Lord
GREENE:—This
is
an
appeal
by
the
executors
of
the
Honourable
Patrick
Burns,
deceased
(who
died
on
February
24,
1937),
and
six
added
parties
who
are
interested
under
his
will
from
a
judgment
of
the
Supreme
Court
of
Canada
([1946]
C.T.C.
253)
allowing
in
part
an
appeal
by
the
appellants
from
a
judgment
of
the
Exchequer
Court.
That
judgment
had
dismissed
an
appeal
by
the
executors
from
a
decision
of
the
present
respondent,
the
Minister
of
National
Revenue,
who
had
confirmed
assessments
to
income
tax
in
respect
of
the
four
years
1938
to
1941
inclusive
under
the
provisions
of
the
Income
War
Tax
Act,
R.S.C.
1927,
c.
97.
The
appeal
relates
to
the
liability
to
income
tax
of
certain
income
received
by
the
executors
in
the-years
in
question
and
capitalized
by
them
pursuant
to
directions
in
the
will.
The
nature
of
the
added
parties
and
their
interests
in
relation
to
this
income
require
a
more
detailed
explanation.
By
the
will
of
the
testator
his
executors
(called
his
“trustees”)
were
directed
in
the
events
which
happened
to
hold
the
residue
of
his
estate
(described
as
his
‘‘Trust
Estate’’)
subject
to
provision
for
an
annuity
to
his
son’s
widow
and
certain
other
fixed
annuities
upon
trust
until
the
death
of
the
last
of
those
annuitants
or
the
death
of
the
widow
of
his
son
(neither
of
which
events
has
happened)
to
pay
certain
percentages
totalling
60%
of
the
net
annual
income
of
the
Trust
Estate
by
way
of
annuities
to
nephews
and
nieces
of
the
testator
and
to
invest
the
surplus
as
part
of
the
capital
of
the
Trust
Estate
at
compound
interest.
On
the
death
of
the
last
fixed
annuitant
or
that
of
the
widow
of
his
son,
whichever
should
last
happen,
the
trustees
were
to
stand
possessed
of
his
‘‘Trust
Estate”
with
all
accumulations
and
additions
upon
trust
to
distribute
67%
thereof
among
nephews
and
nieces
‘‘and
upon
the
further
trust
to
pay
and
convey
the
rest,
residue
and
remainder
of
‘my
Trust
Estate’
unto
the
Royal
Trust
Company
for
the
creation
and
establishment
of
a
Trust
to
be
known
as
the
‘Burns
Memorial
Trust’
to
be
administered
by
it
as
trustee
at
its
office
in
the
City
of
Calgary,
in
the
Province
of
Alberta,
and
the
net
annual
income
therefrom
to
pay
and
distribute
annually
in
equal
shares
thereof
amongst’’
five
named
objects.
The
gifts
in
favour
of
these
five
objects
were
by
order
of
the
Supreme
Court
of
Alberta
dated
December
11,
1939,
declared
to
be
valid
charitable
gifts.
Object
No.
(1)
described
in
the
will
as
the
“Father
Lacombe
Home
at
Midnapore”
is
part
of
the
charitable
work
carried
on
by
Les
soeurs
de
Charité
de
la
Providence
and
is
the
second
added
appellant.
By
the
Order
of
December
11,
1939,
the
proper
name
of
the
body
mentioned
as
object
No.
(2)
in
the
will
was
declared
to
be
‘‘The
Governing
Council
of
the
Salvation
Army
Canada
West’’
under
which
name
it
appears
as
the
third
added
appellant.
The
charitable
objects
mentioned
in
the
will
under
the
numbers
(3),
(4)
and
(5)
not
being
existing
charities,
the
same
order
directed
that
Separate
schemes
in
regard
to
them,
all
in
substantially
the
same
form,
should
be
approved.
The
last
three
added
appellants
are
the
trustees
of
the
schemes
so
approved.
The
nature
of
the
trusts
to
be
carried
into
effect
under
the
said
schemes
appears
sufficiently
from
the
titles
of
the
schemes
as
being
for
the
benefit
of
"‘poor
and
indigent
and
neglected
children”,
4
"widows
and
orphans
of
members
of
the
Calgary
Police
Force”
and
"widows
and
orphans
of
the
Calgary
Fire
Brigade’’.
