Dubé
J
[TRANSLATION]:—The
plaintiff,
incorporated
in
Quebec
in
1946,
operates
a
feed
mill
as
well
as
several
farms
in
St-Pie.
It
is
appealing
the
Minister’s
assessments
for
the
1970,
1971
and
1972
taxation
years
with
respect
to
premiums
for
insurance
on
the
life
of
the
President
Jacques
A
Guertin,
salaries
paid
to
the
president’s
mother
(Mrs
Antoine
Guertin)
and
to
the
president’s
sister
(Mrs
André
Gaudreault)
and
charitable
donations
made
by
the
plaintiff
and
its
employees
to
the
Fondation
St-Pie.
1.
Insurance
premiums
In
1969
the
plaintiff
borrowed
the
sum
of
$300,000
from
the
Industrial
Development
Bank
—
to
purchase
and
operate
farms
—
as
security
for
which
the
Bank
required
the
transfer
of
$200,000
in
insurance
on
the
life
of
the
president
and
$100,000
in
insurance
on
the
life
of
the
manager,
Emile
Cordeau,
The
Minister
allowed
the
deduction
of
the
term
insurance
premiums
for
Emile
Cordeau,
but
refused
to
allow
the
deduction
of
the
$1,000
in
premiums
on
the
President’s
life
on
the
ground
that
these
premiums
purchased
permanent
insurance
and
that
the
plaintiff
would
thus
acquire
an
asset
of
a
capital
nature.
The
plaintiff’s
accountant
explained
to
the
court,
however,
that
his
client
had
charged
only
the
cost
of
a
term
policy
to
expenses
and
deducted
the
remainder
from
its
surplus.
For
a
20-year
term
policy
in
the
amount
of
$200,000
dated
June
15,
1969
for
Jacques
Guertin,
aged
34
at
the
time,
the
annual
premium
was
$1,090.
The
company’s
intention
was
to
charge
to
expenses
only
that
portion
of
the
premium
applicable
to
the
loan.
The
plaintiff
did
not
charge
the
full
annual
premium
of
$4,022,
which
represents
a
premium
for
life
insurance
with
a
surrender
value.
The
figures
for
1973
confirm
this
intention:
the
$1,090
premium
was
reduced
to
$1,030.05
since
the
$200,000
loan
had
been
reduced
to
$189,000
at
that
time.
In
my
view
this
part
of
the
premium
($1,090)
should
be
regarded
as
an
expense
incurred
in
the
year
in
the
course
of
borrowing
money
used
by
the
taxpayer
for
the
purpose
of
earning
income
from
a
business,
in
this
case
a
farming
business
comprising
land,
buildings,
machinery
and
equipment.
The
transfer
of
$200,000
in
insurance
on
the
life
of
the
president,
until
the
debt
was
repaid,
was
an
essential
term
of
the
loan.
A
sum
equal
to
the
amount
of
the
premium
for
the
term
life
insurance
(without
surrender
value)
corresponding
to
the
debt
to
be
repaid
is
therefore
deductible
under
subparagraph
11
(1
)(cb)(ii)
of
the
old
Act
and
subparagraph
20(1
)(e)(ii)
of
the
new
Act,
which
reads
as
follows:
(e)
an
expense
incurred
in
the
year
(ii)
in
the
course
of
borrowing
money
used
by
the
taxpayer
for
the
purpose
of
earning
income
from
a
business
or
property
(other
than
money
used
by
the
taxpayer
for
the
purpose
of
acquiring
property
the
income
from
which
would
be
exempt)*
In
Equitable
Acceptance
Corporation
Ltd
v
MNR,
[1964]
CTC
74;
64
DTC
5045,
my
brother
Cattanach
J
ruled
that
premiums
for
an
insurance
policy
on
the
life
of
the
plaintiff
company’s
president
were
not
deductible,
precisely
because
this
was
permanent
insurance
which
was
not
restricted
to
the
term
of
the
loan
but
covered
the
entire
life
of
the
insured,
with
a
surrender
value,
and
that
therefore
such
a
policy
was
a
lasting
asset
on
which
the
company
could
borrow
money
again
once
the
first
loan
had
been
paid
off.
