Citation: 2008TCC311
Date: 20080526
Docket: 2007-2299(GST)I
BETWEEN:
JONATHAN WOOD,
Appellant,
and
HER MAJESTY THE QUEEN,
Respondent.
REASONS FOR JUDGMENT
Rossiter, J.
Facts
[1] The Appellant is
the son of Andrew Wood and Marguerite Wood who were married on August 31, 1979.
The Appellant was born March 18, 1984 and as such was a minor in May 2002, age
19 years being the age of majority in New Brunswick.
[2] Andrew is a lawyer
practicing law as a solicitor for many years in Fredericton, New Brunswick.
[3] Piper’s Lane
Heritage Development Inc. (Piper’s Lane) (and its named predecessor corporate)
is a body corporate, its shares being owned by Marguerite Wood since at
least 1993.
[4] Andrew and
Marguerite Wood entered into a Domestic Contract on March 15, 1995. This
contract specifically identified the shares of Piper’s Lane as being the property
of Marguerite Wood (see Exhibit A-23, article 22).
[5] Marguerite Wood
owned Piper’s Lane shares until they were transferred to Andrew Wood in Trust
for Jonathan Wood pursuant to a Separation Agreement between Andrew Wood and Marguerite
Wood, (Exhibit A-24, paragraph 7F) dated April 8, 2003. The document for the share
transfer was completed in September 2003.
[6] While a lawyer,
Andrew Wood was also involved in real estate which lead to his personal
bankruptcy in July 1995 (Exhibit A-12) and from which he received a personal
discharge on July 12, 2001 (Exhibit A-19).
[7] When Andrew Wood
went bankrupt, the receivables in his practice were taken by the Receiver in Bankruptcy,
KPMG. They were subsequently sold to Piper’s Lane for $15,000. Included in the
receivables were receivables from Harry Green [or his companies] a client and
personal friend of Andrew Wood. Before Andrew Wood went into bankruptcy, Andrew
Wood asserts that, in order to secure the receivables of Harry Green and his
companies, he took a deed on November 22, 1991 from Harry Green for property
that Harry Green owned in Blackville, New Brunswick (Exhibit A-1 – November 22, 1991).
There was also an Agreement (Exhibit A-7, Tab 2) entered into on the same date
by Andrew Wood and Harry Green setting out the terms of what Andrew Wood
says is a Trust, but what the Respondent says, in relation to the Blackville Property,
is a time limited right of redemption in Harry Green – 5 years.
[8] Notwithstanding
Article 3 of this Agreement (Exhibit A-7, Tab 2), which prohibited Andrew Wood
from conveying the property without the consent of Harry Green, Andrew Wood on
January 11, 1993, purported to convey the Blackville lands to Andrew Wood in Trust
even while Harry Green still had right of redemption.
[9] The Agreement
between Andrew Wood and Harry Green of November 22, 1991, specifically stated
that the receivables owing by Harry Green to Andrew Wood and Gilbert, McGloan,
Gillis, was $9,500 and the conveyance of the property to Andrew Wood was in
satisfaction of the debts due to Andrew Wood.
[10] Andrew Wood had
practiced law as Andrew F. Wood Associates, 1988 – 1990, and with Gilbert, McGloan,
Gillis, 1990 – 1991, and as Yeamans Wood 1991 – 1993.
[11] In the acquisition
of the receivables of Andrew Wood by Piper’s Lane, Marguerite Wood, gave
instructions on the terms of the negotiations on the purchase (Exhibit A-14, Tab 6).
[12] Harry Green died on
March 28, 1998; Andrew Wood was the executor in Harry Green’s last will and
testament. Andrew Wood approached the heirs of Harry Green to settle the receivables
– that is pay the receivables and the Blackville Property would go to the
estate. The heirs declined, so Andrew Wood asserts that the Blackville Property
then became the property of Piper’s Lane by virtue of its purchase of the
receivables of Andrew Wood from his Trustee in Bankruptcy, KPMG.
[13] When Andrew Wood
transferred the Blackville Property from himself to himself as Trustee, he
purported to hold the property as security for the debt of Harry Green with a
right of redemption but the redemption never occurred.
[14] The Harry Green
personal and corporate receivables purchased by Piper’s Lane from the Trustee
in Bankruptcy of Andrew Wood, KPMG, only include the following receivables:
Northern Timber, $1,191.35;
Northern Timber, $1,819.44.