The
first
added
appellant,
"The
Royal
Trust
Company”,
referred
to
in
the
will,
is
a
commercial
company
whose
objects
are
not
limited
to
charitable
objects.
In
each
of
the
years
in
question
the
executors
paid
out
of
the
income
of
the
trust
estate
the
fixed
annuities
and
other
sums
payable
thereout
and
distributed
60%
of
the
balance
among
the
named
nephews
and
nieces.
The
surplus,
amounting
to
40%,
they
transferred
for
accumulation
to
capital
account
in
their
books.
Sixty-seven
per
cent
of
this
surplus
was
ultimately
divisible
under
the
will
between
the
nephews
and
nieces
and
33%
was
ultimately
payable
to
the
Royal
Trust
Co.
It
is
with
income
tax
claimed
by
the
respondent
in
respect
of
this
33%
in
the
years
in
question
that
the
present
controversy
is
concerned.
It
is
to
be
noted
that
the
ultimate
destination
of
any
fund
which
at
the
date
of
distribution
will
represent
accumulations
of
this
33%
will,
under
the
terms
of
the
will
and
pursuant
to
the
Order
of
the
Alberta
Court,
be
in
favour
of
charity.
Those
accumulations,
however,
will
be
and
remain
capital
funds
and
will
be
held
as
such
by
the
appellants,
the
Royal
Trust
Co.;
only
the
income
of
the
accumulated
fund
will
be
payable
to
the
last
five
added
appellants
for
charitable
purposes.
Although
the
ultimate
destination
of
the
funds
will
be
to
constitute
capital
funds
for
charitable
purposes
the
machinery
for
bringing
them
to
the
hands
of
those
whom
the
testator
nominates
as
the
bodies
to
administer
the
several
charities
is
somewhat
complicated.
The
persons
who
will
receive
the
33%
of
surplus
income
during
the
period
between
the
death
of
the
testator
and
the
date
of
distribution
are
the
executors.
They
are
the
persons
charged
with
the
duty
of
receiving
and
accumulating
it.
When
the
date
of
distribution
arrives
33%
of
the
accumulations
will
be
handed
over
to
the
Royal
Trust
Co.
as
a
capital
fund.
That
company
will
continue
to
hold
and
administer
this
capital
fund
but
the
annual
income
of
the
fund
is
to
be
paid
over
to
the
last
five
added
appellants.
The
purpose
for
which
the
33%
share
of
the
accumulations
is
to
be
handed
over
to
the
Royal
Trust
Co.
is
stated
to
be
"‘for
the
creation
and
establishment
of
a
Trust
to
be
known
as
The
Burns
Memorial
Trust
to
be
administered
by
it
(i.e.,
the
Royal
Trust
Co.)
as
trustee’’.
The
appellants’
first
and
most
important
claim
is
that
the
income
in
question
was
not
liable
to
taxation
by
reason
of
s.
4(1)
(e)
of
the
Act
which
exempts
from
liability:
44
The
income
of
any
religious,
charitable,
agricultural
and
educational
institution,
board
of
trade
and
chamber
of
commerce,
no
part
of
the
income
of
which
inures
to
the
personal
profit
of,
or
is
paid
or
payable
to
any
proprietor
thereof
or
shareholder
therein.’’
The
income,
they
submitted,
was
the
income
either
of
the
five
added
appellants
or
of
the
"‘Burns
Memorial
Trust’’.
All
of
these,
they
claim,
were
"‘charitable
institutions’’
and
the
33%
of
the
surplus
income
was
entitled
to
the
exemption.
In
order
that
the
income
may
be
exempted
under
the
relevant
words
of
s.
4(1)
(e)
two
conditions
must
exist.
The
body
claiming
exemption
must
be
a
‘‘charitable
institution
and
the
income
must
be
its
income.
If
either
of
these
conditions
is
absent
the
claim
to
exemption
must
fail.
The
learned
Deputy
Judge
in
the
Exchequer
Court
held
that
the
income
in
question
was
not
"‘income''
of
any
of
the
added
appellants
and
consequently
he
did
not
find
it
necessary
to
decide
whether
any
of
them
was
a
charitable
institution
within
the
meaning
of
the
section.