Such
premiums
were
of
course
not
deductible;
but
an
amount
equal
to
the
premium
for
term
life
insurance
covering
the
amount
of
the
loan
is
deductible
both
for
the
president
of
Antoine
Guertin
Ltée
and
for
the
manager,
even
if
in
the
former
case
the
company
purchased
permanent
insurance
—
not
to
avoid
tax
but
to
save
money
—
and
in
the
latter
case
term
insurance.
2.
Salaries
paid
to
Mrs
Guertin
and
Mrs
Gaudreault
The
plaintiff
stated
it
had
paid
Mrs
Guertin
and
Mrs
Gaudreault
the
following
salaries
for
the
taxation
years
in
question,
on
which
they
paid
tax:
1970
Mrs
Guertin
|
$17,681.81
|
Mrs
Gaudreault
|
$13,346.83
|
1971
|
|
Mrs
Guertin
|
$12,631.72
|
Mrs
Gaudreault
|
$
8,911.95
|
1972
|
|
Mrs
Guertin
|
$12,994.68
|
Mrs
Gaudreault
|
$
9,156.95
|
The
Minister
reduced
the
above
salaries
to
$3,000
per
year,
alleging
that
they
were
unreasonable
in
view
of
the
negligible
participation
of
these
two
directors
of
the
company,
their
minimal
experience
and
their
almost
total
absence
from
the
company’s
premises.
According
to
the
testimony
of
Jacques
Guertin,
which
was
contradicted,
his
mother
had
taken
part
in
establishing
the
business
alongside
his
father.
She
invested
some
of
her
own
money
from
her
inheritance
in
it.
From
the
outset
she
had
seen
to
the
financing
and
management
of
the
company.
Her
husband,
Antoine
Guertin,
was
concerned
more
with
the
mill
machinery
and
technology.
It
was
Mrs
Guertin
who
met
the
suppliers
and
attended
conventions.
After
the
departure
of
her
husband
Mrs
Guertin
continued
to
be
involved
in
the
operation
of
the
business.
She
met
the
new
president,
her
son,
every
noon
for
lunch
in
the
family
residence
located
opposite
the
mill.
It
was
here
that
the
daily
problems
were
discussed
and
solved.
She
attended
all
meetings
of
the
board
of
directors;
she
went
to
the
office
to
see
how
things
were
going.
She
was
the
person
who
signed
cheques
in
the
president’s
absence.
When
her
husband
retired
for
health
reasons
and
began
taking
increasingly
long
vacations
in
Grand
Bahama
and
Maine,
the
contribution
of
his
wife,
who
had
considerable
experience,
became
increasingly
important.
In
the
circumstances,
I
do
not
consider
the
salaries
paid
to
Mrs
Guertin
to
be
unreasonable
and
I
think
that
they
should
be
accepted
by
the
Minister.
The
situation
seems
to
me
to
be
different
with
regard
to
the
salaries
paid
to
Mrs
Gaudreault,
however.
Mrs
Gaudreault
did
not
even
live
in
St-Pie,
but
in
the
suburbs
of
Montreal.
She
did
attend
meetings
of
the
board
of
directors
and
performed
certain
services
when
the
company
had
things
to
be
done
in
Montreal,
either
with
suppliers
or
involving
errands
on
behalf
of
the
company.
The
evidence
indicated
that
her
participation
was
in
fact
minimal.
Her
experience
in
the
plaintiff’s
business
is
also
negligible.
The
reduction
of
her
salary
to
$3,000
per
annum
for
tax
purposes
is
therefore
reasonable
and
should
be
confirmed.
3.
Donations
to
the
Fondation
St-Pie
The
fondation
was
incorporated
on
December
23,
1960
under
Part
III
of
the
Quebec
Companies
Act.
