Bowie
J.T.C.C.:
—
These
two
appeals
were
heard
together
on
common
evidence
by
agreement
of
the
parties.
The
sole
issue
for
decision
is
whether
the
ostensible
sale
by
each
of
these
Appellants
of
the
shares
they
held
in
Silvertip
Holdings
Ltd.
(Silvertip)
to
401349
Alberta
Ltd.
(the
numbered
company)
is
effective
to
convey
the
shares.
If
it
is,
then
a
deemed
dividend
arises
for
each
Appellant
pursuant
to
the
provisions
of
paragraph
84.1
(1
)(b)
of
the
Income
Tax
Act
(the
Act).
If
the
transaction
is
ineffective
then
there
is
no
disposition,
and
therefore
no
deemed
dividend,
and
the
appeals
succeed.
The
position
of
the
Appellants
is
that
at
the
time
the
contracts
were
entered
into
the
vendors
and
the
purchasers
were
all
labouring
under
a
common
mistake
so
fundamental
that
its
effect
is
to
render
the
transactions
void
ab
initio.
The
Respondent
takes
the
position
that
if
there
is
a
mistake
it
is
a
mistake
of
law,
in
that
the
parties
did
not
understand
the
tax
consequences
of
the
transactions
that
they
were
entering
into,
but
that
does
not
vitiate
the
contract.
Alternatively,
she
takes
the
position
that
the
legal
effect
of
the
mistake
would
be.
at
most,
to
render
the
contract
voidable
but
not
void,
and
as
the
Appellants
have
taken
no
steps
to
rescind
it,
the
contract
remains
extant,
and
the
Appellants
must
live
with
the
consequences
in
the
form
of
the
deemed
dividend.
Counsel
helpfully
filed
at
the
opening
of
the
trial
a
Statement
of
Agreed
Facts,
together
with
a
book
of
the
documents
referred
to
in
it.
As
a
result
there
are
very
few
facts
in
dispute.
The
parties
to
the
transaction
are
the
two
Appellants,
and
their
son
James
McLeod
and
his
wife
Lesley
McLeod,
through
the
medium
of
the
numbered
company.
I
shall
refer
to
them
as
the
McLeods
Senior
and
the
McLeods
Junior,
as
has
been
done
in
the
Statement
of
Agreed
Facts.
For
many
years
the
McLeods
Senior
owned
and
operated
a
resort
property
called
Castle
Mountain
Village,
near
Banff,
Alberta.
Title
to
the
property
and
the
business
was
held
by
Silvertip,
and
the
McLeods
Senior
owned
all
of
the
100
outstanding
shares
of
that
company.
As
they
approached
retirement
age
they
thought
it
desirable
that
their
son
become
involved
in
the
operation
of
the
business.
The
McLeods
Junior
therefore
joined
in
the
running
of
the
business
in
1978,
and
between
then
and
1980
they
took
over
most
of
the
responsibility
for
it.
In
1980
the
McLeods
Senior
sold
to
the
McLeods
Junior
49
of
their
100
shares
in
Silvertip.
The
ownership
and
the
operating
arrangements
remained
unchanged
until
the
fall
of
1988,
at
which
time
the
McLeods
Senior
wished
to
retire,
and
discussions
were
held
among
them
concerning
the
purchase
of
the
remaining
51
shares
of
Silvertip
by
the
McLeods
Junior.
During
the
discussions
and
negotiations
that
ensued,
and
which
culminated
in
the
transaction
here
in
question,
the
McLeods
Senior
had
one
main
objective
in
mind,
which
was
to
ensure
that
the
purchase
price
was
adequate
to
meet
their
needs
for
a
retirement
fund.
The
first
proposal
made
by
the
McLeods
Junior
was
that
they
would
purchase
the
remaining
51
Silvertip
shares,
and
the
McLeods
Senior’s
shareholder
loans,
for
either
$187,282
payable
over
a
ten-year
term,
or
alternatively,
for
a
cash
payment
of
$157,000.
The
McLeods
Senior
sought
the
advice
of
their
accountant
and
their
lawyer.
The
accountant’s
advice
was
that
the
sale
for
$157,000
cash
would
have
no
adverse
tax
consequences,
because
any
capital
gain
would
be
subject
to
the
capital
gains
exemption
available
to
them.
Over
the
winter
of
1988/1989
the
McLeods
Senior
decided
that
the
price
was
not
adequate,
and
that
they
would
make
a
counter
offer,
which
they
did
in
the
spring
of
1989.
