Denault,
J.:—This
is
an
appeal
by
the
plaintiff,
Walter
G.
Sweeney,
from
a
reassessment
by
the
Minister
of
National
Revenue
with
respect
to
the
plaintiff's
1983
tax
return
by
which
a
taxable
capital
gain
of
$312,500
was
added
to
the
plaintiff's
income.
The
sole
issue
for
determination
in
this
dispute
is
the
proper
calculation
of
the
adjusted
cost
base
of
the
plaintiff's
right
to
purchase
his
father's
shares
in
Lawrence
Sweeney
Fisheries
Ltd.,
pursuant
to
an
agreement
of
December
18,
1950.
Pursuant
to
subsection
26(3)
of
the
Income
Tax
Application
Rules,
1971,
the
adjusted
cost
base
would
be
the
middle
figure
of
cost,
fair
market
value
as
at
December
31,1971,
and
proceeds
of
disposition.
If
two
of
these
figures
are
the
same,
the
adjusted
cost
base
will
be
that
figure.
Both
parties
are
in
substantial
agreement
as
to
the
cost
and
the
proceeds
of
disposition,
they
disagree
however
as
to
the
fair
market
value
of
the
plaintiff's
right
as
of
December
31,
1971
(valuation
day).
The
plaintiff
submits
that
the
fair
market
value
at
valuation
day
is
in
excess
of
the
amount
obtained
from
the
proceeds
of
disposition,
and
that
as
a
result
no
capital
gain
resulted
and
no
tax
is
owing.
The
Minister
submits
that
the
fair
market
value
of
the
plaintiff's
right
at
valuation
day
was
nil,
and
that
consequently
half
of
the
entire
proceeds
of
disposition
is
a
taxable
capital
gain.
The
Facts
The
plaintiff
returned
from
his
studies
in
1948
to
enter
his
father's
business.
On
December
18,
1950
Walter
Lawrence
Sweeney
submitted
to
his
son
Gordon
an
agreement
whereby
the
son
could
purchase
the
father's
shares
in
his
company,
for
a
stipulated
sum
upon
the
father's
death.
The
price
agreed
upon
was
$1,327.13
per
share.
The
agreement
provided
that
the
son
would
contribute
towards
a
life
insurance
policy
for
the
father,
the
proceeds
of
which
would
be
used
to
purchase
the
shares;
it
also
provided
that
the
price
per
share
would
be
reviewable,
that
the
father
would
not
dispose
of
the
shares
other
than
pursuant
to
the
agreement
and
that
if
a
bona
fide
offer
by
a
third
party
was
considered
then
the
son
would
have
a
right
of
first
refusal.
The
agreement
provided
furthermore
that
it
could
be
revoked
by
either
party
upon
60
days'
notice.
On
December
31,
1971,
the
father
was
67
years
old,
in
good
health
and
active
in
the
business.
At
that
time
he
owned
79
of
the
100
shares
issued
by
the
company.
Twenty
shares
had
been
given
over
the
past
eight
years
to
his
three
other
children
without
the
plaintiff's
knowledge,
and
contrary
to
the
agreement.
Moreover
the
father's
will,
which
was
drawn
up
in
1965,
provided
that
his
trustees
should
continue
his
interests
in
Lawrence
Sweeney
Fisheries
Ltd.,
and
then
wind
up
the
company.
The
plaintiff
had
no
knowledge
of
the
existence
of
this
will.
The
fair
market
value
of
the
father’s
remaining
shares
on
valuation
day
was
$1,200,000.
When
the
father
died
on
January
20,
1983,
he
had
been
ill
for
merely
a
week
prior
to
his
death.
Shortly
before
his
death
he
had
assured
his
son
of
the
continued
validity
of
their
agreement.
After
his
father's
death
the
son
obtained
the
proceeds
of
the
life
insurance
policy,
and
tendered
to
purchase
the
father's
79
shares
in
the
company
for
$104,843
($1,327.13
x
79).