He
expressed,
however,
the
following
opinions:
(1)
That
the
Royal
Trust
Co.
is
obviously
not
a
charitable
institution
;
(2)
that
the
‘‘Burns
Memorial
Trust’’
is
nothing
more
than
a
name
attached
to
a
fund
and
is
not
a
charitable
institution.
The
same
opinions
were
expressed
by
all
the
Judges
of
the
Supreme
Court
and
their
Lordships
take
the
view
that
they
are
manifestly
correct.
With
regard
to
the
argument
that
the
last
five
added
appellants
are
‘‘charitable
institutions”
entitled
to
claim
exemption
the
learned
Deputy
Judge
said:
4
"
But
holding
as
I
have
done
that
no
part
of
the
income
for
any
of
the
relevant
years
will
at
any
time
reach
the
beneficiaries
as
income,
it
is
quite
unnecessary
for
me
to
determine
this
point
and
I
make
no
finding
in
regard
thereto.’’
In
the
Supreme
Court
this
claim
to
exemption
was
held
to
fail
for
the
same
reason
although
in
the
opinion
of
the
majority
the
Lacombe
Home
and
the
Salvation
Army
were
religious
or
charitable
institutions.
This
latter
expression
of
opinion
was,
however,
not
necessary
to
the
decision.
Their
Lordships,
while
not
desiring
to
throw
any
doubt
on
its
correctness,
prefer
to
base
their
decision
on
the
view
taken
both
by
the
learned
Deputy
Judge
and
by
all
the
members
of
the
Supreme
Court
that
the
income
was
not
income
of
any
of
the
five
added
appellants.
The
executors
are
the
recipients
of
the
income.
It
is
their
duty
to
accumulate
it
and
ultimately
to
hand
over
the
accumulation
to
the
Royal
Trust
Co.
That
company
will
receive
these
accumulations
not
as
income
but
as
a
capital
fund
which
will
always
remain
capital
in
its
hands.
All
that
it
will
disburse,
all
that
the
five
bodies
will
receive,
will
be
the
income
of
the
capital
fund.
It
is
true
that
the
company
and
the
five
bodies
are
entitled
to
enforce
the
obligations
in
respect
of
the
income
which
the
will
imposes
upon
the
executors
and
the
five
bodies
will
also
be
entitled
to
enforce
the
obligations
in
respect
of
the
administration
of
the
accumulated
fund
and
the
distribution
of
its
income
which
are
imposed
on
the
company.
But
this
does
not
make
the
income
received
by
the
executors
or
the
capital
fund
to
be
received
by
the
Royal
Trust
Co.
in
any
sense
or
at
any
time
the
income
of
those
bodies.
This
being
in
their
Lordships’
view
a
conclusive
answer
to
the
whole
of
the
claim
based
on
el.
(e)
of
s.
4(1)
they
prefer
to
express
no
opinion
on
the
question
whether
any
of
the
five
bodies
are
institutions
within
the
meaning
of
that
clause.
But
this
does
not
dispose
of
the
matters
in
issue.
The
learned
Deputy
Judge
of
the
Exchequer
Court
had
held
that
the
whole
of
the
income
was
covered
by
the
charging
provisions
of
the
Act
and
dismissed
the
appeal
to
that
Court.
In
the
Supreme
Court
a
different
view
was
taken
and
the
appellants
obtained
a
measure
of
success.
The
majority
(consisting
of
the
Chief
Justice,
Kerwin
and
Hudson,
JJ.)
thought
that
two-fifths
of
the
income
in
question
(being
that
proportion
from
which
the
Lacombe
Home
and
the
Salvation
Army
are
ultimately
entitled
to
the
interest
thereon),
were
free
from
income
tax
for
the
years
1938
and
1939
on
the
ground
that
in
those
years
there
was
no
relevant
charging
section
in
the
Act
which
applied
to
that
proportion.
The
minority
(consisting
of
Rand
and
Estey
JJ.)
took
a
view
more
favourable
to
the
appellants.
They
considered
that
the
entirety
of
the
33%
of
the
income
and
not
merely
two-fifths
of
it
was
free
from
income
tax
for
those
two
years
and
also
for
the
year
1940
on
the
ground
that
no
charging
section
applied
to
any
of
it
until
the
year
1941.
