Stone,
J.:—This
appeal
raises
questions
concerning
the
interpretation
to
be
given
certain
provisions
of
the
Income
Tax
Act
(the
“Act’’)
as
it
stood
both
in
1968*
and
1969.t
It
is
brought
from
a
decision
of
the
Trial
Division:):
rendered
on
March
20,
1984
in
which
it
was
held
that
the
appellant
had
correctly
included
in
its
1969
income
for
income
tax
purposes
an
amount
of
$10,454,396
which
it
had
deducted
from
its
1968
income.
Background
The
appellant
was
incorporated
in
1887
by
an
Act
of
the
Parliament
of
Canada
with
authority
to
carry
on
an
accident
insurance
business.
That
business
may
be
conveniently
referred
to
as
its
“other-than-life"
insurance
business.
It
has
engaged
in
that
line
of
business
throughout
the
entire
period
of
its
existence.
In
1924
the
appellant
was
authorized
to
underwrite
life
insurance
risks
and
ever
since
it
has
engaged
in
that
line
of
business
simultaneously
with
its
other-than-life
insurance
business.
In
point
of
fact,
it
has
devoted
substantial
assets
to
both
lines
of
business.
In
1968,
for
example,
the
amounts
were
roughly
equal
and
were
very
substantial,
each
being
in
the
neighbourhood
of
$28,000,000.
The
issues
on
this
appeal
arise
out
of
assessments
and
reassessments
by
the
Minister
of
National
Revenue
of
the
appellant’s
income
for
the
taxation
years
1969,
1970,
1971
and
1972.
It
is
agreed,
however,
that
the
pivotal
year
is
1969
and
that
the
assessments
and
reassessments
for
the
remaining
years
will
stand
or
fall
according
to
whether
the
assessment
and
reassessment
for
the
1969
taxation
year
were
correct
or
incorrect.
Certain
provisions
of
section
85B
of
the
Act
as
it
stood
in
the
1969
and
subsequent
taxation
years
are
relevant.
That
section
read
in
part:
SPECIAL
RESERVES
85B.
(1)
In
computing
the
income
of
a
taxpayer
for
a
taxation
year,
(a)
every
amount
received
in
the
year
in
the
course
of
a
business
(i)
that
is
on
account
of
services
not
rendered
or
goods
not
delivered
before
the
end
of
the
year
or
that,
for
any
other
reason,
may
be
regarded
as
not
having
been
earned
in
the
year
or
a
previous
year,
or
(ii)
under
an
arrangement
or
understanding
that
it
is
repayable
in
whole
or
in
part
on
the
return
or
resale
to
the
taxpayer
of
articles
in
or
by
means
of
which
goods
were
delivered
to
a
customer,
shall
be
included;
(b)
(c)
subject
to
subsection
(3),
where
amounts
of
a
class
described
in
subparagraph
(i)
or
(ii)
of
paragraph
(a)
have
been
included
in
computing
the
taxpayer's
income
from
a
business
for
the
year
or
a
previous
year,
there
may
be
deducted
a
reasonable
amount
as
a
reserve
.
.
.
(d)
(e)
there
shall
be
included
the
amounts
deducted
under
paragraphs
(c)
.
.
.
in
computing
the
income
of
the
taxpayer
for
the
immediately
preceding
year.
(5)
Paragraph
(c)
of
subsection
(1)
does
not
apply
to
allow
a
deduction
as
a
reserve
in
respect
of
insurance,
but
an
insurance
corporation
shall,
in
computing
its
income
for
a
taxation
year
from
an
insurance
business,
other
than
a
life
insurance
business,
carried
on
by
it,
deduct
as
policy
reserves
such
amounts
as
have
been
prescribed
for
the
purposes
of
this
subsection.
(7)
For
the
purposes
of
paragraph
(e)
of
subsection
(1),
an
amount
determined
under
subsection
(3)
or
an
amount
deducted
under
subsection
(5)
or
(6)
shall
be
deemed
to
have
been
deducted
under
paragraph
(c)
of
subsection
(1).
In
its
1968
taxation
year,
the
appellant
filed
two
separate
income
tax
returns,
one
in
respect
of
its
life
insurance
business
and
the
other
in
respect
of
its
other-than-life
insurance
business.
This
was
done
in
compliance
with
a
long
established
practice
which
had
been
initiated
by
the
Department
of
National
Revenue.
In
calculating
its
income
from
its
other-than-life
insurance
business
for
that
year
the
appellant
deducted
the
amount
in
issue
as
a
policy
reserve
which
it
calculated
according
to
the
provisions
of
Regulation
1400
as
“prescribed”
for
purposes
of
subsection
85B(5)
as
it
then
stood.
Regulation
1400
read:
POLICY
RESERVES
OF
INSURANCE
CORPORATIONS
1400.
For
the
purpose
of
subsection
(5)
of
section
85B
of
the
Act,
the
amounts
prescribed
are
(a)
the
total
amount
of
the
unearned
premiums,
on
the
100%
basis,
at
the
end
of
the
corporation’s
taxation
year,
and
(b)
such
other
amounts,
if
any,
as
are
required
to
be
shown
as
policy
reserves
at
the
end
of
the
corporation’s
taxation
year
as
computed
for
the
purpose
of
financial
statements
required
to
be
submitted
to
the
Superintendant
of
Insurance
for
Canada,
or
if
the
corporation
is
not
required
to
submit
financial
statements
to
the
Superintendent
of
Insurance
for
Canada,
the
provincial
authority
under
whose
jurisdiction
the
corporation
was
incorporated.
By
a
combination
of
paragraph
(1)(c)
and
subsections
(5)
and
(7)
thereof,
section
85B
of
the
Act
as
it
stood
in
1968,
like
its
1969
successor,
provided
for
the
deduction
from
income
of
a
policy
reserve.
The
relevant
provisions
read
in
part:
85B.
(1)
In
computing
the
income
of
a
taxpayer
for
a
taxation
year,
(a)
(b)
(c)
.
.
.
there
may
be
deducted
a
reasonable
amount
as
a
reserve
.
.
.
(d)
(e)
there
shall
be
included
the
amounts
deducted
under
paragraphs
(c)
.
.
.
in
computing
the
income
of
the
taxpayer
for
the
immediately
preceding
year.