The
tenders
were
returned
by
his
brother
and
sisters,
and
he
launched
an
action
before
the
Supreme
Court
of
Nova
Scotia
for
specific
performance
of
his
right
of
purchase.
After
three
days
of
hearing
the
case
was
settled
out
of
court
and
the
plaintiff
was
paid
$625,000
in
“lieu
of
damages".
It
is
agreed
by
the
parties
that
this
amount
represents
the
proceeds
of
disposition
of
the
plaintiff's
right.
No
portion
of
that
capital
receipt
was
included
in
the
plaintiff's
1983
tax
return.
Plaintiffs
Argument
The
plaintiff
has
put
forward
four
distinct
arguments
in
support
of
his
position.
The
principal
argument
advanced
by
the
plaintiff
is
that
in
determining
the
fair
market
value
of
the
plaintiff's
right
at
valuation
day
the
agreement
setting
forth
his
rights
should
be
evaluated
as
though
it
contained
no
revocation
clause.
It
is
on
this
basis
that
the
plaintiff's
expert
estimated
the
valuation
day
fair
market
value
of
the
plaintiff's
right
to
be
between
$821,000
to
$876,000.
The
plaintiff
sought
to
establish
that
from
the
mid-1960s
up
until
and
including
valuation
day,
the
father
no
longer
considered
the
1950
agreement
to
be
valid.
In
support
of
this
contention
it
was
pointed
out
that
from
1957
until
1978,
the
plaintiff
was
not
involved
in
the
functioning
of
the
company
and
that
when
he
left
in
1957
he
stopped
paying
the
yearly
premiums
on
the
life
insurance
policy
as
stipulated
in
the
contract.
Except
for
a
few
occasions
his
father
took
over
that
responsibility.
Moreover
in
making
gifts
of
his
shares
to
his
other
son
and
to
his
daughters
in
the
mid-1960s
the
father
breached
clause
5
of
the
agreement,
and
his
will
of
1965
also
seems
to
indicate
his
belief
that
the
agreement
was
no
longer
of
value.
Finally
two
memos
written
by
the
father,
one
in
April
1967,
and
one
in
January
1970,
indicate
that
he
was
then
of
the
opinion
that
the
agreement
was
no
longer
valid.
The
Crown
objected
to
the
filing
of
both
these
memos
and
of
two
other
letters,
as
they
were
unsigned.
However
the
plaintiff
established
that
the
memos
had
been
drafted
in
reply
to
letters
from
Walter
P.
Wakefield,
the
father’s
solicitor.
It
appears
from
handwritten
comments
on
the
memos,
from
the
father's
peculiar
drafting
style,
and
from
the
uncontradicted
evidence
that
he
constantly
wrote
memos
to
himself,
that
Walter
Lawrence
Sweeney
was
the
author
of
these
documents
and
that
they
should
be
accepted
and
filed
in
Court
as
such.
They
therefore
also
contribute
to
the
submission
that
the
father
considered
the
agreement
to
be
void
at
the
time
of
valuation
day.
However
in
spite
of
his
belief
that
the
agreement
was
null
and
void,
it
was
never
revoked
or
even
altered
in
any
way
by
the
parties.
In
fact
the
father
never
even
indicated
to
his
son
that
he
privately
believed
the
agreement
to
be
invalid.
The
father
and
son
worked
very
closely
and
enjoyed
good
relations,
even
during
the
time
the
son
moved
away
to
Yarmouth
to
look
after
another
family
business.
In
1978
the
son
returned
to
help
his
father
in
the
running
of
Lawrence
Sweeney
Fisheries
Ltd.
In
late
1982
the
plaintiff
was
told
by
an
intimate
friend
of
his
brother's
that
he
was
in
for
a
big
surprise
when
his
father
died.
