Dubé
J:—This
is
an
appeal
from
the
decision
rendered
on
September
16,
1975
by
the
Tax
Review
Board,
dismissing
plaintiff’s
(appellant’s)
appeal
against
his
income
tax
assessment
for
1971.
-
The
facts
may
be
summarized
as
follows.
Appellant
is
by
profession
an
attorney
and
municipal
judge
of
the
city
of
Lasalle,
Quebec.
He
married
Dame
Jacqueline
Sicotte
on
August
31,
1939,
after
entering
into
an
antenuptial
contract
adopting
the
regime
of
separation
of.
property.
On
December
2,
1971,
the
two
spouses
adopted
the
regime
of
community
of
movables
and
acquests
by
contract
notarized
on
that
date,
homologated
by
judgment
handed
down
on
March
31,
1972
and
registered
at
Montreal
on
June
5,
1972.
On
April
26,
1972
appellant
filed
an
income
tax
return
by
which
each
of
the
spouses
claimed
half
of
the
income
for
the
fiscal
year
(from
February
28,
1971
to
February
27,
1972).
The
income,
as
shown
in
the
summary
of
the
return,
was
derived
from
the
city
of
Lasalle,
employment,
rentals
and
investments.
Appellant
alleged
that
under
his
new
matrimonial
regime
the
income
of
the
two
spouses
belongs
to
the
community
and
that
consequently
each
of
the
spouses
is
liable
for
tax
on
only
half
of
the
income.
Respondent
contended
that
appellant’s
new
matrimonial
regime
did
not
take
effect
until
the
date
it
was
registered,
that
is
on
June
5,
1972,
and
in
no
way
affects
the
1971
fiscal
year.
Alternatively,
even
if
the
new
regime
were
in
effect
during
the
fiscal
year
in
question,
the
decision
of
the
Supreme
Court
of
Canada
in
1961
in
Frank
Sura
v
MNR,
[1962]
CTC
1;
62
DTC
1005,
on
appeal,
to
the
effect
that
in
a
community
of
property
the
tax
cannot
be
divided
between
the
two
spouses,
also
applies
to
the
community
of
movables
and
acquests
established
by
Bill
10
in
1970.*
First
of
all,
therefore,
it
must
be
determined
on
what
date
the
new
matrimonial
regime
took
effect.
If
it
took
effect
during
the
fiscal
year
in
question,
it
will
then
have
to
be
established
whether,
in
fact,
under
the
regime
of
community
of
movables
and
acquests
income
tax
can
be
divided
between
the
spouses.
Clause
1
of
the
contract
of
December
2,
1971
between
the
spouses
stipulates
that
the
new
regime
they
are
adopting
takes
effect
retroactively
to
their
marriage:
THE
SPOUSES
adopt
the
regime
of
community
of
movables
and
acquests
with
effect
as
of
the
date
of
the
solemnization
of
their
marriage,
and
accordingly
agree
that
all
personal
and
real
property
acquired
since
the
solemnization
of
their
marriage
constitutes
the
property
of
the
community
according
to
the
provisions
of
Arts
1272
et
seq
of
the
Civil
Code
of
the
province
of
Quebec.
It
is
important
to
examine
the
scope
of
the
new
articles
of
the
Civil
Code
relative
to
marriage
covenants
as
amended
by
Bill
10
in
1970,
as
they
apply
not
only
to
spouses
but
also
to
third
parties.
Article
1265
allows
the
spouses
to
modify
their
matrimonial
regime
“provided
that
.
.
.
they
do
not
prejudice
.
.
.
the
rights
of
their
creditors”.
Article
1266
provides
that
any
modification
of
the
regime
must
be
established
by
notarial
deed:
“it
has
effect
only
if
homologated
by
the
court
of
their
domicile”.
Article
1266b
reads
as
follows:
The
act
entered
into
in
virtue
of
the
provisions
of
articles
1264
and
1266
has
effect
with
respect
to
third
persons
only
by
the
registration
of
a
notice
in
the
central
register
of
matrimonial
regimes.
The
aforesaid
Article
1264
applies
to
changes
in
matrimonial
covenants
before
the
solemnization
of
the
marriage
and
does
not
concern
us
here.
On
the
other
hand,
appellant
states
that
Article
1261
provides
that
every
matrimonial
regime
takes
effect
retroactively
to
the
date
of
solemnization
of
the
marriage.
The
matrimonial
regime,
whether
it
be
legal
or
conventional,
takes
effect
from
the
day
the
marriage
is
solemnized;
the
parties
cannot
stipulate
that
it
will
take
effect
at
any
other
period.
In
an
article
published
in
the
Revue
générale
de
droit
civil,
1970,
entitled
“Le
Bill
10
depuis
le
premier
juillet
1970’’,
Roger
Comtois
wrote
at
228:
All
the
property
acquired
by
the
spouses
for
valuable
consideration
during
the
marriage
would
fall
into
the
community
or
into
the
partnership
of
acquests.