(5)
Paragraph
(c)
of
subsection
(1)
does
not
apply
to
allow
a
deduction
as
a
reserve
in
respect
of
insurance,
but
an
insurance
corporation,
other
than
a
life
insurance
corporation,
shall,
in
computing
its
income
from
its
insurance
business
for
a
taxation
year,
deduct
as
policy
reserves
such
amounts
as
have
been
pre-
cribed
for
the
purposes
of
this
subsection.
(7)
For
the
purposes
of
paragraph
(e)
of
subsection
(1),
an
amount
determined
under
subsection
(3)
or
an
amount
deducted
under
subsection
(5)
or
(6)
shall
be
deemed
to
have
been
deducted
under
paragraph
(c)
of
subsection
(1).
The
Minister
accepted
the
appellant's
policy
reserve
calculation
and
assessed
its
1968
other-than-life
insurance
income
accordingly.
In
1969
the
appellant
again
filed
two
income
tax
returns,
one
in
respect
of
its
life
insurance
business
and
the
other
in
respect
of
its
other-than-life
insurance
business.
Consistent
with
the
appellant’s
return
of
income
for
that
year,
the
Minister
assessed
income
from
its
other-than-life
insurance
business
on
the
basis
that
the
amount
in
issue,
having
been
deducted
in
1968
as
a
policy
reserve,
was
required
by
paragraph
85B(1)(e)
to
be
brought
into
income
in
1969.
In
confirming
this
action
by
way
of
reassessment
the
Minister
rejected
the
appellant’s
contention
that
paragraph
85B(1)(e)
of
the
1969
legislation,
properly
understood,
did
not
require
it
to
include
the
amount
in
issue
in
its
1969
return
of
other-than-life
insurance
income
because
such
amount
ought
not
to
have
been
deducted
in
1968.
That
contention
lies
at
the
heart
of
this
appeal.
It
is
based
upon
the
treatment
accorded
taxable
income
of
a
“life
insurance
corporation”
under
section
30
of
the
statute
as
it
stood
in
1968.
That
section,
like
section
85B,
is
found
in
Part
1
of
the
statute
and
reads
in
part:
30.
Notwithstanding
anything
in
this
Part,
the
taxable
income
of
a
life
insurance
corporation
for
a
taxation
year
is
the
aggregate
of
the
amounts
credited
to
shareholders'
account
or
otherwise
appropriated
for
or
on
account
of
shareholders
during
the
year
minus
the
aggregate
of
.
.
.
The
appellant
contends
that
as
it
did
not
in
1968
credit
or
otherwise
appropriate
any
amount
for
or
on
account
of
the
shareholders,
as
a
“life
insurance
corporation"
in
that
year
it
had
no
taxable
income
to
compute;
that
being
a
“life
insurance
corporation"
in
that
year
it
could
have
no
other-than-life
insurance
income
from
which
to
deduct
a
policy
reserve
pursuant
to
subsection
85B(5)
which,
by
its
terms,
applied
only
to
the
income
of
“an
insurance
corporation,
other
than
a
life
insurance
corporation;"
that
the
fact
that
it
did
compute
income
from
its
other-than-life
insurance
business
in
1968
and
did
deduct
therefrom
the
amount
in
issue
as
a
policy
reserve
in
that
year
is
of
no
consequence
because
it
was
not
done
according
to
law;
that
in
view
of
the
foregoing
the
above
amount
cannot
be
said
to
have
been
deducted
from
1968
income
“under”
paragraph
85B(1)(c)
of
the
1968
legislation
and
therefore
was
beyond
the
reach
of
paragraph
85B(1)(e)
of
the
1969
legislation.
The
phrase
“an
insurance
corporation,
other
than
a
life
insurance
corporation”
in
subsection
85B(5)
appeared
as
well
in
section
68A
of
the
1968
legislation
in
only
a
slightly
different
form
(there
being
no
comma
after
the
third
word).
That
section
laid
down
rules
for
the
computation
of
the
income
of
an
insurance
corporation
arising
from
what
is
referred
to
herein
as
an
other-than-life
insurance
business
and
read
in
part
as
follows:
Mutual
Insurance
Corporations
68A.
It
is
hereby
declared
that
an
insurance
corporation
other
than
a
life
insurance
corporation,
whether
or
not
it
is
a
mutual
corporation,
that
has,
in
a
taxation
year,
entered
into
insurance
contracts
or
other
arrangements
or
relationships
whereby
it
can
reasonably
be
regarded
as
undertaking
to
insure
other
persons,
whether
or
not
such
persons
are
members
or
shareholders
of
the
corporation,
against
loss,
damage
or
expense
of
any
kind,
shall,
regardless
of
the
form
or
legal
effect
of
those
contracts,
arrangements
or
relationships,
be
deemed,
for
the
purposes
of
this
Act,
to
have
been
carrying
on
an
insurance
business
in
the
year
for
profit,
and,
in
any
such
case,
for
the
purpose
of
computing
the
income
from
the
business
so
deemed
to
have
been
carried
on,
the
following
rules
are
applicable.
I
have
already
quoted
the
text
of
paragraph
85B(1)(e)
as
it
stood
in
1969
but
some
of
its
language
bears
repeating.
It
directed
a
taxpayer,
in
computing
income
for
a
current
taxation
year,
to
include
therein
“the
amounts
deducted
under
paragraphs
(c)
.
.
.”
in
computing
income
“for
the
immediately
preceding
year.”
By
the
legislation
as
it
stood
in
1968,
a
policy
reserve
required
to
be
deducted
by
subsection
85B(5)
was,
by
subsection
(7),
deemed
for
the
purposes
of
paragraph
(1)(e)
to
have
been
deducted
“under”
paragraph
(1)(c).
The
form
of
paragraph
(1)(e)
of
the
1969
legislation
was
substantially
the
same
as
that
which
had
appeared
in
the
1968
legislation.
Trial
Judgment
In
deciding
that
the
amount
in
issue
was
reached
by
paragraph
(1)(e)
as
it
stood
in
1969
the
learned
trial
judge
stated:*
Had
the
1968
version
of
subsection
85B(5)
been
cast
in
the
same
mould
as
its
1969
counterpart
there
could
have
been
no
question
about
the
deduction
of
the
unearned
premium
reserve
of
$10,454,396.
But
the
plaintiff
says
that
as
a
life
insurance
corporation
it
was
legally
precluded
from
deducting
this
reserve,
although
it
did
in
fact
do
so.
