Rip,
T.C.C.J.:—Jaans
Leasing
Ltd.
("Jaans")
paid
both
cash
and
stock
dividends
to
its
shareholders
in
1982.
At
the
time
the
dividends
were
paid
Jaans
had
satisfied
all
past
assessments
for
its
1975
to
1981
taxation
years.
After
1982
reassessments
of
tax
were
made
increasing
Jaans'
liability
under
the
Income
Tax
Act,
R.S.C.
1952,
c.
148
(am.
S.C.
1970-71-72,
c.
63)
(the
"Act")
for
amongst
other
years,
its
1979,
1980
and
1981
taxation
years.
The
Minister
of
National
Revenue
("Minister")
assessed
each
of
Algoa
Trust
and
116488
Canada
Inc.
(”
Canada")
pursuant
to
section
160
of
the
Act
making
them
jointly
and
severally
liable
with
Jaans
for
the
latter's
liability
under
the
Act
to
the
extent
of
the
value
of
the
dividends
each
received
in
1982.
The
appellants
have
appealed
the
assessments
on
the
basis
that
the
payments
of
dividends
did
not
constitute
a
transfer
of
property
within
the
meaning
of
section
160
of
the
Act
and,
in
the
alternative,
the
appellants
gave
consideration
to
Jaans
for
the
dividends
received.
The
appellants
also
questioned
the
applicability
of
paragraph
160(1)(e)
with
respect
to
liabilities
incurred
prior
to
November
13,
1981,
when
that
provision
took
effect.
The
appeals
were
heard
on
common
evidence.
Mr.
Joseph
Schlesinger,
C.A.
("Schlesinger")
testified
for
both
appellants.
Schlesinger
is
a
partner
in
the
auditing
firm
that
audited
Jaans’
accounts
and
at
all
relevant
times
worked
closely
with
the
directors
of
Jaans.
Jaans
was
incorporated
under
the
laws
of
Canada.
Its
fiscal
periods
ended
on
December
31.
At
all
relevant
times
Jaans
was
a
corporation
carrying
on
an
active
business
and
during
the
years
1975
to
1982
inclusive
paid
dividends
to
its
shareholders.
Algoa
Trust
was
the
sole
shareholder
of
Jaans,
owning
103
common
shares,
from
July
13,
1977
to
December
17,
1982.
In
1981
the
annual
dividend
was
slightly
above
annual
earnings
and
in
1982
dividends
were
substantially
above
annual
earnings.
In
1981
the
amount
of
dividends,
was
$78,000.
In
1982
the
dividends
declared
and
paid
aggregated
$228,000,
of
which
$78,000
was
declared
and
paid
in
May
($40,000)
and
September
($38,000).
In
his
budget
speech
of
November
12,
1981,
the
Minister
of
Finance
amended
Part
II
of
the
Act
that
is,
sections
181
and
182,
to
impose
a
tax
on
a
corporation
paying
a
dividend
out
of
its
small
business
income.
Schlesinger
testified
Jaans'
professional
advisers
recommended
Jaans
pay
dividends
on
active
business
income
earned
prior
to
1982
to
a
corporate
shareholder
so
as
to
avoid
the
Part
II
tax
in
future
years
on
dividends
paid
out
of
such
income.
Thus,
on
December
17,
1982,
Canada
was
incorporated
and
effective
the
same
day
Algoa
Trust
transferred
its
103
common
shares
in
Jaans
to
Canada
in
exchange
for
103
common
shares
of
Canada.
By
certificate
of
amendment,
issued
on
December
20,
1982,
Jaans'
authorized
capital
was
increased
by
the
addition
of
an
“unlimited
number
of
nine
per
cent
non-cumulative
redeemed
[sic]
preferred
shares".
On
December
21,
1982,
the
directors
of
Jaans
declared
a
stock
dividend
of
$150,000
and
caused
to
be
issued
to
Canada
15,000
fully
paid
preferred
shares
in
the
capital
stock,
having
a
stated
capital
of
ten
dollars
per
share,
that
is,
a
stated
capital
of
$150,000
for
the
15,000
shares.
As
early
as
August,
1982
the
Minister
had
informed
the
directors
of
Jaans
that
its
tax
returns
for
1975
to
1978
inclusive
were
being
audited
and
on
or
about
September
9,
1982
an
agreement
between
Jaans
and
the
corporation
associated
with
it
was
filed
with
the
Minister
allocating
no
part
of
the
"business
limit"
and
“total
business
limit"
for
those
years
to
Jaans.
By
notices
dated
January
17,
1983
Jaans
was
reassessed
pursuant
to
sections
125
and
127
of
the
Act
for
1975
to
1978
in
accordance
with
the
agreement.
For
similar
reasons
Jaans
was
also
reassessed
tax
on
August
30,
1984
for
its
1979,
1980
and
1981
taxation
years.
Jaans
had
paid
all
taxes
assessed
for
taxation
years
1975
to
1979
inclusive;
Jaans'
liability
to
the
fisc
for
which
the
appellants
are
jointly
and
severally
liable
is
for
taxes
for
1980
and
1981
aggregating
$21,952.37
and
interest
of
$66,292.45
with
respect
to
taxation
years
1978
to
1982
inclusive.
The
total
liability
of
Jaans
is
$88,244.82.
Both
parties
called
expert
witnesses
to
testify
as
to
the
fair
market
value
of
the
issued
shares
of
Jaans
before
and
after
the
declaration
and
payment
of
the
stock
dividend
on
December
21,
1982.
The
conclusion
of
both
experts,
Richard
Wise,
C.A.,
("Wise")
for
the
appellants
and
Jacques
Pelletier
("Pelletier")
for
the
Minister,
was
that
a
potential
buyer
of
all
the
capital
stock
of
Jaans
on
December
21,
1982
would
have
paid
the
same
amount
for
the
issued
shares
of
Jaans
both
before
and
after
the
payment
of
the
stock
dividend.
