DUMOULIN,
J.:—The
instant
appeal
is
directed
against
the
re-assessment
dated
May
1,
1963,
and
assessment
dated
May
6,
1963,
in
respect
of
income
for
taxation
years
1960
and
1961.
Appellant
company
filed
Notice
of
Objection
to
the
re-assessment
for
1960
and
the
assessment
for
1961
on
July
25,
1963,
and
such
re-assessment
and
assessment
were
confirmed
by
respondent
by
a
Notification
of
July
29,
1964.
*
Consumers’
Gas
is
a
company
“incorporated
by
Special
Act
of
the
former
Province
of
Canada
and
continued
under
the
Corporations
Act,
1953,
of
Ontario,
and
is
engaged
in
the
business
of
distributing
natural
gas
to
consumers
in
the
Provinces
of
Ontario
and
Quebec,
and
in
the
State
of
New
York”.
As
related
at
trial
by
the
appellant’s
vice-president,
treasurer
and
assistant
secretary,
Mr.
Warren
Hurst,
this
company
has
maintained
an
oft-repeated
policy
of
soliciting
additional
working
capital
from
the
investing
public
at
large.
Since
1954,
recourse
was
had
to
17
such
financings,
an
8
months’
periodicity,
in
the
form
of
bonds,
debentures,
preferred
and
common
shares.
Two
of
the
latest
issues
were
those
of
December
8,
1959,
and
June
8,
1961.
Paragraph
3
of
the
Notice
of
Appeal
sets
forth
that
:
“Pursuant
to
the
terms
of
a
Prospectus
filed
on
December
3,
1959,
(ex.
A-3)
the
Appellant
issued
and
sold
309,472
of
its
common
shares
without
par
value
upon
the
exercise
by
holders
of
the
Appellant’s
common
shares
of
subscription
warrants
evidencing
the
right
to
subscribe
for
one
additional
common
share
without
par
value
of
the
capital
stock
of
the
Appellant
for
each
six
common
shares
without
par
value
then
issued
and
outstanding.
In
the
course
of
issuing
and
selling
such
shares
the
Appellant
incurred,
inter
alia,
the
expenses
described
in
paragraph
5
of
this
Notice
of
Appeal.’’
It
could
go
without
saying
that
the
sole
and
only
moot
question
is
that
of
the
deductibility
of
those
disbursements,
re-occurring
also,
for
different
amounts,
in
connection
with
the
1961
issue
of
1,093,230
common
shares,
evidenced
by
the
June
8,
1961,
prospectus
(ex.
A-6).
Each
prospectus
resulted
from
agreements
dated,
respectively,
November
23,1959
(ex.
A-4)
and
June
7,1961
(ex.
A-7),
between
Consumers’
Gas
and
Dominion
Securities
Corporation,
Ltd.,
and
A.
E.
Ames
and
Co.
Ltd.,
hereinafter
called
the
‘‘
Underwriters’’.
Paragraph
5
and
its
subparagraphs
(a),
(b)
and
(c),
next
quoted,
would
sum
up
the
purport
of
these
agreements
so
far
as
they
may
interest
this
suit
:
“5.
Pursuant
to
the
terms
of
an
agreement
evidenced
by
letter
dated
November
23,
1959,
the
Appellant
agreed
to
pay
to
Dominion
Securities
Corpn.
Limited
and
A.
E.
Ames
&
Co.
Limited
(hereinafter
called
the
‘Underwriters’)
the
following
amounts
in
consideration
of
the
services
rendered
by
the
Underwriters
as:
hereinafter
described
:
(a)
$24,150
for
services
rendered
by
the
Underwriters
in
forming
and
managing
on
Underwriting
Group
and
Soliciting
Dealers
Group
to
facilitate
subscriptions
for
the
new
common
shares
of
the
Appellant,
and
in
consideration
of
the
agreement
by
the
Underwriters
to
use
their
best
efforts
to
maintain
an
orderly
market
in
the
rights
evidenced
by
the
subscription
warrants;
(b)
$108,315
representing
commission
payable
to
the
Underwriters
in
consideration
for
their
services
as
dealers
in
securities;
and
(c)
$46
738.89
in
consideration
for
the
services
of
the
Underwriters
for
the
performance
of
all
administrative
and
clerical
work
involved
in
processing
warrants
tendered
by
shareholders
in
the
course
of
exercising
their
right
to
subscribe
for
and
purchase
the
new
common
shares
of
the
Appellant.
