The
Chief
Justice:—This
is
an
appeal
from
a
judgment
of
the
Trial
Division
allowing
an
appeal
from
an
assessment
for
gift
tax
based
on
what
is
described
in
the
assessment
as
“inadequate
considerations”,
in
respect
of
shares
“sold”
by
the
respondent
to
his
sons
in
April
1968.
As
applicable
to
transactions
taking
place
at
that
time,*
the
relevant
provisions
of
Part
IV
of
the
Income
Tax
Act
concerning
“Gift
Tax”
read
as
follows:
111.
(1)
A
tax
shall
be
paid
as
hereinafter
required
upon
the
gifts
made
in
a-
taxation
year
by
an
individual
resident
in
Canada
or
a
personal
corporation.
(2)
For
the
purpose
of
this
section,
‘‘gift’’
includes
a
transfer,
assignment
or
other
disposition
of
property
(whether
situate
inside
or
outside
Canada)
by
way
of
gift,
and
without
limiting.
the
generality
of
the
foregoing,
includes
(a)
the
creation
of
a
trust
of,
or
an
interest
in,
property
by
way
of
gift,
and
(b)
a
transaction
or
transactions
whereby
a
person
disposes
of
property
directly
or
indirectly
by
way
of
gift.
The
transactions
on
which
the
assessment
is
based
are
two
sales
made
by
the
respondent
to
each
of
two
sons
of
blocks
of
shares
in
a
company
in
which
the
respondent
and
his
family
had
a
substantial
interest
and
which
was
apparently
under
the
de
facto
control
of
the
respondent
(by
virtue
of
his
influence
in.
regard
to
shares
belonging
to
himself
and
members
of
his
family)
and
a
related
family
with
which
he
was
acting
in
concert.
Prima
facie,
as
it
seems
to
me,
the
sales
by
the
respondent
to
his
sons,
which
have
not
been
attacked
by
the
appellant
as
being
shams,
are
not
gifts
subject
to
Part
IV
of
the
Income
Tax
Act
as
applicable
at
the
relevant
time.
However
while,
in
apparent
continuation
of
a
policy
of
selling
shares
in
the
company
to
his
sons
that
had
been
adopted
by
the
respondent
some
years
earlier,
the
sales
were
made
at
$24
per
share,
which
was
just
above
market
price,
the
respondent
had
at
the
time
of
the
particular
sales
been
engaged
in
negotiations
that
had
made
it
apparent,
before
the
dates
of
the
sales,
that
there
was
a
real
possibility
that
one
or
more
larger
companies
engaged
in
related
business
activities
would
make
an
offer
to
buy
substantially
all
the
shares
in
the
company
at
a
price
per
share
substantially
in
excess
of
$24
and,
in
fact,
a
firm
offer
of
$68.22
was
made,
about
a
month
after
the
sales
to
the
sons,
for
a
minimum
of
approximately
/3
of
the
shares
in
the
company
and
the
sons’
shares
were
resold
pursuant
to
that
offer
at
that
price.
The
difference
between
the
price
of
$24
per
share
paid
by’
the
sons
and
the
amount
of
$68.22
per
share
is
the
amount
taxed
under
Part
IV
of
the
Income
Tax.
Act
as
“inadequate
considerations”.
When
the
appellant
dismissed
the
respondent’s
objection
to
the
assessment,
he
did
so
by
a
document
reading
in
part:*
The
Honourable
the
Minister
of
National
Revenue
having
reconsidered
the
assessment
and
having
considered
the
facts
and
reasons
set
forth
in
the
Notice
of
Objection
hereby
confirms
the
said
assessment
as
having
been
made
in
accordance
with
the
provisions
of
the
Act
and
in
particular
on
the
ground
that
a
benefit
in
the
amount
of
$641,197.00
conferred
by
the
taxpayer
on
his
children
in
respect
of
shares
of
Walter
N
Lowney
Co
Ltd
have
been
deemed
to
be
gifts
to
which
Part
IV
of
the
Act
applies
in
accordance
with
the
provisions
of
subsection
(2)
of
section
137
of
the
Act.
However,
the
issue
was
put
before
the
Trial
Division
without
reference
to
section
137.
To
appreciate
this
fact,
reference
must
be
made
to
the
pre-1972
Income
Tax
Act
and
(a)
to
the
notice
of
appeal
filed
by
the
respondent
under
section
98
thereof
whereby
the
respondent
was
required
to
set
out
“the
allegations
of
fact,
the
statutory
provisions
and
reasons”
which
he
intended
to
submit
in
support
of
his
appeal
(subsection
(3));
and
(b)
to
the
appellant’s
reply
under
subsection
99(1
>
thereof,
whereby
he
was
required
to
set
out.
inter
alia
“such
further
allegations
of
fact
and
.
.
.
such
statutory
provisions
and
reasons”
as
he
intended
to
rely
on.
While,
in
such
documents
and
at
trial
much
of
the
attention
seems
to
have
been
directed
to.
the
question
of
“value”
of
the
shares
at
the
time
of
the
sales
in
question,
it
seems
clear
-
(a)
that
the
respondent
did,
by
his
notice
of
appeal
in
the
Trial
Division,
take
the
position
that
the
sales
were
not
gifts
within
Part
IV,
(b)
that
the
learned
trial
judge
did
expressly
hold
that
such
sales
were
not
gifts,
.
..
(c)
that
the
respondent,
by
his
memorandum
in
this
Court,
takes
the
same
position,
and
(d)
that
the
appellant
has,
at
no
stage,
endeavoured
to
support
the
assessment
on
the
basis
of
section
137.*
In
my
view,
no
question
having
been
raised
at
trial
as
to
the
bona
tides
of
the
contracts
of
sale—ie,
it
being
conceded
that
they
were
not
shams—there
was
no.
“gift”
of
the
shares
or
any
disposition
of
them
“by
way
of
gift”
as
required
to
bring
them
within
subsection
111(2).
A
contract
of
sale,
which
is,
by
definition,
a
transfer
of
property
for
a
consideration.
cannot
be
a
gift,
which
is:
by
definition,
a
disposition
of
property
without
consideration.
The
appellant’s
submission
is,
however,
as
I
understood
it,
that,
although
the
sales
of
the
shares
were
not
gifts
of
the
shares,
having
been
made
at
an
undervaluation
with
an
intention
to
confer
a
gratuitous
benefit,
each
of
them
falls
within
paragraph,
1
T1(2)(b)
as
being
“a
transaction
.
.
.
whereby
a
person
disposes
of
property
.
.
.
indirectly
by
way
of
gift’.
The
short
answer
to
this,
in
my
view,
is
that
the
only
“property”
disposed
of
was
the
shares
and
they
were
sold
and
not
disposed
of
by
way
of
gift.
While,
speaking
loosely,
one
might
say
that
a
gift
was
made-by
way
of
sale
at
an
undervaluation
(the
gift
being
the
benefit
so
conferred),
in
my
view,
the
word
gift
in
a
taxing
Statute
must
be
taken
as
referring
to
what
is
known
to
the
law
as
a
gift,
namely,
the
gratuitous
transfer
of
property,
and
the
difference
between
value
and
price
is
not
“property”
and
is
not
something
that
can
be
transferred.