The
experts
also
agreed
that
as
a
result
of
the
payment
of
the
stock
dividend
the
value
of
the
common
share
was
reduced
by
$150,000.
Wise
opined
that
the
15,000
preferred
shares
had
a
value
of
$150,000;
Pelletier
agreed
the
preferred
shares
had
a
value
of
$150,000
to
a
person
not
dealing
with
the
common
shareholders
at
arm's
length
but
less
than
$150,000
to
a
person
dealing
at
arm's
length
with
the
common
shareholders.
A
collection
officer
with
Revenue
Canada,
Normand
Gélinas,
("Gélinas")
testified
for
the
Minister
with
respect
to
payments
of
tax
made
by
or
on
behalf
of
Jaans.
Gélinas
agreed
that
on
December
21,
1982,
the
records
of
Revenue
Canada
indicated
Jaans
owed
no
money.
The
appellants'
counsel
produced
through
Gélinas
as
Exhibit
A-3
a
bundle
of
photostatic
copies
of
Revenue
Canada
remittance
forms
sent
by
Jaans
to
Revenue
Canada,
photostatic
copies
of
cheques
drawn
on
Jaans’
bank
account
payable
to
the
Receiver
General
of
Canada
in
the
amounts
indicated
on
the
remittance
form,
as
well
as
a
copy
of
a
Revenue
Canada
computer
print-out
indicating
payments
by
Jaans
for
taxation
years
1979
to
1984
inclusive.
On
six
remittance
forms
there
are
handwritten
changes
to
the
fiscal
period
for
which
the
particular
payment
is
indicated.
For
example,
the
year
in
the
remittance
form
for
a
payment
for
the
fiscal
period
ending
“31
Dec.
81”
was
changed
by
hand
to
“83”
and
the
payment
of
$11,200
appears
to
have
been
allocated
to
the
1983
fiscal
period.
Gélinas
was
unable
to
indicate
on
whose
instructions
the
alterations
were
made.
Counsel
for
the
appellants
advised
that
while
his
clients
were
prepared
to
accept
the
unaltered
remittance
forms
directing
payment
for
the
relevant
fiscal
period
as
valid
they
were
not
prepared
to
acknowledge
that
Jaans
had
made,
or
instructed
Revenue
Canada,
to
alter
the
fiscal
periods
on
the
six
forms.
Obviously
the
interest
assessed
Jaans
would
be
less
if
credit
were
given
to
earlier
payments.
Counsel
queried
if,
in
the
circumstances,
such
handwritten
alterations
to
the
remittance
forms
could
be
held
against
the
appellants
who
are
third
parties.
I
agree
that
when
the
Minister
is
unable
to
reply
to
a
question
with
respect
to
facts
that
ought
to
be
within
his
knowledge,
the
appellants
ought
to
get
the
benefit
of
doubt.
Payments
should
be
applied
to
the
earlier
fiscal
periods
indicated
on
the
remittance
forms
for
the
purpose
of
calculating
interest.
The
Minister,
by
notices
dated
November
20,
1989,
assessed
Algoa
Trust
for
$78,000
and
Canada
for
$89,424.17
pursuant
to
subsection
160(1)
of
the
Act.
On
November
19,
1992,
12
days
before
trial,
the
Minister
mailed
notices
to
the
appellants
reassessing
Algoa
Trust
the
same
amount
he
did
on
November
20,
1989
and
reducing
the
amount
assessed
Canada
to
$88,244.82.
Both
notices
of
assessment
sent
to
Canada
stated
the
liability
under
subsection
160(1)
of
the
Act
was
in
respect
of
a
transfer
"on
or
about
December
21,
1992”
from
Jaans
to
Canada
of
15,000
preferred
shares.
The
Minister
reassessed
in
view
of
the
Court's
decision
in
Leung
v.
M.N.R.,
[1991]
2
C.T.C.
2268,
91
D.T.C.
1020
and
attached
particulars
to
Jaans'
liability
to
each
assessment.
The
appellants’
counsel
agreed
the
appeals
proceed
as
scheduled.
The
relevant
portions
of
section
160
read
as
follows:
(1)
Where
a
person
has,
on
or
after
the
1st
day
of
May,
1951,
transferred
property,
either
directly
or
indirectly,
by
means
of
a
trust
or
by
any
other
means
whatever,
to
(c)
a
person
with
whom
he
was
not
dealing
at
arm's
length,
the
following
rules
apply:
(e)
the
transferee
and
transferor
are
jointly
and
severally
liable
to
pay
under
this
Act
an
amount
equal
to
the
lesser
of
(i)
the
amount,
if
any,
by
which
the
fair
market
value
of
the
property
at
the
time
it
was
transferred
exceeds
the
fair
market
value
at
that
time
of
the
consideration
given
for
the
property,
and
(ii)
the
aggregate
of
all
amounts
each
of
which
is
an
amount
that
the
transferor
is
liable
to
pay
under
this
Act
in
or
in
respect
of
the
taxation
year
in
which
the
property
was
transferred
or
any
preceding
taxation
year,
but
nothing
in
this
subsection
shall
be
deemed
to
limit
the
liability
of
the
transferor
under
any
other
provision
of
this
Act.
(2)
The
Minister
may
at
any
time
assess
a
transferee
in
respect
of
any
amount
payable
by
virtue
of
this
section
and
the
provisions
of
this
Division
are
applicable
mutatis
mutandis
in
respect
of
an
assessment
made
under
this
section
as
though
it
had
been
made
under
section
152.
Subsection
160(1)
was
amended
by
1980-81-82-83,
c.
140,
s.
107(1)
and
paragraph
(c)
is
applicable
with
respect
to
transfers
of
property
occurring
after
November
12,
1981.