Both of these receivables were from
Andrew Wood’s practice with Gilbert, McGloan, Gillis, 1990 – 1991. The other
receivables purchased by Piper’s Lane from the Trustee in Bankruptcy of Andrew
Wood, KPMG, included a receivable from Harry Green of $5,713.80 which was a
receivable from Andrew Wood’s practice with Yeamans Wood, 1991 – 1993. There
was no receivable of $9,500, nor any collection of receivables totalling $9,500
to Andrew Wood from Harry Green or any of his companies, that was part of
the receivables acquired by Piper’s Lane.
[15] After Harry Green
died the estate/heirs did not redeem the Blackville Property and pay the debt.
The property was sold at arm’s length to a Mr. Hallihan for (a) $20,000
and (b) property in Quarryville, New Brunswick.
[16] When this
transaction was completed, Michael Noel acted as the Solicitor for both the
vendor and purchaser. His instructions were to convey the Quarryville Property
to Andrew Wood in Trust but he did not do so and mistakenly registered the property
to Andrew Wood (Exhibit A-1, Tab 28). When the mistake was noticed by Andrew
Wood he wanted the title corrected ab initio and this could not be done
by re-conveyance but could only be done by a Certificate of Registered Ownership
(Exhibit A-3, Tab 30), which had the effect of showing Andrew Wood as Trustee
of the Property on May 28, 2002.
[17] Andrew Wood and his
wife Marguerite were separated in 2001 and in January/February 2002 they agreed
that the shares that she held in Piper’s Lane would be transferred to Andrew
Wood in Trust for Jonathan Wood. The documented transfer did not formally take
place until September 2003. Andrew Wood had no involvement with the
governance of Piper’s Lane previous to the execution of the Separation Agreement
between he and Marguerite Wood.
[18] The Quarryville conveyance
was completed on May 28, 2002. Andrew Wood and his son, the Appellant, did a Trust
Agreement as of May 1, 2002 but purportedly signed on July 9, 2003, (Exhibit
A-4, Tab 24). This Agreement obviously contemplates the Blackville/Quarryville property
exchange and speaks of the Trust in the future. The original deal was to be
closed on April 2002 but did not close until late May 2002.
[19] At the time the deed
for the Quarryville Property to Andrew Wood was rectified to read Andrew Wood
in Trust, July 9, 2003, Andrew Wood and Jonathan Wood, as Trustee and Settlor
respectively, signed a Trust Agreement as of May 1, 2002, in relation to the Quarryville
Property. A Solicitor took the signatures of Andrew Wood and Jonathan Wood as
evidenced by the Notarial Certificates of July 9, 2003, but the Solicitor could
not verify that the certificates were attached to the Trust Agreement. He did,
however, have an appointment scheduled with Andrew Wood for July 9, 2003 and on
the same date, Andrew Wood executed a Power of Attorney before the same
Solicitor.
[20] An ink aging expert
for the Respondent testified that upon analysis of the signature of Andrew Wood
in the Trust Agreement there was conclusive evidence for the hypothesis that it
was not signed on the date of the document, May 1, 2002 or July 9, 2003, and
that it was probable that the signature of Jonathan Wood was not placed on
the document on July 9, 2003 but more likely signed no earlier than November 2004.
[21] Some adjusting
journal entries were completed on September 3, 2002, for Piper’s Lane in
relation to the property exchange (Blackville for Quarryville) but these
entries appear to be in the wrong year – February 1, 2001 to January 31, 2002.
The transaction did not take place until May 2002. These entries disclose the
financial aspect of the deal – the Blackville Property had a cost base of $8,725.59.
Cash was received of $20,000 and a cabin on the Quarryville Property was
designated as $7,500, total deal $27,500; that is $20,000 in cash, $7,500 for
the Quarryville Property, all for the Blackville Property which had a cost base
of $8,725.59 and a gain of $18,775.41. At the same time, Jonathan Wood,
the Appellant, paid $7,500 in a receivable for the Quarryville Property.
[22] Post May 2002 to
early January 2004, renovations to the Quarryville Property were carried out by
the Appellant with the father, Andrew Wood, paying for the materials.
[23] The Appellant
received $85,111 from Piper’s Lane on March 29, 2004, as payment for a
shareholder’s loan outstanding to him as beneficial owner of Piper’s Lane
shares. It had nothing to do with the Quarryville Property or its ownership.
The financial statements of Piper’s Lane for the year ending January 31,
2003, show as outstanding a shareholder loan of $85,111 – the amount paid to
Jonathan Wood on March 29, 2004.