I
have
not
overlooked
the
decision
of
the
Quebec
Court
of
Appeal
in
Char.lebois
v
Charlebois,
[1974]
Que
CA
99,
on
which
the
appellant
relies.
As
it
seems
to
me,
however,
if
that
decision
does
hold
that
a
sale
at
an
undervaluation
was
an
indirect
gift
for
the
purpose
of
Article
712
of
the
Civil
Code,
it
should
not
be
taken
to
extend
the
application
of
section
111
of
the
Income
Tax
Act
in
the
Province
of
Quebec
beyond
what
it
would
be
in
another
province.!
Apart
from
that
decision,
I
should
have
had
no
doubt
that
a
disposition
“of
property
.
.
.
indirectly
by
way
of
gift”
referred
to
a
gratuitous
disposition
of
“property”
by
a
circuitous
route
and
does
not
include
a
direct
“sale”
at
an
undervaluation.
I
have
also
considered.
the
view
with
regard
to
paragraph
111(2)(b)
expressed
by
Sweet,
DJ
in
A
Levine
Estate
v
MNR,
[1973]
CTC
219
at
227;
73
DTC
5182
at
5187,
but,
as
that
was
a
section
137
case,
the
view
was
obiter
and,
if
it
is
to
be
regarded
as
a
considered
opinion,
I
regret
that
I
cannot
adopt
it.
For
the
above
reasons,
I
cannot
agree
that
the
appeal
should
be
allowed
and
the
assessment
restored.
However,
in
view
of
the
fact
that
I
am
putting
aside
any
question
of
liability
to
gift
tax
by
virtue
of
subsection
137(2)
in
a
case
where,
superficially,
it
might
have
been
thought
that
subsection
137(2)
would
apply,
I
deem
it
advisable
to
indicate
why,
in
my
view.
it
would
not
be
proper
to
amend
the
“pleadings”
or
otherwise
take
steps
to
support
the
assessment
on
the
basis
of
that
provision.
In
my
view,
when
a
cause
of
action
is
to
be
supported
on.
the
basis
of
a
statutory
provision,
it
is
elementary
that
the
facts
necessary
to
make
the
provision
applicable
be
pleaded
(preferably
with
a
direct
reference
to
the
provision)
so
that
the
opposing
party
may
decide
what
position
to
take
with
regard
thereto,
have
discovery
with
regard
thereto
and
prepare
for
trial
with
regard
thereto.
In
this
case,
the
Minister’s
decision
on
the
objection
referred
to
section
137
but,
when
complying
with
section
99
in
the
preparation
of
his
defence
in
the
Trial
Division,
the
respondent
not
only
did
not
refer
to
that
section
although
he
referred
to
others,
he
did
not
plead
facts
showing
that
“the
result
of
one
or
more
.
.
.
transactions
.
.
.
is
that
a
person
confers
a
benefit
.
.
.”.
Had
that
been
pleaded,
other
facts
might
well
have
been
the
subject
of
evidence
in
addition
to
those
that
were
brought
out
at
trial.
In
my
view,
it
is
no
mere
‘technicality”,
but
a
matter
of
elementary
justice
to
abstain,
in
the
absence
of
very
special
circumstances,
from
drawing
inferences
from
evidence
adduced
in
respect
of
certain
issues
in
order
to
make
findings
of
fact
that
were
not
in
issue
during
the
course
of
the
trial.*
In
my
view,
the
appeal
should
be
dismissed
with
costs
but,
by
consent
of
counsel
at
the
conclusion
of
argument,
the
judgment
appealed
from
should
be
amended
to
indicate
more
precisely
what
was
intended
thereby.
I
propose
that
the
judgment
of
this
Court
should
provide
that
“the
assessment
referred
to
in
the
notice
of
appeal
in
the
Trial
Division
is
set
aside
and,
subject
thereto,
the
appeal
is
dismissed
with
costs”.
4.
Le
Dain,
J:—I
agree
that
the
appeal
should
be
dismissed.
While
I
share
to
a
great
extent
Mr
Justice
Dubinsky’s
view
of
the
facts
I
agree
with
the
Chief
Justice
as
to
the
meaning
and
application
that
must
be
given
to
section
111
of
the
Act;
having
regard
to
those
facts.
There
is
no
doubt
in
my
mind
that
at
the
time
the
respondent
Littler
sold
his
shares
to
his
sons
in
April
1968
for
$24
per
snare
he
had
every
reason
to
believe
that
they
would
be
able
to
resell
them
to
Standard
Brands
in
the
near
future
for
the
price
of
$68.22.
it
was
not
just
a
possibility;
it
was
a
probability—a
virtual
certainty.
The
respondent
had
been
skilfully
preparing
the
ground
for
the
sale
to
Standard
Brands
for
several
months.
As
early
as
January
1968
he
had
decided
on
the
price
that
he
would
accept
for
the
shares
and
he
had
reason
to
believe
that
it.
would
be
acceptable
to
the
other
members
of
the
family.
He
had
invited
bids
from
Kraft,
and
Warner
Lambert,
and
let
this
be
known
to
Standard
Brands.
It
is
clear
from
the
evidence
that
Standard
Brands
was
keen
to
purchase
Lowney’s
and
was
prepared
to
pay
a
high
price
for
the
shares
rather
than
see
the
company
go
to
one
of
its
competitors.
Its
senior
officers
wasted
no
time
in
agreeing
to
the
price
suggested
by
Littler.
Price
was
not
going
io
be
a
problem.
Of
course
there
were
conditions.
But
they
were
not
conditions,
as
the
events
proved,
that
were
going
to
prevent
the
realization
of
the
sale.
At
that
price,
in
comparison
with
the
price
at
which
the
stock
was
trading
on
the
exchange,
there
was
going
to
be
no
difficulty
in
obtaining
the
required
67%
of
the
outstanding
shares
whether
or
not
the
respondent
and
the
members
of
his
family
could
be
said
to
be
in
effective
control
of
that
much
stock.
As
for
the
possibility
of
difficulties
with
Williamson
over
the
“Oh
Henry”
mark,
such
was
the
desire
of
Standard
Brands
to
have
the
company
that
it
was
prepared
to
take
a
chance
on
its
ability
to
resolve
these
difficulties
satisfactorily.
In
my
view
it
results
from
the
evidence
that
at
the
time
Littler
sold
the
shares
to
his
sons
in
April
1968
he
conferred
on
them
the
benefit
of
transferring
to
them
at
a
price
of
$24
shares
that
were
for
all
practical
purposes
worth
$68.22
because
of
the
virtual
certainty
that
they
could
be
resold
to
Standard
Brands
at
that
price
in
a
relatively
short
time.
The
assessment
of
the
benefit
resulting
from
this
difference
in
price
was
confirmed
by
the
Minister
on
the
basis
that
it
was
deemed
to
be
a
gift
pursuant
to
subsection
137(2).
For
some
reason
that
is
not
clear
the
Crown
chose
not
to
invoke
and
rely
on
subsection
137(2)
at
trial,
and
counsel
who
appeared
for
the
appellant
in
this
Court
was
quite
candid
in
conceding
that
he
could
not
rely
on
this
provision.
His
submission
was
that
the
benefit
conferred
by
the
respondent
was
a
disposition
of
property
indirectly
by
way
of
gift
within
the
meaning
of
paragraph
111
(2)(b).
