JACKETT,
P.:—I
shall
deliver
a
single
set
of
reasons
for
judgment
in
Buckerfield’s
Limited
v.
M.N.R.,
Green
Valley
Fertilizer
&
Chemical
Co.
Ltd.
v.
M.N.R.,
Westland
Elevators
Limited
v.
M.N.R.
and
Burrard
Terminals
Limited
v.
M.N.R.
These
four
appeals
in
each
case
are
appeals
against
the
assessments
of
the
respective
appellants
under
the
Income
Tax
Act
for
the
1961
taxation
year.
The
appellant
in
each
case
challenges
the
assessment
on
the
ground
that
the
Minister
erred
when,
in
making
the
assessment,
he
assumed
that
the
appellant
and
another
company
were
‘‘associated
with
each
other’’
in
1961
within
the
meaning
of
these
words
in
subsection
(2)
of
Section
39
of
the
Income
Tax
Act.
As
the
Minister’s
assumption
was
that
Buckerfield’s
Limited
(hereinafter
referred
to
as
‘*‘
Buckerfield’s’’)
was
associated
with
Green
Valley
Fertilizer
&
Chemical
Company
Limited
(hereinafter
referred
to
as
‘‘Green
Valley”),
the
questions
in
the
appeals
of
those
two
companies
are
identical
and
those
appeals
were
therefore
heard
together.
Similarly,
as
the
Minister’s
assumption
was
that
Burrard
Terminals
Limited
(hereinafter
referred
to
as
“Burrard”)
was
associated
with
Westland
Elevators
Limited
(hereinafter
referred
to
as
‘‘
Westland’’),
the
questions
in
the
appeals
of
those
two
companies
are
identical
and
those
appeals
were
therefore
heard
together.
The
argument
submitted
in
support
of
the
appeal
is
the
same
in
all
four
cases.
In
1961,
one-half
of
the
issued
shares
of
Buckerfield’s
belonged
to
Pioneer
Grain
Company
Limited
(hereinafter
referred
to
as
“Pioneer”)
and
one-half
belonged
to
Federal
Grain
Company
(hereinafter
referred
to
as
“Federal”).
The
same
two
companies
each
owned
one-half
of
the
issued
shares
of
Green
Valley.
The
shares
in
Buckerfield’s
were
acquired
by
Pioneer
and
Federal
under
written
agreement
dated
December
24,
1951,
under
which
they
agreed
in
effect,
(a)
that
their
share
holdings
in
Buckerfield’
s
were
to
be
maintained
at
the
same
level,
(b)
that,
notwithstanding
the
number
of
shares
held
or
controlled
by
either
of
them,
each
of
them
was
to
have
“an
equal
voice
.
.
.
in
the
control
and
operation
of
Buckerfield’s”,
•(c)
that
each
of
them
was
to
be
entitled
to
nominate
50
per
cent
of
the
board
of
directors
of
Buckerfield’s,
(d)
that
‘‘the
management
of
Buckerfield’s
.
.
.
shall
be
such
as
shall
at
all
times
.
.
.
be
acceptable
to
both
parties”,
and
(e)
that
each
of
them
should
have
a
right
of
first
refusal
in
respect
of
the
other’s
shares
in
Buckerfield’s.
The
parties
had
verbally
agreed
to
the
same
terms
in
relation
to
Green
Valley.
Buckerfield
and
Green
Valley
were
controlled
in
accordance
with
the
respective
agreements.
The
basic
facts
in
respect
of
Burrard
and
Westland
were
in
substance
the
same
as
the
basic
facts
that
I
have
just
recited
in
relation
to
Buckerfield’s
and
Green
Valley
except
that,
in
the
case
of
Burrard,
its
shares
were
held
one-third
by
Pioneer,
one-
third
by
The
Alberta
Pacific
Grain
Company
(1948)
Limited
(a
wholly
owned
subsidiary
of
Federal
hereinafter
referred
to
as
“Alberta
Pacific”)
and
one-third
by
Searle
Grain
Company
Limited
(hereinafter
referred
to
as
‘‘Searle’’),
and,
in
the
case
of
Westland,
its
shares
were
held
one-third
by
Federal,
one-third
by
Pioneer
and
one-third
by
Searle.
Buckerfield’s
and
Green
Valley
were
each
carrying
on
a
business
unrelated
to
the
businesses
of
their
shareholders.
They
both
sold,
among
other
things,
fertilizer,
and
were
in
active
competition
with
each
other.
There
seems
to
have
been
no
reason
for
acquisition
of
their
shares
by
Pioneer
and
Federal
except
that
the
shares
were
regarded
as
a
good
investment.
Burrard
and
Westland,
on
the
other
hand,
operated
terminal
elevators
and
had
facilities
which,
at
certain
seasons
of
the
year,
were
of
some
considerable
importance
to
the
three
companies
which
had
acquired
their
shares.