[24] There were no
corporate documents for Piper’s Lane Minutes, Share Certificates, nothing in
relation to the share transfer, share ownership or share transfer in Trust for
Jonathan Wood.
Issues
[25] The parties
initially agreed that the issues could be described as follows:
1.
Was
the legal effect of the registration of the filed rectification (Quarryville)
recorded on January 21, 2004, that the May 28, 2002 transfer to Andrew F. Wood of
the property was in a valid Trust as of May 28, 2002?
2.
If
Andrew Wood held legal title to the property at all material times at or after
May 28, 2002, has a transfer pursuant to section 325 of the Excise Tax Act
of the Quarryville Property occurred from Andrew Wood to the Appellant?
3.
If
so, on what date did such transfer occur and by what means?
4.
If a
transfer of the property was made to the Appellant after May 28, 2002, did the
transferor have a beneficial interest, i.e. hold beneficial title to the property
on the date of such transfer to the Appellant?
5.
If
the Court is of the view that Andrew Wood had a beneficial ownership interest
in the property and made a transfer of the property to the Appellant on the
date when Andrew Wood was liable to pay excise tax (and if that was on or after
May 28, 2002, the Appellant does not dispute there is liability in Andrew
Wood’s transfer), then did the Minister correctly ascertain the value of the property
on the date of the transfer so as to correctly calculate the amount of tax the
Appellant is vicariously liable for?
[26] Having gone through
the trial and after review of the above issues, there is really a single issue
and that is who owned the Blackville Property when it was conveyed to Hallihan in
an arm’s length transaction for the sum of $20,000 and the Quarryville Property?
Was it Piper’s Lane, was it Andrew Wood or was it Andrew Wood in Trust? The
answer to this question will lead to the result of this appeal.
Law and Analysis
[27] The Appellant
asserts there was some sort of Trust which came into existence in favour of the
Appellant when the Quarryville Property was allegedly held in Trust by Andrew
Wood.
[28] I will not review the law as it relates to implied, express,
resulting or constructive trusts.
[29] There were
numerous aspects of conflicting evidence in the presentation of the Appellant’s
case, some examples of which were as follows:
1.
The Appellant asserts that
receivables sold by Andrew Wood’s Trustee in Bankruptcy, KPMG, to Piper’s Lane
included the Blackville Property receivable because the Blackville Property was
taken as security for receivables owed by Harry Green. In contrast to this, are
the documents adduced by the Appellant via Andrew Wood which show that Andrew
Wood had in fact been paid in full the $9,500 owed to him at the time by
Harry Green and the security of the Blackville Property was not in
relation to this particular $9,500 debt. Also, this particular debt, was not
assigned to Piper’s Lane nor were any debts which collectively add up to $9,500
assigned to Piper’s Lane. Andrew Wood’s version of the facts is contradicted by
the documentation, he and the Appellant produced, that is Andrew Wood’s own Agreements
between he and Harry Green. Andrew Wood contradicted his own Trust Agreement
with Harry Green whereby Harry Green could redeem the property within five
years of the execution of the Agreement and Andrew Wood was precluded from
conveying of the property without Harry Green’s consent during the same period.
Andrew Wood conveyed the property from Andrew Wood to Andrew Wood in Trust without
any indication in the Trust deed to whom he held the property in Trust for or
anything else.
2.
When Andrew Wood caused the
Certificate of Registered Ownership for the Quarryville Property to be executed
on July 9, 2003 as of May 28, 2002, which would have effect as of May 28, 2002,
he and Jonathan Wood were also purported to have executed, as Trustees and Settlor
respectively, a Trust Agreement as of May 1, 2002 in relation to the same property
(Quarryville). The Trust Agreement related to property which had not even come
into the ownership of Andrew Wood as of May 1, 2002, because the property
transaction for the exchange of the Blackville Property for $20,000 and the Quarryville
Property did not close until May 28, 2002.
3.
Journal entries were prepared for Piper’s
Lane on September 3, 2002 dated for the year ending January 31, 2002 which
related to the exchange of the Blackville Property for the Quarryville Property,
when the transaction had not even taken place during that financial year but
rather took place in May 2002.
4.
