JUDSON,
J.:—The
issue
in
this
appeal
is
whether
the
appellant
was
a
personal
corporation
within
the
meaning
of
Section
68
of
the
Income
Tax
Act
during
its
1955
and
1956
taxation
years.
Both
the
Income
Tax
Appeal
Board
and
the
Exchequer
Court
have
found
that
it
was
not.
The
appellant
contests
this
finding
and
appeals
from
the
re-assessments
made
for
the
1955
and
1956
taxation
years.
The
appellant
was
incorporated
as
a
private
company
under
the
Companies
Act
of
British
Columbia
and
for
many
years
it
was
controlled
by
the
late
Robert
William
Fiddes,
who
owned
1699
shares
out
of
its
1700
total
issued
ordinary
shares.
During
the
lifetime
of
the
late
Mr.
Fiddes,
the
appellant
was
admittedly
a
personal
corporation
within
the
meaning
of
Section
68
of
the
Income
Tax
Act.
Mr.
Fiddes
died
on
April
25,
1954.
Under
his
will,
the
Montreal
Trust
Company
and
Elmore
Meredith,
both
of
the
City
of
Vancouver,
were
appointed
executors
and
Letters
Probate
were
granted
to
them
on
June
15,
1954.
Following
the
death
of
Mr.
Fiddes,
the
shares
of
the
appellant
were
held
by
these
executors
and
the
appellant
was
controlled
by
them
during
the
1955
and
1956
taxation
years.
For
these
years,
in
filing
its
income
tax
returns,
the
appellant
claimed
exemption
from
tax
on
the
ground
that
it
was
a
personal
corporation.
The
Minister
rejected
this
claim
and
re-assessed
for
these
years
on
the
ground
that
the
appellant
was
not
a
personal
corporation.
These
are
the
re-assessments
which
were
confirmed
on
appeal
to
the
Income
Tax
Appeal
Board
and
to
the
Exchequer
Court.
In
my
opinion,
the
appeal
fails
and
should
be
dismissed
with
costs.
Personal
corporation”
is
defined
by
Section
68
of
the
Income
Tax
Act
in
the
following
terms:
“68.
(1)
In
this
Act,
a
‘personal
corporation’
means
a
corporation
that,
during
the
whole
of
the
taxation
year
in
respect
of
which
the
expression
is
being
applied,
(a)
was
controlled,
whether
through
holding
a
majority
of
the
shares
of
the
corporation
or
in
any
other
manner
whatsoever,
by
an
individual
resident
in
Canada,
by
such
an
individual
and
one
or
more
members
of
his
family
who
were
resident
in
Canada
or
by
any
other
person
on
his
or
their
behalf
;
(b)
derived
at
least
one-quarter
of
its
income
from
(i)
ownership
of
or
trading
or
dealing
in
bonds,
shares,
debentures,
mortgages,
hypothecs,
bills,
notes
or
other
similar
property
or
an
interest
therein,
(ii)
lending
money
with
or
without
securities,
(iii)
rents,
hire
of
chattels,
charterparty
fees
or
remunerations,
annuities,
royalties,
interest
or
dividends,
or
(iv)
estates
or
trusts;
and
(c)
did
not
carry
on
an
active
financial,
commercial
or
industrial
business.
(2)
For
the
purpose
of
paragraph
(a)
of
subsection
(1),
the
members
of
an
individual’s
family
are
his
spouse,
sons
and
daughters
whether
or
not
they
live
together.
It
is
admitted
that
the
income
of
the
corporation
qualifies
under
paragraph
(b)
of
Section
68(1).
The
question
is
whether
the
control
of
the
corporation
in
1955
and
1956
was
such
as
to
qualify
it
within
paragraph
(a)
of
Section
68(1).
A
personal
corporation
does
not
pay
income
tax
but
its
income
is
taxed
in
the
hands
of
the
shareholders
under
Section
67
of
the
Act,
which
reads:
“67.
(1)
The
income
of
a
personal
corporation
whether
actually
distributed
or
not
shall
be
deemed
to
have
been
dis-
tributed
to,
and
received
by,
the
shareholders
as
a
dividend
on
the
last
day
of
each
taxation
year
of
the
corporation.
(2)
No
tax
is
payable
under
this
Part
on
the
taxable
income
of
a
corporation
for
a
taxation
year
during
which
it
was
a
personal
corporation.’’
