O’Connor
J.T.C.C.:
—
These
appeals
were
heard
at
Halifax,
Nova
Scotia
on
August
21
and
22,
1995
pursuant
to
the
General
Procedure
of
this
Court.
Written
submissions
of
counsel
were
subsequently
received
by
this
Court,
the
last
dated
October
6,
1995.
Testimony
was
given
by
John
Edward
Oakley,
the
Chief
Operating
Officer
of
the
Appellant
from
January
of
1986;
by
Allen
Stevens,
a
shareholder
and
director
of
the
Appellant
and
provider
of
services
to
the
Appellant
and
from
January,
1992,
the
president
of
the
Appellant;
and
by
Tony
Howatt,
a
chartered
accountant.
Also
approximately
58
exhibits
were
filed
by
the
Appellant.
Issues
The
only
issues
in
these
appeals,
which
relate
to
taxation
years
1986
through
1991,
are
whether
certain
lease
guarantee
fees
and
certain
management
fees
and
interest
expenses
on
some
of
those
fees
are
deductible
expenses
in
computing
the
Appellant’s
income,
and,
if
not,
whether
the
Notice
of
Reassessment
for
1986
was
statute
barred.
Facts
1.
By
Notices
of
Reassessment
dated
December
17,
1991
(for
the
1986,
1987,
1988,
1989
and
1990
taxation
years)
and
October
19,
1992
(for
the
1991
taxation
year)
the
Minister
of
National
Revenue
(“Minister”)
reassessed
the
Appellant’s
income
tax
liability
for
its
1986
through
1991
taxation
years
inclusive)
by
disallowing
the
deduction
of
certain
expenses
as
follows:
The contents of this table are not yet imported to Tax Interpretations.
2.
'l'he
Appellant
is
a
Canadian
corporation,
incorporated
in
1985,
with
a
fiscal
year
end
of
September
30
and
was
formerly
known
as
Nosco
Marine
Industries
Limited
(for
the
1986
and
1987
years
the
Appellant
had
a
fiscal
year
end
of
December
31);
3.
Prior
to
1985
the
Halifax
Port
Corporation,
a
Crown
corporation
(“Port”)
operated
a
grain
elevator
in
Halifax.
By
1985
the
Port
wished
to
privatize
the
grain
elevator
operation
and,
in
this
regard,
it
was
approached
by
a
Mr.
Walter
van
den
Broek,
a
former
general
manager
of
the
Port’s
operations;
4.
Mr.
van
den
Broek
represented
himself
as
agent
for
the
Appellant,
which
was
interested
in
leasing
the
Port’s
facilities
and
running
same
as
a
private
operation.
5.
The
Appellant
was
related
to
Curaçao
Marine
Management,
N.V.
(“CMM”),
a
foreign
corporation
resident
in
the
Dutch
Virgin
Islands
which
had
been
formed
in
1985
to
manage
ship
breaking,
steel
brokerage
and
marine
interests;
6.
Late
in
1985
the
Port
and
the
Appellant
entered
into
an
interim
lease
arrangement
whereby
the
Port
agreed
to
lease
to
the
Appellant
the
Port
facilities
and
the
Appellant
agreed
to
take
over
port
operations
commencing
in
October
1985.
A
final
lease
agreement
was
entered
into
late
in
1986
with
effective
date
as
of
October
1,
1985.
The
lease
was
for
a
period
of
six
years
commencing
October
1,
1985
and
terminating
September
30,
1991
with
a
right
to
renew
for
a
further
six
year
term.
The
rental
was
$50,000
per
annum
for
the
first
three
years
and
$75,000
per
annum
for
the
last
three
years.
In
addition
to
rental
the
Appellant
had
various
other
monetary
obligations
related
to
wharfage,
throughput
charges,
insurance,
real
estate
taxes
and
maintenance;
7.
The
Port
insisted
that
since
the
Appellant
had
little
or
no
assets
all
of
the
obligations
of
the
Appellant
under
said
lease
had
to
be
guaranteed.
The
Appellant
at
first
attempted
to
obtain
guarantees
from
bonding
companies
and
banks
but
such
guarantees
were
not
forthcoming
because
of
the
Appellant’s
lack
of
assets.
Because
of
this
CMM
considered
furnishing
the
guarantee.
Three
of
the
shareholders
of
CMM,
namely,
John
Oakley,
Allen
Stevens
and
Gabriel
Sherover,
were
convinced
that
the
Appellant
could
operate
the
Port
at
a
profit
which
would
accrue
eventually
to
the
benefit
of
the
shareholders.
Three
other
shareholders
disagreed
and
a
fourth
remained
neutral.
Consequently,
the
following
resolution
at
Tab
18
of
Exhibit
A-1
was
enacted:
Curaçao
Marine
Management
Directors
Meeting
In
accordance
with
the
Company
byelaws,
the
following
Resolution
was
passed
at
a
meeting
of
the
Board
of
Directors
properly
called
and
constituted
at
the
offices
of
Gabriel
Sherover,
1806-680
Fifth
Avenue,
New.
York
on
October
16th,
1986
under
the
chairmanship
of
Allen
L.
Stevens,
President.
WHEREAS
Nosco
Marine
Industries
Inc.
have
been
unable
to
obtain
a
guarantee
from
a
Canadian
Bonding
Company
or
Commercial
Bank
acceptable
to
the
Halifax
Port
Corporation,
they
have
required
this
company
to
provide
a
performance
guarantee
for
their
obligations
under
the
lease.
BE
IT
RESOLVED
that
in
view
of
the
split
in
the
Board
over
the
viability
of
this
enterprize
and
the
high
level
of
risk
which
would
be
placed
on
our
shareholders
given
this
Company’s
performance
to
date
[i.e.,
the
Appellant’s],
this
Board
has
recommended
issuance
of
said
guarantee
under
the
following
conditions:
1.
Personal
guarantees
be
provided
to
CMM
in
the
total
amount
of
Canadian
dollars
THREE
MILLION
by
Allen
L.
Stevens,
Gabriel
Sherover,
John
E.
Oakley.
2.
All
assets
and
earnings
of
Nosco
Marine
Industries,
including
payables
to
CMM,
be
pledged
against
the
guarantee.
3.
Nosco
Marine
Industries
will
suspend
dividends
until
such
time
as
their
assets
exceed
ONE
MILLION
DOLLARS,
unless
first
approved
by
the
Board.
4.
That
CMM
charge
a
fee
for
this
guarantee
based
on
the
most
probable
financial
exposure
if
NMI
defaults.
The
rate
to
be
established
by
NMI
auditors
equivalent
to
that
available
in
Canada
related
to
the
asset
base
of
NMI
and
the
degree
of
risk.
Dated
at
New
York
this
15th
day
of
November
1986.
8.
At
first
the
optimism
of
Oakley,
Stevens
and
Sherover
was
based
upon
projections
proposed
by
Mr.
Van
den
Broek,
the
original
president
of
the
Appellant.
These
projections
later
proved
false
in
the
extreme
with
the
result
that
Mr.
Van
den
Broek
was
removed/resigned
in
1986
and
was
replaced
by
Mr.
Oakley.
9.
The
shareholders
of
CMM
and
the
Appellant
were
essentially
the
same.
They
determined
that
a
profit
would
only
be
attainable
by
the
Appellant
if
considerable
improvements
were
made
in
the
Appellant’s
operations.
Recognizing
that
Mr.
Oakley
did
not
have
all
of
the
expertise
required
to
improve
the
operations
it
was
agreed
that
CMM
would
provide
various
services
to
this
end.
Consequently
a
Management
Agreement
with
effect
as
of
October,
1985
was
entered
into
by
the
Appellant
and
CMM.
The
most
relevant
provisions
are
as
follows:
The
following
Management
Agreement
between
Nosco
Marine
Industries
Inc.
and
Curaçao
Marine
Management
N.V.
to
organize
and
operate
a
grain
elevator
facility
leased
from
the
Port
of
Halifax
Corporation
is
agreed
subject
to
the
following
terms
and
conditions:
1.