He
invited
us
to
apply
to
the
word
“indirectly”
in
that
paragraph
the
meaning
given
to
that
word
in
Article
712
of
the
Quebec
Civil
Code
respecting
the
obligation
of
an
heir
on
coming
to
a
succession
to
return
to
the
general
mass
what
he
may
have
received
from
the
deceased
“by
gift
inter
vivos,
directly
or
indirectly”.
He
cited
the
decision
of
the
Quebec
Court
of
Appeal
in
Charlebois
v
Charlebois,
[1974]
Que
CA
99,
as
indicating
that
the
concept
of
libéralité
indirecte
in
this
part
of
the
Code
includes
the
“indirect
advantage’"
(see
Article
721
CC)
which
a
deceased
may
have
conferred
on
an
heir
by
a
bona
fide
sale
of
property
to
him
at
a
price
significantly
below
its
true
value.
In
my
opinion
this
particular
notion
of
libéralité
indirecte,
resulting
from
the
special
considerations
underlying
the
obligation
of
return
in
successions,
is
ndt
of^such
general
application
to
the
meaning
of
gift
that
it
should
be
ascribed
to
the
legislative
intention
reflected
in
the
words
“directly
or
indirectly
by
way‘of
gift’’
in
paragraph
111
(2)(b).
It
is
not
to
be
confused
with
the
gift
disguised
by
a
simulated
sale.
The
appellant
did
not
attack
the
sale
of
the
shares
in
the
present
case
as
a
simulated
one
and
there
would
be
no
basis
in
the
evidence
in
my
opinion
for
concluding
that
it
was.
That
being
the
case,
II
agree
with
the
Chief
Justice
that
the
word
“property”
in
paragraph
111(2)(b)
excludes
the
interpretation
contended
for
by
the
appellant.
The
advantage
or
benefit
which
the
respondent
conferred
by
the
sale
of
the
shares
was
Not
property
and
could
not,
therefore,
be
the
Subject
of
a
gift
contemplated
by
section
111.
Dubinsky,
DJ
(dissenting).:—The
facts
in
this
case
have
been
set
forth
in
the
reasons
for
judgment
given
by
the
learned
Chief
Justice
and
which
I
have
had
the
privilege
of
reading.
I
agree
with
his
summary
of
the
facts
but
with
.great
deference,
I
find
myself
constrained
to
take
a
different
view
from
that
which
the
Chief
Justice
has-reached
relative
to
this
appeal.
l.
In
the
opening
paragraph
of
the
learned
trial
judge’s
decision,
he
said
the
following:
In
this
matter,
the
issue
is
to
determine
whether
the
Minister
of
National
Revenue
was
right
in
considering
that
the
market
value
of
shares
of
Walter
M
Lowney
Co
Limited,
hereinafter
called
Lowney,
transferred
on
April
3
and
19,
1968
by’
the
appellant
to
his
sons,
had
a
fair
market
value
of
$68.22
a
share
rather
than
.
$24
a
share,
the
latter
value
being
the
one
quoted
on
the
Montreal
Stock
Exchange,
by
assuming
that
the
appellant
had
known,
as
of
April
3
and
19.
1968
that
the
shares
were
of
a
value
of
$68.22
because
he
was
aware
of
the
possible
event
that
the
shares
might
be
the
object
of
an
offer
to
purchase
at
a
price
higher
than
$24
a
share.
In
the
closing
paragraph,
he
made
the
following
comment:
If
the
transfer
to
the
sons
had
been
effected
at
a
ridiculously
low
price,
that
is,
far
below
the
market
value,
then
I
would
be
facing
the
case
of
a
disguised
sale
and
I
should
have
no
choice
but
to
find’
that
the
Minister
had,
in
principle,
properly
assessed
to
gift
tax
the
difference
between
such
a
ridiculously
low
price,
and
the
market
value.
Such
is
not
the
case
as
the
market
price
on
the
Exchange
has
been
used
to
determine
the
price
of
the
sale
of
the
shares
to
the
sons.
I
have
read
and
re-read
the
above
quoted
paragraphs
and
the
only
meaning
that
I
can
attribute
to
the
learned
trial
judge’s
words
is
that
if
he
had
concluded
from
the
evidence
that
the
transfer
to
the
sons
had
been
effected,
as
he
put
it,
‘‘at
a
ridiculously
low
price”,
he
would
have
approved
of
the
Minister’s
assessment
herein.
The
reason
for
his
not
having
approved
the
decision
of
the
Minister
was
because
the
latter
had
been
governed
by
the
Standard
Brands
offer
and
that
course
by
the
Minister
was
surprising
in
the
opinion
of
the
learned
trial
judge.
Following
are
.some
of
the
things
which
Mr
Justice
Décary
said
relative
to
the
above:
Respondent
has
taken
as
the
fair
market
value
the
amount
of
$68.22
a
share,
being
the
price
paid
by
Standard
Brands
Limited;
hereinafter
called
.
Standard,
in
its
offer
of
May
15,
J968
to
all
the
holders
of
Lowney
stock,
inasmuch
as
Standard
could
own
67%
of
the
issued
and
outstanding
shares
of
Lowney.
.
.
.
It
is
quite
surprising
that
the
Minister
should
resort
to
the
price
paid,
by
Standard
about
one
month
later
than
the
transfers
being
the
subject
matter
of
this
appeal.
It
seems
evident
that
the
Minister
has
taken
for’
firm
commitments,
that
is,
duties
binding
upon
Standard,
talks
that
in
fact
were
nothing
but
exploratory
or
conditional
to
the
possibility
of
an
eventual
sale.
I
do
not
believe
that
it
would
be
unreasonable
to
state
that
the
Minister,
in
establishing
such
an
assessment,
has
gone
much
further
than
using
hindsight
in
valuing
the
quoted
shares.
It
is
trite
law
that
hindsight
is
not
to
be
resorted
to
in
a
matter
as
the
present
one.
The
price
relied.
upon
by
the
Minister
could
very
well
never
have
been
paid
if
the
offer
made
by
Standard
had
not
been
accepted
by
67%
of
the
shareholders
of
Lowney.
In
other
words,
the
Minister
has
taken
as.
a
fact
what
was
an
eventuality
which
might
or
might
not
have
materialized.
I
said
previously
that
the
Minister
had
taken
as
a
firm.,commitment
an
offer
by
Standard
dated
May
15,
1968
and
addressed
to
the
holders
of
the
shares
of
Lowney.
That
document,
produced
under
reserve
under
the
quote
D-1-12,
out
of
16
documents
so
produced
under
reserve,
is
the
only
one
retained,
all
the
others
being
rejected.
By
resorting
to
the
offer
by
Standard,
the
Minister
was
using
hindsight
but
even
so
has
forgotten
to
properly
gauge
the
legal
importance
of
the
document
offering
to
buy
the
shares
of
Lowney
It
is
my
considered
opinion
that
the
wording
of
that
subparagraph
(a)
[Exhibit
D-1-12]
indicates
clearly
that
Standard
may
withdraw
its
offer
if
67%
of
the
shares
of
Lowney
cannot
be
purchased.
.
.
.
,,
In
my
view,
one
cannot
escape
from
the
conclusion
that
the
offer
from
Standard
is
a
conditional
one
being
a
suspensive
contract
for
the
holders
of
shares
wishing
to
sell
their
shares
and
a
resolutory
one
for
Standard
wishing
to
buy.