It
is
a
charitable
organization
recognized
by
the
Department
of
National
Revenue
and
registered
as
number
0133801-03-08.
It
gives
all
its
income
to
foreign
missions.
Antoine
Guertin,
the
founder
of
the
plaintiff
company,
also
established
the
Fondation
St-Pie.
He
appears
to
have
been
an
extremely
religious
person,
he
initiated
the
“Chapelet
en
famille”
(family
rosary),
a
program
on
a
Montreal
radio
station.
Two
of
his
daughters
became
convent
nuns.
He
himself
tried
to
become
a
priest
at
the
age
of
65,
a
few
years
before
he
died.
Profoundly
interested
in
missions,
he
proved
to
be
a
generous
donor,
especially
with
respect
to
the
Brazil
Mission
of
St-Hyacinthe,
a
community
in
his
diocese.
It
is
this
Mission
which
received
the
bulk
of
the
revenues
distributed
by
the
Fondation
every
year.
During
1972,
the
only
year
in
which
donations
are
at
issue
in
this
appeal,
it
received
$5,000
of
the
$7,336
distributed.
The
plaintiff
gave
the
Fondation
a
cheque
for
$12,400
as
a
charitable
donation
for
the
taxation
year
in
question.
During
this
period
the
plaintiff
also
gave
its
employees
bonuses
in
the
amount
of
$111,653.60
and
the
employees
gave
the
Fondation
a
total
of
$39,155
out
of
these
bonuses
as
charitable
donations.
The
company
generally
gave
each
employee
only
one
bonus
cheque
each
year.
For
1972
the
accountant
St-Onge
took
the
initiative
of
dividing
the
bonuses
into
three
parts,
one
part
for
the
Fondation,
one
as
a
loan
to
the
plaintiff
to
be
paid
into
a
pension
fund
for
the
employees
and
the
third
part
representing
the
balance
of
the
bonus
to
be
kept
by
the
employees.
St-Onge
thus
gave
each
employee
three
cheques
for
that
year.
According
to
the
defence,
the
use
of
the
Fondation
St-Pie,
with
the
employees’
complicity,
was
a
pure
sham
created
by
the
plaintiff
for
the
purpose
of
artificially
reducing
its
income.
The
defence
added
that
the
sums
of
$39,155
and
$12,400
constituted
disbursements
in
respect
of
a
transaction
or
operation
that,
if
allowed,
would
unduly
or
artificially
reduce
the
income
of
the
plaintiff,
contrary
to
subsection
245(1)
of
the
Act.
This
subsection
reads
as
follows:
245.
(1)
In
computing
income
for
the
purposes
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.
According
to
his
son,
the
idea
of
paying
bonuses
came
to
Antoine
Guertin
when
he
was
reading
an
article
in
the
Digest
describing
the
merits
of
this
system
in
encouraging
employees
to
participate
in
the
progress
of
a
business.
Bonuses
are
still
being
paid
to
employees
by
the
plaintiff.
According
to
the
current
president,
the
results
are
convincing:
there
has
never
been
a
labour
dispute
at
the
mill
and
profits
are
increasing
every
year.
The
list
of
bonuses
is
prepared
by
the
board
of
directors.
According
to
the
president
the
amounts
of
the
individual
bonuses
are
based
on
three
factors:
the
increase
in
the
cost
of
living,
the
number
of
years
of
service
and
individual
performance.
The
total
sum
to
be
divided
depends
on
the
company’s
profits
(1972
was
an
excellent
year).
Antoine
Guertin
would
then
take
the
list
and
visit
all
the
employees.
With
his
ardent
missionary
zeal
he
succeeded
in
convincing
them
to
give
generously.
It
is
not
impossible,
in
fact
even
probable,
that
he
lured
them
with
the
possibility
of
bonuses
based
on
the
generosity
of
the
donations.