That
Curaçao
Marine
Management
N.V.
will
provide
full
management
and
sales
services
towards
increasing
throughput
at
the
grain
elevator
facility,
advising
and
supervising
elevator
improvements,
controlling
costs
of
operations,
advising
on
legal
and
contract
matters,
administrating
the
lease
agreement
with
Port
of
Halifax
Corporation,
promoting
the
use
of
the
grain
elevator
both
within
Canada
and
abroad,
advising
on
investment
of
retained
capital,
advising
on
labour
relations,
advising
on
taxation,
and
any
other
duty
normally
associated
with
day
to
day
operations
of
a
grain
elevator....
5.
That
the
management
fee
be
payable
annually
for
as
long
as
any
of
the
management
obligations
remain
outstanding.
6.
That
said
management
fee
be
based
on
the
following
scale
of
net
before
tax
profits,
as
follows:
Net
profits
B.T.:
|
0-
|
$1.5
million
|
fee
$300,000.
|
|
Over
-
|
$1.5
million
|
30%
|
7.
Curaçao
Marine
Management
N.V.
will
provide
a
resident
manager
and
such
advisors
as
are,
from
time
to
time,
considered
essential
to
the
operations.
The
salary
and
bonus
of
said
manager
and
advisors
will
be
fixed
annually
by
the
Directors
of
Nosco
Marine
Industries
Inc.
and
paid
from
Corporate
earnings
before
calculation
of
the
management
fee.
All
reasonable
expenses
incurred
by
the
resident
manager
and
advisors
shall
similarly
be
paid
from
Corporate
earnings
of
Nosco
Marine
Industries
Inc.
before
calculation
of
the
management
fee.
8.
Curaçao
Marine
Management
N.V.
will
be
responsible
for
the
performance
of
the
resident
manager
and
may
apply
discipline
up
to
and
including
dismissal
as
they
see
fit.
9.
Curaçao
Marine
Management
N.V.
may
choose
to
waive
payment
of
all
or
any
part
of
the
said
management
fee
in
any
one
year,
or
may
choose
to
loan
this
to
Nosco
Marine
Industries
Inc.
for
an
indefinite
period.
Should
a
management
fee
be
waived
or
loaned
to
the
Company,
it
shall
bear
interest
at
the
rate
of
Canadian
prime
plus
1
per
cent
for
the
full
period
of
such
waiver
or
loan.
10.
Should
Curaçao
Marine
Management
N.V.
loan
or
waive
payment
of
any
fees
payable,
they
shall
have
the
sole
option
to
fix
the
repayment
period
and/or
have
the
option
to
demand
payment
at
any
time.
The
management
fees
for
the
three
months
of
1985
and
for
the
year
1986
were
waived
by
CMM
because
the
Appellant
was
not
in
a
position
to
pay.
10.
CMM,
pursuant
to
the
said
resolution,
guaranteed
the
lease
and
the
fee
was
fixed
at
7
per
cent
per
annum
of
the
total
monetary
exposure
under
the
lease
from
year
to
year.
As
can
be
seen
from
the
figures
in
paragraph
1,
these
fees
diminished
over
the
years
as
the
exposure
under
the
lease
diminished.
Also,
Messrs.
Stevens,
Sherover
and
Oakley
each
executed
guarantees
limited
to
$1,000,000
whereby
each
unconditionally
underwrote
the
lease
guarantee
provided
to
the
Port
by
CMM.
In
other
words,
if
CMM
could
not
fulfil
its
obligations
under
the
guarantee
to
the
Port,
CMM
could
look
to
these
three
shareholders
for
payment
under
their
backup
guarantees.
There
are
numerous
other
facts
evidenced
by
the
many
exhibits
filed
by
the
Appellant
and
the
testimony.
Not
all
of
these
facts
need
be
reviewed
here
in
detail.
Some
of
them
are
referred
to
below
in
the
submissions.
All
facts
have
been
reviewed
and
considered
in
formulating
the
decision
in
these
appeals.
Submissions
of
Appellant
The
Appellant’s
initial
submission
made
in
writing
and
dated
September
14,
1995
is
essentially
to
the
effect
that
based
upon
all
of
the
evidence
it
is
clear
that
CMM
gave
the
lease
guarantee
in
question,
that
without
that
guarantee
there
would
never
have
been
a
lease
with
the
Appellant,
nor
a
profit,
that
the
guarantee
fee
charged
was
reasonable
in
the
circumstances
and
consequently
the
Appellant
is
entitled
to
deduct
the
guarantee
fees
indicated
above.
With
respect
to
the
services
provided,
advisory
and
otherwise,
by
the
shareholders
of
CMM
to
the
Appellant,
Appellant’s
counsel
submits
that
the
evidence
is
extensive
to
the
effect
that
the
services
of
the
three
shareholders
mentioned
above,
and
other
persons,
retained
by
CMM
were
absolutely
essential
to
change
the
fortunes
of
the
Appellant
and
to
turn
what
promised
to
be
a
losing
proposition
into
a
profitable
one.
The
expert
business
skills,
connections
and
profile
of
the
persons
involved
at
CMM
were
evident.
These
services,
summarized
by
Mr.
Stevens
in
Tab
55
of
Exhibit
A-l,
involved,
according
to
Mr.
Stevens,
a
total
of
6,352
manhours
from
1985
through
1990
and
covered
items
such
as
lease
negotiations,
management
organization,
dealing
with
government
boards,
commissions
and
councils,
finances,
efficiency
studies,
competition
analysis,
proposals
to
introduce
feed
grain
shipments,
large
tonnage
vessels
and
self-unloading
vessels,
evaluation
of
costs
of
moving
U.S.
grain
to
European
and
Middle
East
markets
and
studying
other
potential
cargoes,
reorganizing
following
removal
of
the
At
and
East
grain
export
subsidy,
a
subsidy
which
had
enabled
the
railways
to
charge
lower
than
market
rates
for
shipments
to
Halifax
and
other
easterly
ports.
With
respect
to
interest
charged
on
the
fees,
Appellant’s
counsel
submits
that
if
the
two
sets
of
fees
are
found
to
be
acceptable,
the
interest
charged
on
the
unpaid
fees
was
reasonable
and
similarly
should
be
allowed.
Submissions
of
Respondent
These
are
best
set
forth
in
the
following
excerpts
from
the
Respondent’s
counsel’s
written
submission
dated
September
28,
1995:
11.
The
Respondent
says
that
CMM
was
a
shell
corporation
in
that
if
it
existed
as
a
legal
entity,
which
is
by
no
means
certain
throughout
the
period
under
appeal
but
will
be
assumed
for
purposes
of
argument,
it
had
no
assets
and
did
not
carry
on
business.
Consequently,
CMM
could
not
have
honored
its
guarantee.
12.
The
Respondent
submits
that
the
payment
of
the
lease
guarantee
fee
to
CMM
was
an
artificial
arrangement
whereby
the
Appellant
and
CMM
arranged
their
affairs
to
make
it
appear
that
the
Appellant
was
incurring
an
expense
to
CMM.
In
fact,
the
fee
charged
for
the
guarantee
was
part
of
the
artificial
arrangement
whereby
the
Appellant
transferred
funds
offshore
under
the
guise
of
being
a
valid
expense.
There
is
not
a
shred
of
evidence
that
CMM
had
any
assets
at
risk
to
justify
the
payment
of
a
lease
guarantee
fee.
The
only
assets
at
risk
were
those
of
the
individual
shareholders
who
provided
guarantees
and
who
chose
to
charge
no
fee.
13.
The
Respondent
does
not
dispute
that
the
specific
circumstances
probably
did
not
exist
throughout
the
period
under
appeal
for
the
Appellant
and
CMM
to
be
deemed
to
be
associated
corporations
pursuant
to
paragraph
256(1
)(b)
of
the
Income
Tax
Act
(the
“Act”)
and
therefore
dealing
at
non-arm’s
length.