Their
Lordships
are
of
opinion
that
the
majority
of
the
High
Court
were
right
in
thinking
that
the
two-fifths
of
the
income
indi-
cated
by
them
was
free
from
tax
but
they
agree
with
the
view
of
the
minority
that
it
was
so
free
also
for
the
year
1940.
They
are
unable,
however,
to
accept
the
view
of
the
minority
that
the
remaining
three-fifths
of
the
income
was
free
from
tax
for
any
of
the
years
in
question.
The
questions
here
involved
turn
on
the
construction
of
certain
provisions
of
s.
11
of
the
Act
and
on
the
effect
of
two
amendments
made
in
s-s.
(4)
of
that
section,
one
having
effect
for
the
year
1940,
and
the
other
for
the
year
1941.
The
general
scheme
of
the
Act
in
the
case
of
trust
property
is
to
impose
the
tax
on
the
persons
beneficially
entitled
to
the
income
and
not
on
the
trustees.
But
in
some
cases
this
would
have
led
to
administrative
difficulties
in
enforcing
the
tax
against
anyone.
Examples
of
cases
where
the
tax
is
imposed
on
trustees
are
to
be
found
provided
for
in
s.
11.
The
first
subsection
of
that
section
refers
to
the
general
scheme.
It
provides
as
follows
:
*
The
income,
for
any
taxation
period,
of
a
beneficiary
of
any
estate
or
trust
of
whatsoever
nature
shall
be
deemed
to
include
all
income
accruing
to
the
credit
of
the
taxpayer
whether
received
by
him
or
not
during
such
taxation
period.”
It
is
convenient
here
to
interpose
a
reference
to
an
argument
which
was
at
one
time
advanced
on
behalf
of
the
appellants,
viz.,
that
the
income
in
question
could
be
regarded
as
income
of
the
five
bodies,
they
being
(it
was
suggested)
"‘beneficiaries’’
to
whose
"‘credit’’
the
income
was
accruing.
Their
Lordships
are
of
opinion
that
this
argument
cannot
prevail.
They
consider
that
this
income
is
not
“‘income’’
accruing
to
the
credit
of
any
of
them.
All
that
they
are
entitled
to
is
to
receive
at
a
future
date
a
capital
sum
built
up
from
receipts
which,
as
has
been
already
pointed
out,
could
never
be
carried
to
their
credit
as
income.
The
subclause,
in
their
Lordships’
opinion,
is
dealing
with
income
“‘accruing
to
the
credit’?
of
a
‘‘taxpayer’’
only
in
the
sense
that
it
is
income
which
is
his
although
not
yet
paid
to
him.
Subsection
(2)
of
the
section
so
far
as
material
provides
as
follows:
‘‘Income
accumulating
in
trust
for
the
benefit
of
unascertained
persons,
or
of
persons
with
contingent
interests
shall
be
taxable
in
the
hands
of
the
trustee
or
other
like
person
acting
in
a
fiduciary
capacity,
as
if
such
income
were
the
income
of
a
person
other
than
a
corporation,
provided
that
he
shall
not
be
entitled
to
the
exemptions
provided
by
paragraphs
(c),
(d),
(e)
and
(i)
of
subsection
one
of
section
five
of
this
Act.”
It
was
argued
on
behalf
of
the
respondent
that
the
whole
of
the
income
in
question
was
chargeable
under
this
subsection
as
being
income
accumulating
in
trust
for
the
benefit
of
"‘unascer-
tained
persons’’.
The
majority
of
the
Supreme
Court
accepted
this
argument
as
regards
the
proportion
of
the
accumulating
income
which
will
ultimately
be
handed
over
to
the
three
sets
of
trustees.
In
the
case
of
those
bodies
they
considered
that
the
accumulations
were
in
trust
for
the
benefit
of
the
several
objects
of
the
charities
namely
the
poor,
indigent
and
neglected
children,
the
widows
and
orphans
of
members
of
the
Police
Force
and
the
widows
and
orphans
of
members
of
the
Fire
Brigade.
These
they
considered
to
be
"‘unascertained
persons’’
so
that
the
wording
of
the
subsection
was
precisely
applicable.