For
the
year
in
question
a
series
of
Antoine
Guertin
Ltée
cheques
dated
November
30,
1972
(the
end
of
the
company’s
fiscal
year)
payable
to
the
employees
were
thus
endorsed
by
the
latter
“deposit
to
the
Fondation
St-Pie
fund”.
These
cheques
totalling
$39,155
(together
with
the
company’s
cheque
for
$12,400)
were
forwarded
to
the
Fondation
St-Pie’s
account
on
that
date
and
deposited
by
the
latter
on
December
22,
1972.
These
funds
totalling
$51,555
were
immediately
lent
by
the
Fondation
to
the
plaintiff,
which
gave
it
a
new
promissory
note
for
the
same
amount
bearing
interest
at
the
rate
of
7
per
cent.
The
Fondation
had
lent
the
donations
it
received
in
previous
years
to
the
plaintiff
on
promissory
notes
in
the
same
manner.
The
practice
was
repeated
from
year
to
year,
in
November,
when
the
total
amount
of
the
donations
was
lent
to
the
plaintiff
on
a
promissory
note.
In
return
the
plaintiff
paid
the
Fondation
7
per
cent
interest,
and
it
was
these
revenues
that
were
then
distributed
to
the
missions.
The
Fondation
regularly
files
financial
reports
and
other
forms
required
by
the
Department
of
National
Revenue.
Any
donor
may
become
an
active
member
of
the
Fondation
once
accepted
by
the
directors.
The
directors
are
not
employees
of
the
company,
with
the
exception
of
Emile
Cordeau,
who
was
formerly
the
plaintiff’s
manager,
and
now
of
Jean
St-Onge,
his
successor
as
manager
of
the
plaintiff
and
also
secretary
of
the
Fondation.
The
founder
Antoine
Guertin
did
not
remain
a
director
of
the
Fondation
after
its
incorporation.
The
capital
of
the
Fondation
reached
$485,000
in
1977
and
then
remained
Stable.
All
this
money
is
still
being
lent
to
the
plaintiff
and
the
7
per
cent
interest
is
still
being
distributed
to
the
missions.
Cordeau
left
the
plaintiff
in
1972
and
the
Fondation
in
1973.
His
successor
testified
that
he
followed
the
tradition
established
by
Cordeau,
including
the
practice
of
the
donations
and
loans.
The
meetings
of
the
Fondation
took
place
in
St-Onge’s
office
in
the
plaintiff’s
mill,
and
this
is
where
the
Fondation
took
place
in
St-Onge’s
office
in
the
plaintiff’s
mill,
and
this
is
where
the
Fondation’s
books
are
kept.
The
Fondation
has
no
premises,
offices
or
employees.
Its
only
expenses
are
$10,
which
it
pays
every
year
to
ther
Quebec
Department
of
Financial
Institutions.
The
balance
of
the
receipts
(the
interest
on
the
plaintiff’s
loan)
is
distributed
to
the
missions.
According
to
the
testimony
of
Jacques
Guertin,
Yvon
Boyer,
the
company’s
chartered
accountant
and
auditor,
and
Jean
St-Onge,
the
only
three
witnesses
at
the
hearing,
the
system
of
employee
bonuses
and
donations
of
the
Fondation
reflects
the
intentions
of
the
founder
of
both
bodies,
who
was
striving
for
both
industrial
peace
at
the
plant
and
a
realization
of
his
spiritual
views
through
the
Fondation.
According
to
his
son,
toward
the
end
of
his
life
Antoine
Guertin
wanted
to
give
all
the
company’s
revenues
to
the
Fondation.
Jacques
Guertin,
who
readily
admits
to
being
much
less
religious
than
his
father,
was
careful
not
to
agree
to
this
proposal.