However,
the
Respondent
submits
that
pursuant
to
paragraph
251(l)(b)
of
the
Act
it
is
a
question
of
fact
whether
the
parties
were
dealing
at
arm’s
length.
The
Respondent
further
submits
that
the
evidence
is
overwhelming
that
the
Appellant
was
not
dealing
at
arm’s
length
with
CMM.
14.
The
shareholders
of
CMM
were
primarily
shareholders
of
the
Appellant
and
vice
versa.
...
One
has
only
to
review
any
of
the
exhibits
submitted
by
the
Appellant
to
determine
that
the
existence
of
the
Appellant
and
CMM
was
so
intertwined
as
to
make
them
almost
one
entity.
At
Tab
14,
which
is
notes
of
a
meeting
of
the
Board
of
Directors
of
CMM
held
in
New
York
on
January
21,
1986,
the
Board
waived
a
management
fee
from
the
Appellant
and
appointed
John
Oakley
the
general
manager
of
the
Appellant.
As
exhibited
at
Tabs
36
and
37,
CMM
appointed
John
Oakley
as
President
of
the
Appellant.
The
testimony
of
Mr.
Oakley
was
clear
that
he
did
not
distinguish
between
a
corporation
and
its
shareholders.
(reference
transcript,
August
22,
pages
27-28)
15.
…
16.
In
the
present
case
it
is
submitted
that
the
guiding
mind
of
both
the
Appellant
and
CMM
were
one
and
the
same,
being
the
same
group
of
shareholders
who
caused
each
to
be
incorporated
and
who
directed
the
affairs
of
each
throughout
the
period
in
question.
Consequently,
it
is
clear
on
the
facts
that
the
Appellant
and
CMM
were
always
dealing
on
a
non-arm’s
length
basis.
17.
There
is
no
objective
evidence
that
CMM
existed
or
carried
on
business
in
1986
or
any
subsequent
year.
At
paragraph
3(j)
of
the
Reply
to
Notice
of
Appeal
the
Respondent
assumed
this
very
point.
The
Appellant
produced
evidence
in
the
form
of
testimony
and
documents
that
actions
were
carried
out
in
the
name
of
CMM.
There
were
various
directors’
resolutions
produced
and
documents
such
as
the
interim
lease
and
final
lease
with
the
Halifax
Port
Corporation
were
signed
on
behalf
of
CMM.
However
there
is
no
evidence
that
CMM
was
anything
but
a
shell
at
best,
unable
to
honor
any
form
of
guarantee.
18.
Tab
13
of
Exhibit
A-l
contains
a
financial
statement
of
CMM
as
at
August
1,
1985.
It
shows
all
assets
of
the
company
already
allocated.
John
Oakley
stated
in
cross
examination
that,
because
of
commitments
with
the
company’s
bank,
CMM
was
required
to
get
approval
for
any
large
expenditures.
(reference
transcript,
August
22,
pages
18-20).
19.
Subsequent
to
August
1,
1985
there
are
no
indications
that
CMM
had
any
assets
or
was
in
business.
Both
Messrs.
Oakley
and
Stevens
indicated
that
throughout
the
taxation
years
relevant
to
the
appeal
they
never
saw
a
financial
statement
of
CMM.
Mr.
Oakley
testified
that
as
late
as
1987
he
saw
a
combined
financial
statement
of
CMM
and
its
subsidiary
but
after
that
he
relied
on
information
given
by
third
parties
and
that
he
had
no
direct
knowledge
of
the
assets
of
CMM,
if
any.
(reference
transcript,
August
22,
pages
45-52).
Mr.
Stevens
gave
similar
testimony
despite
the
fact
that
he
claimed
to
be
the
President
of
CMM
in
this
period,
(reference
transcript,
August
22,
pages
152-53).
20.
It
is
common
ground
that
guarantees
were
given
to
CMM
totalling
$3,000,000
should
CMM
become
liable
pursuant
to
its
guarantee
to
the
Halifax
Port
Corporation
(reference
Exhibit
A-1,
Tabs
19,
20
&
21).
21.
The
memorandum
from
Mr.
Stevens
to
Mr.
Oakley
located
at
Tab
53
of
Exhibit
A-l
shows
clearly
that
following
1985,
these
shareholder
guarantees
were
more
than
sufficient
to
cover
any
potential
liability
to
the
Port
Corporation.
Both
Mr.
Oakley
and
Mr.
Stevens
testified
that
the
guarantors
were
each
capable
of
meeting
their
obligation
under
the
guarantees.
22.
The
Appellant
led
evidence
in
the
form
of
expert
testimony
by
Tony
Howatt
to
the
effect
that
the
rate
of
7
per
cent
charged
by
CMM
for
the
lease
guarantee
was
reasonable.
In
reaching
his
opinion
that
the
rate
was
reasonable,
Mr.
Howatt
assumed
that
CMM
was
at
all
times
able
to
meet
it
obligations
and
honour
the
lease
guarantee,
(reference
transcript,
August
22,
page
181)
He
further
testified
that
a
reasonable
lease
guarantee
was
calculated
as
a
percentage
of
the
assets
of
the
guarantor
at
risk.
Consequently,
if
CMM
had
$1.00
of
assets,
a
reasonable
fee
would
be
7
cents,
(reference
transcript,
August
22,
pages
181-83).
23.
The
Respondent
says
that
the
Appellant’s
deduction
of
the
lease
guarantee
was
properly
disallowed
pursuant
to
paragraph
18(1
)(a)
of
the
Act
as
it
was
not
incurred
to
earn
income.
This
is
evident
because
there
is
no
indication
that
CMM
had
any
assets
at
risk
even
though
this
point
was
clearly
put
in
issue
in
the
Respondent’s
pleadings.
In
effect,
the
Appellant
was
paying
a
fee
for
nothing.
The
only
logical
conclusion
is
that
the
“owners”
of
CMM
and
the
Appellant
were
using
this
as
a
means
of
funneling
wealth
from
Canada
to
the
offshore
under
the
guise
of
a
legitimate
business
activity.
24.
In
the
alternative,
it
is
submitted
that
the
payment
of
the
fee
was
unreasonable
in
the
circumstances.
The
shareholder
guarantees
were
given
to
CMM
free
of
charge.
It
is
unreasonable
for
CMM
to
then
demand
and
for
the
Appellant
to
pay
a
fee.
Keeping
in
mind
the
close
relationship
among
all
of
the
parties
involved,
the
only
reasonable
course
of
action
would
have
been
for
the
shareholders
to
give
guarantees
directly
to
the
Appellant,
free
of
charge.
ISSUE
B.
-
WHETHER
THE
MINISTER
WAS
CORRECT
IN
DISALLOWING
THE
DEDUCTION
OF
MANAGEMENT
FEES
FOR
THE
YEARS
1987
TO
1991,
INCLUSIVE;
25.
By
agreement
dated
September
15,
1985,
CMM
and
the
Appellant
agreed,
inter
alia,
that
CMM
would
provide
management
services
to
the
Appellant
for
remuneration.
26.
The
Appellant
has
introduced
memoranda
detailing
work
that
was
done
by
persons
on
its
behalf
in
an
effort
to
justify
the
management
fees.
These
persons
were
shareholders
of
both
CMM
and
the
Appellant
or
were
employees
of
shareholders.
(reference
Exhibit
A-l,
Tabs
15,
30,
43
&
54).
The
Respondent
does
not
dispute
that
work
was
done
by
the
shareholders
and
that
this
work
was
directly
connected
to
and
responsible
for
the
Appellant’s
financial
success.
However,
the
Respondent
says
that
CMM
could
not
have
and
did
not
perform
the
services.
27.
John
Oakley
testified
that
he
was
president
of
CMM
until
January,
1986
and
that
he
drew
a
salary
from
it.
He
then
moved
to
Nova
Scotia,
began
to
work
for
the
Appellant,
became
an
employee
of
the
Appellant
and
ceased
to
be
paid
by
CMM.