Such
an
offer
being
conditional,
it
could
have
very
well
never
been
exercised
and
on
that
account,
it
cannot
be
a
basis
to
establish
the
market
value
of
the
shares
acquired
by
the
two
sons
of
appellant
one
month
earlier
than
the
offer
by
Standard
to
all
the
shareholders
and
five
months
before
the
offer
could
become
null.
Not
only
is
the
basis
of
the
assessment
a
conditional
offer
but
it
is
based
on
hindsight,
which
is
contrary
to
all
canons
of
valuation
especially
when
a
stock
is
quoted
on
the
Exchange.
In
my
view,
a
stock
quoted
on
the
Exchange,
be
it
active
or
not,
reflects
the
market
value,
people
are
putting
on
the
shares
and
such
an
appreciation
is
far
more
realistic
than
the
resorting
to
hindsight
on
a
conditional
offer.
With
great
deference
to
the
learned
trial
judge,
I
cannot
agree
with
the
conclusion
that
he
has
drawn
from
the
facts,
namely,
that
the
Minister
was
using
hindsight
as
a
basis
in
determining
the
correct
market
value
of
the
shares.
I
recognize
only
too
well
that
not
to
have
heard
the
witnesses
nor
to
have
watched
their
demeanour
on
the
stand,
puts
judges
on
appeal
at
a
disadvantage
compared
to
the
trial
judge.
It
has
been
held
in
many
cases
that
unless
it
can
be
shown
that
the
trial
judge
failed
to
use
or
has
palpably
misused
the
advantage
given
to
a
trial
judge
of
seeing
and
hearing
the
witnesses,
the
appeal
judges
ought
not
to
take
the
responsibility
of
reversing
the
decision
of
the
trial
judge
merely
on
the
result
of
their
own
comparisons
and
criticisms
of
the
witnesses
and
of
their
own
view
of
the
probabilities
of
the
case.
See
Stein
et
al
v
The
Ship
“Kathy
K”
et
al
(1976),
62
DLR
(3d)
1,
per
Ritchie,
J
at
4-5;
Prudential
Trust
Co
v
Forseth
(1960),
21
DLR
(3d)
587
at
593-5
per
Martland,
J.
Both
Ritchie,
J
and
Martland,
J
referred
to
the
oft-quoted
dictum
by
Viscount
Sankey,
LC
in
Powell
v
Streatham
Manor
Nursing
Home,
[1935]
AC
243
at
249-50:
On
an
appeal
against
a
judgment
of
a
judge
sitting
alone,
the
Court
of
Appeal
will
not
set
aside
the
judgment
unless
the
appellant
satisfies
the
Court
that
the
judge
was
wrong
and
that
his
decision
ought
to
have
been
the
other
way
.
.
.
see
Clarke
v
Edinburgh
Tramways
Co,
per
Lord
Shaw,
[1919]
SC
(HL)
35,
36,
where
he
says:
"When
a
judge
hears
and
sees
witnesses
and
makes
a
conclusion
or
inference
with
regard
to
what
is
the
weight
on
balance
of
their
evidence,
that
judgment
is
entitled
to
great
respect,
and
that
quite
irrespective
of
whether
the
judge
makes
any
observation
with
regard
to
credibility
or
not
.
.
.
Am
I—who
sit
here
without
those
advantages,
sometimes
broad
and
sometimes
subtle.
which
are
the
privilege
of
the
Judge
who
heard
and
tried
the
case—in
a
position
not
having
those
privileges,
to
come
to
a
clear
conclusion
that
the
Judge
who
had
them
was
clearly
wrong?
If
I
cannot
be
satisfied
in
my
own
mind
that
the
Judge
with
those
privileges
was
plainly
wrong,
then
it
appears
to
me
to
be
my
duty
to
defer
io
his
judgment.’’
In
Tiesmaki
et
al
v
Wilson
et
al
(No
2)
(1976),
60
DLR
(3d)
19,
Hadded,
JA,
for
the
Appellate
Division
of
the
Alberta
Supreme
Court,
referred
to
the
Prudential
Trust
and
Streatham
Manor
cases
and
said
at
page
29:
There
is
no
justification
for
interfering
with
the
findings
of
the
trial
judge
on
appeal
unless
it
becomes
manifest
that
there
has
been
a
failure
by
him
on
his
evaluation
of
the
evidence
or
that
for
any
reason
he
is
clearly
wrong.
This
is
a
basic
and
long-standing
principle.*
If
there
has
been
a
failure
on
the
part
of
a
trial
judge
to
evaluate
the
evidence,
the
Appeal
Court
has
a
right
to
interfere.
That
is
the
view
of
the
Supreme
Court
of
Canada
as
expressed
by
Fauteaux,
J,
as
he
then
was,
in
Dorval
v
Bouvier,
[1968]
SCR
288
at
293-4
(translation).
Two
English
decisions
are
worth
noting
in
this
connection.
Firstly,
there
is
the
case
of
Mersey
Docks
and
Harbour
Board
v
Proctor,
[1923]
AC
253
at
258-9.
Viscount
Cave,
LC
said
this:
The
procedure
on
appeal
from
a
judge
sitting
without
a
jury
is
not
governed
by
the
rules
applicable
to
a
motion
for
a
new
trial
after
a
verdict
of
a
jury.
In
such
a
case
it
is
the
duty
of
the
Court
of
Appeal
to
make
up
its
own
mind,
not
disregarding
the
judgment
appealed
from
and
giving
special
weight
to
that
judgment
in
cases
where
the
credibility
of
witnesses
comes
into
question,
but
with
full
liberty
to
draw
its
own
inferences
from
the
facts
proved
and
admitted
and
to
decide
accordingly.*
Then
there
is
the
well-known
decision
of
Benmax
v
Austin
Motor
Co
Ltd,
[1955]
AC
370,
where
Viscount
Simonds
said
at
page
373:
This
does
not
mean
that
an
appellate
court
should
lightly
differ
from
the
finding
of
a
trial
judge
on
a
question
of
fact,
and
I
would
say
that
it
would
be
difficult
for
it
to
do
so
where
the
finding
turned
solely
on
the
credibility
of
a
witness.
But
I
cannot
help
thinking
that
some
confusion
may
have
arisen
from
failure
to
distinguish
between
the
finding
of
a
specific
fact
which
is
really
an
inference
from
facts
specifically
found,
or,
as
it
has
sometimes
been
said,
between
the
perception
and
evaluation
of
facts.”
.
.
In
the
present
case,
we
are
not
concerned
with
the
question
of
credibility
of
witnesses.
Has
the
learned
trial
judge
properly
evaluated
the
proven
facts?
It
is
with
great
deference
that
I
find
that
he
has
not
and
this
Court
of
Appeal
has
a
right,
nay
a
duty,
to
interfere
with
his
ruling
herein.
I
now
turn
to
an
examination
of
some
of
the
evidence
to
which,
in
my
view,
the
learned
trial
judge
has
not
paid
sufficient
attention.
A
couple
of
months
prior
to
the
sale
of
the
shares
by
the
respondent
to
his
two
sons,
he
visited
the
office
of
Stanley
George
Bickley,
who
was
then
the
Assistant
General
Manager
of
the
Toronto
Dominion
Bank
at
500
St
James
Street,
Montreal.
