Bonner,
T.C.J.:—This
is
an
appeal
from
an
income
tax
assessment
for
the
appellant's
1980
taxation
year.
On
assessment
the
respondent
added
to
declared
income
the
sum
of
$9,900
as
the
appellant’s
share
of
a
dividend
paid
by
Peeltown
Welding
Limited
(hereinafter
"Peeltown").
In
the
reply
to
notice
of
appeal
the
respondent
pleaded
that
the
assessment
was
based
on
the
following
findings
or
assumptions
of
fact:
(a)
Peeltown
Welding
Limited
(hereinafter
‘‘Peeltown’’)
is
a
closely
held
private
corporation
in
which
the
Appellant
and
his
spouse
are
the
only
shareholders;
(b)
the
Appellant
owns
99
shares
and
the
Appellant’s
spouse
owns
1
share
of
Peeltown;
(c)
the
Appellant
is
also
an
employee
of
Peeltown
and
the
company’s
income
is
derived
from
the
sale
of
the
Appellant’s
services;
(d)
in
the
1980
taxation
year
Peeltown
declared
a
dividend
of
$10,000.00
for
the
benefit
of
the
Appellant’s
spouse;
(e)
at
the
time
this
$10,000.00
dividend
was
declared,
the
company’s
retained
earnings
totalled
$20,000.00;
(f)
the
rights
carried
by
the
shares
ranked
pari
passu
and
thus
shareholders
participated
in
the
benefits
of
membership
equally;
(g)
on
this
basis,
the
Appellant
would
have
been
entitled
to
a
dividend
of
$990,000.00
in
the
1980
taxation
year
which
the
company
was
clearly
unable
to
declare;
(h)
the
Appellant
purported
to
waive
the
Peeltown
dividend
to
which
he
was
entitled;
(i)
the
dividend
of
$9,900.00
constituted
a
payment
or
transfer
of
property
made
pursuant
to
the
direction
of,
or
with
the
concurrence
of
the
Appellant
to
his
spouse
for
the
benefit
of
the
Appellant
or
as
a
benefit
the
Appellant
desired
to
have
conferred
on
his
spouse.
The
respondent,
as
suggested
by
the
last
of
the
assumptions,
relied
on
subsection
56(2)
of
the
Income
Tax
Act
as
the
basis
for
including
in
the
computation
of
the
appellant’s
income
99/100ths
of
the
dividend
payment
to
the
appellant’s
wife.
The
appellant
advanced
two
arguments.
The
first
was
that
the
$10,000
payment
was
in
substance
salary
or
a
bonus
which
Mrs.
Cliche
had
earned
by
virtue
of
services
which
she
had
rendered
to
the
company.
This
argument
rested
on
evidence
given
by
the
appellant
in
which
he
described
his
wife
as
an
"active
shareholder"
of
Peeltown
and
stated
that
she
does
now
and
has
in
the
past
looked
after
all
bookkeeping
and
banking
chores
in
connection
with
the
company's
business.
He
asserted
that
without
the
teamwork
of
his
wife
and
himself
the
company
could
not
have
gotten
by.
It
was
plain
that
Mr.
Cliche
felt
that
Mrs.
Cliche
was
entitled
to
compensation
in
addition
to
the
salary
which
had
been
paid
to
her.
He
stated
that
it
was
decided
that
such
compensation
should
take
the
form
of
dividends
and
not
a
bonus.
As
is
evident,
it
was
common
ground
that
the
payment
to
Mrs.
Cliche
was
not
in
fact
additional
salary
or
bonus.
Tax
liability
rests
on
events
which
have
occurred
and
not
events
which
might
have
occurred.
Thus,
I
need
not
consider
the
tax
consequences
which
might
have
ensued
had
the
payment
in
fact
been
salary.
The
appellant’s
second
argument
was
that
the
respondent
had
"accepted"
the
waiving
of
dividends
and
that
by
waiving
his
right
to
the
dividend
he
did
not
receive
any
money
or
confer
any
benefit
on
his
spouse.
This
argument
rested
on
Interpretation
Bulletin
No.
IT-208
dated
April
28,
1975.
The
first
two
paragraphs
thereof
read
as
follows:
1.
Where
a
shareholder
does
not
receive
a
taxable
dividend
because
he
unconditionally
waived
(before
or
after
its
declaration)
his
present
or
future
right
to
it,
it
is
not
included
in
computing
his
income
and
section
80,
dealing
with
the
forgiveness
of
debts,
does
not
apply
to
the
payer
corporation
which
declared
but
did
not
pay
the
taxable
dividend
to
the
shareholder.