He
further
testified
that
in
1986,
after
he
left,
CMM
had
at
best
two
employees,
a
secretary
and
Gabriel
Sherover,
a
shareholder.
He
did
not
know
if
Mr.
Sherover
was
paid
by
CMM
(reference
transcript,
August
22,
pages
9-12)
28.
Mr.
Allen
Stevens
testified
that
neither
he
nor
any
of
the
other
CMM
principals
were
paid
by
CMM.
Mr.
Stevens
was
not
certain
whether
he
was
reimbursed
for
his
expenses
incurred
in
working
on
behalf
of
the
Appellant
or
who
would
have
paid
if
he
was
reimbursed.
To
Mr.
Stevens
knowledge
none
of
the
shareholders
of
CMM
were
under
contract
to
work
for
it
exclusively.
29.
The
Courts
have
held
that
corporations
dealing
at
non-arm’s
length
may
charge
one
another
reasonable
management
fees
when
the
employees
of
one
corporation
perform
services
on
behalf
of
and
that
directly
benefit
the
other.
In
all
of
the
decisions
cited
by
the
Appellant,
this
was
the
case.
30.
In
R.
v.
Laidlaw
Transport
Ltd.,
[1977]
C.T.C.
151,
77
D.T.C.
5091
(F.C.T.D.),
the
parent
charged
a
management
fee
to
the
Defendant.
The
Court
found
that
“DeGroote
was
an
employee
of
both
the
defendant
and
the
parent
in
the
period
in
question.
His
services
as
an
employee
were
primarily
to
the
parent.
The
defendant
reaped
the
benefit
(at
pages
154-55
(D.T.C.
5093)).
31.
The
Respondent
says
that
CMM
did
not
provide
management
services
to
the
Appellant.
There
is
no
evidence
in
the
present
case
that
any
work
was
done
by
employees
of
CMM
that
benefited
the
Appellant.
In
fact,
the
only
evidence
on
this
point
is
that
CMM
did
not
have
employees.
Certainly,
none
of
the
persons
described
in
the
evidence
as
having
performed
services
to
benefit
the
Appellant
were
employees
of
CMM.
What
is
clear
is
that
services
were
performed
by
shareholders
of
the
Appellant
for
its
benefit
and,
quite
reasonable,
they
asked
for
no
compensation
in
return
except
for
Mr.
Oakley
who
was
paid
by
the
Appellant
for
his
position
as
its
General
Manager.
32.
The
Respondent
says
that
the
management
agreement
between
the
Appellant
and
CMM
was
an
artificial
arrangement
designed
to
make
it
appear
that
CMM
was
providing
management
services
to
the
Appellant
when,
in
fact,
CMM
was
never
capable
of
providing
any
kind
of
management
service
as
it
had
no
employees
or
persons
under
contract
to
provide
those
services.
33.
The
Respondent
says
that
the
Appellant’s
deduction
of
the
management
fees
was
properly
disallowed
pursuant
to
paragraph
18(1
)(a)
of
the
Act
as
they
were
not
incurred
to
earn
income.
The
evidence
indicates
conclusively
that
CMM
provided
no
services
to
the
Appellant.
Like
the
lease
guarantee
fees,
in
effect,
the
Appellant
was
paying
a
fee
for
nothing.
The
only
logical
conclusion
is
that
the
“owners”
of
CMM
and
the
Appellant
were
also
using
this
as
a
means
of
funneling
wealth
from
Canada
to
the
offshore
under
the
guise
of
a
legitimate
business
activity.
34.
In
the
alternative,
it
is
submitted
that
the
payment
of
the
fee
was
unreasonable
in
the
circumstances.
The
shareholders
performed
services
free
of
charge.
it
is
unreasonable
for
CMM
to
then
demand
and
for
the
Appellant
to
pay
a
fee.
ISSUE
C.
-
WHETHER
THE
MINISTER
WAS
CORRECT
IN
DISALLOWING
THE
DEDUCTION
OF
INTEREST
EXPENSES
FOR
THE
YEARS
1989
TO
1991,
INCLUSIVE
35.
The
interest
expenses
arose
as
a
result
of
the
accrual
of
fees
owed
to
CMM.
The
Respondent
says
that
if
the
lease
guarantee
fees
and
management
fees
were
properly
disallowed,
then
the
interest
cannot
be
said
to
have
been
incurred
for
the
purpose
of
gaining
or
producing
income
pursuant
to
paragraph
20(1
)(c)
of
the
Act.
Response
of
Appellant
to
Respondent's
Submissions
These
are
best
summed
up
by
quoting
certain
extracts
from
the
written
response
of
Appellant’s
counsel
dated
October
6,
1995.
Lease
Guarantee
Fees
With
respect
to
paragraph
11
of
the
Respondent’s
Submission,
it
appears
that
the
reference
to
“shell
corporation”
means
a
corporation
that
had
no
or
insignificant
assets.
The
testimony
established
(Exhibit
A-1,
tab
13);
transcript
of
August
21,
1995,
pages
24,
80;
transcript
of
August
22,
1995,
pages
86,
149)
that
CMM
was
incorporated
with
substantial
assets,
which
were
augmented
by
payments
received
from
the
Appellant
and
others
(transcript
of
August
22,
pages
99,
137-38,
150-51);
its
assets
were
retained
by
it
in
the
form
of
portfolio
investments
and
not
distributed
to
its
shareholders
but
transferred
intact
to
the
successor
company
incorporated
in
1990
in
the
Isle
of
Man
(transcript
of
August
21,
pages
187-88;
transcript
of
August
22,
pages
47,
99,
104,
139.,
153).
Even
if
that
were
not
the
case,
CMM
had
an
enforceable
legal
right,
reflected
in
tabs
19,
20,
and
21
of
Exhibit
A-l,
to
call
upon
its
major
shareholders
for
up
to
$3,000,000
in
connection
with
its
guaranteed
commitment
to
the
Halifax
Port
Corporation.
Tab
18
in
Exhibit
A-1
makes
it
clear
that
the
guarantees
were
provided
to
CMM
for
purposes
of
enabling
it
to
assure
the
Port
Corporation
that
CMM
could
fulfil
its
obligations
under
its
guarantee
to
the
Port
Corporation,
regardless
of
what
other
assets
CMM
might
have
had.
These
backup
guarantees
were
substantially
sufficient
to
ensure
that
CMM
could
meet
its
maximum
guarantee
exposure,
as
reflected
in
tab
17
of
Exhibit
A-1.
The
evidence
indicated
(Exhibit
A-1,
tab
18,
third
paragraph;
transcript
of
August
21,
pages
94-
95;
transcript
of
August
22,
pages
110-11)
that
there
was
a
lack
of
unanimity
within
the
board
of
CMM
whether
the
guarantees
should
be
given
to
the
Port
Corporation,
and
the
consent
of
the
board
was
only
obtained
on
condition
that
the
three
shareholders
in
question
supported
their
confidence
in
the
grain
elevator
operation
by
providing
personal
backup
guarantees
to
CMM.
Consequently
full
value
was
provided
by
CMM
to
the
Appellant
in
exchange
for
the
guarantee
fee.
The
fact
that
the
Port
Corporation
considered
the
guarantee
to
be
of
continuing
importance
is
evidenced
by
its
insistence
that
the
guarantee
be
renewed
with
the
renewal
of
the
lease
(Exhibit
A-l,
tab
57;
transcript
of
August
22,
pages
102-03).
It
is
hard
to
see
on
what
basis
it
is
claimed
in
paragraph
12
of
Respondent’s
Submission
that
the
arrangement
to
pay
a
guarantee
fee,
at
a
rate
that
expert
testimony
has
established
to
be
reasonable
(Exhibit
A-2;
transcript
of
August
22,
pages
165-84),
for
a
guarantee
that
the
Appellant
needed
in
order
to
carry
on
its
business
and
could
not
obtain
elsewhere
(transcript
of
August
22,
p.