That
offer
provided
that
the
McLeods
Senior
would
sell
all
of
their
shares,
and
their
shareholder
loans,
to
the
McLeods
Junior
for
a
total
amount
of
$250,000.
Fifty
thousand
dollars
was
to
be
payable
on
December
1,
1989,
with
the
balance
payable
over
10
years,
with
interest
at
8%
per
annum.
Agreement
in
principle
was
reached
between
the
McLeods
Senior
and
the
McLeods
Junior
for
the
sale
on
these
terms
at
a
meeting
of
the
shareholders
of
Silvertip
which
was
held
on
May
9,
1989.
It
was
agreed
that
the
McLeods
Junior
would
draw
up
an
offer
to
purchase
on
these
terms
and
present
it
to
the
McLeods
Senior
before
the
end
of
June.
On
June
26,
Lesley
McLeod
wrote
to
the
McLeods
Senior,
enclosing
a
detailed
six-page
offer
to
purchase
which
had
been
prepared
by
the
solicitors
for
the
McLeods
Junior.
This
document
was
on
the
terms
that
had
been
agreed
upon
in
May,
but
with
one
significant
difference.
The
purchaser
was
to
be
the
numbered
company,
rather
than
the
McLeods
Junior
in
their
personal
capacities.
The
numbered
company
had
by
then
been
incorporated,
and
the
offer
was
executed
on
its
behalf
by
James
McLeod
and
Lesley
McLeod.
They
also
each
signed
it
as
guarantor
of
the
obligations
which
the
numbered
company
would
assume
under
the
proposed
transaction.
The
McLeods
Senior
passed
this
offer
to
their
solicitor
for
his
advice.
He
replied
with
a
number
of
suggestions
concerning
the
terms
of
the
agreement,
none
of
which
touched
upon
the
prospect
of
the
deemed
dividend
under
section
84.1
of
the
Act.
Allan
McLeod
also
made
inquiries
of
his
accountant,
Barry
Carter,
and
of
the
McLeods
Junior,
concerning
the
implication
of
the
purchaser
being
a
numbered
company.
He
testified
that
he
spoke
with
Mr.
Carter
by
telephone,
who
advised
him
that
this
would
not
create
any
problem.
The
McLeods
Junior
responded
by
saying
it
was
a
“tax
dodge”
for
them.
A
second
draft
of
the
agreement
was
prepared,
which
included
some
changes
requested
by
the
McLeods
Senior
in
accordance
with
their
solicitor’s
advice.
It
was
dated
August
1,
1989,
and
like
the
first
offer
it
was
executed
by
James
McLeod
and
Lesley
McLeod
for
401349
Alberta
Ltd.,
and
also
by
each
of
them
as
guarantor
of
its
obligations
under
the
agreement.
This
document
was
forwarded
to
the
McLeods
Senior
under
cover
of
a
short
hand-written
letter
dated
August
3,
signed
by
Lesley
McLeod.
The
second
paragraph
of
that
letter
reads
as
follows:
If
the
number
company
is
what
is
causing
you
concern
-
that
is
our
tax
dodge.
Otherwise
we
would
have
to
pay
personal
income
tax
on
the
$210,000.00
that
covers
your
51%
shares
-
just
as
we
have
had
to
pay
on
[sic]
tax
on
the
$127,400.00
already.
Allan
McLeod
testified
that
he
did
not
understand
why
this
paragraph
was
included
in
Lesley’s
letter
of
August
3;
he
continued
to
rely
on
the
advice
of
his
accountant
that
no
problem
arose
from
the
introduction
of
a
corporation
into
the
transaction
as
purchaser.
The
McLeods
Senior
executed
the
agreement
of
purchase
and
sale
on
August
4,
and
the
transaction
closed
later
that
year.
The
evidence
of
each
of
the
Appellants
was
quite
clear
that
they
would
not
have
sold
their
interest
in
Silvertip
for
the
price
that
they
did
if
they
had
known
of
the
tax
consequences
for
them
that
would
flow
from
the
sale.
They
had
received
advice
from
their
accountant
at
the
time
of
the
original
proposal
that
the
proceeds
would
be
received
by
them
tax
free.
They
also
had
him
review
the
formal
offer
of
June
21,
1989,
which
made
it
very
clear
that
the
purchaser
would
be
a
numbered
company
brought
into
existence
by
the
McLeods
Junior
for
that
purpose.