This
prompted
the
plaintiff
to
ask
his
father
whether
the
1950
agreement
was
still
valid
and
his
father
replied:
“Certainly!”
A
few
days
before
Christmas,
and
just
four
weeks
before
his
death
the
father
handed
the
original
agreement
over
to
his
son
and
told
him:
"Keep
this
in
a
safe
place.”
In
essence
the
plaintiff
is
submitting
that,
while
the
father
may
have
later
confirmed
the
validity
of
the
1950
agreement,
at
the
material
time,
December
31,
1971,
it
is
submitted
that
the
father
considered
the
agreement
to
be
void.
As
the
father
thought
the
agreement
was
void,
there
was
virtually
no
likelihood
that
the
revocation
clause
would
have
been
invoked
at
that
time.
The
plaintiff
submits
that
given
that
fact,
it
is
appropriate
to
read
the
agreement
as
if
the
revocation
clause
did
not
exist.
The
plaintiff
relied
on
the
case
of
Goodwin
Johnson
(1960)
Ltd.
v.
The
Queen,
[1983]
C.T.C.
389;
83
D.T.C.
5417
(F.C.T.D.)
for
the
proposition
that
the
Court
should
look
beyond
the
specific
words
of
a
contract
to
its
surrounding
circumstances,
to
determine
the
contract's
effect,
and
that
it
was
indeed
permissible
to
find
that
no
termination
clause
did
exist
even
in
a
case
where
it
was
expressly
stipulated
in
the
contract.
Three
alternative
arguments
were
also
presented
by
the
plaintiff.
The
first
alternative
argument
starts
from
the
assumption
that
the
termination
clause
ceased
to
have
effect
at
least
59
days
prior
to
the
father's
death,
since
by
its
own
terms
it
required
a
60-day
notice
period.
Thus
from
59
days
before
his
death
onward
any
revocation
by
the
father
would
have
been
invalid.
On
that
basis
it
is
submitted
that
from
the
beginning
of
that
59-day
period
the
value
of
the
plaintiff's
rights
increased
considerably
by
virtue
of
the
fact
that
the
agreement
could
no
longer
be
revoked.
The
plaintiff's
expert
presented
uncontested
evidence
that
the
value
of
the
1950
agreement,
59
days
prior
to
the
father's
death,
was
close
to
the
value
of
the
shares
themselves,
that
is
it
was
worth
between
$8,200,000
and
$8,700,000.
The
plaintiff
submitted
that
the
agreement
allowed
the
father
to
pass
on
one
of
the
family
businesses
to
his
eldest
son.
It
remained
in
effect,
unaltered,
for
33
years.
The
plaintiff
had
suggested
to
his
father
over
the
years
that
the
agreement
be
reviewed
but
the
father
declined.
The
father
confirmed
the
validity
of
the
agreement
just
months
prior
to
his
death.
The
plaintiff
submits
that
all
these
events,
perfected
by
the
father's
forbearance
from
terminating
the
agreement
when
he
was
legally
able
to
do
so,
constitute
a
"transaction"
within
the
meaning
of
subsection
245(2)
of
the
Income
Tax
Act,
R.S.C.
1952,
c.
148
(am.
S.C.
1970-71-72,
c.
63)
(the
"Act"),
in
which
case
the
fair
market
value
of
the
right,
according
to
paragraph
69(1)(c)
of
the
Act,
is
to
be
determined
not
at
valuation
day
but
at
the
time
the
transaction
was
completed,
namely
59
days
prior
to
death.
Counsel
for
the
plaintiff
stressed
that
the
words
"other
transactions
of
any
kind
whatever"
have
been
given
a
very
broad
interpretation
by
the
Court,
and
one
that
should
include
the
circumstances
of
this
case
(M.N.R.
v.
Granite
Bay
Timber
Co.,
[1958]
Ex.
C.R.
179;
Dufresne
v.
M.N.R.,
[1967]
2
Ex.
C.R.