On
January
18,
1968,
to
be
exact,
he
wanted
Mr
Bickley
to
refuse
him
a
loan
of
$1,000,000.
He
discussed
with
Mr
Bickley
the
fact
that
the
McConnell
Estate
which
owned
some
31,000
shares
in
the
Lowney
company
wanted
to
sell
him
the
shares
at
about
$32
per
share
but
he
did
not
want
to
pay
that
much
for
them.
Mr
Bickley
was
asked
if
there
were
any
other
topics
discussed
and
he
replied
that
there
were
and
he
went
on
to
say
in
part:
Well,
he
went
on
to
say
in
the
course
of
his
discussion
with
me
that
for
the
first
time
he
had
seriously
thought
of
selling
his
shares
in
the
company,
or
at
least
advising
the
people
who
controlled,
I
think
the
control
was
in
the
Lowney
Company,
it
wasn’t
he
that
owned
it
all
himself,
to
dispose
of
the
shares
if
the,
if,
apparently
if
the
price
were
right
because
he
said
he
had
been
bothered
by
his
sister
who
was
somewhat
worried
about
conditions,
and
he
had
heard
that
a
company
in
the
United
States,
Warner
Lambert
whose
Canadian
and
subsidiary
here
had
expressed
an
interest
.in
buying
the
Lowney
Company.
He
had
heard
that
Warner
Lambert
in
the
United
States
had
bought
the
Williamson
Candy
Company
in
the
United
States.
I
think
it’s
Chicago,
for
a
price
of
equivalent
to
the
book
value
of
the
stock
plus
the
depreciation.
He
went
on
to
say
in
the
case
the
Lowney
Company
this
would
amount
to
sixty-eight
($68.00)
per
share,
and
would
be
pretty
hard
to
turn
down
an
offer
of
that
kind
.
.
.
Q.
So,
on
the
eighteenth
(18th)
of
January—A.
Yes
Sir.
..Q.
Mr
Littler
mentioned
that
if
we
apply
a
certain
formula
which
was
used
in
the
United
States
to
purchase
a
company
similar
to
his,
we
apply
this
.
fprmula,
the
price
per
share
for
the
Lowney
share
would
be
in
the
area
of
“sixty-eight
($68.00)
dollars?
A.
That’s
right.
Q.
He
also
said
the
eighteenth
(18th)
of
January
that
he
had
spoken
to
his
sons
about
this
possibility
in
that
and
that
at
such
a
price
his
sons
would
voluntarily
sell
these
shares?
A.
That’s
right.
That’s
right.
A.
So,
the,
it
was,
it
would
be
only
if
he
could
get
the.
sixty-
eight
($68.00)
that
the
McConnell
shares
would
then
come
into
the
picture,
because
he
told
,
me
in
January
that
if
he
could
get
the
sixty-eight
dollars
($68.00)
he
would
:then
buy
the
McConnell
shares
and
turn
a
profit
of
about
a
million
,
dollars
($1,000,000.00).
It
was
following
this
interview
that
Mr
Bickley
wrote
a
letter
Jo
A
E
Woods,
the
General
Manager
of
the
Toronto
Dominion
Bank
in
which
he
set
forth
the
substance
of
his
talk
with
Mr
Littler.
In.
this
letter,
he
refers
to
the
$68
figure
for
the
shares
and
Mr
Littler’s
anticipation
of,
rpaking
a
profit
of
$1,000,000.
This
letter,
marked
D-1-15
dated
January
22,
1968
was
referred
to
by
its
number
during
the
testimony
of
this
witness
and
was
subsequently
rejected
by
the
trial
judge.
In
my
opinion,
it
was
properly
put
in
evidence,
was
relevant
to
the
issue
and
the
learned
trial
judge
was
in
error
in
rejecting
it.
The
evidence
of
Gaeton
Morrissette
was
to
the
effect
that
in
1968
he
was
chairman
of
the
board
and
chief
executive
officer
of
Standard
Brands
Company
and
in
that
year,
his
company
was
interested
in
purchasing
the
shares
of
the
Lowney
company.
His
company
had
in
fact
beep-interested
in
Lowney’s
for
some
years.
On
February
1,
1968
Mr
Littler
met
his
company’s
president,
ie
the
president
of
Standard
Brands
and.
inquired
if
Standard
was
still
interested
in
buying
the
business.
On
March
7,
1968
he
sat
down
with
Mr
Littler
to
review
financier
data
and
visited
the
Lowney
plant
later
that
day.
At,
that
time,.,
the
witness
was
informed
that
the
Kraft
Foods
company
had
offered
$55
per
share
for
the
business.
On
March
15,
1968
Mr
Morrissette
had
prepared
a
letter
of
intent
to
buy
with
the
suggested
figure
of
$55
per
share
and
he
gave
an
unsigned
copy
thereof
to
Mr’
Littler.
(That
letter
of
intent
was
referred
to
in
the
evidence
of
this
witness,
was
marked
D-1-14
and
should
not,
in
my
opinion,
have
been
rejected,
by
the
learned
trial
judge.)
He
called
Mr
Littler,
On
March
25,
1968
and
was
advised
that
there
was
no
rush
and
that
he
was
waiting
for
other
bids
to
come
through.
His
evidence
continues
at
a
certain
point
as
follows:
Q,
And
when
was
the
next
time
that
you
spoke
to
Mr
Littler?
A.
On
April
the
sixteenth
(16th)
we
had
a
three
(3)
day
meeting
with
my
New
York,
with
my
New
York
immediate
superior,
Mr
Richer,
who
was
Executive
VP
of
the
parent
company,
and
we
made
a
date
with
Mr
Littler'to
tour
the
ice
cream
plant
on
the
nineteenth
(19th).
On
the
nineteenth
(19th).
accompanied:
by
Mr
-Clark,
who
also
wanted
to
have
a
look
at
the
plant,
and
Mr
Richer
we
visited
Mr
Littler.
Mr
Clark,
Mr
Richer
looked
at
the
plant,
and
Mr
Littler
and
I
sat
down
to
discuss
the
transaction
further.
At
that
‘time
I
think
that
I
said,
Well,
I
know
pretty
well
what
the
Elson’s
would
maybe
look
at,
well,
you
never
told
me
what
would
be
the
price
of
your
stock,
or
the
one
(1)
that
you
control,
and—
Q.
The
price
of
the
Elson
would
have
been
fifty-five
(55),
I
gather—A.
Again
general.
Q.
In
your
mind?
A.
For
only
fifteen
(15)
percent
of
the
stock.
Q.
Fifty-five
dollars
($55.00)
for
fifteen
(15)
percent
of
the
stock?
A.
That
is
if
you
consider
buying
somewhat
less
in
control
and
Mr
Littler
then
said,
well,
I
might
consider
and
recommend
to
my
family.
The
net
worth
of
the
company
as
shown
on
the
last
balance
sheet
plus
the
depreciation,
which
on
March
the
twentieth
(20th),
their
last
financial
.
report
amounted.
to
an
overall
price
of
sixty-eight
twenty-two
($68.22)
dividing
the
total
of
two
(2)
and
the
number
of
shares.
Ready
as
usual
I
had
the
letter
of
intent
ready.
I
just
fill
in*
the
sixty-eight
twenty-two
($68.22)
and
I
‘said
to
Ted,
here’s
your
price,
how
about
it?