He
did
not
amend
his
original
advice
as
a
result
of
this,
and
the
Mcleods
Senior,
quite
reasonably,
continued
to
believe
that
the
proceeds
of
the
sale
would
be
free
of
tax
in
their
hands.
Certainly,
when
they
entered
into
the
transaction
at
the
beginning
of
August,
they
held
a
mistaken
belief
as
to
the
amount
of
the
after-tax
proceeds
they
would
receive
from
the
sale.
The
same
cannot
be
said
with
respect
to
the
McLeods
Junior.
They
also
had
the
advice
of
an
accountant
as
to
the
tax
consequences
for
them
of
the
transaction.
It
was
as
a
result
of
this
advice
that
the
purchase
was
structured
in
the
way
that
it
was.
They
did
not
know
what
the
tax
consequences
would
be
for
the
vendors.
Early
in
the
negotiations,
as
a
result
of
their
initial
consultation
with
their
own
accountant,
the
McLeods
Junior
asked
the
McLeods
Senior
about
their
financial
situation.
The
response
from
the
McLeods
Senior
was
that
they
had
their
own
accountant
and
lawyer
to
take
care
of
their
interest,
and
that
they,
the
McLeods
Junior,
should
not
concern
themselves
about
it.
After
the
first
formal
offer
was
presented,
the
McLeods
Senior
inquired
of
the
McLeods
Junior
concerning
the
reason
that
the
purchaser
was
to
be
a
company,
rather
than
the
two
individuals.
Their
concern,
it
seems,
was
that
the
company
might
be
a
front
for
Japanese
interests.
Lesley
McLeod’s
August
3
letter,
quoted
above,
was
intended
to
allay
that
concern.
At
the
time
the
contract
was
entered
into,
then,
the
situation
was
this.
The
McLeods
Senior
had
fixed
the
price
at
which
they
were
willing
to
sell
their
total
combined
interest
in
Silvertip
at
$250,000.
This
was
arrived
at
on
the
basis
that
they
needed
no
less
than
that
to
ensure
their
comfortable
retirement,
and
as
a
result
of
professional
advice
that
the
full
amount
of
the
selling
price
would
be
tax
free
in
their
hands.
The
McLeods
Junior
were
willing
to
pay
$250,000,
but
no
more,
and
they
structured
their
acquisition
of
the
shares
through
the
medium
of
a
corporation
brought
into
being
for
that
purpose
because
their
professional
advisors
told
them
that
this
would
secure
a
tax
advantage
for
them.
Because
of
the
negative
response
to
their
earlier
inquiry
they
did
not
concern
themselves
one
way
or
the
other
about
the
tax
consequences
of
the
transaction
for
the
McLeods
Senior.
In
my
opinion
this
case
does
not
fall
within
the
relatively
narrow
confines
of
the
doctrine
of
common
mistake.
The
Appellants’
case
rests
on
what
they
say
is
a
common
mistake
at
law,
as
opposed
to
one
established
in
equity.
The
significant
distinction
between
the
two
for
present
purposes
is
that
the
former
may
lead
to
the
conclusion
that
the
contract
is
void
ab
initio,
while
the
latter
results
in
a
contract
which
may
be
voidable
in
equity.
The
modern
history
of
the
common
law
doctrine
has
its
origins
in
the
judgment
of
House
of
Lords
in
Bell
v.
Lever
Brothers
Ltd.,
[1932]
A.C.
161,
[1931]
All
E.R.
Rep.
1.
That
decision
was
examined
in
some
detail
by
Steyn
J.
in
Associated
Japanese
Bank
v.
Crédit
du
Nord,
[1988]
3
All
E.R.
902.
Steyn
J.
concludes
his
examination
of
Bell
v.
Lever
Brothers
Ltd.
with
what
I
believe
is
an
accurate
statement
of
the
applicable
principles:
It
might
be
useful
if
I
now
summarised
what
appears
to
me
to
be
a
satisfactory
way
of
approaching
this
subject.
Logically,
before
one
can
turn
to
the
rules
as
to
mistake,
whether
at
common
law
or
in
equity,
one
must
first
determine
whether
the
contract
itself,
by
express
or
implied
condition
precedent
or
otherwise,
provides
who
bears
the
risk
of
the
relevant
mistake.
It
is
at
this
hurdle
that
many
pleas
of
mistake
will
either
fail
or
prove
to
have
been
unnecessary.