128;
[1967]
C.T.C.
153;
and
Boardman
et
al.
v.
The
Queen,
[1986]
1
C.T.C.
103;
85
D.T.C.
5628.)
If
the
offer
of
the
right
to
buy
the
shares
can
be
viewed
as
a
transaction
perfected
at
the
time
the
agreement
became
irrevocable,
then
the
fair
market
value,
assessed
as
of
that
time
would
be
over
$8,000,000,
a
figure
well
in
excess
of
the
proceeds
of
disposition
and
the
plaintiff
would
have
no
capital
gain
to
declare.
The
second
alternative
argument
is
that
at
the
time
the
plaintiff's
father
delivered
to
him
the
agreement
with
instructions
to
keep
it
in
a
safe
place,
he
was
in
effect
making
a
gift
to
the
plaintiff
of
the
sizeable
increase
in
value
of
the
agreement
due
to
the
fact
that
the
agreement
had
been
handed
over
to
the
son
for
his
safe-keeping
with
the
intimation
that
no
changes
or
revocation
would
follow.
It
was
submitted
that
this
benefit
constituted
either
a
"transaction"
within
the
meaning
of
subsection
245(2)
or
a
"gift"
which
again,
according
to
paragraph
69(1)(c)
of
the
Act,
would
cause
the
fair
market
value
to
be
calculated
at
the
time
of
death
when
the
right
to
purchase
was
at
its
most
valuable
which
would
again
result
in
no
capital
gain
for
the
plaintiff.
The
final
alternative
argument
is
that
a
“gift”
or
“inheritance”
occurred
within
the
meaning
of
paragraph
69(1)(c),
at
the
time
of
the
father's
death
due
to
the
certainty
that
no
revocation
or
changes
would
be
made,
and
that
the
agreement
remained
in
force.
The
plaintiff
cited
the
American
case
Armstrong's
Estate
v.
C.I.R.,
146
Fed.
R.
2nd
457,
for
the
proposition
that
such
words
ought
to
be
interpreted
in
a
broad
manner,
so
that
substance
may
rule
over
form.
In
that
case
it
was
held
that
benefits
which
were
derived
from
a
contract
entered
into
during
the
taxpayer's
lifetime,
were
in
substance
benefits
in
the
nature
of
legacies,
and
should
be
recognized
as
such.
Defendant's
Argument
The
defence
consisted
entirely
of
a
rebuttal
of
the
plaintiff's
arguments.
As
for
the
first
argument
the
defendant's
expert
maintained
that
a
mathematical
approach,
estimating
the
impact
of
each
individual
limitation
on
the
plaintiff's
right
at
valuation
day,
was
inappropriate.
He
claimed
that
the
fair
market
value
of
the
plaintiff's
right
to
purchase
the
shares
upon
his
father's
death
had
to
be
determined,
as
any
other
property,
from
the
perspective
of
a
third
party
in
a
bona
fide
offer.
In
light
of
the
numerous
limitations
on
the
plaintiff's
right
of
purchase
the
Crown's
expert
claimed
that
the
fair
market
value
of
the
right
was
nil.
Among
the
limits
mentioned
by
the
expert
in
his
opinion
were;
(1)
the
fact
that
the
father
could
raise
the
purchase
price
at
any
time
and
if
it
were
not
accepted
by
the
plaintiff
or
a
third
party
purchaser,
the
father
could
terminate
the
agreement;
(2)
the
fact
that
should
a
bona
fide
offer
from
a
third
party
be
made
the
plaintiff,
or
any
other
notional
purchaser,
would
only
have
30
days
under
the
agreement
to
exercise
his
right
of
first
refusal
—not
by
paying
the
stated
price
in
the
agreement,
but
by
matching
the
bona
fide
offer;
(3)
the
father
could
revoke
the
agreement
for
any
reason
with
60
days'
notice;
and
(4)
there
was
nothing
to
prevent
the
father
from
decreasing
the
value
of
the
company,
either
through
mismanagement
or
otherwise.