It
follows
that
the
deduction
of
the
unearned
premium
reserve
must
be
treated
as
non-existent.
In
other
words,
the
legal
wand
magically
erases
the
factual
occurrence.
The
result
is
that
nothing
happened
in
1968
which
could
possibly
trigger
in
1969
the
capturing
mechanism
of
paragraph
85B(1)(e),
assuming
it
applies.
This
is
an
able
and
ingenious
argument
but
it
belies
the
fact
of
what
actually
occurred.
Moreover,
it
constitutes
an
outright
attack
on
the
1968
assessment
by
asserting
how
the
Minister
should
have
assessed
the
plaintiff
in
that
year
and
thus
puts
in
issue
an
objection
for
which
the
time
afforded
by
the
statute
to
serve
notice
of
objection
and
file
appeal
has
long
since
expired.
In
my
opinion,
the
argument
does
not
avail
with
the
result
that
the
1968
assessment
must
be
deemed
valid
and
binding.
Consequently,
the
deduction
by
the
plaintiff
in
that
year
of
the
unearned
premium
reserve
of
$10,454,396
is
not
obliterated
but
remains
very
much
a
fact.
The
focal
point
is
thus
constricted
to
the
issue
of
what
legal
result
obtained
in
1969
from
the
fact
of
the
1968
deduction.
This
brings
to
mind
the
old
saying
of
Bishop
Butler:
things
and
actions
are
what
they
are
and
the
consequences
of
them
will
be
what
they
will
be
.
.
.
The
final
question
is
simply
this
—
whether
the
words
of
paragraph
85(1
)(e)
of
the
Income
Tax
Act
interpreted
in
their
plain,
ordinary
and
grammatical
sense
in
context
of
the
statutory
scheme
of
section
85B
reach
out
to
bring
within
the
tax
net
in
1969
the
unearned
premium
reserve
of
$10,454,396
deducted
in
1968.
The
basic
rule
for
the
interpretation
of
a
taxing
statute
is
to
give
effect
to
the
meaning
of
the
words
used
within
their
proper
context
and
in
light
of
the
statute
as
a
whole.
There
are
two
complementary
subrules.
If
the
words
taken
in
context
are
precise
then
they
must
be
interpreted
in
their
plain,
ordinary
and
grammatical
sense.
If
the
words
are
imprecise
so
as
to
give
rise
to
the
possibility
of
two
constructions
then
they
should
be
interpreted
in
the
manner
which
will
bring
about
the
result
which
conforms
to
the
apparent
scheme
of
the
legislation,
rather
than
in
a
way
which
will
obviously
defeat
it.
(Tennant
v.
Smith,
[1982]
A.C.
150,
Versailles
Sweets,
Limited
v.
The
Attorney
General
of
Canada,
[1924]
S.C.R.
466,
468,
Highway
Sawmills
Ltd.
v.
M.N.R.,
[1966]
S.C.R.
384,
393;
[1966]
C.T.C.
150;
66
D.T.C.
5116).
It
is
my
opinion
that
the
words
of
paragraph
85B(1)(e)
of
the
Income
Tax
Act
taken
in
proper
context
in
light
of
the
statutory
scheme
of
section
85B
and
the
other
related
provisions
clearly
require
that
the
unearned
premium
reserve
of
$10,454,396
which
the
plaintiff
deducted
in
1968
for
its
other-than-life
business
must
be
included
in
its
1969
income
from
that
source.
I
am
satisfied
that
this
was
the
obvious
intent
of
Parliament,
especially
in
the
absence
of
any
“notwithstanding”
clause
to
nullify
the
interactive
effect
of
the
said
paragraph.
To
quote
Lord
Halsbury
in
Tennant
v.
Smith
..
the
words
of
the
Act
have
reached
the
alleged
subject
of
taxation.”
For
the
foregoing
reasons,
I
conclude
that
the
Minister
was
correct
in
treating
the
1968
unearned
premium
reserve
deduction
as
income
to
the
plaintiff
in
1969
and
his
reassessments
must
stand.
Accordingly,
the
plaintiffs
appeal
is
dismissed
with
costs.
Arguments
I
return
to
the
appellant's
contention
as
it
was
elaborated
before
us.
The
learned
trial
judge,
it
is
said,
erred
by
failing
to
decide
whether
in
1968
the
appellant,
as
it
claimed,
was
a
"life
insurance
corporation"
and,
if
it
was,
whether,
for
the
purposes
of
paragraph
85B(1)(e)
of
the
1969
legislation,
the
policy
reserve
was
deducted
"under"
paragraph
85B(1)(c)
of
the
1968
legislation.
It
is
argued
that
had
that
been
done
and
an
affirmative
conclusion
arrived
at,
the
learned
trial
judge
would
have
been
obliged
to
conclude,
on
the
basis
of
the
case
law
as
it
then
stood,
that
all
of
the
appellant’s
income
for
that
year
was
subject
to
taxation
under
section
30
alone.
The
appellant
further
submits
that,
as
it
had
accepted
its
1968
income
tax
assessment,
the
learned
trial
judge
again
erred
in
characterizing
the
above
contention
as
an
"outright
attack"
on
that
assessment.
Rather,
it
says,
only
the
legal
effect
in
the
1969
taxation
year
of
what
it
ought
to
have
done
in
the
1968
taxation
year
is
being
raised
and
not
the
validity
of
the
1968
assessment
as
such.
The
contention
that
the
appellant
was
a
“life
insurance
corporation"
in
its
1968
taxation
year
is
supported
in
three
ways.
In
the
first
place
counsel
relies
upon
a
decision
of
the
Exchequer
Court
of
Canada
in
British
Pacific
Life
Insurance
Company
v.
M.N.R.t
The
appellant
in
that
case
was
incorporated
in
1959
by
an
Act
of
the
Parliament
of
Canada
with
power
to
"make
contracts
of
life
insurance,
personal
accident
insurance
and
sickness
insurance."
In
that
year,
as
well
as
in
1960
and
1961,
it
engaged
in
those
lines
of
the
insurance
business.
It
was
clear
that,
relative
to
its
accident
and
sickness
insurance
business,
its
life
insurance
business
was
rather
minuscule.
In
those
three
years
premium
income
from
that
source
comprised,
respectively,
16
per
cent,
1.02
per
cent
and
1.68
per
cent
of
total
premium
income
from
its
entire
insurance
business.