He
said,
well,
I
can’t
sign
that
letter
because,
first-(1st)
of
all,
I
have
to
talk
to
Elson,
and
I
have
to
talk
to..
my
lawyers,
of
course,
but
in
any
case
the
bids
will
be
on
May
20th,
and
out
of
courtesy
of
anyone
else
I
have
to
let
those
bids
come
in,
so
he
would
not
sign
that
letter
at
that
time.*
Mr
Morrissette
spoke
of
the
letter
of
intent
of
April
19,
1968
which
he
gave
to
Mr
Littler
on
that
date.
It
was
marked
D-1-13
and
it
too
was
rejected
by
the
trial
judge
and
in
my
opinion
he
was
-in
error
in
doing
so.
This
typewritten
letter
was
four
pages
in
length
and
had
the
amount
of
$68.22
written
in
and
initialled.
He
told
the
Court
that
when
he
wrote
that
letter,
he
was
then
the
head
of
the
company
in
Canada.
the
chairman
of
the
board
and
the
chief
executive
officer.
He
said
that
he
had
reasonable
assurance
that
his
action
would
be
approved
at
a
board
meeting.
He
had
never
been
turned
down
previously
on
a
deal
similar
to
this
one.
When
asked
whether
the
figure
of
$68.22
had
been
suggested
by
Mr
Littler
or
had
been
suggested
by
himself
and
as
a
result
of
calculations
by
his
own
people,
his
reply
was
that-it
was
a
formula
suggested
by
Mr
Littler
and
based
on
another
deal
which
he
(Littler)
had
thought
had
taken
place.
When
asked
whether
he
felt
that
by
inserting
the
amount
of
$68.22
he
was
“then
putting
in
a
figure
which
was
reasonable”,
his
reply
went
thus:
A.
On
that
day
as
you
recall
Mr
Richer,
who
is
the
number
two
(2)
man
in-
Canada,
was
with
me
when
he
was
back
from
the
visit
of
the
plant
at
which
time
I
told
him
what
I
was
doing,
and
as
we
had
arrived
at
a
general
basis
of
agreement,
having
met-Mr
Littler’s
price,
he"
was
quite
satisfied
that
we
had
successfully.
completed
the
transaction
subject
to
the
usual
legal—*
.
When
the
figure
of
$68.22
was
inserted
in
the
letter
of
intent,
there
were
present
himself,
Mr
Clark,
the
president
of
the
board
and
Mr
Richer,
the
so-called
No
2
man
in
Standard
Brands.
From
the
testimony
of
Mr
Bickley
and
Mr
Morrissette,
it
is
abundantly
clear,
in
my
humble
opinion,
that
the
figure
of
$68.22
per
share
of
Lowney’s
was
a
realistic
one
as
far
as
Mr
Littler
was
concerned
even
as
early
as
January
1968.
There
cannot
be
the
slightest
doubt
that
as
far
as
Kraft
Foods
company
was
concerned
and
the
Elson
family
(part
of
the
respondent’s
family,
Elson
himself
being
executive
vice-president
of
Lowney’s)
the
solid
figure
per
share
was
$55.
Mr
Littler
himself
told
the
Court
that
he
had
had
an
offer
of
$55
per
share
from
the
Warner
Lambert
people
who
were
interested
in
buying
his
company.
But
he
was
not
considering
$55
at
any
time.
With
deference.
therefore.
to
the
contrary
view
of
the
learned
trial
judge,
the
Minister
had
every
reason
to
attribute
to
the
value
of
a
share
in
Lowney’s
a
figure
of
$68.22
quite
apart
from
what
eventually
took
place
in
May
1968.
Experienced
and
solid
businessman
that
he
was.
there
was
no
doubt
in
Mr
Littler’s
mind—going
back
to
January—
that
he
was
going
to
get
the
sum
of
$68.22
which
he
had
anticipated
getting
and
as
we
know
did
in
fact
get.
The
Minister
was
justified
in
placing
the
value
of
$68.22
on
the
shares
which
Mr
Littler
conveyed
to
his
sons.
As
far
as
the
Minister’s
decision
is
concerned,
it.
was
not,
in
my
opinion,
a
case
of
hindsight
at
all.
It
was
based
on
Substantial
facts
existing
prior
to
the
transaction
challenged
herein.
If
I
am
wrong
in
the
inference
that
I
have
drawn
from—and
my
evaluation
of—the
evidence
pertaining
to
the
uncontradicted
facts
prior
to
the
two
sales
to
the
sons
in
April
1968,
I
am
nevertheless
of
the
opinion,
with
great
deference
to
the
learned
trial
judge,
that
the
Minister
had
the
right
to
take
into
consideration
the
firm
offer
of
$68.22
made
on
May
15.
1968
by
Standard
Brands.
I
say
this
on
the
authority
of
the
case
of
Roberts
and
Bagwell
v
Her
Majesty
the
Queen,
[1957]
SCR
28,
which
incidentally
was
followed
by
Joseph
Simard
&
Cre,
Ltée
v
MNR,
[1964]
CTC
461:
64
DTC
5289,
per
Dumoulin,
J
of
ire
Exchequer
Court
of
Canada.
At
page
36
of
that
case,
Nolan,
J,
who
delivered
the
judgment
for
the
Supreme
Court
of
Canada,
had
this
to
say:
The
appellants,
in
proof
of
the
value
of
the
lands
prior
to
the
enactment
of
the
Regulations,
tendered
evidence
of
sales
in
the
vicinity
of
those
affected
after
that
date,
but
such
evidence
was
excluded.
The
Crown
was
subsequently
permitted
to
adduce
similar
sales
as
evidence
to
refute
the
Statements
of
the
appellants’
witnesses
as
to
diminution
of
value
resulting
from
the
Regulations.
If
sales
made
after
the
enactment
were
totally
,
excluded,
obviously
there
could
be
no
evidence
whatever
of
sales
affected
by
the
Regulations
in
the
Malton
area
and
apparently
there
was
no
other
airport
area
which
afforded
such
instances.
In
my
view,
evidence
of
a
sale
after
the
enactment
can,
in
the
absence
of
special
circumstances,
be
relevant
to
the
value
prior
to
the
enactment.
The
sale
must
be
shown
to
be
as
free
in
all
respects
from:
extraneous
factors
such
as
prior
sales
and
made
within
such
time
as
the
evidence
shows
prices
not
to
have
changed
materially
from
those
before
the
critical
date.
In
other
words,
the
mere
circumstance
of
the
sale
being
before
or
after
a
particular
date
cannot
nullify
the
relevance
of
subsequent
sales
while
the
general
market
conditions
remained
the
same.
The
rule
should
allow
the
Court
to
admit
evidence
of
such
sales
as
it
finds,
in
place,
time
and
circumstances,
to
be
logically
probative
of
the
fact
to
be
found.*
It
is
to
be
remembered
that
no
special
circumstances
or
extraneous
factors
took
place
between
the
months
of
January
and
May
1968
affecting
the
price
of
Lowney
shares.
It
follows,
therefore,
from
the
authoritative
reasons
given
by
Nolan,
J
that
the
offer
of
Standard
Brands
on
May
15,
1968
was,
in
the
circumstances,
probative
of
the
true
value
of
those
snares
during
the
month
of
April
1968.