171),
was
artificial.
The
Appellant
did
incur
an
expense
to
CMM
and,
with
or
without
some
delay,
paid
that
expense
(see
Submission
of
Appellant
to
this
Honourable
Court
dated
September
14,
1995
-
“Appellant’s
Submission”
pages
14-16;
also
transcript
of
August
21,
pages
176,
179;
transcript
of
August
22,
page
99).
It
is
not
clear
under
what
section
of
the
Income
Tax
Act
or
what
case
law
paragraph
12
of
the
Respondent’s
Submission
is
claiming
that
alleged
artificiality
justifies
a
disallowance
of
the
deduction
of
the
lease
guarantee
fees.
Former
subsection
245(1)
of
the
Income
Tax
Act
was
not
pleaded
in
the
Reply,
but
in
any
event
it
is
submitted
that
it
is
not
applicable
where
a
reasonable
commercial
arrangement
is
in
place.
That
provision
was
in
issue
in
Mark
Resources
Inc.
v.
R.
(sub
nom.
Mark
Resources
Inc.
v.
Canada),
[1993]
2
C.T.C.
2259,
93
D.T.C.
1004
(T.C.C.;
under
appeal),
where
Bowman
J.T.C.C.,
said,
at
page
2266
(D.T.C.
1009):
It
is
fair
to
say
that
artificiality
is
in
the
eye
of
the
beholder,
and
where
one
draws
the
line
between
“acceptable”
and
“unacceptable”
tax
avoidance
schemes
is
a
matter
of
perception.
In
that
determination
the
fact
that
the
scheme
may
have
been
predominantly
or
exclusively
fiscally
motivated
plays
a
minor
or
even
a
non-existent
role.
Here
there
is
no
evidence
before
the
Court,
and
no
questions
were
raised
on
cross-examination,
concerning
the
possibility
that
the
arrangements
in
question
were
tax-motivated.
Even
if
they
were,
that
would
not
make
them
artificial.
This
subject
will
be
discussed
further
at
a
later
point,
in
relation
to
“income
splitting”.
It
is
submitted
that
it
is
incorrect,
in
the
last
sentence
of
paragraph
12
of
the
Respondent’s
Submission,
to
allege
that
“the
only
assets
at
risk
were
those
of
the
individual
shareholders”:
by
reason
of
the
backup
guarantees,
those
assets
were
available
at
any
time
to
CMM,
if
required,
to
discharge
CMM’s
corporate
obligation;
the
assurance
that
CMM
had
access
to
the
required
funds,
wholly
apart
from
any
other
assets
of
CMM,
provided
substance
to
the
CMM
guarantee
(see
transcript
of
August
22,
page
175).
As
will
be
established
later,
it
was
irrelevant
to
the
value
of
the
guarantee
to
the
Appellant,
or
to
the
reasonableness
of
the
fee
that
it
paid
for
the
guarantee,
whether
the
shareholders
of
CMM
who
provided
the
backup
guarantees
were
directly
compensated
by
CMM
for
so
doing.
The
Respondent’s
Submission,
in
paragraphs
13
to
16
inclusive,
argues
that
CMM
and
the
Appellant,
at
all
relevant
times,
were
not
dealing
at
arm’s
length.
While
there
was
not
an
identity
of
shareholders,
there
clearly
was
a
close
relationship
between
the
two
corporations,
particularly
in
the
early
stages.
Tab
12
of
Exhibit
A-l,
among
other
things,
in
paragraph
7
empowered
CMM
to
provide
a
resident
manager
and
other
advisers
to
the
Appellant.
Hence
CMM’s
appointment
of
Mr.
Oakley
to
take
charge
of
the
Appellant
in
early
1986.
As
Mr.
Oakley
testified,
however,
(transcript
of
August
21,
pages
191-92;
Exhibit
A-l,
tabs
2,
56)
it
was
in
his
personal
interest
to
minimize
the
intercompany
charges,
and
he
agreed
to
them
because
he
felt
that
they
were
reasonable
in
the
circumstances.
In
any
event,
as
counsel
for
the
Appellant
indicated
to
His
Honour
in
response
to
a
question
(transcript
of
August
21,
pages
35-37),
it
is
not
critical
to
the
Appellant’s
case
whether
or
not
the
two
companies
were
dealing
at
arm’s
length
at
the
relevant
times.
Whether
the
applicable
provision
of
the
Income
Tax
Act
is
section
67
(which
can
apply
whether
or
not
the
parties
to
a
transaction
are
at
arm’s
length)
or
subsection
69(2)
(which
only
applies
if
the
parties
are
not
at
arm’s
length),
the
deductibility
of
the
expenses
in
question
depends
upon
the
reasonableness
of
their
amount
having
regard
to
all
surrounding
circumstances.
Consequently
the
main
thrust
of
the
testimony
presented
on
behalf
of
the
Appellant
related
to
the
reasonableness
of
the
intercompany
charges,
which
it
is
submitted
has
been
amply
established
by
the
evidence.
Reference
is
made
to
pages
22
and
23
of
Appellant’s
Submission.
In
paragraph
17
of
the
Respondent’s
Submission
it
is
alleged
that
there
is
no
“objective
evidence”
that
CMM
continued
to
exist
in
1986
or
subsequent
years
or,
failing
that,
that
it
was
anything
other
than
a
shell.
The
latter
point
has
already
been
answered.
Since
it
is
admitted
by
the
Respondent
that
CMM
came
into
existence,
the
suggestion
must
be
taken
as
being
that
the
Appellant
has
not
proved
that
CMM’s
corporate
existence
did
not
terminate
at
or
before
the
beginning
of
1986
or,
if
not,
some
time
during
the
years
in
question.
It
is
submitted
that,
unless
some
reason
caused
the
shareholders
(of
whom
Mr.
Oakley
and
Mr.
Stevens
had
significant
holdings)
to
take
steps
to
terminate
a
corporation’s
existence,
it
is
a
reasonable
inference
that
the
corporation,
once
established,
would
continue
as
such.
In
addition,
it
is
clear
that
all
parties
concerned
regarded
CMM
as
continuing
to
exist
(see,
for
example,
Mr.
Stevens’
views
in
transcript
of
August
22,
page
99)
and
acted
on
that
basis:
1.
The
CMM
guarantee
to
the
Port
Corporation
continued
(transcript
of
August
22,
pages
102-03;
2.
CMM
continued
to
invoice
the
Appellant
(see,
for
example,
tab
36
of
Exhibit
A-l),
and,
as
previously
noted,
the
Appellant
made
significant
payments
to
CMM;
3.
As
noted
earlier,
CMM
continued
to
retain,
augment,
and
invest
its
assets
and
delivered
those
assets
intact
to
the
successor
corporation
in
1990;
4.
Mr.
Sherover
and
then
Mr.
Stevens
acted
as
president
of
CMM
in
the
late
1980s
(transcript
of
August
22,
pages
152-53);
5.
Further
capital
was
put
into
CMM
(transcript
of
August
22,
pages
137-38);
6.
Mr.
Stevens
purchased
shares
from
Mr.
Sherover
upon
the
latter’s
death
in
1989
(transcript
of
August
22,
page
138;
see
also
transcript
of
August
21,
page
163;
transcript
of
August
22,
pages
99,
129);
7.
The
shareholders
did
not
withdraw
funds
from
CMM
by
way
of
dividends
or
liquidating
payments
(transcript
of
August
22,
pages
100,
104-105),
which
would
naturally
happen
if
the
corporation
had
been
terminated
unless
a
fraud
had
been
perpetrated
-
and
there
is
no
basis
for
suggesting
fraud
(transcript
of
August
22,
page
53);
8.
The
Isle
of
Man
company
commenced
operation
with
significant
assets,
without
any
infusion
of
additional
capital
from
the
shareholders
(transcript
of
August
22,
page
138).
9,
Annual
audited
financial
statements
were
prepared
for
the
Appellant
showing
the
ongoing
financial
relationship
between
it
and
CMM
(Exhibit
A-1,
tabs
31,
37,
38,
44,
45,
46);
10.
