisions
binding
on
the
company
in
the
shape
of
resolutions
passed
at
a
general
meeting.
The
appeals,
therefore,
in
respect
of
assessments
to
income
tax
and
excess
profits
tax
for
the
years
1942
and
1943
will
be
dismissed
and
the
assessments
confirmed.
The
appeal
as
to
the
assessment
to
income
tax
for
the
year
1941
will
also
be
dismissed
and
the
assessment
confirmed.
In
regard
to
the
appeal
in
respect
of
excess
profits
tax
for
the
year
1941
the
appeal
will
be
allowed,
the
assessment
set
aside
and
that
item
of
the
appeal
will
be
referred
back
to
the
Minister
to
be
dealt
with
under
see.
5(2)
of
the
Act,
and
when
the
standard
profits
have
been
so
ascertained,
the
appellant
will
be
re-assessed
to
excess
profits
tax
for
the
year
1941.
Inasmuch
as
the
appellant
is
only
partially
successful
in
its
appeal
and
as
most
of
the
argument
had
to
do
with
matters
in
which
it
failed,
I
am
of
the
opinion
that
it
should
be
entitled
to
only
one-half
of
its
taxed
costs
and
I
so
direct.
Judgment
accordingly.