In
my
view,
therefore,
a
reasonable
inference
to
draw
from
all
the
established
facts
is
that
the
price
of
$24
per
share
at
which
the
respondent
sold
the
two
blocks
of
shares
to
his
two
sons
on
April
3,
1968
and
April
19,
1968
respectively
was,
to
borrow
a
phrase
by
a
Court
of
Appeal
when
setting
aside
a
jury’s
award,
namely,
“inordinately
low”.
Did
the
respondent,
however,
dispose
of
those
shares
by
way
of
gift?
Notwithstanding
my
respect
for
the
contrary
view,
I
am
of
the
opinion
that
he
did.
Part
IV
of
the
Income
Tax
Act,
RSC
1952,
c
148,
section
111
states
as
follows:
111.
(1)
A
tax
shall
be
paid
as
hereinafter
required
upon
the
gifts
made
in
a
taxation
year
by
an
individual
resident
in
Canada
or
a
personal
corporation.
I
.
(2)
For
the
purpose
of
this
section,
‘‘gift’’
includes
a
transfer,
assignment
or
other
disposition
of
property
(whether
situate
inside
or
outside
Canada)
by
way
of
gift,
and
without
limiting
the
generality
of
the
foregoing,
includes
(a)
the
creation
of
a
trust
of,
or
an
interest
in,
property
by
way
of
gift,
and
(b)
a
transaction
or
transactions
whereby
a
person
disposes
of
property
directly
or
indirectly
by
way
of
gift.
By
virtue
of
section
114,
the
tax
on
gifts
imposed
by
section
111
is
payable
by
the
donor.
As
mentioned
in
the
reasons
for
judgment
delivered
by
the
learned
Chief
Justice
of
this
Court,
when
the
appellant
dismissed
the
respondent’s
objection
to
the
assessment,
he
declared
the
transactions
to
be
a
gift
in
accordance
with
the
provisions
of
subsection
137(2)
of
the
Act.
Subsection
137(2)
reads
as
follows:
137.
(2)
Where
the
result
of
one
or
more
sales,
excnanges,
declarations
of
trust,
or
other
transactions
of
any
kind
whatsoever
is
that
a
person
confers
a
benefit
on
a
taxpayer,
that
person
shall
be
deemed
to
have
made
a
payment
to
the
taxpayer
equal
to
the
amount
of
the
benefit
conferred
notwithstanding
the
form
or
legal
effect
of
the
transactions
or
that
one
or.
more
other
persons
were
also
parties
thereto;
and,
whether
or
not
there
Was
an
intention
to
avoid
or
evade
taxes
under
this
Act,
the
payment
shall,
depending
upon
the
circumstances,
be
(a)
included
in
computing
the
taxpayer’s
income
tor
the
purpose
of
Part
I.
(b)
deemed
to
be
a
payment
to
a
non-resident
person
to
which
Part
III
applies,
or
(c)
deemed
to
be
a
disposition
by
way
of
gift
to
which
Part
IV
applies..
Counsel
for
the
appellant,
in
the
Court
below,
did
not
support
the
Minister’s
assessment
on
the
basis
of
section
137
nor
did
they
do
so
before
us
in
the
Court
of
Appeal.
The
case
of
A
Levine
Estate
v
MNR,
[1973]
CTC
219;
73
DTC
5182,
is
therefore
not
helpful
to
the
appellant,
nor
is
any
other
case
which
is
based
on
section
137
of
the
Act.
We
must
limit
ourselves
to
section
111
which
was
pleaded
in
the
defence
filed
by
the
appellant
and
dealt
with
before
us
on
appeal.
Let
me
now
come
to
the
word
“gift”.
One
of
the
definitions
which
Britannica
World
Dictionary
gives
to
it
is
the
following:
“A
gift
is
that
which
is
voluntarily
bestowed
without
expectation
of
return
or
compensation.”
Stroud’s
Judicial
Dictionary
says
of
gift,
inter
vivos:
“The
word
‘gift’
involves
a
transfer
without
consideration
of
a
beneficial
interest.”
Finally,
18
Halsbury’s
3rd,
at
page
364
states:
“A
gift
inter
vivos
may
be
defined
shortly
as
the
transfer
of
any
property
from
one
person
to
another
gratuitously
while
the
donor
is
alive
and
not
in
expectation
of
death.”
The
essential
characteristic
of
a
gift
appears
in
all
three
definitions.
The
first
notes
that
it
is
bestowed
“without
expectation
of
return
or
compensation”;
the
second
that
it
involves
a
transfer
“without
consideration”
and
the
third
says
that
it
is
effected
“gratuitously”.
There
is
no
doubt
that
each
definition
rightly
conveys
the
accepted
meaning
of
a
“gift”.
But
one
must
not
lose
sight
of
the
fact
that
what
we
are
dealing
with
in
this
appeal
is
the
interpretation
of
a
statute
of
which
the
prime
purpose
is
very
well
understood
by
all
Canadians.
If
the
statute
were
concerned
only
with
the
commonly
accepted
meaning
of
gift,
there
would
be
no
need
for
subsection
(2)
of
section
111.
Subsection
(1),
stating
that
a
tax
shall
be
paid
upon
gifts,
would
be
quite
sufficient.
It
is
a
principle
of
statutory
interpretation
that
the
Legislature
does
not
use
unnecessary
words
and
therefore
we
must
give
meaning
and
substance
to
subsection
(2).
This
subsection,
reminds
us
that
for
the
purpose
of
this
section,
that
is,
for
the
purpose
of
subsection
(1),
a
“gift”
includes
a
transfer,
assignment
or
other
disposition
of
property
by
way
of
gift,
In
other
words,
the
draftsman
has
added
something,
in
so
far
as
this
statute
is
concerned,
to
our
ordinary
understanding
of
what
constitutes
a
gift.
It
is
highly
significant,
in
my
humble
opinion,
that
the
word
“gratuitous”
or
any
expression
suggestive
of
“gratuitous”
is
not
to
be
found
in
subsection
(2)
and
it
is
my
further
opinion
that
these
words
cover
the
sale
of
property
by
way
of
gift.
The
learned
trial
judge
recognized
this
in
his
closing
paragraph
which
I
quoted
earlier
in
these
reasons.
Where
we
differ
is
in
the
amount
of
the
price
for
which
the
shares
in
question
were
sold.
Obviously,
he
did
not
consider
$24
per
share
“a
ridiculously
low
price’.
With
great
deference,
in
the
circumstances
which
I
have
enumerated
earlier,
I
do
consider
that
figure
to
be
a
ridiculously
low
one.
Had
the
trial
judge
considered
the
price
to
be
ridiculously
low,
he
would
have
treated
the
transaction
as
a
“case
of
a
disguised
sale’’,
to
use
his
words.
It
goes
without
saying
that
I
find
the
transactions
to
have
been,
just
that.
At
the
risk
of
repeating
myself,
may
I
say
that
the
word
“gift’’
ordinarily
does
connote
the
gratuitous
transfer
of
property
but
not
so
in
a
taxing
statute.
It
would
have
been
a
very
simple
matter
for
the
draftsman
to
have
added
the
word
“gratuitous”
in
subsection
(2)
if
he
had
intended
to
limit
gifts
to
gratuitous
transfers
or
other
dispositions
of
property.