The
appellant’s
submissions
on
this
appeal
were
that
the
executors
were
individuals
according
to
the
definition
of
“individual”
and
‘‘person’’
in
Section
139(1)
(u)
and
(ac),
and
that,
consequently,
the
requirements
of
Section
68(1)
(a)
were
met.
Section
139(1)
(u)
and
(ac)
read:
“139.
(1)
.
.
.
(u)
‘Individual’
means
a
person
other
than
a
corporation;
(ac)
‘person’
or
any
word
or
expression
descriptive
of
a
person,
includes
any
body
corporate
and
politic,
and
the
heirs,
executors,
administrators
or
other
legal
representatives
of
such
person,
according
to
the
law
of
that
part
of
Canada
to
which
the
context
extends;
.
.
.”
The
argument
is
that
since
an
individual
means
a
person
(other
than
a
corporation)
and
as
the
definition
of
“person”
includes
executors
and
legal
representatives,
it
follows
that
the
executors
of
the
Fiddes
estate
are
individuals
and
that
having
had
the
requisite
control
and
all
the
other
requirements
of
Section
68(1)
having
been
met,
the
appellant
company
was
in
1955
and
1956
a
personal
corporation.
I
have
no
hesitation
in
rejecting
this
argument.
The
executors
controlled
this
company
during
the
taxation
years
in
question
on
behalf
of
the
beneficiaries
of
the
estate.
This,
in
my
opinion,
is
not
one
of
the
three
modes
of
control
contemplated
by
Section
68(1)(a).
The
three
modes
of
control
are:
(i)
by
an
individual
resident
in
Canada;
(ii)
by
such
an
individual
and
one
or
more
members
of
his
family
who
were
resident
in
Canada
(family
being
defined
by
statute)
;
(iii)
by
any
other
person
on
his
or
their
behalf.
In
my
opinion,
the
individual
first
referred
to
must
be
a
natural
living
person
exercising
control
on
his
own
behalf.
The
word
does
not
include
executors,
whether
corporate
or
otherwise.
I
say
this
because
that
individual
first
referred
to
is
next
referred
to
in
connection
with
his
family.
There
is
no
room
for
executors,
whether
corporate
or
otherwise,
in
this
scheme
of
control.
The
last
mode
of
control
is
by
any
other
person
on
behalf
of
an
indi-
vidual
or
on
behalf
of
the
individual
and
members
of
his
family.
I
can
think
of
situations
where
executors
could
exercise
control
under
this
third
mode
of
control,
for
example,
if
T
dies
leaving
all
his
shares
in
a
personal
corporation
to
executors
and
trustees
in
trust
for
an
individual
or
for
that
individual
and
members
of
his
family.
But
this
is
not
the
present
case.
Under
the
terms
of
the
will
left
by
the
late
Mr.
Fiddes,
the
executors
control
on
behalf
of
numerous
beneficiaries.
They
do
not
control
on
behalf
of
an
individual
or
the
individual
and
members
of
his
family.
My
conclusion
therefore
is
that
an
executor
cannot
be
the
individual
referred
to
in
Section
68(1)
(a).
Nor
do
I
think
that
the
appellant
can
get
any
assistance
from
Section
63(1)
and
(2)
of
the
Income
Tax
Act,
which
defines
a
trust
and
then
goes
on
to
define
a
trust
as
an
individual
as
follows:
“63.
(1)
In
this
Act,
trust
or
estate
means
the
trustee
or
the
executor,
administrator,
heir
or
other
legal
representative
having
ownership
or
control
of
the
trust
or
estate
property.
(2)
A
trust
or
estate
shall,
for
the
purposes
of
this
Act,
and
without
affecting
the
liability
of
the
trustee
or
legal
representative
for
his
own
income
tax,
be
deemed
to
be
in
respect
of
the
trust
or
estate
property
an
individual
.
.
.”
Section
63
has
no
relevancy
in
the
determination
whether
a
corporation
is
a
personal
corporation.
Although
Section
63(2)
may
require
executors
to
be
deemed
an
individual
for
the
purpose
of
taxation
of
the
trust
or
estate
and
although
they
may
be
an
individual
holding
the
shares
of
the
appellant
company,
for
the
reasons
I
have
given
they
cannot
be
the
individual
referred
to
in
Section
68(1)
(a),
because
a
plain
intention
to
the
contrary
is
to
be
gathered
from
the
context
of
the
section
itself.
I
would
dismiss
the
appeal
with
costs.
Appeal
dismissed.