We
must
therefore
determine
whether
the
use
of
the
Fondation
constitutes
a
pure
sham
created
by
the
plaintiff
and
its
employees
for
the
purpose
of
artificially
reducing
income,
as
the
Minister
maintained;
or
whether
the
bonuses
are
legitimate
current
expenses,
incurred
in
the
course
of
the
company’s
business
in
order
to
earn
income,
and
whether
the
donations
to
the
Fondation
are
allowable
deductions.
Unfortunately
the
two
witnesses
who
could
best
have
shed
light
on
the
situation,
the
founder
and
his
wife,
are
both
dead.
It
is
nonetheless
evident
from
the
testimony
of
the
plaintiff’s
three
witnesses
that
Antoine
Guertin’s
essential
aims
were
achieved:
the
bonus
system
guarantees
the
company
a
loyal
and
efficient
staff
and
the
Fondation
now
has
a
constant
amount
of
capital
the
annual
income
from
which
is
given
to
the
missions.
This
successful
formula
also
produces
two
other
beneficial
results
for
the
plaintiff.
First,
the
payment
of
bonuses
increases
the
company’s
expenses
and
consequently
reduces
the
tax
payable;
secondly,
the
company
benefits
from
a
source
of
borrowing
at
a
highly
favourable
rate.
None
of
the
above
transactions
is
concealed
or
illegal.
The
Fondation
has
letters
patent
incorporating
it
as
a
corporation
whose
objects
are
to
administer
funds
and
contributions
to
assist
charitable
institutions.
In
the
event
of
the
corporation’s
dissolution
its
net
assets
are
to
be
transferred
to
organizations
having
similar
aims.
The
Fondation
is
registered
as
a
charity
under
paragraph
110(1
)(a)
of
the
Act,
which
authorizes
the
deduction
of
donations.
With
the
exception
of
Cordeau
in
1972
(and
now
St-Onge),
the
directors
are
not
attached
to
the
company.
The
donors
do
not
come
exclusively
from
the
ranks
of
the
company
either;
the
founder
had
also
canvassed
farmers
in
the
area
as
well
as
suppliers
and
other
clients.
There
is
nothing
to
prevent
the
Fondation
from
lending
its
money
elsewhere
and
it
is
free
to
increase
its
rates
once
the
promissory
note
expires.
The
charter
of
incorporation
provides
that
in
the
event
of
dissolution
the
assets
will
not
go
back
to
the
company
but
will
go
to
other
organizations
dedicated
to
supporting
missionaries.
The
Fondation’s
assets
have
now
reached
a
plateau
and
there
is
no
longer
a
dedicated
worker
to
collect
donations
from
the
employees
or
elsewhere.
The
money
given
to
the
employees
in
1972
as
bonuses
is
entered
in
the
company’s
books
as
such
and
appears
on
the
T-4
forms
of
these
employees
as
income.
Their
charitable
donations
are
also
reported
as
such.
It
appears
that
the
founder
discussed
with
each
employee,
and
with
the
accountant,
the
maximum
deductible
amount
that
each
employee
could
give
to
the
Fondation.
There
is
nothing
reprehensible,
of
course,
in
informed
taxpayers
taking
maximum
advantage
of
the
deductibility
of
their
donations.
Although
the
donations
of
the
company
and
its
employees
reduced
the
plaintiff’s
income,
this
does
not
mean
that
these
expenses
are
unreasonable
and
unlawful.
Analysed
in
light
of
the
principal
objectives
initially
pursued
by
the
company
and
the
Fondation,
these
donations
do
not
seem
to
me
to
have
been
made
primarily
in
order
to
reduce
income,
even
though
this
was
the
result,
but
chiefly
in
order
to
achieve
the
objectives
already
mentioned.
This
reduction
in
income
is
therefore
not
necessarily
unrealistic
and
The
oft-cited
passage
from
Lord
Diplock’s
judgment
in
Snook
v
London
&
West
Riding
Investments
Ltd,
[1967]
1
All
ER
518,
is
relevant
in
this
context:
As
regards
the
contention
of
the
plaintiff
that
the
transactions
between
himself,
Auto-Finance,
Ltd
and
the
defendants
were
a
“sham”,
it
is,
I
think,
necessary
to
consider
what,
if
any,
legal
concept
is
involved
in
the
use
of
this
popular
and
pejorative
word.