Andrew Wood on April 4, 1998 forwarded
correspondence to David Green (as the representative of the heirs of Harry
Green) to the effect that the Blackville Property referred to in the Trust Agreement
between Harry Green and he, was held in Trust on the terms in the Trust Agreement
by him and the debt due was assigned to a holding company and technically, the
beneficiary of the sums due from the Estate, was not him personally, but a
company owned by his wife to whom the receivables had been assigned. Two months
later, on June 12, 1998, Andrew Wood did a Memorandum to his own file in which
he stated in part as follows:
I also advised
David that the Blackville properties which were formally held in Trust by me
had concluded under the terms of the Trust. I indicated that what I would
do is to give them an option to purchase them for the cost to David or his
designates and David indicated that he was happy with this.
[30] These two notes
are in contradiction to each other, one in which Mr. Wood asserts that the
properties were in Trust pursuant to the terms therein and that the
indebtedness had been assigned to a holding company and the sum is really due
to a company not personally owned by him but by his wife, yet, two months later
he says that the properties were formally held in Trust by him and that the Trust
terms had been concluded but he was willing to offer the estate an option to
purchase the property.
[31] These are but
four examples of the conflicting evidence which arose through the Appellant’s
case. There are numerous others which I will not review but they naturally give
the Court considerable difficulty in trying to accept the submissions of the
Appellant with respect to who did or did not own the Blackville Property at the
key time, that is, when it was transferred for the Quarryville Property and the
$20,000. It would appear that Andrew Wood in his rush to prepare documentation
to attempt to establish the Trust became mixed up and confused as to who owned
what, when and how.
[32] I believe a
detailed review of the exhibits before the Court, reveal answers to the
question as to who owned the Blackville Property when it was conveyed for the Quarryville
Property that is Piper’s Lane or Andrew Wood or Andrew Wood in Trust.
[33] I conclude from a
review of the evidence that the Blackville Property was always owned by Andrew
Wood as beneficial owner and was never transferred to Piper’s Lane. Andrew Wood
owned this property as beneficial owner when it was transferred for $20,000 and
the Quarryville Property on May 28, 2002. I reach this conclusion after review
of all of the evidence but most particularly:
1.
Exhibit A-7 is an Agreement
between Andrew Wood and Harry Green which purportedly, according to Andrew Wood
was a Trust Agreement. In the preamble it notes that the Settlor or Harry
Green, is indebted to the Creditor that is Andrew Wood and Gilbert, McGloan,
Gillis for the sum of $9,500 and then goes on in the preamble to say “And
whereas the Settlor conveyed the property to the Creditor in satisfaction of
the debts due to the Creditor.” The property in question was the Blackville Property.
This statement would certainly lead one to believe that a conveyance had been
completed and in fact had been completed on the same date. If the recitals are
correct it had been completed to Andrew Wood in his own right in satisfaction
of the debts due to him by Harry Green.
There were however, other debts outstanding and Andrew
Wood had agreed that he would hold property in Trust for Andrew Wood for all accounts
due from Harry Green to Andrew Wood and/or Gilbert, McGloan, Gillis. Also,
Andrew Wood agreed not to deed the property in favour of any person except as
directed by the Settlor, Harry Green. The Settlor could at any time within 5
years of the date (November 22, 1991) require the Creditor to re‑convey
the property to Settlor by giving notice of such intent to the Creditor and
upon payment of all sums due then to the Creditor. It is noted that this right
of redemption had never been exercised and that the Creditor, Andrew Wood,
within a short period of time of the entire conveyance to him, conveyed the property
from himself to himself as Trustee.
2.
Exhibit A-21 was a Memorandum from
Andrew Wood to his file of June 12, 1998 wherein he noted that he had advised
David (presumably Green as he was dealing with David Green as representative of
Harry Green’s heirs) that the Blackville Property which was formally held in Trust
by him had concluded under the terms of the Trust but he was willing to offer the
heirs of Harry Green an Option to Purchase the property for the cost. This
document would certainly indicate that any Trust which may have included the Blackville
Property had been completed and Andrew Wood was still willing to provide an
Option to Purchase to the Green Estate.
3.
Andrew Wood conveyed the property
in question to himself, in Trust, by Deed dated January 22, 1993 contrary to
the express Trust Agreement between he and Harry Green whereby Harry Green had
the right of the redemption.
4.
In Exhibit A-13 the Statement of
Assets of the affairs of Andrew Wood when he declared bankruptcy showed the
receivables of Andrew Wood and the various law firms he worked over a period of
time. The receivables which were assigned from the Trustee in Bankruptcy, KPMG,
to Piper’s Lane could not have included the $9,500 referred to in the Trust Agreement
between Andrew Wood and Harry Green because it is not specified in the
receivables assigned to Piper’s Lane and as a result Piper’s Lane did not
receive title to the receivable and could not receive title to the security
held for the receivable.