The
expert
insisted
first
on
the
termination
clause
on
a
60-day
notice
being
the
most
negative
one,
and
second
on
the
possibility
by
the
father
to
change
the
purchase
price.
The
Crown
also
submitted
that
the
fact
that
the
father
thought
the
agreement
to
be
invalid
actually
strengthened
its
submission
that
the
right
to
purchase
had
no
value
at
valuation
day
since
the
informed,
prudent
party
making
a
bona
fide
offer
would
have
sought
to
have
the
father
confirm
the
agreement's
continued
existence.
All
these
factors,
along
with
the
likelihood
of
litigation
concerning
the
legal
validity
of
the
right,
would
have,
in
the
Crown
expert's
opinion,
rendered
the
right
without
value.
As
for
the
plaintiff's
alternative
arguments
the
Crown
responded
that
no
“transaction”
within
the
meaning
of
subsection
245(2)
can
be
deemed
to
occur
if
no
benefit
accrues
to
the
taxpayer.
In
this
case
the
Crown
submitted
that
no
benefit
occurred;
the
plaintiff
merely
offered
to
purchase
shares
for
less
than
their
market
value,
but
his
offer
was
refused.
The
Crown
submitted
that
the
plaintiff's
father
had
not
directly
or
indirectly
disposed
of
any
shares
or
even
of
a
right
to
purchase
shares,
and
that
as
no
property
was
transferred
there
can
be
no
deemed
disposition,
by
way
of
gift
or
otherwise.
Finally
the
Crown
submitted
that
the
father's
will
belies
any
intention
to
impart
any
benefit
on
the
plaintiff
by
way
of
gift
or
inheritance,
and
that
the
agreement
itself
demonstrates
that
there
was
a
contract,
based
on
mutual
consideration,
which
also
belies
the
suggestion
of
a
gift
having
been
made.
For
these
reasons
the
Crown
concluded
that
the
cost
of
the
agreement
was
nil,
that
the
fair
market
value
at
valuation
day
was
nil,
and
that
the
adjusted
cost
base
pursuant
to
subsection
26(3)
of
the
Income
Tax
Application
Rules,
1971
was
therefore
also
nil.
Decision
I
cannot
accept
the
plaintiff's
main
submission
that
the
1950
agreement
should
be
appraised
at
valuation
day,
as
though
it
did
not
contain
a
termination
clause.
In
Goodwin
Johnson
(1960)
Ltd.,
supra,
the
case
relied
on
by
the
plaintiff
for
this
submission,
the
defendant
therein
had
submitted
that
the
timber
sales
contract
between
the
parties
could
not
be
transferred
or
assigned
from
the
plaintiff
to
anyone
else.
Those
submissions
however
were
not
based
on
the
terms
of
the
contract
itself,
but
merely
on
statements
in
correspondence
from
the
provincial
Forestry
Service.
However,
the
Court
found,
as
a
matter
of
fact,
that
the
contract
could
have
been
assigned
by
way
of
a
power
of
attorney,
to
any
other
reputable
operator.
There
is
also
some
indication
in
the
decision
that
this
matter
was
not
strenuously
contested.
I
see
therefore
little
relevance
between
that
case
and
the
present
one.
Here
the
termination
clause
is
part
and
parcel
of
the
agreement
itself.
Even
if
the
Court
were
to
accept
the
plaintiff's
allegation
of
an
erroneous
belief
by
the
father
that
the
agreement
was
invalid,
that
is
certainly
no
grounds
for
reading
the
agreement
as
if
it
contained
no
termination
clause.
The
clause
merely
remains
there
unused,
if
only
for
the
very
good
reason
that
the
father
may
have
preferred
to
construe
the
agreement
to
be
valid
at
a
later
date,
as
the
mood
suited
him,
and
as
he
later
asserted.