Apart
from
their
mutual
interests
in
the
appellant
companies,
the
evidence
is
that
Pioneer,
Federal
and
Searle
are
vigorous
competitors.
They
are
each
in
the
grain
business
in
Western
Canada
and
operate
completely
independently
of
each
other.
The
evidence
is
further
that,
in
three
cases
at
least,
the
management
of
the
appellants
is
left
to
the
officers
employed
for
the
purpose
and
that
there
is,
in
fact,
no
control
exercised
over
the
management
of
the
appellants
by
Pioneer,
Federal
or
Searle
or
by
any
one
or
more
of
them
acting
in
combination.
On
these
facts,
the
question
to
be
determined
in
each
appeal
arises
under
Section
39
of
the
Income
Tax
Act
as
applicable
to
the
1961
taxation
year.
That
section
reads
in
part
as
follows:
“39.
(1)
The
tax
payable
by
a
corporation
under
this
Part
upon
its
taxable
income
or
taxable
income
earned
in
Canada,
as
the
case
may
be,
(in
this
section
referred
to
as
the
‘amount
taxable’)
for
a
taxation
year
is,
except
where
otherwise
provided,
(a)
18%
of
the
amount
taxable
,if
the
amount
taxable
does
not
exceed
$35,000,
and
(b)
$6,300
plus
47%
of
the
amount
by
which
the
amount
taxable
exceeds
$35,000,
if
the
amount
taxable
exceeds
$35,000.
(2)
Where
two
or
more
corporations
are
associated
with
each
other
in
a
taxation
year,
the
tax
payable
by
each
of
them
under
this
Part
for
the
year
is,
except
where
otherwise
provided
by
another
section,
47%
of
the
amount
taxable
for
the
year.
(4)
For
the
purpose
of
this
section,
one
corporation
is
associated
with
another
in
a
taxation
year
if,
at
any
time
in
the
year,
(b)
both
of
the
corporations
were
controlled
by
the
same
person
or
group
of
persons,’’
The
question
in
the
one
set
of
appeals
is
simply
whether
Buckerfield’s
and
Green
Valley
are
‘‘controlled
by
the
same
.
.
.
group
of
persons’’
within
the
meaning
of
those
words
in
Section
39(4)
(b)
and
the
question
in
the
other
set
of
appeals
is
whether
Burrard
and
Westland
are
‘‘controlled
by
the
same
.
.
.
group
of
persons’’
within
the
meaning
of
those
words
in
Section
39(4)
(b).
Many
approaches
might
conceivably
be
adopted
in
applying
the
word
‘‘control’’
in
a
statute
such
as
the
Income
Tax
Act
to
a
corporation.
It
might,
for
example,
refer
to
control
by
‘
management”,
where
management
and
the
board
of
directors
are
separate,
or
it
might
refer
to
control
by
the
board
of
directors.
The
kind
of
control
exercised
by
management
officials
or
the
board
of
directors
is,
however,
clearly
not
intended
by
Section
39
when
it
contemplates
control
of
one
corporation
by
another
as
well
as
control
of
a
corporation
by
individuals
(see
subsection
(6)
of
Section
39).
The
word
‘‘control’’
might
conceivably
refer
to
de
facto
control
by
one
or
more
shareholders
whether
or
not
they
hold
a
majority
of
shares.
I
am
of
the
view,
however,
that
in
Section
39
of
the
Income
Tax
Act,
the
word
‘‘controlled’’
contemplates
the
right
of
control
that
rests
in
ownership
of
such
a
number
of
shares
as
carries
with
it
the
right
to
a
majority
of
the
votes
in
the
election
of
the
board
of
directors.
See
British
American
Tobacco
Co.
v.
C.I.R.,
[1943]
1
All
E.R.
13,
where
Viscount
Simon,
L.C.,
at
page
19,
says:
“The
owners
of
the
majority
of
the
voting
power
in
a
company
are
the
persons
who
are
in
effective
control
of
its
affairs
and
fortunes.
’
’
See
also
M.N.R.
v.
Wrights
9
Canadian
Ropes,
Ltd.,
[1947]
A.C.
109;
[1947]
C.T.C.
1,
per
Lord
Greene,
M.R.,
at
pages
118,
6,
where
it
was
held
that
the
mere
fact
that
one
corporation
had
less
than
50
per
cent
of
the
shares
of
another
was
“conclusive”
that
the
one
corporation
was
not
‘‘controlled’’
by
the
other
within
Section
6
of
the
Income
War
Tax
Act.
Where,
in
the
application
of
Section
39(4),
a
single
person
does
not
own
sufficient
shares
to
have
control
in
the
sense
to
which
I
have
just
referred,
it
becomes
a
question
of
fact
as
to
whether
any
‘‘group
of
persons’’
does
own
such
a
number.
of
shares.