Such
charges
were
required
by
the
Underwriters
in
accordance
with
the
provisions
of
Regulations
issued
by
the
Investment
Dealers
Association
of
Canada,
the
Toronto
Stock
Exchange
and
the
Montreal
Stock
Exchange
to
reimburse
the
Underwriting
Group
for
the
cost
of
such
administrative
and
clerical
work.
Such
particular
services
rendered
by
the
Underwriters
were
not
rendered
by
them
as
agents
or
dealers
in
securities
in
the
course
of
issuing
and
selling
the
Appellant’s
new
common
shares,
All
of
the
expenses
described
in
this
paragraph
5
were
incurred
by
the
Appellant
during
the
1960
taxation
year.”
Paragraph
6
is
identically
worded,
save
that
it
concerns
the
1961
taxation
year
and
the
amounts
in
its
sub-paragraphs
are
:
(a)
$121,654;
(b)
$136,653;
(c)
$121,980,
and
substitutes
“Facilitating
Group”
for
“Soliciting
Dealers
Group’?
in
(a)
of
paragraph
5.
The
Notice
of
Appeal
next
proceeds
to
explain,
in
paragraphs
7
and
9,
that
for
the
1960
and
1961
taxation
years,
appellant
deducted,
in
computing
its
income
returns
according
to
Section
11(1)
(cb)
of
the
Income
Tax
Act:
“7.
.
.
.
$12,075
(representing
one-half
of
the
expenses
described
in
paragraph
5(a)
of
this
Notice
of
Appeal)
and
the
whole
sum
of
$46,738.89
described
in
paragraph
5(c)
...
The
Appellant
did
not
deduct
the
sum
of
$108,315
described
in
paragraph
5(b)
.
.
.
,
such
sum
being
regarded
by
the
Appellant
as
a
non-deductible
commission
payable
to
the
Underwriters
in
consideration
for
their
services
as
dealers
in
securities.”
Similar
averments
for
larger
figures
appear
for
1961
in
paragraph
8
of
the
Notice
of
Appeal,
which
urges
the
following
reasons
and
statutory
provisions
in
paragraph
10,
Part
B
:
“10.
The
Appellant
submits
that
none
of
the
expenses
described
in
paragraphs
5(a)
and
(c)
and
6(a)
and
(c)
.
.
.
constituted
‘
commission
or
bonus
paid
or
payable
.
.
.
for
or
on
account
of
services
rendered
by
a
person
as
(emphasis
in
text)
a
salesman,
agent
or
dealer
in
securities
in
the
course
of
issuing
or
selling
the
shares’
of
the
Appellant,
within
the
meaning
of
section
11(1)
(cb)
(iii)
of
the
Income
Tax
Act.
The
Appellant
says
that
such
expenses
were
on
account
of
services
rendered
by
the
Underwriters
acting
in
a
clerical
capacity
and
not
as
dealers
in
securities.
.
.
.”
The
company
therefore
submits
that
the
expenses
above
mentioned,
for
the
material
taxation
years
1960
and
1961,
are
deductible
in
accordance
with
the
provisions
of
Section
11(1)
(cb)
(i)
enacting
as
follows:
“11.
(1)
Notwithstanding
paragraphs
(a),
(b)
and
(h)
of
subsection
(1)
of
section
12,
the
following
amounts
may
be
deducted
in
computing
the
income
of
a
taxpayer
for
a
taxation
year:
(cb)
an
expense
incurred
in
the
year,
(i)
in
the
course
of
issuing
or
selling
shares
of
the
capital
stock
of
the
taxpayer,”
The
Minister
replies
negatively
on
the
assumption
that
all
sums
referred
to
in
subparagraphs
(a)
and
(c)
of
paragraphs
5
and
6
of
the
Notice
of
Appeal
‘‘were
payments
on
account
of
capital
and
properly
disallowed
as
deductions
.