The
appellant
there
contended
that
taxability
of
its
income
under
the
Act
as
it
stood
in
those
years
was
governed
by
section
30.
In
other
words,
it
argued,
as
a
"life
insurance
corporation'"
all
of
its
insurance
income
and
not
just
that
derived
from
its
life
insurance
business
was
governed
by
the
provisions
of
that
section
and
not
by
any
other
provision
of
the
Act.
Section
30
was
identical
in
the
years
there
in
question
to
that
which
was
in
force
in
the
appellant’s
1968
taxation
year.
The
case
was
heard
by
Gibson,
J.
He
accepted
the
taxpayer's
contention,
concluding,
at
274
(C.T.C.
97),
that
"the
taxable
income
of
the
appellant
from
all
sources"
and
not
just
its
income
from
the
life
insurance
part
of
its
business
was
to
be
computed
"pursuant
to
section
30
of
the
Act
and
not
pursuant
to
the
provisions
of
the
Act
other
than
section
30."
The
learned
judge
gave
the
following
reasons
for
so
concluding:!:
My
reasons
for
coming
to
the
conclusion
that
I
do,
may
be
put
briefly:
(1)
the
appellant
is
and
was
at
all
material
times
in
the
life
insurance
business
in
a
bona
fide
manner
and
has
expended
most
substantial
effort
and
money
from
incorporation
to
date
in
getting
into
the
life
insurance
business;
(2)
the
1948
Income
Tax
Act
was
an
entirely
new
act,
and
the
date
of
its
enactment
is
the
date
which
should
be
looked
at
in
considering
the
meaning
of
a
“life
insurance
corporation”
in
section
30
of
the
present
Act;
(3)
section
30
of
the
Income
Tax
Act
is
not
an
exempting
provision.
It
is
a
special
provision
prescribing
the
method
to
be
employed
in
taxing
the
income
of
life
insurance
corporations,
and
is
no
different
than,
for
example,
section
69
of
the
Act
which
prescribes
special
provisions
for
the
taxation
of
the
income
of
investment
companies;
(4)
the
Act
incorporating
the
appellant
company
at
clause
6,
authorized
the
appellant
to
be
in
the
life
insurance
business;
and
the
name
granted
in
this
Act
by
Parliament
to
the
appellant,
namely,
British
Pacific
Life
Insurance
Company
is
some
evidence
of
Parliament's
intent;
(5)
the
Certificate
of
Registry
under
the
Canadian
and
British
Insurance
Companies
Act,
Statutes
of
Canada
1952,
chapter
31,
authorized
the
appellant
to
engage
in
the
life
insurance
business;
and
Part
IV
of
that
Act
applies
to
this
appellant;
(6)
section
30
of
the
Income
Tax
Act
is
not
an
escape
from
taxation
but
merely
a
type
of
deferment,
(See
in
this
connection
section
84
of
the
Canadian
and
British
Insurance
Companies
Act.);
(7)
neither
in
section
30
nor
in
any
other
section
of
the
Income
Tax
Act
is
there
a
definition
of
“a
life
insurance
corporation”;
(8)
no
regulations
have
been
passed
pursuant
to
the
enabling
provisions
of
section
117(b)
of
the
Act
“prescribing
the
evidence
required
to
establish
facts
relevant
to
assessments
under
this
Act”
and
the
facts
alleged
and
proved
therefore
are
no
guide
as
to
what
should
be
considered
in
coming
to
a
conclusion
as
to
what
are
the
necessary
constituent
elements
of
a
business
of
a
corporation
to
qualify
it
as
a
“life
insurance
corporation”
within
the
meaning
of
section
30
of
the
Act;
(9)
if
Parliament
had
meant
to
qualify
section
30
of
the
Act
with
either
the
word
“sole”
or
“exclusive”
or
the
word
“predominant”
or
with
equivalent
words
in
relation
to
the
business
of
a
“life
insurance
corporation”,
or
to
have
it
apply
only
to
the
life
insurance
part
of
the
whole
business
of
such
a
corporation
as
the
appellant,
it
would
have
said
so,
as
it
did,
for
example,
in
section
13,
section
83A(2),
section
83A(3),
section
83A(3a),
section
83A(3b)
and
section
83A(3c)
of
the
Income
Tax
Act;
and
finally
(10)
it
is
not
the
function
of
the
Court
to
add
words
in
interpreting
the
words
of
a
statute.
In
this
connection,
the
words
of
Lord
Simonds
in
Magor
and
St.
Mellons
Rural
District
Council
v.
Newport
Corporation,
[1952]
A.C.
189
at
191,
in
relation
to
what
was
suggested
as
the
correct
procedure
for
a
Court
to
adopt
in
interpreting
a
statute,
namely,
“What
the
legislature
has
not
written,
the
court
must
write”,
are
apposite
here,
namely:
It
appears
to
me
to
be
a
naked
usurpation
of
the
legislative
function
under
the
thin
disguise
of
interpretation.
And
it
is
the
less
justifiable
when
it
is
guesswork
with
what
material
the
legislature
would,
if
it
had
discovered
the
gap,
have
filled
it
in.
If
a
gap
is
disclosed,
the
remedy
lies
in
an
amending
Act.
For
these
said
reasons,
the
conclusion
that
I
have
come
to,
is
that
on
a
true
interpretation
of
Section
30
of
the
Income
Tax
Act
in
relation
to
the
facts
of
this
case,
the
appellant
is
“a
life
insurance
corporation”
within
the
meaning
of
those
words
in
that
section.
The
appellant
argues
that
its
case,
if
anything,
is
even
stronger
here
because
a
greater
percentage
of
premium
income
derived
from
its
life
insurance
business.
Moreover,
as
it
points
out,
very
substantial
assets
were
committed
to
its
life
insurance
business
as
of
the
year
1968.
Secondly,
the
appellant
relies
on
certain
provisions
of
section
90A(1),
(2)
and
(22)
of
the
Canadian
and
British
Insurance
Companies
Act,
R.S.C.
1952
c.
31,
as
amended
by
S.C.
1957-58,
c.
11
to
support
its
contention.
They
read
in
part:
90A.