In
a
moment,
I
shall
advance
my
thought
why
that
word
is
significantly
absent.
Maxwell
on
Interpretation
of
Statutes,
12th
ed,
1969;
states
at
page
43:
The
so-called
“golden
rule”
is
really
a
modification
of
the
literal
rule.
It
was
stated
in
this
way
by
Parke,
B
(Becke
v
Smith
(1836),
2
M
&
W
191
at
p
195):
“It
is
a
very
useful
rule,
in
the
construction
of
a
statute,
to
adhere
to
the
ordinary
meaning
of
the
words
used,
and
to
the
grammatical
construction,
unless
that
is
at
variance
with
the
intention
of
the
legislature,
to
be
collected
from
the
statute
itself
.
.
.”
It
goes
without
saying
that
the
intent
of
the
Income
Tax
Act
can
readily
be
collected
from
the
statute
itself.
Pure
and
simple,
it
is
a
taxing
enactment
and,
as
already
noted,
by
section
111'it
is
provided
that
a
tax
is
to
be
paid
on
gifts.
If
in
such
a
statute
the
word
“gift”
were
to
be
limited
to
gratuitous
transfers
of
property,
in
my
view,
the
door
would
be
opened
wide
to
those
who
would
seek
to
circumvent
the
avowed
purpose
of
the
Act
by
the
subterfuge
of
disguised
sales
as
was
done
by
the
respondent
herein
and
by
the
appellant
in
Joseph
Simard
&
Cie,
Ltée
v
MNR
(supra).
One
might
contend
that
section
137
of
the
1952
Income
Tax
Act
is
designed
to
take
care
of
disguised
gifts.
That
may
be
true
but
the
answer
to
this
contention
is,
in
my
opinion,
that
one
must
needs
examine
the
Act
as
a
whole.
In
doing
so,
one
finds
that
Part
IV
of
the
Act
deals
with
gift
tax.
Part
V
is
devoted
to
administration
and
enforcement
and
Part
VI
speaks
of
tax
evasion.
It
is
under
this
Part
that
we
have
section
137,
subsection
(1)
of
which
states
as
follows:
137.
(1)
In
computing
income
for
the
purpose
of
this
Act,
no
deduction
may
be
made
in
respect
of
a
disbursement
or
expense
made
or
incurred
in
respect
of
a
transaction
or
operation
that,
if
allowed,
would
unduly
or
artificially
reduce
the
income.
The
purpose
of
Part
VI
is
to
guard
against
tax
evasion
generally
in
so
far
as
the
Act
as
a
whole
is
concerned.
It
does
not
prevent
the
Court,
I
suggest,
from
interpreting
judicially
section
111
which
falls
under
a
particular
Part
of
the
statute
and
this
is
what
I
have
endeavoured
to
do
in
these
reasons.
I
have
received
some
encouragement
for
my
views
from
glancing
through
a
number
of
English
‘cases
based
on
taxing
statutes.
For
example,
there
is
Hellby
v
Matthews,
[1895]
AC
471,
where
Lord
Herschell,
LC
said
at
page
475:
It
is
said
that
the
substance
of
the
transaction
evidenced
by
the
agreement
must
be
looked
at,
and
not
its
mere
words.
In
Lethbridge
v
Attorney
General,
[1907]
AC
19,
Lord
Atkinson
said
at
pages
26-7:
It
has
many
times
been
decided
that
in
dealing
with
questions
arising
on
the
Finance
Act
of
1894
and
the
Succession
Duty
Acts
regard
should
be
had
to
the
substance
of
the
transactions
on
which
these
questions
turn
rather
than
to
the
form
of
conveyancing
which
the
parties
to
them
may
have
adopted
to
carry
out
their
objects.
The
doctrine
set
forth
in
such
cases
has
been
criticized
at
times.
For
example,
in
Inland
Revenue
Commissioners
v
Duke
of
Westminster,
[1936]
AC
1,
Lord
Tomlin
said
at
page
20:
This
so-called
doctrine
of
“the
substance”
seems
to
me
to
be
nothing
more
than
an
attempt
to
make
a
man
pay
notwithstanding
that
he
has
so
ordered
his
affairs
that
the
amount
of
tax
sought
from
him
is
not
legally
claimable.
Notwithstanding
the
criticism,
I
feel
that
the
doctrine
presents
a
safe
and
proper
course
to
follow
and
I
have
done
so
in
this
appeal.
I
have
looked
at
the
substance
of
the
challenged
transactions
and
in
doing
so,
I
found
that
what
was
effected
here
was
a
gift
disguised
as
a
Sale.
For
the
reasons
that
I
have
put
forward,
I
cannot
agree
with
the
dismissal
of
this
appeal.
Accordingly,
I
would
allow
the
appeal
and
direct
that
the
Minister’s
assessment
be
restored.
Although
it
was
not
raised
at
the
hearing
before
us,
nevertheless
I
am
constrained
to
say
something
about
a
matter
which
has
concerned
me
greatly
in
‘my
reading
of
the
Appeal
Book
herein.
I
refer
to
the
unduly
large
number
of
times
that
the
learned
trial
judge
entered
into
the
discussion
between
counsel
and
witnesses.
I
recognize
that
the
learned
trial
judge,
in
the
words
of
Lord
Greene,
MR
in
Yuill
v
Yuill,
[1945]
1
All
ER
183
at
185-6:
.
.
.
was
endeavouring
to
ascertain
the
truth
in
the
manner
which
at
the
moment
seemed
to
him
most
convenient.
But
he
must,
I
think,
have
lost
sight
of
the
inconveniences
which
are
apt
to
flow
from
an
undue
participation
by
the
judge
in
the
examination
of.
witnesses.
It
is,
of
course,
always
proper
for
a
judge—and
it
is
his
duty—to
put
questions
with
a
view
to
elucidating
an
obscure
answer
or
when
he
thinks
that
the
witness
has
misunderstood
a
question
put
to
him
by
counsel.
.
.
.
I
make
this
observation
not
with
a
view
to
finding
fault
with
the
distinguished
trial
judge
below
but
rather
because
of
some
unfortunate
experiences
of
my
own
over
the
years
as
a
trial
judge.
I
am
afraid
that
I
have
not
always
followed
the
good
advice
contained
in
the
headnote
to
Jones
v
National
Coal
Board,
[1957]
2
All
ER
155,
wherein
we
read:
The
part
of
a
judge
at
the
trial
of
a
civil
action
is
to
hearken
to
the
evidence,
only
himself
asking
questions
of
witnesses
when
it
is
necessary
to
clear
up
any
point
that
has
been
overlooked
or
left
obscure;
.
.
.
It
is
undoubted
that
excessive
judicial
interruption
inevitably
weakens
the
effectiveness
of
examination
and
particularly
cross-examination.
In
referring
to
the
well-known
case
on
this
point,
Majcenic
v
Natale,
[1968]
1
OR
189;
66
DLR
(2d)
50,
Houlden,
JA,
speaking
for
the
Ontario
Court
of
Appeal
in
Franco
et
al
v
Woolfe
et
al
(1977),
69
DLR
(3d)
501
said
at
page
504:
A
trial
judge
must
be
careful
not
to
assume
the
role
of
an
advocate.
The
appeal
is
allowed
with
costs
in
this
Court
and
in
the
Court
below.