.
.
under
the
provisions
of
paragraph
(b)
of
subsection
(1)
of
section
12”
.
.
.
and/or
‘‘were
commissions
paid
to
persons
on
account
of
services
rendered
as
salesmen,
agents
or
dealers
in
securities
in
the
course
of
issuing
or
selling
the
Appellant’s
shares
within
the
meaning
of
subparagraph
(iii)
of
paragraph
(cb)
of
subsection
(1)
of
section
11
of
the
Income
Tax
Act’’.
These
two
sections
read
thus:
‘12.
(1)
In
computing
income,
no
deduction
shall
be
made
in
respect
of
(b)
an
outlay,
loss
or
replacement
of
capital,
a
payment
on
account
of
capital
.
.
.
11.
(1)
—.
(supra)
(b)
(supra).
Deductions
allowed
are
exclusive
of
(iii)
a
commission
or
bonus
paid
or
payable
to
a
person
to
whom
the
shares
were
issued
or
sold
or
from
whom
the
money
was
borrowed,
or
for
or
on
account
of
services
rendered
by
a
person
as
a
salesman,
agent
or
dealer
in
securities
in
the
course
of
issuing
or
selling
the
shares
or
borrowing
the
money,”
As
the
hearing
of
the
case
began,
the
appellant’s
counsel
reminded
the
Court,
as
said
in
paragraphs
7
and
8,
that
the
amounts
of
$24,150
in
paragraph
5(a)
and
$121,654
in
6(a)
were
reduced
by
one-half
each,
and
those
of
$108,315
in
5(b)
and
of
$136,653:
in
6(b)
were
completely
withdrawn,
these
latter
disbursements
‘‘being
regarded
by
the
Appellant
as
a
nondeductible
commission
payable
to
the
Underwriters
in
consideration
of
services
as
dealers
in
securities’’.
The
explanation
offered
for
the
50%
reduction
of
the
claims
in
subparagraphs
(a)
of
paragraphs
5
and
6
was
their
similarity
with
those
of
subsections
(c)
in
paragraphs
5
and
6
of
the
Notice
of
Appeal,
respectively.
These
preliminary
informations
disposed
of,
there
now
remains
for
the
Court’s
decision
the
real
subject
matter
consisting
in:
1.
The
legal
connotation
of
the
disbursements
sought
in
subparagraphs
5(a)
and
6(a)
:
‘‘for
services
rendered
by
the
Underwriters
in
forming
and
managing
an
Underwriting
n
Group
and
Soliciting
Dealers
Group’’
(5a);
and/or
“‘a
Facilitating
Group
to
facilitate
subscriptions
for
the
new
common
shares
of
the
Appellant”
(6a)
;
and
2.
Are
the
payments
‘‘in
consideration
for
the
services
of
the
Underwriters
for
the
performance
of
all
administrative
and
clerical
work
involved
in
processing
warrants
tendered
by
shareholders”
.
.
.
alleged
in
subparagraphs
5(c)
and
6(c)
of
the
appeal
governed
by
the
provisions
of
Section
11(1)-
(cb)
(i)
of
the
Act
or,
rather,
of
11
(1)
(cb)
(iii),
deductible
in
the
former
hypothesis,
excluded
in
the
latter?
I
will
attempt
to
answer
these
questions
in
their
numerical
sequence.
1,
The
duties
and
obligations
assumed
by
the
Underwriters,
Dominion
Securities
Corp.
Ltd.,
and
A.
E.
Ames
&
Co.
are
minutely
detailed
in
the
Letters
of
Agreement,
exhibits
A-4
and
A-7,
relating
to
the
1959
and
1961
issues
of
shares.
Their
wording
S,
substantially,
along
comparable
lines
except,
inter
alia,
that
in
A-7,
the
noun
‘‘fee’’
has
ousted
that
of
“commission”
used
in
the
initial,
1959,
covenant,
ex.
A-4,
from
which
the
texts
hereunder
are
excerpted.