Only
if
the
contract
is
silent
on
the
point
is
there
scope
for
invoking
mistake.
That
brings
me
to
the
relationship
between
common
law
mistake
and
mistake
in
equity.
Where
common
law
mistake
has
been
pleaded,
the
court
must
first
consider
this
plea.
If
the
contract
is
held
to
be
void,
no
question
of
mistake
in
equity
arises.
But,
if
the
contract
is
held
to
be
valid,
a
plea
of
mistake
in
equity
may
still
have
to
be
considered:
see
Grist
v.
Bailey
[1966]
2
All
E.R.
875,
[1967]
Ch
532
and
the
analysis
in
Anson’s
Law
of
Contract
(26th
edn,
1984)
pp
290-
291.
Turning
now
to
the
approach
to
common
law
mistake,
it
seems
to
me
that
the
following
propositions
are
valid
although
not
necessarily
all
entitled
to
be
dignified
as
propositions
of
law.
The
first
imperative
must
be
that
the
law
ought
to
uphold
rather
than
destroy
apparent
contracts.
Second,
the
common
law
rules
as
to
a
mistake
regarding
the
quality
of
the
subject
matter,
like
the
common
law
rules
regarding
commercial
frustration,
are
designed
to
cope
with
the
impact
of
unexpected
and
wholly
exceptional
circumstances
on
apparent
contracts.
Third,
such
a
mistake
in
order
to
attract
legal
consequences
must
substantially
be
shared
by
both
parties,
and
must
relate
to
facts
as
they
existed
at
the
time
the
contract
was
made.
Fourth,
and
this
is
the
point
established
by
Bell
v.
Lever
Bros
Ltd,
the
mistake
must
render
the
subject
matter
of
the
contract
essentially
and
radically
different
from
the
subject
matter
which
the
parties
believed
to
exist.
While
the
civilian
distinction
between
the
substance
and
attributes
of
the
subject
matter
of
a
contract
has
played
a
role
in
the
development
of
our
law
(and
was
cited
in
the
speeches
in
Bell
v.
Lever
Bros.
Ltd’,
the
principle
enunciated
in
Bell
v.
Lever
Bros
Ltd.
is
markedly
narrower
in
scope
than
the
civilian
doctrine.
It
is
therefore
no
longer
useful
to
invoke
the
civilian
distinction.
The
principles
enunciated
by
Lord
Atkin
and
Lord
Thankerton
represent
the
ratio
decidendi
of
Bell
v.
Lever
Bros
Ltd..
Fifth,
there
is
a
requirement
which
was
not
specifically
discussed
in
Bell
v.
Lever
Bros.
Ltd.
What
happens
if
the
party
who
is
seeking
to
rely
on
the
mistake
had
no
reasonable
grounds
for
his
belief?
An
extreme
example
is
that
of
the
man
who
makes
a
contract
with
minimal
knowledge
of
the
facts
to
which
the
mistake
relates
but
is
content
that
it
is
a
good
speculative
risk.
In
my
judgment
a
party
cannot
be
allowed
to
rely
on
a
common
mistake
where
the
mistake
consists
of
a
belief
which
is
entertained
by
him
without
any
reasonable
grounds
for
such
belief.
This
passage
was
adopted
by
Mandel
J.
of
the
Ontario
Court
of
Justice
(General
Division)
in
Canadian
Medical
Laboratories
Ltd.
v.
Stabile
(1992),
25
R.P.R.
(2d)
106.
How
then
do
these
principles
apply
in
the
present
case?
Mr.
Nitikman
argued
strenuously
that
this
unusual
factual
situation
brings
into
play
the
common
law
doctrine
of
common
mistake.
Both
parties,
he
said,
shared
the
same
mistaken
belief,
not
as
to
the
operation
of
the
Income
Tax
Act
upon
the
proceeds
of
sale,
but
as
to
the
fact
that
the
introduction
into
the
transaction
of
a
numbered
company
incorporated
by
James
and
Lesley
to
be
the
purchaser
was
not
a
matter
about
which
the
vendors
need
be
concerned.
This
argument
cannot
be
reconciled
with
the
principles
as
Steyn
J.
has
summarized
them.
Looking
first
at
the
question
of
who
bears
the
risk,
it
is
obvious,
I
think,
that
the
McLeods
Senior
(or
their
professional
advisor)
must
bear
the
risk
so
far
as
it
relates
to
the
tax
consequences
of
the
transaction.