Submissions
of
appellants
Counsel
for
the
appellants
made
three
submissions:
(a)
The
declaration
and
payment
of
a
dividend
by
its
nature
cannot
in
normal
circumstances
as
in
the
appeals
at
bar
constitute
a
transfer
of
property
within
the
meaning
of
that
term
in
subsection
160(1);
(b)
Even
if
the
Court
concludes
a
dividend
constitutes
a
transfer
of
property
for
the
purposes
of
subsection
160(1),
such
a
transfer
of
property
is
done
for
consideration
and
in
the
absence
of
evidence
to
the
contrary,
the
consideration
is
equal
to
the
dividend
paid;
and
(c)
Jaans
was
not
liable
to
pay
any
amount
under
the
Act
in
or
in
respect
of
1982
or
any
preceding
year
at
the
time
dividends
were
paid
to
Algoa
Trust
and
Canada.
(a)
Dividend
not
a
transfer
of
property
After
reviewing
briefly
the
legislative
history
of
section
160,
in
particular
the
enactment
of
paragraph
160(1)(e),
counsel
stated
that
the
fisc
did
not
require
any
provision
in
the
Act
to
attach
improper
transfers
of
property
by
its
debtors
since
it
had
available
in
Quebec,
for
example,
the
right
to
an
action
Paulienne
under
the
provisions
of
articles
1032
to
1040
of
the
Civil
Code
of
Quebec
as
well
as
oppression
remedies
such
as
section
241
of
the
Canada
Business
Corporations
Act
with
respect
to
federally
incorporated
companies.
Counsel
declared
that
Dussault,
T.C.C.J.,
in
Fournier
v.
M.N.R.,
[1991]
1
C.T.C.
2699,
91
D.T.C.
743,
assumed
the
payment
of
a
dividend
was
a
transfer
of
property
since
that
was
not
an
issue
before
him.
Dividends
had
been
paid
to
a
shareholder
who
owned
45
per
cent
of
the
issued
shares
of
a
private
corporation
and
who
was
not
related
to,
nor
otherwise
could
have
been
said
to
be
dealing
at
arm's
length
with,
the
majority
shareholder
who
held
55
per
cent
of
the
shares.
The
question
before
Dussault,
T.C.C.J.
was
whether,
as
a
matter
of
fact,
the
corporation
was
dealing
with
the
minority
shareholder
at
arm's
length
when
it
paid
him
the
dividend.
The
Court
held
that
on
the
facts
they
were
not
dealing
at
arm's
length
at
the
time
and
confirmed
the
assessment
against
the
minority
shareholder
under
section
160.
Counsel
also
referred
me
to
the
Supreme
Court
of
Canada
decision
of
McClurg
v.
M.N.R.,
[1990]
3
S.C.R.
1020,
[1991]
1
C.T.C.
169,
91
D.T.C.
5001
for
the
authority
that
the
payment
of
a
dividend
in
certain
circumstances
is
not
a
transfer
of
property.
The
McClurg
appeal
arose
out
of
an
assessment
against
the
taxpayer
that
a
portion
of
dividends
declared
under
a
discretionary
dividend
clause
to
one
class
of
shareholders
to
the
exclusion
of
other
classes
and
received
by
his
wife
should
be
included
in
the
taxpayer's
income
pursuant
to
subsection
56(2)
of
the
Act.
Mr.
McClurg
and
his
partner,
who
were
the
only
directors
of
their
company,
each
held
400
Class
A
common
shares
and
37,000
Class
C
preferred
shares.
Their
respective
wives
each
held
100
Class
B
shares.
During
the
taxation
years
involved,
the
corporation
paid
dividends
of
$100
per
share
on
the
Class
B
shares
so
that
the
taxpayer's
wife
received
$10,000.
The
corporation
did
not
declare
any
other
dividends
during
the
taxation
years.
The
Minister
reassessed
the
taxpayer's
income
for
the
taxation
years
on
the
basis
that
80
per
cent
of
the
amount
paid
to
his
wife
was
attributable
to
the
taxpayer
pursuant
to
subsection
56(2)
of
the
Act.
In
the
Minister’s
view
the
dividends
declared
should
have
been
paid
proportionately
on
all
common
shares
and
no
distinction
should
have
been
made
between
the
Class
A
common
and
Class
B
common
shares.
The
Minister
based
its
assessment
on
the
basis
that
the
dividends
paid
to
the
minority
shareholders
were
in
substance
an
indirect
payment
to
the
majority
shareholders,
and
should
be
attributed
to
the
principal
shareholders
and
taxed
in
their
hands.
The
Supreme
Court
dismissed
the
Minister's
appeal
and
concluded
that
subsection
56(2)
does
not
generally
apply
to
corporate
dividends.
A
dividend
payment
cannot
reasonably
be
considered
to
be
a
benefit
diverted
from
a
taxpayer
to
a
third
party
within
the
contemplation
of
subsection
56(2).
Dickson,
C.J.,
as
he
then
was,
wrote
at
page
184
(D.T.C.
5011-12):
I
agree
with
that
conclusion,
and
with
the
skepticism
expressed
by
Le
Dain,
J.
in
Perrault
v.
The
Queen,
[1979]
1
F.C.
155,
[1978]
C.T.C.
395,
78
D.T.C.
6272
(F.C.A.),
where
he
questioned
whether
the
words
of
subsection
56(2)
"were
intended
to
apply
to
the
payment
of
a
dividend"
(at
403
(D.T.C.
6278;
F.C.
165-66)).
While
it
is
always
open
to
the
courts
to
"pierce
the
corporate
veil”
in
order
to
prevent
parties
from
benefitting
from
increasingly
complex
and
intricate
tax
avoidance
techniques,
in
my
view
a
dividend
payment
does
not
fall
within
the
scope
of
subsection
56(2).
The
indirect
payments
rule
in
subsection
56(2)
of
the
Act
was
designed
to
prevent
tax
avoidance
by
means
of
a
payment
to
a
third
party
and
the
section
cannot
reasonably
have
been
intended
to
cover
benefits
conferred
for
adequate
consideration
in
the
context
of
a
legitimate
business
relationship,
the
Court
stated.