If
the
spouses
decided
to
adopt
a
new
regime,
it
was
because
the
new
one
was
better,
and
it
must
have
been
so
ever
since
the
marriage.
In
principle,
the
new
law
has
retroactive
effect,
in
so
far
as
the
new
law
is
better
than
the
old
one.*
Michel
Légaré
takes
the
opposite
stance
in
an
article,
‘‘De
la
rétroactivité
ou
de
la
non-rétroactivité
du
changement
de
régime
matrimonial”.*
His
conclusion
at
160
may
prove
to
be
prophetic:
We
have
certainly
leaned
toward
one
theory
more
than
another,
but
a
merely
theoretical
opinion
is
not
worth
much
with
regard
to
the
direction
a
practitioner
must
follow
when
he
has
to
cope
with
such
a
problem.
Will
we
have
to
wait
for
a
court
decision
to
know
how
to
proceed,
or
will
the
legislator
act
quickly
enough
to
resolve
the
problem
through
preventive
action?
We
wager
thai
we
will
have
to
wait
for
a
judicial
decision!
In
an
annotation
to
the
above-cited
article,
Mr
Comtois
changes
his
mind
in
the
following
terms:
The
opinion
expressed
by
the
author
is
contrary
to
what
we
had
proposed
shortly
after
Bill
10
was
passed.
We
are
quite
prepared
to
change
our
mind
in
view
of
the
arguments
put
forth
by
the
author
and
by
the
authorities
he
cites.
A
special
committee
of
the
Civil
Code
Revision
Office.
responsible
for
revising
the
law
on
matrimonial
regimes,
is
now
proposing
a
precise
text:
the
modified
matrimonial
regime
,
takes
effect
from
the
day.
the
deed
is
made.
provided
it
is
homologated.
The
question
appears
to
be
resolved.
It
is
to
be
hoped
that
this
amendment
will
be
adopted
as
soon
as
possible.
It
is
a
fundamental
principle
of
law
that.
unless
otherwise
stated,
an
enactment
is
presumed
not
to
have
retroactive
effect.
and
the
parties
to
a
contract
like
this
one
cannot
claim
to
attribute
to
their
regime
a
retroactive
effect
that
the
enactment
does
not
provide.
Article
1261
must
alSo
be
considered
in
context.
This
article
does
come
after
Article
1260
and
is
related
to
it:
in
the
absence
of
special
agreements,
the
spouses
are
subject
to
the
regime
of
partnership
of
acquests,
and
whatever
the
regime.
it
takes
effect
from
the
day
the
marriage
is
solemnized:
“the
parties
cannot
stipulate
that
it
will
take
effect
at
any
other
period"
in
the
future.
The
day
the
marriage
is
solemnized
is
therefore
the
starting
point
of
the
spouses’
first
regime.
It
is
not
and
cannot
become
the
start
of
a
subsequent
regime.
Furthermore,
from
a
practical
standpoint.
giving.
a
new
regime
acquired
later
in
life
retroactive
effect
to
the
date
of
the
marriage
would
plunge
society
into
a
state
of
chaos
and
even
ridicule.
Could
the
numerous
real
estate
transactions
in
the
course
of
a
lifetime
under
one
regime
be
rescinded
by
a
spouse
on
the
setting
up
of
a
new
regime?
Such
retroactivity
might
be
beneficial
to
the
spouses,
but
it
would
tend
to
prejudice
the
interests
of
third
parties.
In
my
view,
that
is
precisely
what
the
legislator
contemplated
in
Article
1266b
when
he
provided
that.
the
act
has
effect
with
respect
to
third
parties
only
by
the
registration
of
a
notice
in
the
central
register.
It
is
only
after
such
notice
that
the
public
is
protected.
Other
authors
have
also
examined
the
interpretation
of
these
new
provisions
of
the
Civil
Code
and
agree
that
the
new
regime
is
not
retroactive
to
the
marriage,
and
that
with
regard
to
third
parties
the
deed
has
effect
only
by
registration.*
The
following
conclusion
by
Professor
Jean-Guy
Bergeron
should
be
kept
in
mind:t
With
respect
to
third
parties.
Article
1266b
of
the
Civil
Code
states
that
the
change
in
the
covenant
“has
effect
only
by
the
registration
of
a
notice
in
the
central
register
of
matrimonial
regimes”.
On
the
basis
of
this
wording,
we
have
to
consider
only
one
date,
that
of
the
registration;
the
wording
does
not
imply
any
condition
precedent:
it
is
equivalent
to
the
expression
“it
has
effect
only
from
the
date
of
registration
.
.
.”.