In
these
appeals,
there
is
no
doubt
that
Pioneer
and
Federal,
in
the
one
pair
of
appeals,
and
Pioneer,
Federal
(including
its
subsidiary
Alberta
Pacific)
and
Searle,
in
the
other
pair
of
appeals,
have
control
of
the
two
appellants.
If
Pioneer
and
Federal
are,
in
relation
to
the
ownership
of
the
shares
of
Bucker-
field’s
and
Green
Valley,
aptly
described
by
the
words,
“group
of
persons’’,
Buckerfield’s
and
Green
Valley
are
‘‘associated
with
each
other’’
within
the
meaning
of
those
words
in
Section
39(2).
Similarly,
if
Pioneer,
Federal
(including
its
subsidiary
Alberta
Pacific)
and
Searle
are,
in
relation
to
the
ownership
of
the
shares
of
Burrard
and
Westland,
aptly
described
by
the
words
‘‘group
of
persons’’,
Burrard
and
Westland
are
“associated
with
each
other’’
within
the
meaning
of
those
words
in
Section
39(2).
The
applicable
sense
of
the
word
“group”
as
defined
by
the
Shorter
Oxford
English
Dictionary
(1959)
is
“2.
gen.
An
assemblage
of
objects
standing
near
together,
and
forming
a
collective
unity;
a
knot
(of
people),
a
cluster
(of
things).
In
early
use
there
is
often
a
notion
of
confused
aggregation.
’
’
The
only
other
sense
that
might
be
applicable
is
“3.
A
number
of
persons
or
things
in
a
certain
relation,
or
having
a
certain
degree
of
similarity.
’
’
Counsel
for
the
appellants
referred
to
other
dictionary
definitions
but
I
do
not
find
any
conflict
among
them.
Apart
from
the
argument
on
these
appeals,
the
phrase
‘‘group
of
persons’’
is
apt
to
encompass
thé
companies
holding
the
shares
of
Buckerfield’s
and
Green
Valley
or
the
companies
holding
the
shares
of
Burrard
and
Westland,
within
my
understanding
of
the
meaning
of
that
phrase
whether
or
not
I
seek
the
aid
of
dictionaries.
Counsel
for
the
appellants,
however,
put
forward
two
submissions.
These
two
submissions,
as
I
understand
them,
are
(a)
that
the
word
‘
4
group”
in
its
ordinary
sense
does
not
include
any
number
of
persons
less
than
four;
and
(b)
in
Section
39(4),
the
word
‘‘group’’
means
a
group
of
persons
who
come
together
to
take
advantage
of
the
low
rate
of
tax
under
Section
39
and
not
a
group
of
persons
who
come
together
for
any
other
particular
common
purpose.
In
support
of
the
first
of
these
two
submissions,
as
I
understand
him,
counsel
submitted
that,
if
Parliament
had
intended
to
include
two,
reference
would
have
been
made
to
a
couple
or
a
pair
and,
if
it
had
intended
to
include
three,
reference
would
have
been
made
to
a
trio.
I
cannot
accept
this
submission.
The
word
“group”
in
its
ordinary
meaning,
as
I
understand
it,
can
refer
to
any
number
of
persons
from
two
to
infinity.
There
is
nothing
in
Section
39(4)
to
suggest
that
there
is
any
intention
to
omit
any
of
them.
Any
omission
of
particular
numbers
would
be,
moreover,
an
obvious
gap
in
the
legislative
scheme.
I
have
equal
difficulty
in
appreciating
the
force
of
counsel’s
other
submission.
It
is
that,
in
Section
39(4)
‘‘group’’
means
a
group
of
persons
who
come
together
to
take
advantage
of
the
low
rates
of
tax
under
Section
39.
I
have
difficulty
in
conceiving
of
a
group
of
shareholders
holding
shares
in
two
or
more
companies
having
joined
together
in
their
share
holdings
in
order
to
get
the
benefit
of
the
lower
tax
rate
in
Section
39.
The
course
of
action
that
Section
39
has
been
designed
to
discourage
is
the
multiplication
of
corporations
carrying
on
a
business
in
order
to
get
greater
advantage
from
the
lower
tax
rate.
If
a
group
were
a
party
to
such
activity,
presumably
it
would,
as
a
group,
have
controlled
a
single
company
carrying
on
the
business
before
the
business
was
divided
among
a
number
of
companies
each
controlled
by
the
group.
In
such
a
case,
the
group
would
not
have
come
together
for
the
purpose
of
getting
the
low
rate
under
Section
39.
Indeed,
I
can
conceive
of
no
case
in
which
the
group
would
have
come
together
for
that
purpose.
In
any
event,
I
am
unable
to
appreciate
the
cogency
of
the
argument
in
support
of
the
submission
that
such
an
artificial
limitation
should
be
read
into
Section
39(4)
so
as
to
cut
down
the
ambit
of
the
clear
words
of
that
subsection.
The
appeals
are
dismissed
with
costs.
Judgment
accordingly.