In
early
1988,
the
Appellant
issued
to
CMM
250,000
Class
C
shares
from
the
Appellant’s
treasury
in
payment
of
the
1986
guarantee
fee
(Exhibit
A-l,
tabs
2,
27;
tab
37,
note
6;
transcript
of
August
21,
pages
121-26);
11.
Meetings
of
directors
and
shareholders
of
CMM
continued
to
be
held,
mostly
in
New
York
(Exhibit
A-l,
tabs
18,
36,
42;
transcript
of
August
21,
pages
80,
86,
94,
167-68;
transcript
of
August
22,
pages
44-45,
161).
It
is
clear
that
the
shareholders
had
no
reason
to
terminate
the
corporation
and,
indeed,
that
their
only
concern
was
the
geographic
location
of
their
investments:
having
terminated
their
business
operations
in
Curaçao,
they
investigated
the
possibility
of
transferring
the
company
to
Bermuda
(transcript
of
August
21,
pages
187-88;
transcript
of
August
22,
page
48)
and,
when
that
was
found
not
to
be
possible
or
appropriate,
to
the
Isle
of
Man
(transcript
of
August
21,
page
188;
transcript
of
August
22,
page
47,49).
Consequently
it
is
submitted
that
there
is
every
reason
to
conclude
that
CMM
continued
in
existence,
in
its
original
corporate
form
until
late
1990
and
thereafter
as
the
reincorporated
company
in
the
Isle
of
Man,
and
that
it
provided
the
various
services
in
consideration
for
which
the
fees
in
question
were
paid
by
the
Appellant.
In
any
event,
regardless
of
the
corporate
status
of
CMM,
the
valuable
services
in
question
were
performed,
and
the
fees
in
question
were
accrued
and
paid.
It
is
submitted
that
the
argument
in
paragraph
22
of
the
Respondent’s
Submission,
suggesting
that
Mr.
Howatt
agreed
that
a
nominal
lease
guarantee
fee
would
be
appropriate
if
CMM
had
insignificant
assets,
misses
the
point
of
Mr.
Howatt’s
testimony.
It
is
clear
that,
when
his
testimony
is
read
in
context,
he
was
saying
that,
providing
CMM
had
the
resources,
or
had
access
to
the
resources,
to
honour
its
guarantee
in
full,
a
reasonable
guarantee
fee
would
be
based
on
its
full
exposure
to
potential
liability
(transcript
of
August
22,
pages
175,
179,
183).
No
other
interpretation
of
Mr.
Howatt’s
testimony
makes
sense.
With
respect,
it
is
submitted
that
paragraph
23
of
the
Respondent’s
Submission
is
wrong
in
suggesting
that
“the
Appellant
was
paying
a
fee
for
nothing”.
The
Port
Corporation
did
not
think
so,
nor
did
Mr.
Oakley
in
agreeing
that
the
payments
were
proper
(transcript
of
August
21,
pages
191-92).
Again
there
is
a
hint
here
of
illegitimate
tax
avoidance,
which
was
not
raised
in
cross-
examination
and,
it
is
submitted,
is
irrelevant
anyway.
In
effect,
the
claim
being
made
here
is
that
there
was
a
species
of
“income
splitting”
because
some
of
what
otherwise
would
be
the
income
of
the
Appellant
became
the
income
of
CMM
or
of
its
shareholders.
On
the
question
of
income
splitting,
Rothstein
J.,
in
Neuman
v.
Minister
of
National
Revenue
(sub
nom.
R.
v.
Neuman),
[1994]
1
C.T.C.
354,
94
D.T.C.
6094
(F.C.T.D.;
under
appeal),
at
page
364
(D.T.C.
6102),
noted:
It
may
also
be
appropriate
for
me
to
observe
that
nothing
in
the
scheme
of
the
Income
Tax
Act
as
a
whole
suggests
an
overall
intention
to
prevent
income
splitting.
Again,
no
section
of
the
Income
Tax
Act
is
cited
as
authority
for
disallowing
the
guarantee
fees
on
the
basis
that
they
accomplished
a
splitting
of
income.
If
a
motive
on
the
part
of
the
Appellant’s
shareholders
to
split
income
with
an
offshore
entity
were
relevant
to
this
appeal,
it
is
hard
to
infer
such
a
motive
when
CMM
agreed
to
forego
management
fees
for
1985
and
1986
(Exhibit
A-l,
tabs
14,
36).
Further
income
splitting
would
have
been
possible
by
not
waiving
these
fees,
allowing
them
instead
to
create
or
increase
non-capital
losses
for
the
Appellant
for
the
years
in
question,
and
carrying
those
losses
forward,
under
section
111
of
the
Income
Tax
Act,
to
reduce
the
Appellant’s
taxable
incomes
for
its
profitable
years
commencing
in
1987.
The
argument
in
paragraph
24
of
the
Respondent’s
submission
that
the
guarantee
fees
were
unreasonable
has
already
been
addressed.
It
is
hard
to
see
on
what
basis,
in
the
last
sentence
of
paragraph
24
of
the
Respondent’s
Submission,
it
is
suggested
that
no
fee
should
have
been
charged
for
the
valuable
guarantee
nor
why
the
backup
guarantees
had
to
be
given
directly
to
the
Appellant
rather
than
to
CMM.
It
was
CMM
to
which
the
Port
Corporation
was
looking
for
guarantee
support,
and
the
backup
guarantees
were
given
to
CMM,
for
legitimate
business
reasons,
to
alleviate
the
concerns
of
several
of
the
shareholders.
Those
concerns,
expressed
in
late
1986,
reflected
an
assumption
that
CMM
had,
or
was
expected
to
have,
assets
of
its
own
that
otherwise
would
be
at
risk.
Management
Fees
In
paragraph
26
of
the
Respondent’s
Submission,
it
is
indicated
that
“the
Respondent
does
not
dispute
that
work
was
done
by
the
shareholders
and
that
this
work
was
directly
connected
to
and
responsible
for
the
Appellant’s
financial
success.”
The
only
issues
remaining,
therefore,
are
whether
these
services
could
be
regarded
as
having
been
provided
by
CMM
and
whether
the
amount
of
the
fees
was
reasonable.
For
reasons
already
given,
it
must
be
concluded
that
CMM
continued
in
existence
and
continued
to
provide
services
pursuant
to
the
management
agreement.
There
was
no
suggestion
that
the
management
agreement
is
a
sham
or
should
be
ignored.
In
effect,
services
were
provided
as
admitted
by
the
Respondent,
were
invoiced
to
the
Appellant
as
having
been
provided
pursuant
to
the
management
agreement,
and
were
duly
paid
for
by
the
Appellant.
It
is
not
clear
on
what
basis
these
clearly
established
relationships
between
the
parties
can
be
ignored
because
Revenue
Canada
was
unhappy
with
the
tax
result.
With
respect
to
paragraphs
27
to
31
of
the
Respondent’s
Submission,
it
is
respectfully
submitted
that
the
only
issue
under
the
Income
tax
Act
with
respect
to
the
management
fees
(once
it
is
admitted
that
valuable
services
were
provided)
is
whether
the
fees
were
reasonable
in
the
circumstances.
How
CMM
chose
to
provide
those
services
-
whether
through
paid
or
unpaid
employees,
through
paid
or
unpaid
shareholders
of
CMM
acting
on
a
contract
basis,
or
through
independent
third
parties
contracted
for
by
CMM
(see
transcript
of
August
22,
pages
34,
42),
was
of
no
relevance
to
the
Appellant
and
of
no
relevance
to
the
reasonableness
of
the
fees.
It
is
submitted
that
the
Respondent’s
arguments
concerning
who
may
or
may
not
have
been
an
employee,
and
which
employees
may
or
may
not
have
been
compensated
by
CMM
in
the
form
of
salary,
are
beside
the
point.