I
apprehend
that,
if
it
has
any
meaning
in
law,
it
means
acts
done
or
documents
executed
by
the
parties
to
the
“sham”
which
are
intended
by
them
to
give
to
third
parties
or
to
the
court
the
appearance
of
creating
between
the
parties
legal
rights
and
obligations
different
from
the
actual
legal
rights
and
obligations
(if
any)
which
the
parties
intend
to
create.
In
my
view
the
present
case
does
not
involve
a
series
of
fictitious
operations,
or
shams,
or
evasions.
It
must
be
remembered
that
all
transactions
between
the
plaintiff
and
the
Fondation
were
entered
in
the
books
of
both
entities
and
faithfully
reported
to
the
taxation
authorities.
The
principal
objective
of
these
operations,
in
my
view,
was
not
to
reduce
the
income
artificially
but
rather
to
realize
the
ideal,
both
practical
and
generous,
pursued
by
Antoine
Guertin,
within
the
framework
of
the
Act.
It
has
not
been
shown,
moreover,
that
the
plaintiff
has
gained
thereby
in
income,
since
it
must
not
be
forgotten
that
the
capital
of
$485,000
remains
the
property
of
the
Fondation:
the
plaintiff
will
have
to
repay
its
loan
some
day.
Learned
counsel
for
the
defendant
also
raised
the
argument
that
since
the
plaintiff
and
the
Fondation
are
not
dealing
at
arm’s
length,
there
is
a
presumption
that
these
transactions
between
the
two
are
artificial,
a
presumption
which
it
was
up
to
the
plaintiff
to
rebut.*
He
referred
in
particular
to
a
passage
from
a
judgment
of
my
brother
Cattanach
J.
in
MNR
v
T
R
Merritt
Estate,
[1969]
CTC
207;
69
DTC
5159:
In
my
view,
the
basic
premise
on
which
this
analysis
is
based
is
that,
where
the
“mind”
by
which
the
bargaining
is
directed
on
behalf
of
one
party
to
a
contract
is
the
same
“mind”
that
directs
the
bargaining
on
behalf
of
the
other
party,
it
cannot
be
said
that
the
parties
were
dealing
at
arm’s
length.
In
other
words
where
the
evidence
reveals
that
the
same
person
was
“dictating”
the
“terms
of
the
bargain”
on
behalf
of
both
parties,
it
cannot
be
said
that
the
parties
were
dealing
at
arm’s
length.
*See
Sigma
Explorations
Ltd
v
Her
Majesty
the
Queen,
[1975]
CTC
215;
75
DTC
5121.
Once
again,
even
though
at
the
outset
the
person
of
Antoine
Guertin
dominated
both
entities,
the
situation
was
no
longer
the
same
in
the
period
we
are
concerned
with.
In
1972
the
only
real
tie
between
the
company
and
the
Fondation
was
Emile
Cordeau,
who
was
not
a
shareholder
of
the
plaintiff.
There
is
certainly
no
reason
to
believe
that
he
dictated
the
terms
of
any
bargain
between
the
two
companies.
Moreover,
even
if
there
were
a
presumption
of
artifice,
it
has
been
rebutted
to
my
satisfaction
by
the
evidence,
which
establishes
clearly
the
genuine
existence
of
charitable
donations
made
for
a
specific
and
legitimate
purpose.
In
the
circumstances
the
appeal
should
be
allowed
and
the
reassessments
issued
by
the
Department
of
National
Revenue
in
respect
of
the
plaintiff
for
1970,
1971
and
1972
should
be
vacated,
with
the
exception
of
the
reduction
to
$3,000
of
the
salary
paid
to
Dame
Andrée
Gaudreault,
which
is
confirmed;
the
whole
with
costs.