Had
the
dividend
not
been
declared
and
paid
to
the
third
party,
it
would
not
otherwise
have
been
received
by
the
taxpayer
because
the
funds
would
have
been
retained
by
the
corporation.
The
majority
of
the
Supreme
Court
took
the
view
that
although
subsection
56(2)
does
not
generally
apply
to
the
declaration
of
corporate
dividends,
its
application
on
the
particular
facts
would
also
have
been
contrary
to
the
commercial
reality
of
the
particular
transaction.
On
the
facts
of
McClurg
the
arrangement
constituted
a
legitimate
business
relationship.
The
taxpayer's
wife
played
an
important
role
in
financing
of
the
corporation
by
providing
her
personal
guarantees
on
the
corporate
loans.
She
also
worked
as
an
administrative
assistant
in
her
husband's
company
and
was
paid
a
small
annual
salary.
The
Court
was
of
the
view
that
the
dividend
payments
to
her
represented
a
legitimate
quid
quo
pro
for
her
efforts
and
risk.
The
majority
of
the
Court
was
of
the
view
that
subsection
56(2)
draws
a
distinction
between
arm's
length
and
non-arm's
length
transactions.
As
Dickson,
C.J.,
as
he
then
was,
stated
at
page
184
(D.T.C.
5012-13):
In
my
opinion,
if
a
distinction
is
to
be
drawn
in
the
application
of
subsection
56(2)
between
arms
length
and
non
arms
length
transactions,
it
should
be
made
between
the
exercise
of
a
discretionary
power
to
distribute
dividends
when
the
non-
arms
length
shareholder
has
made
no
contribution
to
the
company
(in
which
case
subsection
56(1)
may
be
applicable),
and
those
cases
in
which
a
legitimate
contribution
has
been
made.
A
minority
of
the
Court
held
that
the
discretionary
dividend
provision
was
invalid
and
that
a
portion
of
the
dividends
received
by
the
taxpayer's
wife
should
be
attributed
for
tax
purposes
to
her
husband.
La
Forest,
J.,
in
his
minority
opinion,
noted
the
majority's
view
that
the
taxpayer's
wife’s
contribution
to
the
business
was
somehow
relevant
in
an
assessment
of
the
tax
consequences
of
the
dividend.
In
his
view,
her
contribution
had
nothing
to
do
with
the
determination
of
the
tax
issue.
A
dividend
is
received
by
virtue
of
the
ownership
of
shares
in
the
corporation.
It
is
a
return
on
capital
that
attaches
to
the
share
and
is
no
way
dependent
on
the
conduct
of
the
particular
shareholder.
He
turned
to
a
specific
analysis
of
the
constituent
elements
of
subsection
56(2)
and
adopted
the
reasoning
of
Cattanach,
J.,
of
the
Federal
Court
in
the
case
Murphy
v.
The
Queen,
[1980]
C.T.C.
386,
80
D.T.C.
6314
(F.C.T.D.).
La
Forest,
J.,
was
of
the
view
a
dividend
payment
is
a
transfer
of
property.
Subsection
56(2),
appellants’
counsel
argued,
is
virtually
identical
to
section
160.
Both
provisions
refer
to
the
phrase
"transfer
of
property".
In
subsection
56(2)
that
phrase
triggers
a
benefit
on
a
transferee
which
in
turn
adds
the
amount
of
the
benefit
to
the
transferor's
income.
While
the
word
"benefit"
is
not
present
in
subsection
160(1),
a
benefit
in
fact
is
received
by
a
transferee
when
he
or
she
is
transferred
property,
he
said.
Counsel
added
section
160
is
even
more
restrictive
than
subsection
56(2).
There
is
no”
built
in
test"
in
section
160
as
there
is
in
subsection
56(2):
there
is
no
requirement
in
the
former
provision
that
the
transfer
of
property
be
for
anyone's
benefit.
One
must
look
at
the
purpose
and
object
of
subsection
160(1)
and
not
simply
read
literally
its
words,
he
declared.
Hence
if
subsection
56(2)
does
not
generally
apply
to
dividends,
neither
does
section
160.
In
support
of
his
position
counsel
stated
that
if
subsection
160(1)
applied
to
dividends
innocent
shareholders
may
be
affected.
He
offered
the
example
of
a
corporation
managed
by
Canadian
resident
directors
which
pays
a
dividend
to
a
non-resident
shareholder
who
owns
75
per
cent
of
the
shares
of
the
company.
Unknown
to
the
non-resident
shareholder
is
that
the
corporation
has
recently
been
assessed
tax
under
the
Act.
If
the
corporation
is
liable
for
tax
under
the
Act,
the
unsuspecting
shareholder
would
be
liable
under
section
160
if
the
section
is
strictly
interpreted,
he
declared.
For
this
reason
Parliament
could
not
have
intended
section
160
to
apply
to
dividends.
(b)
Consideration
for
dividend
A
dividend
is
paid
to
shareholders
for
consideration,
counsel
submitted.
When
a
person
subscribes
for
shares
in
a
corporation
a
bargain
is
struck
between
that
person
and
the
corporation
that
in
return
for
the
investment
the
corporation
will
pay
dividends
to
the
shareholder.
The
payment
of
a
dividend,
if
a
transfer
of
property,
is
made
by
a
corporation
to
its
shareholder
for
consideration
equal
to
the
amount
of
the
dividend
paid.
Also,
counsel
submitted,
on
declaration
of
a
dividend
by
directors
of
a
corporation,
the
shareholder
obtains
an
"action
en
droit”
(right
of
action)
against
the
corporation
to
sue
for
an
amount
equal
to
the
dividend
amount
if
not
paid
the
dividend
when
it
is
payable.
A
shareholder
surrenders
this
right
when
he
or
she
receives
the
dividend.
This,
too,
is
consideration
given
to
the
corporation
in
return
for
the
dividend.