All
of
the
documentation
and
testimony
establishes
that
the
services
were
provided
pursuant
to
the
management
agreement,
and
therefore
CMM
was
entitled
to
be
paid
the
agreed
fees
regardless
of
what
arrangements
it
made
for
the
provision
of
those
services.
Those
who
provided
the
services
would
expect
to
benefit
in
some
way
or
other
—
if
not
by
salary
or
consulting
fees
then
ultimately
by
dividends
or
capital
gains
from
the
growth
in
value
of
their
shares.
That
was
a
matter
of
no
concern
to
the
Appellant.
Similarly
it
was
of
no
concern
to
the
Appellant
whether
any
of
the
shareholders
of
CMM
who
provided
management
services
to
the
Appellant
were
under
contract
to
work
for
CMM
exclusively
-
a
point
raised
in
paragraph
28
of
Respondent’s
Submission.
The
Respondent
cites
Laidlaw,
a
case
also
referred
to
in
the
Appellant’s
Submission.
It
is
submitted
that
there
is
no
suggestion
in
the
judgment
that
the
reasonableness
of
the
intercompany
fee
depended
upon
the
status
of
Mr.
DeGroote
as
an
employee
of
the
parent.
The
significant
point
here
is
provided
at
page
5093
of
the
judgment,
in
the
second
full
paragraph
in
the
right-hand
column,
where
it
is
noted
that
the
fact
that
DeGroote
received
no
compensation
from
the
parent
company
was
irrelevant.
Again,
at
paragraph
32
of
the
Respondent’s
Submission,
a
reference
is
made
to
“an
artificial
arrangement”.
It
is
submitted
that
there
is
nothing
artificial
about
adhering
to
a
legally
enforceable
contract
entered
into
by
the
two
parties.
The
Court’s
task,
it
is
submitted,
is
to
address
the
legal
relationships
that
were
created,
not
alternative
legal
relationships
that
might
have
been
created.
There
is
no
suggestion
anywhere
that
the
transactions
in
question
amounted
to
a
“sham”.
It
is
submitted
that
all
the
points
raised
in
paragraphs
33
and
34
of
the
Respondent’s
Submission
have
already
been
answered.
Interest
Expense
The
Appellant
agrees
with
paragraph
35
in
the
Respondent’s
Submission
but
takes
the
position
that
the
converse
is
also
true:
if
the
lease
guarantee
fees
and
management
fees
should
not
have
been
disallowed,
then
the
interest
should
be
deductible
pursuant
to
paragraph
20(1
)(c)
of
the
Income
Tax
Act.
Preliminary
Issue
There
was
a
preliminary
issue
raised
by
a
motion
of
counsel
for
the
Respondent
under
rule
146
of
the
Tax
Court
of
Canada
Rules.
The
Respondent
had
served
counsel
for
the
Appellant
with
a
subpoena
duces
tecum
ordering
Mr.
Oakley
to
produce
financial
records
of
CMM
for
the
years
1988
to
1990
and
Mr.
Oakley
being
unable
to
obtain
these
records
did
not
furnish
them.
Rule
146
provides
as
follows:
146(1)
A
party
may
secure
the
attendance
of
a
person
who
is,
(a)
an
adverse
party,
or
(b)
an
officer,
director
or
employee
of
an
adverse
party,
as
a
witness
at
a
hearing
by,
(c)
serving
the
person
with
a
subpoena,
or
(d)
serving
on
the
adverse
party
or
the
counsel
of
record
for
the
adverse
party
at
least
ten
days
before
the
commencement
of
the
hearing,
a
notice
of
intention
to
call
the
person
as
a
witness....
(2)
Where
a
person
referred
to
in
subsection
(1)
is
in
attendance
at
the
hearing
a
party
may
call
the
person
as
a
witness
without
previous
notice
or
the
payment
of
witness
fees
and
expenses.
(3)
A
party
calling
a
witness
referred
to
in
subsection
(1)
may
cross-examine
the
witness.
(4)
Where
a
person
required
to
testify
under
this
section,
(a)
refuses
or
neglects
to
attend
at
the
hearing
or
to
remain
in
attendance
at
the
hearing,
(b)
refuses
to
be
sworn,
or
(c)
refuses
to
answer
any
proper
questions
put
to
that
person
or
to
produce
any
document
or
other
thing
which
that
person
is
required
to
produce,
the
Court
may
grant
judgment
in
favour
of
the
party
calling
the
witness,
adjourn
the
hearing
or
give
such
other
direction
as
is
just.
On
this
point
counsel
for
the
Respondent
submitted
as
follows:
RULE
146,
GENERAL
PROCEDURE
RULES
39.
Rule
146
allows
the
Crown,
by
means
of
a
subpoena,
to
secure
the
attendance
of
an
adverse
party,
or
an
officer,
director
or
employee
of
an
adverse
party.
It
is
common
ground
that
Mr.
Oakley
is
a
director
of
the
Appellant.
It
is
also
common
ground
that
Mr.
Oakley
was
served
with
a
subpoena
by
the
Crown
to
attend
the
appeal
with
financial
records
of
CMM.
40.
The
purpose
of
the
subpoena
is
self
evident.
This
case
involves
financial
dealings
between
CMM,
a
foreign
offshore
corporation,
and
Halifax
Grain
Elevator
Limited,
a
Canadian
resident
corporation.
The
issues
raise
questions
of
whether
CMM
had
any
assets;
whether
CMM
was
in
business;
whether
CMM
had
employees.
Was
CMM
merely
a
corporate
name
for
use
in
funnelling
funds
offshore?
If
CMM
is
merely
an
assetless
shell,
a
conduit
for
transferring
funds
to
the
account
of
the
Appellant’s
shareholders,
how
can
it
legitimately
charge
a
guarantee
fee
for
anything?
If
CMM
isn’t
employing
anybody,
how
can
CMM
charge
a
management
fee;
what
services
are
they
offering?
41.
It
is
the
Respondent’s
position
that
it
is
severely
prejudiced
by
the
lack
of
the
financial
statements
and
financial
records
of
CMM
because
the
Crown
and
The
Court
is
left
guessing
as
to
the
existence
of
and
true
financial
position
of
CMM.
As
stated
by
Judge
Bowman
in
the
Farm
Business
Consultants
Inc.
[
]
case:
“the
essential
nature
of
a
transaction
cannot
be
altered
for
income
tax
purposes
by
calling
it
a
different
name.
It
is
the
true
legal
relationship,
not
the
nomenclature,
that
governs.”
[at
page
203]
Enquiries
for
records
were
made
of
an
Isle
of
Man
corporation
that
was
incorporated
in
1990
and
that
appears
to
be
the
successor
of
CMM.
CMM
doesn’t
exist
anymore.
Mr.
Oakley
was
told
that
CMM’s
records
were
destroyed.
42.
In
the
case
of
Crestbrook
Forest
Industries
Ltd.
v.
R.
(sub
nom.
Crestbrook
Forest
Industries
v.
Canada),
[1992]
2
C.T.C.
81,
93
D.T.C.
5186
(F.C.A.),
a
Canadian
company
had
dealings
with
offshore
corporations
to
which
it
was
very
closely
related.
Questions
were
asked
on
Discovery,
and
the
answers
to
those
questions
had
to
be
provided
by
the
offshore
corporations
as
the
Canadian
company
didn’t
have
the
answers.
The
offshore
corporations
refused
to
answer
the
questions
when
the
request
was
made
by
the
Canadian
company.
The
Federal
Court
approved
of
a
passage
from
Monarch
Marketing
Systems
Inc.
v.
Esselte
Metro
Ltd.
which
they
quoted:
Today’s
commercial
reality,
with
international
corporations,
large
and
small,
doing
business
through
affiliates
across
much
of
the
world
and
treating
national
boundaries
as
minor
inconveniences
to
be
coped
with
by
international
organisations,
dictates
that
the
corporate
veil
ought
not
to
be
permitted
to
inhibit
the
administration
of
justice
in
Canada.