I
rather
agree
with
the
Crown's
expert
that
in
view
of
the
numerous
limitations
in
the
agreement,
the
fair
market
value
of
the
plaintiff's
right
had
to
be
determined
from
the
perspective
of
a
third
party
in
a
bona
fide
offer
and
that
these
limitations
rendered
the
right
without
value.
I
now
turn
to
the
plaintiff's
first
alternative
argument
that
since
the
termination
clause
had
ceased
to
have
effect
at
least
59
days
prior
to
the
father's
death,
at
that
point
in
time
the
father,
even
though
he
was
not
aware
of
his
upcoming
death,
conferred
a
benefit
on
the
plaintiff.
It
was
further
argued
that
numerous
events
including
the
father's
confirmation
of
the
validity
of
the
agreement
a
few
months
prior
to
his
death,
perfected
by
his
forbearance
from
terminating
it
when
he
was
legally
able
to
do
so,
constitute
a
transaction
within
the
meaning
of
subsection
245(2)
of
the
Act.
I
do
not
share
that
view.
First
it
is
a
requisite
for
the
application
of
subsection
245(2)
that
there
be
in
fact
a
benefit
to
the
taxpayer
(Boardman
et
al.
v.
The
Queen,
supra).
In
this
case,
the
Court
cannot
accept
that
on
November
23,
1982,
59
days
prior
to
the
father's
death
and
without
the
benefit
of
hindsight,
the
failure
by
the
father
to
revoke
the
1950
agreement
had
the
effect
of
conferring
a
benefit
to
the
plaintiff.
On
that
date,
there
was
no
"transaction",
the
word
being
used
in
the
widest
possible
sense,
as
meaning
"any
act
having
operative
effect
in
relation
to
a
business
or
property"
(Dufresne
v.
M.N.R.,
supra).
As
to
the
second
alternative
argument
by
the
plaintiff
that
he
received
a
gift
from
his
father
when
he
was
told
to
keep
the
agreement
in
a
safe
place,
I
see
no
merit
in
that
argument.
From
the
father's
previous
actions
in
regard
to
the
1950
agreement,
it
cannot
be
reasonably
implied,
as
counsel
suggested,
that
by
delivering
to
his
son
his
copy
of
the
agreement
the
father
was
indicating
that
he
would
not
amend
or
terminate
it.
The
father
did
not
transfer
anything
to
his
son,
and
at
the
very
most,
he
was
then
confirming
the
1950
agreement,
thereby
indicating
that
his
son
could
eventually
acquire
his
remaining
shares
in
the
company,
under
the
same
terms
and
conditions.
The
final
alternative
argument
is
that
a
“gift”
or
"inheritance"
occurred
within
the
meaning
of
paragraph
69(1)(c)
at
the
time
of
the
father's
death
since
no
revocation
or
changes
could
then
be
made.
Paragraph
69(1
)(c)
states
that:
where
a
taxpayer
has
acquired
property
by
way
of
gift,
bequest
or
inheritance,
he
shall
be
deemed
to
have
acquired
the
property
at
its
fair
market
value
at
the
time
he
so
acquired
it.
Unfortunately
for
the
plaintiff,
I
fail
to
see
how
a
right
to
purchase
shares,
acquired
by
contract
under
seal
and
for
mutual
consideration
can
be
interpreted
as
a
gift.
The
essence
of
a
gift
is
the
intentional,
voluntary
and
gratu-
itous
transfer
of
property.
In
the
instance,
there
was
no
element
of
gratuitousness
in
the
1950
agreement
and
the
will
of
the
plaintiff's
father
stipulating
and
authorizing
treatment
of
the
shares
inconsistent
with
the
agreement
belies
any
intention
on
his
part
to
confer
a
gift
on
the
plaintiff
upon
death.
For
these
reasons,
the
appeal
is
dismissed
with
costs.
Appeal
dismissed.