With
respect
to
the
stock
dividend,
counsel
argued
that
as
a
result
of
the
stock
dividend
of
15,000
preferred
shares,
the
value
of
the
common
shares
owned
by
Canada
was
reduced;
the
reduction
in
value
of
its
common
stock
was
consideration
given
by
the
owner
of
the
common
stock
for
the
receipt
of
the
preferred
stock.
Also,
to
any
extent
Canada
was
impoverished
as
a
result
of
the
stock
dividend,
the
shareholder
was
not
enriched.
In
D'Aoust
v.
M.N.R.,
[1990]
1
C.T.C.
2360,
90
D.T.C.
1253,
at
page
2363
(D.T.C.
1256),
Garon,
T.C.C.J.
stated
:
.
.
if
paragraph
160(1)(e)
is
to
apply,
the
transferor
must
have
been
impoverished
by
the
transfer,
and
the
transferee
correspondingly
enriched.
(c)
Existence
of
liability
Counsel
also
submitted
that
timing
is
vital
in
the
application
of
subsection
160(1).
On
December
21,
1982,
Jaans
had
paid
all
amounts
assessed
against
it
up
to
that
day.
Neither
in
its
accounts
or
in
the
accounts
of
Revenue
Canada
was
there
any
indication
that
Jaans
was
liable
under
the
Act.
Appellants’
counsel,
argued
that
third
parties
such
as
the
appellants
should
not
be
jointly
and
severally
liable
for
liabilities
under
the
Act
pursuant
to
subsection
160(1)
when,
at
the
time
property
is
transferred
to
them,
the
transferor
had
satisfied
all
assessments
issued
to
time
of
transfer.
He
referred
to
the
following
comments
of
Noel,
J.
in
The
Queen
v.
Simard-Beaudry
Inc.,
[1971]
F.C.
396,
71
D.T.C.
5511
(F.C.T.D.
)
at
D.T.C.
page
5515:
.
.
.
the
general
scheme
of
the
Income
Tax
Act
indicates
that
the
taxpayer's
debt
is
created
by
his
taxable
income,
not
by
an
assessment
or
reassessment.
In
fact,
the
taxpayer's
liability
results
from
the
Act
and
not
from
the
assessment.
In
principle,
the
debt
comes
into
existence
the
moment
the
income
is
earned,
and
even
if
the
assessment
is
made
one
or
more
years
after
the
taxable
income
is
earned,
the
debt
is
supposed
to
originate
at
that
point.
[He]
contended
that
these
comments
must
be
limited
to
the
taxpayer
whose
own
liability
is
in
question.
Subsection
160(1)
does
not
contemplate
a
third
party
being
affected
by
assessments
issued
subsequent
to
the
transfer
of
property
he
insisted.
Where
a
court
is
concerned
with
a
collections
procedure
in
a
statute,
an
assessment
must
be
issued
and
when
there
is
no
assessment
subsection
160(1)
does
not
apply.
Counsel
referred
to
The
Queen
v.
Cyrus
J.
Moulton
Ltd.,
[1976]
C.T.C.
416,
76
D.T.C.
6239.
In
support
of
his
position
counsel
also
cited
the
reasons
for
judgment
of
the
Exchequer
Court
in
Subsidiaries
Holding
Co.
v.
The
Queen,
[1956]
C.T.C.
240,
56
D.T.C.
1141
where
a
taxpayer
proceeded
by
way
of
petition
of
right
to
obtain
a
refund
on
alleged
overpayment
of
tax
under
the
1948
Act.
In
that
case,
Cameron,
J.
found
that
“the
amounts
of
tax
payable
under
this
Act”
meant
"amounts
of
tax
payable
as
fixed
by
assessment".
However,
Cameron,
J.
applied
the
definition
of
"tax
payable”
found
in
paragraph
127(1)(y)
of
the
1948
Act
in
concluding
in
the
manner
he
did.
Paragraph
127(1)(y)
stated
that
"the
tax
payable
by
a
taxpayer.
.
.
means
the
tax
payable
by
him
as
fixed
by
assessment
Or
reassessment
There
is
no
such
definition
in
the
current
Act.
Counsel
also
referred
the
Court
to
Flemming,
H.J.,
Sr.
Estate
v.
M.N.R.,
[1983]
C.T.C.
321,
83
D.T.C.
5329
where
Cattanach,
J.
stated,
on
page
329
(D.T.C.
5336),
that".
.
.
taxes
do
not
become
payable
before
assessment".
In
Flemming,
however,
the
Court
was
considering
subsections
159(2)
and
(3)
of
the
Act.
Subsection
159(2)
provided
for
certain
persons,
before
distributing
property
under
their
control,
“to
obtain
a
certificate
from
the
Minister
certifying
that
taxes,
interest
or
penalties
that
have
been
assessed
.
.
.
have
been
paid
.
.
."
and
subsection
159(3)
imposed
a
personal
liability
on
those
persons
who
distributed
property
without
the
certificate
"for
the
unpaid
taxes,
interest
and
penalties”.
Reading
subsections
159(2)
and
(3)
together
it
is
clear
that
"the
taxes,
interest
and
penalties"
referred
to
subsection
(3)
refer
to
those
taxes,
interest
and
penalties
"that
have
been
assessed"
referred
to
in
subsection
(2)
and
not
taxes,
interest
and
penalties
that
have
not
been
assessed.
The
reasons
in
Flemming
do
not
assist
him.
Counsel
also
raised
the
argument
that
since
paragraph
160(1)(c)
was
not
a
provision
of
the
Act
for
at
least
two
of
the
taxation
years,
1980
and
1981,
for
which
Jaans
was
liable
for
tax,
and
earlier
years
when
Jaans
was
liable
for
interest
under
the
Act,
the
appellants
as
third
parties
cannot
be
jointly
and
severally
liable
with
Jaans
for
such
debts,
that
is,
debts
created
prior
to
the
creation
of
the
relevant
statutory
provision.