5.
When one refers to Exhibit 9 as
the Agreement of Purchase and Sale between KPMG and Wood Melanson Filliter in
Trust, of January 31, 1997 and one reviews the receivables, some of which were
purportedly owned by Harry Green, the receivable which was the subject matter
of security, the Blackville Property, $9,500 was not included therein nor was
any combination of the receivables that would add up to $9,500 and as a result
it can only be concluded that the receivable in question was not assigned to Piper’s
Lane.
6.
From a review of Exhibit A-20, the
indebtedness of Harry Green to Andrew Wood, there is no reference to the
receivables therein which are the subject matter of the Blackville Property or
any combination thereof that add up to $9,500 or indeed anywhere close to
$9,500.
[34] The Respondent,
in summation, meticulously reviewed the receivables and how they did not fit
within the evidence presented by Andrew Wood and I accept the submissions of
the Respondent in this regard. As a result of the evidence presented I conclude
that the account receivable ($9,500), which was related to the Blackville Property
was never transferred to Piper’s Lane because this debt of $9,500 had already
been paid in full by the acknowledgment of Andrew Wood in his own documents.
[35] Andrew Wood
received the Blackville Property conveyance from Harry Green and then he
had purported to convey the property from himself to himself as Trustee. It is
trite law that you cannot hold property in Trust for yourself and the two
interests merge so that he was the beneficial owner of the property in
question. I conclude that the Blackville Property was always owned by Andrew Wood
as the beneficial owner after it was deeded to him by Harry Green by deed dated
November 22, 1991.
[36] Andrew Wood
received $20,000 and the Quarryville Property in exchange for the Blackville Property.
The question then becomes, when did the transfer take place of the Quarryville Property
from Andrew Wood to Jonathan Wood. The property had nothing to do with Piper’s
Lane. The transfer took place by the Trust Agreement entered into purportedly
on July 9, 2003 as of May 1, 2002.
[37] I note that we have the adjusting journal entries of
Piper’s Lane of September 3, 2002, which purported to show an acquisition of
the Quarryville Property by the Appellant for a $7,500 receivable. Piper’s Lane
did not own the Quarryville Property and therefore had no right convey it for a
cash or receivable or otherwise, at any time.
[38] We have a
forensic expert, Marc Gaudreau, who gave evidence, that there is conclusive
evidence for the hypothesis that the July 9, 2003 Trust Agreement was not
executed by Andrew Wood on that date and that it was probable that it was also
not executed by Jonathan Wood on that date. According to his evidence, the
earliest it could have been executed would be about November 2004. Contrary to
this evidence, is the evidence of P. Larrie Yerxa, a lawyer who was called to
the bar in 1972, having practiced real estate law for over 36 years. He was
quite a convincing witness and seemed direct and down to earth and although he
could not specifically recall executing the Notarial Certificate in July 9,
2003 which was attached to the Trust Agreement in question, he knows that it
was his signature on the document and he knows it was his Notarial Seal. The
Trust Agreement with the Notarial Certificates had been taken apart several
times but he did testify that if the Notarial Certificates were attached to the
Trust Agreement and it was signed by him on the date on the Certificates, he
most certainly took the signatures on that particular date. He never notarized
documents signed by a person who was not in his presence. They may not sign in
his presence but that person would always have to appear before him and confirm
who they were before he would notarize the document. He also noted that he
checked his day timer for July 9, 2003 and it showed that he had an appointment
with Andrew Wood at 12:30 p.m. but it should also be noted that Andrew Wood
also executed a Power of Attorney before Mr. Yerxa on the same date.
Normally a Notarial Certificate would identify the document to which it is
attached but this Notarial Certificate did not, because on the day in question
he likely ran off, what he called, a garden variety of a Notarial Certificate and
used it at the time. Assuming that the Notarial Certificates were attached to
the Trust Agreement then it could not be signed any later than July 9, 2003.
[39] The foregoing gives me three alternatives:
1.
Accept the evidence of the
forensic expert, Mr. Gaudreau, that the Trust Agreement probably was not signed
before November 2004.
2.
Accept the evidence of Mr. Yerxa that
he took the Appellant’s signature and the signature of Andrew Wood on July 9,
2003, or;
3.
Conclude that a Notarial Certificate
of Mr. Yerxa somehow became attached to the Trust Agreement but were not
attached to these documents on July 9, 2003.