Rand
and
Estey
J
J.,
on
the
other
hand
thought
that
the
income
could
not
be
said
to
be
accumulating
in
trust
for
the
"‘benefit’’
of
those
objects
who
would
never
receive
it
as
income
since
all
that
they
will
receive
as
income
will
be
the
income
of
the
accumulated
fund,
not
that
fund
itself.
The
question
is
not
free
from
difficulty
but
their
Lordships
find
themselves
in
agreement
with
the
view
of
the
majority
of
the
Supreme
Court.
The
expression
"‘for
the
benefit
of’’
appears
to
them
to
be
wide
enough
in
its
ordinary
significance
to
cover
the
case
where
the
unascertained
persons
will
receive
an
interest
in
the
income
to
be
derived
from
the
fund
built
up
from
the
accumulating
income.
It
is
true
that
if
the
view
of
the
majority
of
the
Supreme
Court
is
accepted
there
might
in
that
class
of
case
be
a
certain
measure
of
overlapping
with
ss.
(4),
at
any
rate
in
its
form
as
finally
amended.
The
view
which
their
Lordships
favour
does,
however,
find
support
in
the
language
used
by
Lord
Romer
in
delivering
the
opinion
of
the
Board
in
Minister
of
National
Revenue
v.
Trusts
C
Guar.
Co.,
[1938-39]
C.T.C.
371,
[1940]
A.C.
138.
He
said
of
ss.
(2)
:
‘‘The
subsection
applies
in
every
case
where
income
is
being
accumulated
in
trust
for
the
benefit
of
unascertained
persons
whether
those
persons
will
or
will
not
ultimately
take
a
vested
interest
in
such
income,
and
whether
they
will
or
will
not
ever
become
entitled
to
specific
portions
of
it.
In
the
present
case
the
accumulated
interest
in
the
hands
of
the
respondents
as
trustees
will
in
the
year
1948
have
to
be
handed
over
to
the
Municipal
Council
of
Colne
as
trustees
in
trust
to
be
applied
for
the
benefit
of
the
aged
and
deserving
poor
of
that
town.
Such
aged
and
deserving
poor
are
without
any
question
persons,
and
equally
without
question
they
are
unascertained.
The
case,
therefore,
seems
to
fall
within
the
very
words
of
the
subsection.”
No
doubt
the
accumulating
fund
in
that
case
(and
not
merely
its
income)
was
itself
to
be
applied
for
the
benefit
of
the
aged
and
deserving
poor
so
that
they
would
be
the
ultimate
recipients
of
the
fund
built
up
of
the
accumulating
income
(although
they
would
not
have
received
it
as
income).
The
language
used
does
not,
however,
confine
the
principle
expounded
to
cases
of
that
character
but
is
wide
enough
and
in
their
Lordships
‘
view
intentionally
wide
enough
to
cover
such
a
case
as
the
present.
Their
Lordships
therefore
are
of
opinion
that
with
regard
to
the
three-fifths
of
the
income
in
which
the
three
sets
of
trustees
are
interested
the
majority
of
the
Supreme
Court
came
to
the
right
conclusion.
That
proportion
is
covered
by
ss.
(2)
which
is
admittedly
a
charging
provision
and
as
it
is
not
exempted
under
s.
4(1)
(e)
the
appeal
to
that
extent
fails.
As
regards
the
Lacombe
Home
and
the
Salvation
Army
all
members
of
the
Supreme
Court
took
the
view
that
the
proportions
of
income
in
which
those
bodies
were
interested
were
exempt
from
taxation
under
ss.
(2)
for
the
years
1938
and
1939.
The
majority
based
their
conclusion
on
the
view
that
these
bodies
were
ascertained
persons
and
as
such
were
the
persons
for
whose
benefit
the
income
was
accumulating.
There
is
no
cross-appeal
from
this
decision.
The
minority
on
the
other
hand
considered
that
these
proportions
escaped
taxation
under
the
general
principle
enunciated
by
them
that
the
income
could
not
be
said
to
be
accumulating
for
their
"‘benefit’’
and
they
will
never
receive
it
as
income.
Their
Lordships
have
already
given
reasons
for
not
accepting
this
reasoning
of
the
minority.