Crown's
submissions
In
his
lengthy
argument
touching
on
numerous
aspects
of
corporate
law,
counsel
for
the
Minister
submitted
that
a
transfer
of
property
by
a
corporation
to
its
shareholder
takes
place
on
the
declaration
of
the
dividend
by
the
directors
of
the
corporation
since
on
declaration
of
the
dividend
the
corporation
becomes
indebted
to
its
shareholders.
The
payment
of
the
dividend
simply
satisfies
the
corporation's
debts
to
its
shareholder.
He
referred
to
the
reasons
for
judgment
of
Jackett,
C.J.,
as
he
then
was,
in
Kennedy
v.
M.N.R.,
[1973]
C.T.C.
437,
73
D.T.C.
5359,
cited
in
The
Queen
v.
Phillips,
[1975]
C.T.C.
250,
75
D.T.C.
5188,
at
page
254
(D.T.C.
5192)
for
the
proposition
that
a
benefit
is
conferred
for
purposes
of
subsection
8(1)
(now
subsection
15(1))
at
the
time
the
debt
is
created
and
not
when
the
debt
is
paid.
Thus
once
the
cash
and
stock
dividends
were
declared
a
transfer
of
property
took
place.
He
also
argued
the
purpose
of
subsection
56(2)
is
to
ensure
that
payments
which
otherwise
would
have
been
received
by
the
taxpayer
are
not
diverted
to
a
third
party
as
an
anti-avoidance
technique.
Subsection
160(1)
has
no
such
purpose
and
one
cannot
make
any
analogy
of
that
provision
to
subsection
56(2).
Thus
the
reasoning
in
McClurg,
supra,
is
not
relevant.
Counsel
submitted
directors
have
no
obligation
to
declare
a
dividend.
The
investment
by
a
shareholder
in
a
corporation
is
not
consideration
given
to
the
corporation
in
return
for
dividends:
In
re
Ganong
Estate
v.
Belyea
et
al.,
[1941]
S.C.R.
125
at
page
135
per
Crocket,
J.
Hence
the
appellants
did
not
give
consideration
to
Jaans
for
any
dividend.
With
respect
to
appellants’
counsel's
submission
that
paragraph
160(1)(e)
was
not
in
force
in
years
prior
to
1982,
Minister's
counsel
stated
that
paragraph
160(1)(e)
was
effective
with
respect
to
transfers
of
property
which
take
place
after
November
12,
1981
and
the
dividends
in
issue
were
declared
after
that
ate.
Analysis
(a)
Consideration
When
a
person
subscribes
for
shares
of
a
corporation
he
or
she
is
paying
theoretically
for
the
acquisition
of
a
share
of
the
ownership
of
the
corporation
and
receives
shares
of
a
class
in
the
capital
stock
of
the
corporation.
The
shareholder
gives
consideration
for
the
shares
and
not
for
what
the
shares
may
bring.
Ownership
of
shares
gives
the
shareholder
certain
rights:
right
to
vote
as
a
shareholder,
right
to
a
distribution
of
capital
on
the
winding-up
of
the
corporation,
right
to
receive
dividends.
(This
list
is
not
meant
to
be
exhaustive.)
When
the
shareholder
receives
a
dividend
it
is
not
as
a
result
of
any
consideration
he
or
she
gave
the
corporation
and
which
the
corporation
is
obliged
to
pay
for
investing.
When
a
shareholder
purchases
shares
he
is
not
purchasing
an
income
right.
A
shareholder
receives
a
dividend
solely
because
the
right
to
a
dividend
is
an
attribute
of
owning
shares.
Directors
of
a
corporation
are
normally
under
no
obligation
to
declare
dividends
and
a
corporation
is
under
no
obligation
to
pay
dividends
on
its
shares
(except
for
certain
preferred
and
special
shares)
notwithstanding
that
generally
an
investor
expects,
or
hopes,
to
receive
dividends
on
the
shares
he
purchases.
Neither
appellant
gave
any
consideration
to
Jaans
for
the
dividends
each
received.
b)
Transfer
of
Property
(i)
Algoa
Trust
The
purpose
of
section
160
is
to
foil
an
attempt
by
a
taxpayer
who
is
liable
to
pay
any
amount
under
the
Act
to
avoid
the
fisc
by
transferring
property
otherwise
available
to
satisfy
the
liability
to
one
of
three
groups
of
persons,
including
a
person
with
whom
he
or
she
was
not
dealing
at
arm's
length.
In
the
case
at
bar
Jaans
had
certain
assets
in
1982.
In
that
year
it
paid
dividends
to
Algoa
Trust
in
the
amount
of
$78,000,
thus
reducing
its
assets.
The
Shorter
Oxford
English
Dictionary
On
Historical
Principles
defines
the
word
"transfer"
as
follows:
1.
To
convey
or
take
from
one
place,
person,
to
another;
to
transmit,
transport;
to
give
or
hand
over
from
one
to
another.
2.
To
convey
or
make
over
(title,
right
or
property)
by
deed
or
legal
process.
The
transfer
of
any
property
is
the
physical
handing-over
of
it
from
one
person
to
another
whether
or
not
it
is
accompanied
by
consideration,
as
in
the
case
of
a
sale
or
by
way
of
gift.
In
St.
Aubyn
v.
A.-G.,
[1952]
A.C.
15
(H.L.)
at
page
53,
Lord
Radcliffe
interpreted
“
transfer”
as
follows:
If
the
word
“transfer”
is
taken
in
its
primary
sense,
a
person
makes
a
transfer
of
property
to
another
person
if
he
does
the
act
or
executes
the
instrument
which
divests
him
of
the
property
and
at
the
same
time
vests
it
in
that
other
person.
In
Fasken
Estate
v.
M.N.R.,
[1948]
C.T.C.
265,
49
D.T.C.
491
(Exch.),
Thorson,
P.
expressed
the
matter
thusly
at
page
279
(D.T.C.