Since
the
Minister
is
obviously
a
third
party
and
appellant’s
new
regime
takes
effect
only
on
the
date
of
registration,
June
9,
1972,
it
therefore
follows
that
during
the
1971
fiscal
year
appellant
was
governed
by
the
original
matrimonial
regime,
namely
separation
of
property.
I
therefore
do
not
have
to
rule
on
the
effect
that
the
community
of
movables
and
acquests
might
have
on
his
taxable
income.
The
income
of
a
spouse
governed
by
the
regime
of
separation
of
property
is
obviously
taxable
in
his
hands.
Appellant
is
therefore
liable
for
tax
on
all
the
income
from
his
profession,
properties
and
investments.
That
income
consequently
includes
all
the
sums
in
question,
with
the
exception
of
one
which
poses
special
problems.
In
his
tax
return
appellant
declared
under
a
"Statement
of
Investment
Income’’
the
sum
of
$377.39
from
the
taxable
Canadian
corporation
Brault
Guy
Chaput.
In
a
letter
addressed
to
counsel
for
the
respondent,
dated
August
24,
1977
and
filed
at
the
hearing,
appellant
claimed
that
this
sum
represented
half
of
his
wife’s
personal
investment
dividends.
Form
T5,
‘‘Statement
of
Investment
Income’’,
attached
to
the
letter,
indicates
that
the
recipient
is
‘‘Mrs
Jacqueline
S
Béique”.
Appellant’s
wife,
described
in
the
heading
(when
she
was
mis-en-
Cause)
as
‘president,
general
manager
and
domestic
arts
technician’’,
was
not
engaged
in
gainful
employment
during
the
period
in
question.
She
worked
at
home
as
a
wife
and
mother.
As
evidenced
by
the
copies
of
cheques
filed
in
court,
her
husband
gave
her
two
$125
cheques
a
month
and
a
$100
cheque
every
week.
She
used
that
money
to
provide
necessaries
for
the
family.
She
also
saved
money
which,
she
Says,
was
largely
income
from
the
properties.
The
wife
brought
into
her
marriage
in
1939
her
trousseau,
movables,
wedding
gifts
and
some
savings.
These
savings
helped
appellant
acquire
a
parcel
of
land
in
the
town
of
Lasalle
in
1940
at
a
cost
of
$1,000.
According
to
his
testimony,
this
comprised
$700
in
gifts
and
$300
in
savings.
The
newlyweds
received
financial
assistance
from
the
wife’s
father
in
building
their
home.
In
1940
appellant
signed
a
$6,000
mortgage
in
favour
of
his
father-in-law;
it
was
written
off
in
1956.
According
to
the
wife,
the
gift
from
her
father
was
worth
at
least
$14,000,
having
regard
to
the
value
of
the
home
which
she
placed
at
$20,000.
In
1941,
they
bought
other
adjacent
lots,
this
time
in
the
wife’s
name,
from
the
same
vendor
for
the
sum
of
$500.
According
to
the
wife’s
testimony,
the
$500
to
purchase
this
land
was
given
to
her
by
appellant.
This
purchase
gave
her
the
right
to
vote,
and
added
to
the
size
of
the
first
parcel
of
land.
Parts
of
these
lots
were
resold
by
the
wife
in
1962
for
$15,000,
in
1964
for
$2,000
and
in
1966
for
$14,000.
It
is
the
money
from
these
transactions
which
enabled
appellant
to
write
cheques
to
his
wife
and
which
he
invested
in
her
name
in
Brault
Guy
Chaput.
Counsel
for
the
respondent
alleged
that
under
subsection
21(1)
of
the
Act,*
the
income
in
question
should
be
deemed
to
be
income
of
the
husband
as
transferor:
21.
(1)
Where
a
person
has,
on
or
after
August
1,
1977,
transferred
property,
either
directly
or
indirectly,
by
means
of
a
trust
or
by
any
other
means
whatsoever,
to
his
spouse,
or
to
a
person
who
has
since
become
his
spouse,
the
income
for
a
taxation
year
from
the
property
or
from
property
substituted
therefor
shall,
during
the
lifetime
of
the
transferor
while
he
is
resident
in
Canada
and
the
transferee
is
his
spouse,
be
deemed
to
be
income
of
the
transferor
and
not
of
the
transferee.
It
is
not
apparent
from
the
said
transactions
that
the
income
from
the
investment
in
Brault
Guy
Chaput
derived
from
the
wife’s
funds.
Unfortunately
for
appellant,
the
burden
of
proof
rests
on
him.
He
certainly
did
not
establish
to
the
satisfaction
of
the
Court
that
his
wife’s
investments
were
made
from
her
own
personal
funds.
According
to
her,
the
$500
used
to
purchase
the
lots
in
question
had
been
given
to
her
by
her
husband,
and
in
the
final
analysis
the
investment
income
in
question
derives
from
that
sum.
For
all
these
reasons,
the
appeal
must
be
dismissed.