Examination
for
discovery
is
an
important
tool
in
the
administration
of
justice
on
its
civil
side.
I
have
no
doubt
that
under
proper
sanctions
by
the
court,
Canadian
companies
can
readily
and
economically
obtain
from
their
foreign
affiliates
answers
to
proper
questions
on
discovery.
I
am
convinced
that
they
should
be
required
to
try
and
pay
the
consequences
of
their
failure
or
their
affiliates’
recalcitrance.
International
businesses
ought
not
be
permitted,
either
as
an
incident
or
object
of
their
organisational
set-ups,
to
avoid
full
compliance
with
the
law
of
Canada
in
respect
of
the
business
they
do
here.
43.
Under
the
laws
of
Canada,
the
Appellant
is
required
to
keep
all
books
and
records.
As
an
extension
of
the
principle
cited
in
Crestbrook
it
is
the
Respondent’s
position
that
if
the
Appellant
is
going
to
engage
in
international
activity,
it
is
the
Appellant’s
obligation
to
ensure
that
proper
books
and
records
are
maintained.
If
those
books
and
records
have
been
destroyed
then
the
Appellant
must
pay
the
price
for
the
failure
or
the
recalcitrance
of
their
foreign
affiliate’s
failure
to
keep
books
and
records.
44.
The
Crown
is
looking
for
very
specific
and
elementary
information.
Things
as
basic
as,
and
this
is
made
apparent
in
the
Reply
to
Notice
of
Appeal,
did
CMM
exist,
or
was
it
just
something
someone
assumed
continued
to
exist.
Was
it
a
legal
entity?
Did
it
have
any
assets?
Did
it
have
any
employees?
Did
it
pay
any
salaries
or
wages?
Without
answers
to
these
questions
the
Respondent
is
in
an
impossible
position
in
this
case.
The
Crown
is
clearly
prejudiced
without
CMM’s
financial
records.
45.
Consequently,
the
Respondent
is
asking
that
pursuant
to
Rule
146,
this
appeal
be
dismissed
on
the
basis
that
these
financial
records
have
not
been
supplied.
If
the
Court
is
not
prepared
to
grant
this
remedy
then
the
Respondent
requests
that
any
evidence
that
could
be
supplied
or
verified
by
these
financial
records
not
be
admitted
by
an
indirect
means.
Counsel
for
the
Appellant
filed
a
letter
as
Tab
50
of
Exhibit
A-l
which
read
as
follows:
August
1,
1995
Ms
Elke
Juckes
General
Manager
Halifax
Grain
Elevator
Limited
937
Mitchell
Street
Halifax,
Nova
Scotia
83H
3R5
Dear
Mrs.
Juckes
Re:
Financial
Statements
-
1985/1990
We
refer
to
a
request
we
have
received
from
Mr.
John
Oakley,
asking
for
copies
of
our
financial
reports
for
the
years
1985
to
1990
inclusive
in
support
of
the
Halifax
Grain
Elevator
Court
Case.
Whilst
we
would
like
to
provide
every
assistance,
the
business
of
CMM
was
moved
in
November
1990
and
incorporated
in
the
Isle
of
Man.
As
there
was
no
legal
requirement
to
retain
the
business
records
of
its
former
jurisdiction,
a
formal
decision
was
made
to
destroy
those
records
not
required
under
Isle
of
Man
Company
Law.
We
are
therefore
very
sorry
to
report
that
we
are
unable
to
comply
with
your
request.
Yours
sincerely
for
and
on
behalf
of
Curaçao
Marine
Management
Limited
Martin
J
S
Katz
Director
Mr.
Oakley
and
Mr.
Stevens
further
explained
the
rather
casual
approach
to
documentation
by
CMM,
which
in
essence
was
a
holding
or
investment
company,
the
shares
of
which
were
closely
held.
I
am
satisfied
that
Mr.
Oakley
made
an
effort
to
get
the
documents
but
could
not
get
them
because
they
had
been
destroyed.
I
believe
further
that
there
was
sufficient
evidence
given
in
the
testimony
and
the
exhibits
to
enable
the
Respondent
and
the
Court
to
understand
how
CMM
was
established
and
functioned
in
relation
to
the
matters
under
appeal.
Consequently
the
motion
is
dismissed.
Analysis
—
Main
Issues
With
respect
to
the
guarantee
fees
charged,
I
am
satisfied
on
the
basis
of
all
of
the
evidence
that
the
liability
was
a
real
one
for
CMM.
The
agreement
signed
in
my
opinion
was
not
altered
by
the
fact
that
three
shareholders
in
essence
guaranteed
the
guarantee
of
CMM.
The
exposure
of
CMM’s
general
assets
was
no
doubt
reduced
by
the
existence
of
the
back-up
guarantees
but
I
do
not
believe
this
alters
the
legal
situation.
The
back
up
guarantors
could,
during
the
six
year
term
of
the
Port
lease,
have
fallen
on
hard
times.
This
would
not
have
altered
the
direct
liability
of
CMM
to
the
Port.
Further,
based
on
the
expert
evidence
of
Mr.
Howatt,
I
am
satisfied
that
the
7
per
cent
rate
charged
by
CMM
to
the
Appellant
was
reasonable.
Counsel
for
Respondent
argues
that
since
CMM
had
little
or
no
assets,
it
really
was
not
at
risk
and
the
7
per
cent
rate
is
unreasonable.
In
fact
the
back-up
guarantees
constituted
a
valuable
asset
of
CMM,
even
if
contingent.
Moreover
there
is
other
evidence
indicating
CMM
existed
and
had
assets
other
than
the
back-up
guarantees.
With
respect
to
the
management
fees,
I
am
satisfied
that
CMM
through
the
services
of
its
shareholders,
apparent
experts
in
their
respective
fields,
saved
the
Halifax
Port
facility
and
made
it
profitable.
It
may
be
that
some
of
the
services
might
be
considered
as
not
for
the
Appellant’s
benefit
but
rather
as
time
put
in
by
the
persons
rendering
services
in
seeking
out
other
investment
opportunities
for
themselves
or
for
other
corporations
or
legal
entities
to
be
put
in
place
if
the
investment
materialized.
Nonetheless
considerable
services
were
for
the
Appellant’s
benefit
and
in
my
opinion,
given
the
results,
the
fees
charged
were
reasonable
and
deductible
in
all
years
except
1990
and
1991.
It
is
clear
that
after
Mr.
Sherover’s
death
in
1989
the
services
rendered
reduced
considerably
and
eventually
disappeared.
Based
upon
the
testimony
and
the
summaries
of
CMM’s
services
prepared
by
Allen
Stevens
and
filed
at
Tabs
54
and
55
of
Exhibit
A-l,
I
find
that
since
no
services
were
rendered
in
1991
the
management
fee
for
that
year
is
not
deductible
and
based
upon
the
same
sources
showing
reduced
services
in
1990,
the
management
fee
for
1990
is
only
deductible
to
the
extent
of
$150,000.
Resolutions
of
CMM
adopted
February
12,
1988
and
February
20,
1989
refer
to
the
waiver
of
the
fee
in
1985
and
1986
and
contain
a
provision
that
CMM
retains
the
option
of
applying
a
higher
compensatory
fee
in
future
years
where
operations
are
secure.
I
do
not
believe
this
unilateral
act
is
sufficient
to
oblige
the
Appellant
to
pay
fees
in
years
where
no
or
only
reduced
services
were
provided.
With
respect
to
the
interest
charges,
they
are
deductible
save
for
any
that
may
relate
to
the
disallowed
management
fees
for
1990
and
1991.
Considering
the
decision
I
have
arrived
at
there
is
no
need
to
discuss
whether
the
1986
year
was
statute
barred.
For
all
of
the
above
reasons,
the
appeals,
to
the
above
extent,
are
allowed
with
costs
and
the
matter
is
referred
back
to
the
Minister
of
National
Revenue
for
reconsideration
and
reassessment.
Appeals
allowed.