497):
The
word
“transfer”
is
not
a
term
of
art
and
has
not
a
technical
meaning.
It
is
not
necessary
to
a
transfer
of
property
from
a
husband
to
his
wife
that
it
should
be
made
in
any
particular
form
or
that
it
should
be
made
directly.
All
that
is
required
is
that
the
husband
should
so
deal
with
the
property
as
to
divest
himself
of
it
and
vest
it
in
his
wife,
that
is
to
say,
pass
the
property
from
himself
to
her.
The
means
by
which
he
accomplishes
this
result,
whether
direct
or
circuitous,
may
properly
be
called
a
transfer.
When
a
corporation
pays
a
dividend
to
its
shareholders
the
corporation
gives
or
hands
over
property
to
its
shareholders.
Property
is
taken
from
the
patrimony
of
a
corporation
and
placed
in
the
patrimony
of
a
shareholder.
When
the
dividend
is
declared,
the
corporation
becomes
indebted
to
the
shareholder.
When
the
dividend
is
paid,
the
corporation
divests
itself
of
ownership
of
the
money
(or
other
property)
used
to
pay
the
dividend.
In
McClurg,
supra,
the
Supreme
Court
concluded
that
subsection
56(2)
does
not
generally
apply
to
corporate
dividends.
A
payment
of
a
dividend,
on
the
facts
of
McClurg,
cannot
reasonably
be
considered
to
be
a
benefit
diverted
from
one
person
to
another
as
contemplated
by
that
provision.
The
Supreme
Court
stated
the
indirect
payment
rule
in
subsection
56(2)
was
designed
to
prevent
tax
avoidance
by
means
of
a
payment
to
a
third
party
and
the
provision
cannot
reasonably
have
been
intended
to
cover
benefits
for
adequate
consideration
in
the
context
of
a
legitimate
business
relationship.
In
the
view
of
the
Supreme
Court
if
a
dividend
had
not
been
paid
to
Mr.
McClurg
it
would
not
necessarily
have
been
paid
to
her
husband.
No
benefit
due
to
Mr.
McClurg
was
diverted
to
Mrs.
McClurg.
The
corporation
was
not
required
to
make
the
payment
it
made
his
wife
to
Mr.
McClurg.
However
the
purposes
of
subsections
56(2)
and
160(1)
are
different.
Subsection
56(2)
is
found
in
subdivision
d
of
Division
B
of
Part
I
of
the
Act.
Subsection
56(2)
describes
a
source
of
income
not
otherwise
included
in
computing
a
taxpayer's
income
to
be
included
in
that
taxpayer's
income
if
a
payment
or
transfer
of
property
is
made
to
a
person
at
the
taxpayer's
direction
or
concurrence
because
the
taxpayer
desired
that
person
to
enjoy
as
a
benefit
to
the
extent
the
payment
or
transfer
had
been
made
to
the
taxpayer.
Subsection
160(1)
is
not
an
income
inclusion
provision.
It
is
found
in
Division
I
of
Part
I
of
the
Act
which,
amongst
other
things,
sets
out
procedures
and
requirements
for
returns,
assessments,
payment
and
appeals.
Subsection
160(1)
is
included
with
several
provisions,
starting
at
section
153
and
terminating
at
section
163.1,
concerning
payment
of
tax.
The
ability
of
the
Minister
to
collect
amounts
owed
under
the
Act
may
be
seriously
prejudiced
when
a
debtor
conveys
property
to
another
for
no
or
little
consideration.
In
McClurg,
supra,
Dickson,
C.].,
as
he
then
was,
stated
that
had
the
dividend
not
been
declared
and
paid
to
the
third
party,
it
would
have
been
retained
by
the
corporation;
the
taxpayer
would
not
have
received
the
funds.
It
is
precisely
because
the
dividend
was
paid
to
Algoa
Trust
that
Jaans
did
not
retain
funds
to
satisfy
its
liabilities
under
the
Act.
The
payment
of
a
dividend
in
money
or
other
property
is
a
transfer
of
property
within
the
meaning
of
subsection
160(1)
of
the
Act.
The
corporation
is
impoverished
and
its
shareholders
are
enriched.
I
fail
to
see
the
reason
why
a
dividend
is
not
a
transfer
of
property.
I
do
realize
an
unknowing
shareholder
not
dealing
at
arm's
length
with
the
corporation
may
become
jointly
and
severally
liable
under
the
Act
for
the
liability
of
the
corporation
as
a
result
of
my
interpretation
of
subsection
160(1).
If
this
is
an
unintended
effect
of
that
provision
—
and
I
am
not
sure
it
is
—
Parliament
surely
will
consider
remedying
the
problem.
Jaans
transferred
property
to
Algoa
Trust
in
1982.
(ii)
116488
Canada
Inc.
The
payment
of
a
stock
dividend
is
not
a
transfer
of
property.
The
shares
authorized
in
a
corporation's
articles
of
incorporation
are
not
assets
of
the
corporation.
When
a
person
subscribes
for
the
shares
and
pays
the
corporation
for
the
shares,
the
shares
are
issued
to
that
person
and
recorded
in
the
share
registry
of
the
corporation.
The
payment
is
consideration
for
the
shares.
The
issue
of
shares
is
not
a
transfer
since
the
corporation
has
not
divested
itself
of
its
property:
the
shares
were
never
owned
by
the
corporation.
Assets
are
transferred
for
purposes
of
section
160
only
at
the
time
one
person
is
divested
of
ownership
of
property
and
another
person
is
vested
in
that
property.
Prior
to
issue
and
during
issue
the
shares
of
a
corporation
are
not
property
of
that
corporation.
When
a
corporation
pays
a
stock
dividend
to
its
shareholders
it
issues
shares
to
those
shareholders.
A
corporation's
paid-up
capital
is
increased
when
it
issues
shares.
The
corporation
is
usually
enriched,
not
impoverished,
when
shares
are
issued
for
consideration;
when
a
corporation
issues
a
stock
dividend
it
is
neither
enriched
nor
impoverished.