(1)
Notwithstanding
anything
in
its
Act
of
incorporation
or
in
any
Act
amending
such
Act,
or
in
this
Act,
a
company
that
has
a
capital
stock
and
that
is
registered
under
Part
III
to
transact
the
business
of
life
insurance,
whether
alone
or
in
combination
with
any
other
class
of
insurance
business,
may,
with
the
permission
of
the
Minister
establish
and
implement
a
plan
for
the
conversion
of
the
company
into
a
mutual
company
by
the
purchase
of
shares
of
the
capital
stock
of
the
company
in
accordance
with
the
provisions
of
this
section.
(2)
The
terms
and
provisions
of
any
plan
referred
to
in
subsection
(1)
shall
be
set
forth
in
detail
in
a
by-law
.
.
.
(22)
Notwithstanding
anything
in
this
or
any
other
Act,
where
an
amount
has
been
applied
by
a
company
in
payment
for
shares
purchased
under
the
terms
of
a
by-law
of
the
company
described
in
subsection
(2),
(a)
no
part
of
that
amount
shall
be
deemed
to
be
a
distribution,
allotment
or
division
of
profits
of
the
company,
and
(b)
section
8
of
the
Income
Tax
Act
does
not
apply
to
require
the
inclusion,
in
computing
the
income
of
any
shareholder,
of
any
part
of
that
amount,
nor
shall
any
part
thereof
be
deemed,
for
the
purposes
of
section
30
of
that
Act,
to
have
been
credited
to
shareholders’
account
or
otherwise
appropriated
for
or
on
account
of
shareholders,
or,
for
the
purposes
of
section
81
of
that
Act,
to
have
been
received
as
a
dividend.
On
the
basis
of
these
provisions
counsel
makes
the
following
submission
as
set
forth
in
the
appellant’s
memorandum
of
fact
and
law:
74.
The
said
section
90A
contains
provisions
governing
the
conversion
of
a
capital
stock
insurance
company
registered
to
transact
the
business
of
life
insurance,
whether
alone
or
in
combination
with
any
other
class
of
insurance
business,
into
a
mutual
company.
Subsection
90A(22)
provides
that
amounts
applied
by
the
company
in
payment
for
shares
purchased
in
the
course
of
such
a
conversion
shall
be
deemed
not
to
be
amounts
credited
to
the
shareholders'
account
for
the
purposes
of
section
30
of
the
Income
Tax
Act.
In
effect,
subsection
90A(22)
provides
that
if
a
company
such
as
the
Appellant
were
to
convert
to
a
mutual
company,
section
30
will
not
apply
in
respect
of
amounts
paid
for
the
purchase
of
shares
for
cancellation.
It
is
submitted
that
if
companies
such
as
the
Appellant
were
not
considered
by
Parliament
to
be
life
insurance
corporations
within
the
meaning
of
the
1968
Act,
subsection
90A(22)
would
not
have
been
enacted
to
apply
to
companies
such
as
the
Appellant.
Finally,
section
68B
of
the
Act
as
it
stood
in
1968,
when
read
in
the
light
of
the
above
quoted
provisions
of
section
90A
of
the
Canadian
and
British
Insurance
Companies
Act,
is
relied
upon
by
the
appellant
to
support
its
contention.
That
section
of
the
Act
recognized
that
a
provincially
incorpo-
rated
entity
having
authority
to
transact
life
insurance
business
could,
under
provincial
laws,
be
converted
into
a
mutual
corporation
by
means
of
a
purchase
of
shares
made
in
accordance
with
those
laws.
It
provided
that
no
part
of
the
amount
paid
for
such
shares
“shall
be
deemed,
for
the
purposes
of
section
30,
to
have
been
credited
to
shareholders’
account
or
otherwise
appropriated
for
or
on
account
of
shareholders."
On
the
basis
of
those
provisions
counsel
makes
the
following
additional
submission
as
set
forth
in
the
appellant’s
memorandum
of
fact
and
law:
75.
It
is
submitted
that
the
intention
of
Parliament
as
to
the
meaning
of
the
term
“life
insurance
corporation”
in
section
30
of
the
1968
Act
is
indicated
in
section
68B
which
is
entitled
“PROVINCIAL
LIFE
INSURANCE
CORPORATIONS.”
Section
68B
applies
to
a
corporation
that
is
incorporated
under
the
laws
of
a
province
with
authority
to
transact
the
business
of
life
insurance
and
converts
into
a
mutual
company.
It
is
submitted
that
section
68B,
which
was
enacted
by
S.C.
1959,
c.
45,
s.
17
applicable
to
amounts
applied
after
1958,
is
in
pari
materia
with
and
based
on
subsection
90A(22)
of
the
Canadian
and
British
Insurance
Companies
Act,
which
was
enacted
by
S.C.
1957-58,
c.
11,
s.
4,
assented
to
December
20,
1957.
The
Crown's
response
to
the
appellant’s
contention
is
set
forth
in
its
memorandum
of
fact
and
law:
7.
The
Deputy
Attorney
General
of
Canada
submits
that
irrespective
of
whether
or
not
the
Appellant
was
or
was
not
a
life
insurance
corporation
in
the
taxation
year
1968
and
prior
thereto,
the
statutory
scope
of
the
words
found
in
para.
85B(1)(e)
of
the
Income
Tax
Act
interpreted
in
their
plain,
ordinary
and
grammatical
sense
and
read
within
the
context
and
statutory
purpose
of
section
85B,
reach,
in
the
Appellant's
1969
taxation
year,
the
targeted
amount
of
$10,454,396
that
was
factually
deducted
by
the
Appellant
as
an
unearned
premium
reserve
in
its
computation
of
income
for
its
1968
taxation
year
pursuant
to
the
statutory
scheme
of
section
85B
and
regulation
1400
of
the
1968
Act.
Issues
In
Appeal
I
am
prepared
to
deal
with
this
appeal
on
the
basis
of
the
issues
as
defined
by
the
appellant.
They
are:
whether
the
appellant
was
a
“‘life
insurance
corporation”
in
1968;
secondly,
whether,
as
a
life
insurance
corporation,
it
was
required
or
permitted
under
the
Act
to
compute
its
income
from
any
business
or
source
for
that
year;
and,
finally,
whether
it
was
required
to
include
the
amount
in
issue
in
computing
its
1969
income
from
its
other-than-life
insurance
business.
I
adopt
this
approach
despite
the
respondent's
position
that,
by
the
Act,
that
amount
had
to
be
included
in
the
1969
income
“irrespective
of
whether
or
not
the
appellant
was
or
was
not
a
life
insurance
corporation
in
the
taxation
year
1968
and
prior
thereto.”