Accepting,
therefore,
the
view
of
the
majority
of
the
Supreme
Court
as
they
do,
there
is
nothing
which
imposes
a
charge
to
tax
upon
these
two-fifths.
But
ss.
(4)
of
s.
11
remains
to
be
considered.
For
the
years
1938
and
1939
this
subsection
was
in
the
following
form:
‘‘Dividends
received
by
an
estate
or
trust
and
capitalized
shall
be
taxable
income
of
the
estate
or
trust.’’
It
was
not
contended
that
the
subsection
in
this
form
operated
to
charge
these
shares
of
income
in
those
two
years.
In
1940
Parliament
substituted
a
new
ss.
(4)
(a)
for
the
original
ss.
(4)
in
these
terms:
"
(4)
(a)
Income
received
by
an
estate
or
trust
and
capitalized
shall
be
taxable
in
the
hands
of
the
executors
or
trustees,
or
other
like
persons
acting
in
a
fiduciary
capacity.”
The
majority
of
the
Judges
of
the
Supreme
Court
took
the
view
that
unlike
the
original
ss.
(4)
this
substituted
provision
operates
as
a
true
charging
section
notwithstanding
that
it
does
not
expressly
say
what
the
rate
of
taxation
is
to
be.
That
omission,
they
thought,
could
be
supplied
on
the
ground
that
this
Board,
in
Holden
v.
Minister
of
National
Revenue,
[1928-34]
C.T.C.
129,
[1933]
A.C.
526,
construed
s.
11(2)
in
its
then
form
as
a
valid
charging
section,
the
rate
of
taxation
being
sufficiently
indicated
by
the
words
then
present
in
that
subsection
which
provided
that
the
income
there
dealt
with
should
be
taxed
‘‘as
if
such
income
were
the
income
of
an
unmarried
person?
’
Their
Lordships
cannot
agree
with
this
reasoning.
They
share
the
difficulties
expressed
by
Rand
and
Estey,
JJ.,
in
their
dissenting
judgments.
As
Estey,
J.,
said:
"‘Without
a
rate
or
determinable
amount
there
can
be
no
impost”
and
neither
of
those
learned
Judges
was
prepared
to
imply
a
reference
either
to
the
rate
expressly
specified
for
cases
falling
under
s.
11(2)
or
any
other
rate.
With
this
view
of
the
matter
their
Lordships
are
in
agreement.
The
two-fifths
of
the
33%
in
which
the
two
named
bodies
are
interested
is
accordingly
not
subject
to
tax
for
the
year
1940.
Kor
the
year
1941,
however
the
omission
was
made
good.
Parliament
for
that
year
and
following
years
added
a
new
clause
(c)
to
ss.
(4)
reading
as
follows:
"‘Income
taxable
under
the
provisions
of
this
subsection
shall
be
taxed
as
if
such
income
were
the
income
of
a
person
other
than
a
corporation,
provided
that
no
deduction
shall
be
allowed
in
respect
of
the
exemptions
provided
by
paragraphs
(c),
(d),
(e),
(ee)
and
(i)
of
subsection
one
of
section
five
of
this
Act.’’
Their
Lordships
agree
with
the
unanimous
opinion
of
the
Supreme
Court
that
this
addition
states
with
sufficient
precision
what
the
basis
of
the
impost
is
to
be
and
turns
the
subsection
into
a
valid
charging
provision
covering
the
whole
of
the
income
in
question.
In
the
result
their
Lordships
will
humbly
advise
His
Majesty
that
in
the
order
and
declaration
made
by
the
Supreme
Court
the
year
1940
should
be
added
to
the
years
1938
and
1939
for
which
the
two-fifths
of
the
income
in
question
(being
the
proportion
from
which
the
Lacombe
Home
and
the
Salvation
Army
are
ultimately
entitled
to
the
interest
thereon)
are
declared
to
be
free
of
income
tax
and
that
this
appeal
should
be
allowed
to
that
extent
but
no
further.
The
order
of
the
Supreme
Court
as
to
costs
will
stand.
The
appellants
having
failed
on
their
main
contention
must
pay
three-quarters
of
the
respondent’s
costs
of
the
appeal.
Appeal
allowed
in
part.