The
value
of
the
assets
of
the
corporation
are
not
reduced
on
the
payment
of
a
stock
dividend.
As
a
result
of
the
stock
dividend
there
are
changes
in
the
corporation's
balance
sheet;
for
example,
accounts
comprising
shareholders
equity
are
adjusted
to
reflect
the
increase
in
paid-up
capital.
These
accounts,
however,
are
not
assets
of
the
corporation.
In
the
reply
to
the
notice
of
appeal
the
Deputy
Attorney
General
of
Canada
stated
that
on
February
5,
1983
Jaans
redeemed
from
Canada
7,800
of
the
15,000
preferred
shares
issued
in
December
21,
1982
for
$78,000
and
argued
that
the
payment
of
the
stock
dividend
and
the
subsequent
redemption
of
the
preferred
shares
were
part
of
a
series
of
transactions
whereby
property
was
transferred
by
Jaans
to
Canada
for
no
consideration.
This
may
be
so.
However
both
the
notice
of
assessment
dated
November
19,
1992,
with
respect
to
the
assessment
under
appeal,
and
the
notice
dated
November
20,
1989
state
Canada's
liability
is
in
respect
of
a
transfer
to
it,
on
or
about
December
21,
1982
of
15,000
preferred
shares
from
Jaans.
There
is
no
indication
in
any
document
which
is
part
of
the
assessment
that,
in
assessing,
the
Minister
considered
the
redemption
of
the
preferred
shares
to
be
part
of
the
transaction
transferring
property
to
Canada.
The
notices
of
assessment
refer
only
to
the
payment
of
the
stock
dividend
and
Canada
appealed
relying
on
facts
contained
in
the
relevant
notice
of
assessment.
In
fact
the
amount
assessed
Canada,
$88,244.82,
assumes
the
payment
of
the
stock
dividend
was
the
transfer
of
property.
If
the
Minister
considered
the
redemption
of
the
preferred
shares
as
the
final
transaction
in
the
transfer
of
property
he
did
not
assess
on
that
basis;
had
the
Minister
so
assessed
he
would
have
assessed
Canada
$78,000,
the
amount
it
received
from
Jaans
on
the
redemption
of
the
7,800
preferred
shares.
In
a
reply
to
notice
of
appeal,
facts
not
considered
by
the
Minister
in
assessing
may
be
alleged
and
the
onus
is
on
the
Minister
to
prove
those
facts.
However,
the
Minister
cannot
allege
new
facts
in
his
pleadings
which
change
the
very
foundation
of
the
assessment
which,
in
the
appeal
at
bar,
is
the
time
and
nature
of
a
purported
transfer
of
property.
For
this
reason,
when
Canada's
counsel
objected,
I
did
not
permit
Minister's
counsel
to
adduce
evidence
and
argue
the
redemption
was
part
of
a
series
of
transactions
transferring
property
from
Jaans
to
Canada.
I
am
also
of
the
view
that
for
purposes
of
subsection
160(1),
property
is
not
transferred
when
a
dividend
is
declared
by
the
directors.
The
funds
(or
property)
represented
by
the
dividend
are
under
the
control
of
a
corporation
until
the
corporation
pays
the
dividend
to
the
shareholder;
only
when
the
funds
or
property
leave
the
control
of
the
corporation
is
there
a
transfer
of
property.
Jaans
cannot
be
said
to
have
transferred
property
to
Canada
of
subsection
160(1)
when
it
paid
a
stock
dividend
in
1982.
(c)
Existence
of
liability
under
the
Act
Subsection
152(3)
of
the
Act
provides
that:
Liability
for
tax
under
this
Part
is
not
affected
by
an
incorrect
or
incomplete
assessment
or
by
the
fact
that
no
assessment
has
been
made.
The
Act
is
clear:
it
is
not
the
assessment
itself
that
creates
the
liability
for
tax;
it
is
the
operation
of
the
Act
itself
that
creates
the
liability.
Notwithstanding
the
Minister
issued
reassessments
to
Jaans
after
1982
with
respect
to
1981
and
prior
years,
Jaans
was
liable
to
pay
amounts
under
the
Act
at
the
time
it
paid
dividends
to
Algoa
Trust
in
1982.
I
cannot
agree
with
appellants’
counsel
that
the
reasons
of
Noel,
J.,
in
Simard-Beaudry,
supra,
apply
only
to
principal
debtors.
If
a
principal
debtor
is
indebted
under
the
Act
and
he
or
she
makes
a
transfer
of
property,
section
160
may
apply.
Paragraph
160(1)(e)
applies
to
transfers
of
property
made
after
November
12,
1981.
A
transferee
is
made
jointly
and
severally
liable
with
the
transferor
for
the
latter's
liability
under
the
Act
as
a
result
of
a
transaction
he
or
she
was
party
to
after
November
12,
1981,
notwithstanding
the
transferor's
liability
was
incurred
prior
to
that
date,
if
the
transferee
and
the
transferor
were
not
dealing
at
arm's
length.
Accordingly,
the
appeal
by
Algoa
Trust
is
allowed
and
referred
back
to
the
Minister
only
to
recalculate
interest
on
the
basis
payments
of
tax
and
interest
made
by
Jaans
shall
be
allocated
to
those
fiscal
periods
originally
indicated
in
the
six
remittance
forms
and
not
on
the
dates,
as
altered,
and
to
make
the
appropriate
reassessment;
Algoa
Trust
shall
be
entitled
to
no
further
relief.
The
appeal
by
Canada
is
allowed
and
the
assessment
is
vacated.
Canada
shall
be
entitled
to
costs
in
its
appeal
and
the
respondent
shall
be
entitled
to
her
costs
in
the
appeal
by
Algoa
Trust.
Appeal
of
Algoa
Trust
dismissed;
appeal
of
116488
Canada
Inc.
allowed.