The
appellant
concedes
that,
if
it
should
fail
on
the
first
question,
there
will
be
no
need
for
the
Court
to
go
into
the
remaining
questions
for,
then,
the
appeal
must
fail.
In
presenting
his
case,
counsel
for
the
appellant
took
time
to
stress
that,
if
this
appeal
succeeded,
it
would
not
result
in
tax
avoidance
in
the
1969
taxation
year
but
only
in
tax
deferral.
Section
30
of
the
Act
was
repealed
by
the
legislative
changes
contained
in
S.C.
1968-1969,
c.
44
which
were
applicable
to
the
1969
and
subsequent
taxation
years.
Section
68A
was
also
amended
and,
in
consequence,
the
income
of
a
life
insurance
corporation
for
the
1969
and
subsequent
taxation
years
fell
to
be
taxed,
generally
speaking,
in
the
same
way
as
other
insurance
corporations.
The
amended
legislation
provided
transitional
rules
whereby
a
life
insurance
corporation
was
required
to
establish
an
amount
as
a
policy
reserve
as
if
it
were
deducted
in
1968
and
to
bring
that
amount
into
1969
income.
The
position
taken
by
the
appellant
after
its
income
for
1969
had
been
assessed
was
that
the
amount
in
issue
should
have
been
omitted
from
its
other-than-life
insurance
income
for
that
year.
Instead,
as
is
pleaded
in
paragraph
18
of
the
statement
of
claim,
it
should
have
filed
only
one
tax
return
for
1969
reporting
the
consolidated
net
income
from
all
of
its
insurance
business.
It
claims
that,
as
it
was
under
the
amended
legislation
a
life
insurance
corporation
in
that
year,
it
could
have
computed
its
income
by,
inter
alia,
omitting
the
amount
in
issue
under
“opening
reserves
(policy
and
other)”
from
its
other-than-life
insurance
income.
The
overall
effect
of
that
omission
would
have
been
as
explained
in
paragraph
8
of
the
affidavit
of
an
expert
witness,
Robert
C.
Knechtel,
C.A.,
filed
on
behalf
of
the
appellant:
The
effect
of
allowing
the
Plaintiff
to
omit
the
amount
of
$10,454,396
from
its
“opening
reserves
(policy
and
other)”
for
1969
as
shown
in
paragraph
18
of
the
Statement
of
Claim
herein
would
be
to
permit
the
Plaintiff
to
deduct
less
than
its
maximum
allowable
policy
reserves
in
1969
to
the
extent
of
$9,228,486,
thereby
permitting
the
Plaintiff
to
claim
such
reserves
in
subsequent
years.
Immediately
following
this
evidence,
in
the
same
paragraph
the
following
additional
statement
appears:
As
against
that,
the
Plaintiff
has
prepaid
tax
in
the
amount
of
approximately
$1,900,000
during
the
years
1950
to
1968
inclusive
as
shown
in
Schedule
I
attached
hereto.
At
the
trial
it
became
apparent
that
this
evidence
was
based
upon
the
assumption
that
the
appellant
was
a
“life
insurance
corporation”
under
the
legislation
in
effect
for
each
of
the
years
mentioned
by
the
witness.
The
Minister’s
assessments
of
the
appellant’s
income
for
those
years
are
also
closed
and,
like
that
of
1968,
their
validity
is
not
questioned
on
this
appeal.
Discussion
of
Issues
I
will
now
deal
with
the
above-mentioned
issues
in
turn.
Was
the
appellant
a
"life
insurance
corporation"
in
1968?
The
appellant’s
argument
that
being
a
“life
insurance
corporation”
in
1968
it
ought
not
to
have
included
the
above
amount
in
its
1969
other-than-
life
insurance
income
was
emphatically
rejected
by
the
learned
trial
judge
who
characterized
it
as
an
"outright
attack
on
the
1968
assessment”
from
which
no
objection
had
been
taken.
I
shall
deal
with
that
point
momentarily.
In
the
meantime,
I
think
it
legitimate
to
ask
at
this
stage
whether,
by
the
statute
as
it
stood
in
1968,
the
appellant
was
compelled
or
even
permitted
to
deduct
the
amount
in
question
as
a
policy
reserve
against
other-than-life
insurance
income
for
that
year.
The
fact
that
it
did
so,
it
seems
to
me,
will
have
to
be
considered
independently
in
disposing
of
the
ultimate
question
raised
by
this
appeal,
namely,
whether
or
not
that
amount
was
correctly
included
in
the
appellant’s
1969
other-than-life
insurance
income.
I
have
already
set
out
the
appellant’s
arguments
under
this
head.
As
was
made
clear
by
the
learned
trial
judge
in
his
reasons
for
judgment,
the
British
Pacific
case
did
not
deal
with
the
fundamental
question
raised
by
this
appeal.
On
the
other
hand,
it
seems
to
me
to
have
dealt
with
the
particular
question
now
under
consideration:
i.e.,
whether
an
entity
that
transacted
the
business
of
life
insurance
in
a
taxation
year
is
to
be
regarded
as
a
“life
insurance
corporation”
for
the
purposes
of
section
30
of
the
Act
notwithstanding
that
it
transacted
other-than-life
insurance
business
in
the
same
year.
I
am
quite
unable
to
distinguish
the
facts
of
that
case
from
those
of
the
present
case
so
far
as
that
question
is
concerned.
The
Trial
Division
there
decided
that
the
British
Pacific
Life
Insurance
Company
was
“a
life
insurance
corporation”
within
the
meaning
of
section
30
and
no
appeal
was
taken
from
its
decision.
Prior
to
1969
no
definition
of
the
term
“life
insurance
corporation”
appeared
in
the
Act.
The
meaning
of
those
words
must
primarily
be
ascertained
by
reference
to
the
legislation
itself.
As
we
have
already
seen
the
same
words
appeared
elsewhere
in
Part
I
of
the
Act.
In
section
68A
they
appeared
in
the
phrase
‘‘an
insurance
corporation
other
than
a
life
insurance
corporation”
and
in
subsection
85B(5)
that
phrase
was
repeated,
this
time
with
the
addition
of
a
comma
after
the
third
word.
It
is
apparent
that
Parliament,
by
using
this
formulation
of
words,
directed
itself
to
the
tax
treatment
to
be
accorded
either
a
"life
insurance
corporation”
or
an
"insurance
corporation”
as
such
rather
than
the
tax
treatment
to
be
accorded
an
insurance
business.