The
two
underwriters’
opening
offer
is
(ex.
A-4,
first
page)
:
“
(a)
to
form
a
Soliciting
Dealer
Group
(A
Facilitating
Group
in
ex.
A-7)
to
facilitate
subscriptions
for
the
New
Stock
and
to
use
our
best
efforts
to
maintain
an
orderly
market
in
the
rights
evidenced
by
the
Warrants;
(b)
to
form
an
Underwriting
Group
to
be
composed
of
substantially
the
same
investment
dealers
and
brokers
who
have
recently
participated
in
the
primary
distribution
of
other
securities
of
the
Company
and
such
Underwriting
Group
will
include
and
be
managed
by
us;
(c)
to
invite
all
members
of
the
Underwriting
Group,
The
Investment
Dealers’
Association
of
Canada,
The
Toronto
Stock
Exchange,
Montreal
Stock
Exchange
and
Canadian
Stock
Exchange
to
become
members
of
a
Soliciting
Dealer
Group.’’
If,
peradventure,
there
could
remain
any
stock
dealers
unreached
by
this
global
‘‘call
to
action’’,
it
would
require
even
better
than
the
eagle’s
keen
glance
to
ferret
them
out.
Adverting
to
ex.
A-3,
the
company’s
prospectus
dated
December
3,
1959,
conveying
information
about
the
new
issue
of
309,472
common
shares,
we
see,
on
page
30,
that:
“The
Company
has
entered
into
a
letter
agreement
with
Dominion
and
Ames
dated
November
23,
1959
(ex.
A-4)
whereby
:
(i)
Dominion
and
Ames
agreed
to
form
a
Soliciting
Dealer
Group
(changed
into
a
Facilitating
Group
in
ex.
A-6,
the
1961
prospectus)
to
facilitate
subscriptions
for
the
common
shares
currently
being
offered
and
an
Underwriting
Group
and
to
use
their
best
efforts
to
maintain
an
orderly
market
in
the
rights
evidenced
by
the
subscription
warrants
and
the
Company
agreed
to
pay
Dominion
and
Ames,
for
such
services,
an
aggregate
commission
(italics
throughout
these
notes
added)
of
$24,150.
(ii)
(iii)
.
.
.
(iv)
Dominion
and
Ames
agreed:
to
purchase
from
the
Company
at
the
price
of
$32.50
per
share
all
of
the
shares
currently
being
offered
and
not
subscribed
for
pursuant
to
the
subscription
warrants
at
the
expiry
of
the
subscription
period.
.
.
.’’
The
1961
prospectus
(A-6)
does
not
materially
differ,
except,
as
already
noted,
that
the
expression
“aggregate
commission”?
of
$24,150
in
the
1959
one
now
becomes
an
aggregate
‘‘fee’’
of
$121,654.
I
do
not
attach
paramount
importance
to
this
varied
expression,
holding
‘‘commission’’
to
be
much
truer
to
the
facts
and
quite
in
accordance
with
the
definition
of
the
word
found
in
Black’s
Law
Dictionary
(1951,
4th
ed.,
V°
Commission,
p.
339)
:
“The
recompense
or
reward
of
an
agent,
factor,
broker
or
bailee,
when
the
same
is
calculated
as
a
percentage
on
the
amount
of
his
transactions
or
on
the
profit
to
the
principal.”
Though
the
percentage
ratio
or
margin
of
profit
remained
undivulged,
the
two
sums
of
$24,150
and
$121,654
not
in
round
figures
suggest
clearly
enough
a
basis
of
computation.
A
stronger
reason
derives
from
the
services
attributed
to
the
Underwriters
by
subsections
5(a)
and
6(a)
of
the
plea
‘‘in
forming
and
managing
an
Underwriting
Group
and
Soliciting
Dealers
Group
(or
Facilitating
Group
in
6(a))
to
facilitate
subscriptions
for
the
new
common
shares
.
.
.
and
in
consideration
of
the
agreement
by
the
Underwriters
to
use
their
best
efforts
to
maintain
an
orderly
market
in
the
rights
evidenced
by
the
subscription
warrants”.