[40] I am unwilling to
not believe Mr. Yerxa, as I found him to be a very credible, forthright and
frank individual and his evidence was quite clear. The expert’s evidence is
somewhat less exacting than Mr. Yerxa, as he speaks in ranges of time – the
longer the passage of time from when ink is put to the paper, the less exacting
the time range - 2 years being the absolute outside limit. I find the expert
credible, forthright and again frank, the same as Mr. Yerxa but I do not believe
that I can accept his assertion of the hypothesis he suggested over the evidence
of Mr. Yerxa so I conclude the Trust Agreement was executed on July 9, 2003. I have
no evidence of the other alternative. This case is not without its
difficulties.
[41] Having reached the conclusion that Andrew Wood was the
beneficial owner of the property, given the execution of the Trust Agreement on
July 9, 2003, as I have found, was the legal effect of the Certificate of
Registered Ownership that title was in the name of Andrew Wood in Trust as of
May 28, 2002. I accept the evidence of Keith Allen, the Barrister and
Solicitor, qualified as an Expert in Real Estate Law and Practice Standards of
Practitioners. His evidence was that once the Certificate of Registered Ownership
was issued, it had the effect of dating the transfer back to the original
document and to the date of registration of that document – May 28, 2002.
[42] The Trust Agreement itself said it was as of May 1,
2002. This must have been a typo or in an event is in error because Andrew Wood
never had beneficial ownership of the Quarryville Property until the conveyance
was complete which at the earliest was May 28, 2002; therefore the transfer
could only have the effect as of that date at the earliest – I hold the date of
transfer was May 28, 2002. No consideration flowed from the Appellant to Andrew
Wood at the time of the transfer of the Quarryville Property. The question
becomes, what is the fair market value of the Quarryville Property on May 28,
2002?
[43] We have the
evidence of Roger Evans Beckwith who was qualified as an expert in the fair
market value of real estate and he explained in detail how he conducted an
appraisal of the Quarryville Property and came to a conclusion that, in his
expert opinion, the Quarryville Property in January 2004 had a fair market
value of approximately $52,000. We however are concerned with the fair market
value of the property on May 28, 2002. The only evidence we have with respect
to the fair market value of the property in that particular time is the
following:
1.
The assessed value of the property
for property tax purposes as of May 28, 2002, according to the Notice of
Appeal, paragraph 16 and Exhibit R-4, Tab 33, is $38,100.
2.
Andrew Wood listed the property
for sale in July 2002 for the sum of $97,500 according to Exhibit R-13, Tab 13.
3.
Jonathan Wood signed and presented
documents for a loan application to a financial institution on January 27,
2004, which asserts the property value is $150,000.
I question the value put on by Jonathan Wood because
he was quite frank in his evidence in that he really did not know what was
going on with respect to the property in question. The property had been
basically looked after by his father.
Appellant’s Counsel stated that the assessed value of
the property for property tax purposes was $38,000 in 2002, and this is usually
15% to 20% less than the fair market value – this would make the fair market
value about $45,600. I do not believe the property is worth what it was listed
for, nor what it was put down for as the fair market value in the Net Worth Statement
of Jonathan Wood on his loan application. The expert evidence from the
Respondent was $52,000 in January 2004. For property tax purposes it was $38,000.
According to Appellant’s counsel the assessed value for property tax purposes
would have to be about 15% to 20% less than the real fair market value which
would then turn out to be $45,600. As unexacting as this may be, I find that
the fair market value of the property in question on May 28, 2002 was $45,600.
[44] The Minister had
advised in his amended Reply that he did not want the assessment on the basis
of a fair market value of $150,000 and the fair market value should be
reconsidered and reassessed by the Minister on the basis of $52,000. I allow
the appeal in part and I refer the matter back to the Minister for
reconsideration and reassessment on the following basis:
1.
Andrew F. Wood was the beneficial
owner of the property in question, at the relevant time, that is the time of
the transfer of the Blackville Property for the Quarryville Property, May 28,
2002.
2.
The transfer date for the transfer
of the Quarryville Property was May 28, 2002.
3.
The fair market value of the Quarryville
Property at the time of the transfer was $45,600.
4.
The Appellant and Andrew Wood are
jointly and severally liable pursuant to section 325 of the Act.
[45] After considering the various factors applicable to
awarding costs, the Respondent shall have
their costs of the appeal fixed at $2,685; costs, disbursements and taxes all included.
Signed at Ottawa,
Canada, this 26th day of May, 2008.
"E. P. Rossiter"