In
my
view,
on
the
basis
of
the
language
used
by
Parliament,
the
appellant
could
have
been
fairly
regarded
in
1968
as
being
a
"life
insurance
corporation”
for
the
purposes
of
section
30
of
the
Act
rendering
its
insurance
income,
if
any,
subject
to
the
provisions
of
that
section
had
it
chosen
to
file
its
tax
return
on
that
basis.
The
respondent
sought
to
counter
the
appellant's
argument
by
contending
that
it
was
not
in
1968
a
life
insurance
corporation
because
in
that
year
it
also
transacted
an
other-than-life
insurance
business.
That,
of
course,
is
the
very
argument
that
was
addressed
to
and
rejected
by
the
trial
division
in
the
British
Pacific
case.
I
can
find
nothing
in
the
Act
as
it
stood
in
1968
that
requires
a
different
conclusion
only
because
the
appellant
also
transacted
in
that
year
other
forms
of
insurance
business.
In
my
view,
that
circumstance
did
not
alter
the
appellant’s
essential
nature
under
the
Act
as
a
“‘life
insurance
corporation.”
I
am
assisted
on
this
point
by
the
provisions
of
the
Canadian
and
British
Insurance
Companies
Act
relied
upon
by
the
appellant.
The
appellant
was
subject
to
the
regulatory
scheme
laid
down
by
that
statute
and,
indeed,
derived
its
authority
to
transact
its
insurance
business
in
1968
from
a
licence
issued
pursuant
to
its
provisions.
It
is
not
contended,
of
course,
that
the
provisions
of
subsection
90A(22)
of
that
statute
here
relied
upon
represented,
in
effect,
taxation
legislation
as
such.
They
are
intended
to
remove
from
the
operation
of
section
30
of
the
Act
one
of
the
consequences
flowing
from
the
conversion
of
a
life
insurance
corporation
into
a
mutual
company
pursuant
to
subsection
90A(1)
of
the
above
statute.
Parliament
accomplished
that
by
not
treating
an
amount
paid
by
a
life
insurance
corporation
under
a
conversion
plan
to
a
shareholder
for
an
outstanding
share
of
its
capital
stock
as
an
"amount
.
.
.
credited
to
shareholders’
account
or
otherwise
appropriated
for
or
on
account
of
shareholders”
for
the
purposes
of
section
30
of
the
Act.
That
language
is
also
the
language
of
section
30
of
the
Act.
In
so
providing
Parliament
plainly
had
in
mind
not
just
a
company
registered
under
it
to
transact
exclusively
the
business
of
life
insurance
but,
as
is
stated
explicitly
in
subsection
90A(1),
it
also
had
in
mind
a
company
registered
to
transact
the
business
of
life
insurance
"whether
alone
or
in
combination
with
any
other
class
of
insurance
business.”
I
agree
with
the
appellant
that
the
language
used
by
Parliament
in
subsections
90A(1)
and
(22)
points
to
an
intention
on
its
part
that
a
company
engaged
in
the
life
insurance
business
is
to
be
regarded
as
a
“life
insurance
corporation”
for
the
purposes
of
section
30
of
the
Act
notwithstanding
that
it
transacted
simultaneously
some
other
class
of
insurance
business.
The
appellant
also
relies
on
the
provisions
of
section
68B
of
the
Act
read
in
the
light
of
section
90A
of
the
Canadian
and
British
Insurance
Companies
Act
in
further
support
of
its
contention
that
it
was
a
“life
insurance
corporation"
in
1968.
In
view
of
the
conclusion
I
have
already
reached
it
is
not
necessary
to
examine
this
argument.
Was
the
appellant
required
or
permitted
to
compute
its
income
in
1968?
The
next
question
is
whether
the
appellant
was
required
or
permitted
by
the
Act
to
compute
income
in
1968
in
view
of
my
conclusion
that
it
was
in
that
year
a
“life
insurance
corporation.”
The
evidence
at
trial
established
that
no
amounts
were
in
fact
“credited
to
shareholders’
account
or
otherwise
appropriated
for
or
on
account
of
shareholders"
during
1968.
In
view
of
that
circumstance,
the
appellant
had
no
“taxable
income"
for
that
year
under
section
30
of
the
Act
and,
accordingly,
as
a
life
insurance
corporation,
it
was
not
required
or
permitted
to
compute
income
in
1968.
The
fact
that
it
did
so
and
in
doing
so
that
it
deducted
the
amount
in
issue
as
a
policy
reserve
against
other-than-life
insurance
income
is
an
entirely
different
matter
to
which
I
now
turn.
Was
the
appellant
required
to
include
in
1969
income
the
policy
reserve
amount
deducted
in
1968?
I
agree
with
the
respondent
that
this
is
the
“fundamental
question”
to
be
determined
on
this
appeal.
Though
the
appellant
was
not
obliged
by
the
Act
to
compute
1968
income,
in
fact
it
did
so
and
in
doing
so
it
deducted
from
other-than-life
insurance
income
the
above
amount
as
a
policy
reserve.
That
reserve
was
calculated
by
the
appellant
in
accordance
with
regulation
1400
as
prescribed
by
subsection
85B(5)
of
the
Act
as
it
stood
in
1968.
The
respondent
submits
that
it
matters
not
that
this
deduction
was
or
was
not
required
or
permitted
to
be
made
in
1968
according
to
whether
or
not
the
appellant
was
or
was
not
a
“life
insurance
corporation"
in
that
year.
What
is
important,
it
contends,
is
that
in
point
of
fact
the
amount
in
issue
was
deducted
as
a
policy
reserve
in
1968
and
having
been
deducted
that
the
appellant
was
required
to
include
it
in
computing
its
other-than-life
insurance
income
in
1969
in
accordance
with
the
provisions
of
paragraph
85B(1)(e)
of
the
Act
as
it
stood
in
that
year.
The
appellant
stresses
the
presence
of
the
word
“under"
in
that
paragraph.
It
will
be
convenient
at
this
juncture
to
repeat
its
relevant
language.
In
computing
income:
(e)
there
shall
be
included
the
amounts
deducted
under
paragraphs
(c)
.
.
.
in
computing
the
income
of
the
taxpayer
for
the
immediately
preceding
year.
The
appellant
puts
its
argument
in
this
way.