All
similar
assistance
and
endeavours
on
the
Underwriters’
part
are
nothing
but
services
rendered
in
the
actual
sale
and
disposal
of
the
shares
for
which
they
were
paid
by
the
taxpayer
‘fan
aggregate
commission”
or
“aggregate
fee’’
as
dealers
in
securities.
Since
these
disbursements
fall
within
the
exclusion
written
in
Section
11(1)
(cb)
(iii),
the
appellant
cannot
succeed
on
this
point.
2.
Amounts
of
$46,738.89
and
$121,980
are
claimed
as
deductible
in
sections
5(c)
and
6(c)
of
the
Notice
of
Appeal
‘‘in
consideration
for
the
services
of
the
Underwriters
for
the
performance
of
all
administrative
and
clerical
work
involved
in
processing
warrants
tendered
by
shareholders
in
the
course
of
exercising
their
rights
to
subscribe
for
and
purchase
the
new
common
shares
of
the
Appellant
.
.
.’’
Both
parties
agreed
that
this
related
to
clauses
12
of
exhibits
A-4
and
A-7,
the
‘‘Agreement
Letters’?
of
November
23,
1959
(first
issue
of
shares)
and
June
7,
1961
(second
issue).
I
am
quoting
from
ex.
A-4:
“12.
The
Company
as
soon
as
practicable
after
the
expiration
of
the
Subscription
Offer,
shall
pay
a
commission
of
17724
(12%^
in
A-7)
to
each
member
of
the
Soliciting
Dealer
Group
for
each
common
share
for
which
such
member
procures
a
subscription,
provided
such
procurement
is
evidenced
by
the
appearance
of
the
name
of
the
firm
in
the
blank
space
provided
in
the
subscription
form
on
the
face
of
the
warrant.
Payment
will
be
made
to
the
head
office
of
such
firm.’’
Mr.
Warren
Hurst
himself,
in
cross-examination,
had
to
admit
the
wide
discrepancy
between
the
motivations
advanced
in
the
written
plea
and
the
text
just
recited;
adding
that
the
company
paid
these
commissions
to
various
brokerage
firms
by
means
of
260
cheques
in
1960
and
92
for
the
1961
issue
of
stock.
In
this
second
instance,
namely
the
issue
raised
in
paragraphs
5(c)
and
6(c)
of
the
appeal,
the
entitlement
to
a
monetary
reward
on
a
percentage
ratio
uniquely
depends
on
a
perfected
sale,
bearing
no
relation
whatever
to
the
amount
of
pain
or
trouble
if
unsuccessfully
exerted,
and
in
this
connection
“commission”
or
‘‘fee’’
are
absolute
synonyms.
Here
again
it
is
beyond
doubt
that
such
commissions
were
earned
by
individual
members
of
the
Soliciting
Dealer
Group
or
Facilitating
Group
on
account
of
services
rendered
.
.
.
as
salesman
.
.
.
or
a
dealer
in
securities
in
the
course
of
.
.
.
selling
the
shares
”
of
the
appellant,
and
are,
therefore,
assessable
to
income
tax
according
to
Section
11(1)
(cb)
(iii).
The
appellant
frequently
invoked
ruling
No.
18
of
the
Toronto
Stock
Exchange,
under
date
of
April
28,
1959,
filed
as
ex.
A-11,
specifically
alluded
to
in
paragraph
5(c)
of
the
Notice
of
Appeal.
It
indeed
appears
that
the
‘‘service
charges
on
exercising
rights”
therein
foreseen
only
apply
as
between
a
salesman
or
dealer
and
his
personal
client,
a
buyer
of
shares.
I
am
unable
to
find
in
the
agreements
or
prospectuses
any
stipulation
linking
ruling
18
to
the
company.
If,
perchance,
it
did,
then,
its
provisions
would
conflict
nevertheless
with
the
relevant
statuatory
enactments
and,
inasmuch,
be
of
no
avail.
For
the
reasons
above,
this
appeal
should
be
dismissed
with
all
taxable
costs
against
the
appellant
company.