The
McLeods
Junior
raised
this
question
early
in
the
negotiations,
and
were,
in
effect,
told
to
mind
their
own
business.
Absent
some
special
reason
arising
out
of
the
negotiations,
and
there
is
none
here,
it
would
be
remarkable
if
each
party
were
not
himself
liable
to
bear
the
risk
of
adverse
tax
consequences.
As
counsel
for
the
Appellants
would
characterize
the
issue,
it
is
whether
or
not
the
existence
of
a
corporate
purchaser
should
be
a
matter
of
concern
to
the
vendors
that
is
the
subject
of
the
mistake.
That
alone,
as
opposed
to
mistake
as
to
a
specific
reason
for
them
to
be
concerned
about
the
cor-
porate
purchaser,
cannot
amount
to
a
mistake
going
to
the
root
of
the
contract.
The
Appellants’
case
founders
on
the
second
and
the
fourth
of
Steyn
J.’s
principles.
The
circumstances
encountered
here
cannot
be
said
to
be
“unexpected
or
wholly
exceptional”.
Transactions
of
this
kind
take
place
every
day.
They
often
involve
corporate
purchasers.
The
tax
consequences
are
predictable.
What
was
perhaps
exceptional
about
this
case
is
that
the
vendors’
advisors
failed
to
warn
them
about
the
deemed
dividend
that
would
arise
on
completion
of
the
sale,
but
that
is
wholly
collateral
to
the
contract.
Nor
is
there
a
mistake
of
fact
shared
by
both
parties
which
renders
the
subject
matter
of
the
contract
“essentially
and
radically
different
from
the
subject
matter
which
the
parties
believed
to
exist”.
The
subject
matter
was
exactly
what
the
parties
thought
is
was
-
a
sale
of
shares
in
the
business
for
cash
and
future
payments.
Only
the
incidence
of
taxation
on
the
proceeds
of
sale
was
different,
and
that
mistake
was
neither
common
to
both
parties,
nor
fundamental
to
the
contract.
There
is
another
reason
why
these
appeals
must
fail.
It
is
clear
from
the
judgment
of
Mandel
J.
in
the
Canadian
Medical
Laboratories
case
that
in
a
case
where
the
requirements
of
the
doctrine
of
common
mistake
do
exist,
the
parties
may
nevertheless
adopt
the
terms
of
the
contract
after
the
true
facts
are
known.
This
may
be
done
either
by
express
agreement,
or
by
their
conduct.
In
the
present
case
the
contract
called
for
payment
of
the
balance
of
the
purchase
price
in
monthly
instalments
of
$2,500
per
month
for
a
ten
-year
term,
beginning
on
January
1,
1990.
Each
of
these
payments
up
to
and
including
the
first
of
May
1996,
one
week
before
the
trial,
77
in
all,
was
made
by
the
McLeods
Junior,
and
accepted
by
the
Appellants.
The
Minister
of
National
Revenue
had
made
known
his
intention
to
reassess
the
McLeods
Senior
for
the
1989
taxation
year
in
July
1993.
This
was
known
also
to
the
McLeods
Junior
by
August
2
that
year,
when
James
McLeod
wrote
to
his
father
to
say
that
he
and
his
wife
at
no
time
knew
of
the
tax
consequences
that
would
result
from
the
sale.
I
have
no
hesitation
in
finding
that
the
conduct
of
the
parties
on
both
sides
of
the
transaction,
the
McLeods
Junior
in
continuing
to
make
the
monthly
payments,
and
the
McLeods
Senior
in
continuing
to
accept
them,
would,
even
if
the
doctrine
of
common
mistake
were
otherwise
applicable,
establish
an
agreement
by
the
parties
to
treat
the
contract
as
enforceable
and
existing
I
find
that
the
contract
between
the
McLeods
Senior
and
the
McLeods
Junior
is
a
valid
and
subsisting
one
which
has
legal
effect.
It
follows
that
there
was
a
disposition
by
the
Appellants
of
the
shares
of
Sil
vertip
in
1989,
which
resulted
in
the
deemed
dividend
pursuant
to
paragraph
84.1(1)(b)
of
the
Act.
The
appeals
are
dismissed.
The
Respondent
is
entitled
to
costs,
but
with
one
counsel
fee
only,
as
the
two
appeals
were
tried
together
on
common
evidence.
Appeal
dismissed.