As
it
was
not
required
or
permitted
by
the
Act
as
it
stood
in
1968
to
do
so,
the
policy
reserve
against
other-than-life
insurance
income
for
that
year
was
not
“deducted
under
paragraph
(c)"
of
subsection
85B(1)
so
as
to
require
its
inclusion
in
1969
income
pursuant
to
paragraph
85B(1)(e).
Although,
says
the
appellant,
as
a
matter
of
fact
an
amount
was
deducted
as
a
policy
reserve
in
1968
it
was
not
deducted
as
a
matter
of
law
and
therefore
there
was
no
need
to
include
it
in
1969
income.
This
submission
has
the
attraction
of
simplicity.
The
appellant
further
argues
that
the
learned
trial
judge
erred
in
not
considering
whether
that
amount
“could
as
a
matter
of
law
be
"deducted
under
paragraph
(c)'
in
computing"
income
for
1968.
As
I
see
it,
this
argument
is
not
so
much
a
direct
challenge
to
the
validity
of
the
1968
assessment
(which
was
not
appealed
and
is
long
since
closed)
as
it
is
an
attempt
to
argue
a
legal
effect
in
computing
1969
income
from
what
the
appellant
says
ought
to
have
been
done
in
reporting
1968
income.
I
think
it
may
be
legitimately
advanced
notwithstanding
that
the
1968
taxation
year
of
the
appellant
is
plainly
a
closed
book.
The
Court
must
thus
consider
whether
there
is
merit
to
the
argument
in
light
of
the
provisions
of
paragraph
85B(1)(e)
as
it
stood
in
1969
and
also
in
light
of
what
the
appellant
actually
did
in
computing
other-than-life
insurance
income
in
1968.
The
appellant
relies
on
a
judgment
of
this
Court
in
Bensol
Customs
Brokers
Ltd.
et
al
v.
Air
Canada*
to
support
its
argument
that
the
policy
reserve
for
1968
was
not
deducted
"under”
paragraph
85B(1)(c).
The
question
in
that
case
was
whether
the
Court
had
been
invested
by
Parliament
by
virtue
of
section
23
of
the
Federal
Court
Act,
R.S.C.
1970,
c.
10
(2nd
Supp.),
with
power
to
hear
and
determine
a
claim
for
goods
allegedly
lost
while
being
transported
by
air
from
London
to
Montreal.
By
that
section
the
Trial
Division
was
invested
with
jurisdiction
"in
all
cases
in
which
a
claim
for
relief
is
made
or
a
remedy
is
sought
under
an
Act
of
the
Parliament
of
Canada
or
otherwise.”
It
was
argued
that
the
claim
there
was
in
fact
founded
upon
the
Carriage
by
Air
Act,
R.S.C.
1970,
c.
C-14,
and
therefore
that
it
was
made
"under
an
Act
of
the
Parliament
of
Canada.”
In
dealing
with
this
question
Mr.
Justice
Pratte
had
this
to
say:t
A
claim
is
made
under
a
statute,
in
my
view,
when
that
statute
is
the
law
which,
assuming
the
claim
to
be
well
founded,
would
be
the
source
of
the
plaintiff’s
right.
From
those
words
it
is
argued
that
the
amount
in
issue
here
was
not
deducted
"under”
paragraph
85B(1)(c)
because
the
appellant
had
no
right
in
law
to
deduct
it
as
a
policy
reserve
in
1968.
The
words
of
paragraph
85B(1)(e)
are
directed
toward
the
inclusion
in
income
of
an
"amount”
that
was
"deducted”
in
the
previous
year
and
not
toward
an
amount
that
was
"deductible”^:
in
that
year.
Had
that
word
been
used
by
Parliament
it
might
have
added
some
force
to
the
appellant’s
contention
that,
to
be
recapturable
as
income
in
1969,
the
amount
in
issue
had
to
have
been
properly
deducted
in
1968.
I
find
the
respondent's
argument
compelling.
In
its
1968
taxation
year
the
appellant
deducted
the
amount
in
issue
as
a
policy
reserve
(calculated
according
to
regulation
1400)
on
the
basis
that
it
was
entitled
to
do
so
and
its
income
was
assessed
accordingly.
To
be
claimable
in
1969
a
new
policy
reserve
had
to
be
calculated
in
that
year
and
not
simply
brought
forward
from
the
preceding
year.
Although,
on
my
analysis,
the
foregoing
amount
was
not
required
to
be
deducted
in
1968,
that
circumstance
cannot
alter
the
fact
that
it
was
deducted
as
a
policy
reserve
in
that
year.
This
is
particularly
so
when
the
appellant
made
no
attempt
to
challenge
the
correctness
of
the
1968
assessment
which
it
could
have
done
by
taking
appeal
proceedings
against
it
in
a
timely
fashion.
It
accepts
that
assessment
as
binding
and
has
never
questioned
its
validity.
In
my
view,
it
would
require
an
unduly
narrow
construction
of
paragraph
85B(1)(e)
to
say
that
its
language
did
not
require
inclusion
of
the
amount
deducted
in
1968
in
the
appellant's
1969
income.
Though,
undoubtedly,
it
applies
to
an
amount
that
is
properly
deducted,
I
can
see
no
reason
for
restricting
its
application
to
that
circumstance
alone.
On
the
contrary,
its
language
seems
sufficiently
wide
to
bring
within
its
reach
an
“amount”
that
was
in
fact
"deducted"
in
a
previous
year
by
a
taxpayer
complying
or
purporting
to
comply
with
the
provisions
of
paragraph
85B(1)(c).
This
is
particularly
so
where,
as
here,
the
assessment
of
that
income
has
been
made
and
accepted
and
cannot
now
be
challenged
by
the
appellant
but,
rather,
must
be
taken
as
valid
and
binding.
I
am
unable
to
conceive
that
Parliament
intended
anything
more
by
this
paragraph
than
that
a
taxpayer
must
bring
into
income
in
its
current
taxation
year
that
which
it
had
deducted
as
a
policy
reserve
in
its
immediately
preceding
taxation
year.
Conclusion
In
conclusion,
I
would
respectively
agree
with
the
learned
trial
judge
that
the
amount
deducted
as
a
policy
reserve
in
1968
was
properly
included
in
the
appellant's
1969
other-than-life
insurance
income.
For
the
foregoing
reasons,
I
would
dismiss
this
appeal
with
costs.
Appeal
dismissed.