However,
a
taxable
dividend
actually
received
by
a
shareholder
in
spite
of
his
prior
waiver
is
included
in
his
income
pursuant
to
subsection
82(1)
or
90(1).
2.
Where
a
taxpayer
only
waived
direct
receipt
of
a
taxable
dividend
and
directs
or
concurs
with
its
payment
to
some
other
person
to
benefit
himself
or
the
other
person,
the
dividend
when
paid
is
included
in
his
income
pursuant
to
subsection
56(2).
A
dividend
included
in
computing
a
taxpayer’s
income
pursuant
to
subsection
56(2)
is
considered
to
be
received
by
him
for
purposes
of
sections
82,
112,
and
121
and
subsection
212(2).
This
Bulletin
was
“‘cancelled”
by
a
second
bulletin
dated
May
18,
1981,
but,
as
the
appellant
pointed
out,
the
dividend
now
in
question
was
declared
and
paid
during
1980
before
the
cancellation.
The
evidence
of
the
circumstances
surrounding
the
waiver
was
incomplete.
No
detail
was
given
as
to
how
and
when
the
waiver
was
effected.
The
only
evidence
produced
with
regard
to
corporate
proceedings
consisted
of
minutes
of
a
meeting
of
the
directors
of
Peeltown
held
on
June
29,
1981.
It
is
evident
that
that
meeting
could
not
have
been
the
one
at
which
the
dividend
now
in
question
was
declared
not
only
because
of
the
date,
but
also
because
the
minutes
do
not
set
forth
any
resolution
declaring
a
dividend.
The
directors
named
in
the
minutes
were
the
appellant
and
his
spouse.
There
was
no
evidence
indicating
whether
they
were
the
directors
at
the
time
the
1980
dividend
was
declared.
The
corporate
articles
were
not
produced.
No
suggestion
was
made
that
the
shares
held
by
the
appellant
and
the
share
held
by
his
spouse
fell
into
different
classes.
As
a
result
of
the
gaps
in
the
evidence
I
am
not
in
a
position
to
reach
any
conclusion
as
to
whether
the
circumstances
justified
the
respondent's
reliance
on
subsection
56(2).
Dealing
more
directly
with
the
appellant’s
argument,
I
cannot
find
whether
the
appellant
waived
a
present
or
future
right
to
dividends
as
contemplated
by
paragraph
1
of
the
Bulletin
on
which
he
relied
or
whether
he
simply
“..
.
waived
direct
receipt
..
.”
of
the
dividend
and
directed
payment
to
his
spouse
as
contemplated
by
paragraph
2.
A
bulletin
may
properly
be
used
as
an
aid
to
the
interpretation
of
an
unclear
statutory
provision*.
However,
the
Bulletin
is
of
little
use
in
this
case
because
there
appears
to
be
no
doubt
about
the
meaning
of
subsection
56(2).
In
Alex
Miller
v.
M.N.R.,
[1962]
C.T.C.
199
at
212;
62
D.T.C.
1139
at
1147,
Thurlow,
J.
(as
he
then
was)
considered
subsection
16(1)
of
the
former
Income
Tax
Act,
the
predecessor
of
the
present
subsection
56(2).
His
Lordship
said:
In
my
opinion,
section
16(1)
is
intended
to
cover
cases
where
a
taxpayer
seeks
to
avoid
receipt
of
what
in
his
hands
would
be
income
by
arranging
to
have
the
amount
received
by
some
other
person
whom
he
wishes
to
benefit
or
by
some
other
person
for
his
own
benefit.
The
scope
of
the
subsection
is
not
obscure
for
one
does
not
speak
of
benefitting
a
person
in
the
sense
of
the
subsection
by
making
a
business
contract
with
him
for
adequate
consideration.
Here,
the
appellant
has
failed
to
make
any
attempt
to
show
that
in
waiving
the
right
which
he
as
holder
of
99
per
cent
of
the
issued
shares
had
to
99
per
cent
of
the
dividend,
he
was
not
seeking
to
avoid
receipt
of
dividend
income
and
arranging
for
receipt
of
that
amount
by
his
spouse
as
the
respondent
assumed
had
been
done.
The
decision
of
the
Federal
Court
—
Trial
Division
in
Warren
Champ
v.
The
Queen,
[1983]
C.T.C.
1;
83
D.T.C.
5029,
is
indistinguishable
in
principle.
The
appeal
will
therefore
be
dismissed.
Appeal
dismissed.