Guy
       
        Tremblay:—This
      
      case
      was
      heard
      on
      November
      3
      and
      4,
      1981,
      at
      the
      
      
      City
      of
      Halifax,
      Nova
      Scotia.
      
      
      
      
    
      1.
      
        The
       
        Point
       
        at
       
        Issue
      
      The
      point
      at
      issue
      is
      whether
      the
      appellant
      is
      correct,
      in
      the
      computation
      
      
      of
      its
      income
      for
      the
      years
      1973
      and
      1974,
      in:
      
      
      
      
    
      (a)
      deducting
      all
      the
      insurance
      premiums
      of
      $81,779
      in
      1973
      and
      
      
      $381,240
      in
      1974
      paid
      for
      marine
      risks
      of
      its
      vessels.
      Those
      premiums
      
      
      were
      paid
      to
      its
      subsidiary,
      Humber
      Insurance
      Company
      Limited
      
      
      (“Humber”),
      incorporated
      in
      Bermuda;
      and
      
      
      
      
    
      (b)
      not
      including
      in
      its
      net
      income
      the
      interest
      income
      ($4,162
      in
      1973
      
      
      and
      $12,796
      in
      1974)
      of
      the
      said
      insurance
      company.
      
      
      
      
    
      The
      respondent’s
      contention
      is
      that
      a
      part
      of
      the
      premiums
      cannot
      be
      
      
      deducted
      ($24,557
      in
      1973
      and
      $123,025
      in
      1974)
      and
      the
      net
      interest
      income
      
      
      of
      Humber
      must
      be
      included
      in
      the
      appellant’s
      income.
      
      
      
      
    
      2.
      
        The
       
        Burden
       
        of
       
        Proof
      
      2.01
      The
      burden
      is
      on
      the
      appellant
      to
      show
      that
      the
      respondent’s
      assessments
      
      
      are
      incorrect.
      This
      burden
      of
      proof
      results
      particularly
      from
      several
      
      
      judicial
      decisions,
      including
      the
      judgment
      delivered
      by
      the
      Supreme
      Court
      
      
      of
      Canada
      in
      
        Johnston
      
      v
      
        MNR,
      
      [1948]
      CTC
      195;
      3
      DTC
      1182.
      
      
      
      
    
      2.02
      In
      the
      same
      judgment,
      the
      Court
      decided
      that
      the
      assumed
      facts
      on
      
      
      which
      the
      respondent
      based
      the
      assessment
      or
      reassessment
      are
      also
      
      
      deemed
      to
      be
      correct.
      In
      the
      present
      case
      the
      assumed
      facts
      are
      described
      
      
      in
      the
      reply
      to
      notice
      of
      appeal
      as
      follows:
      
      
      
      
    
        8.
        In
        reassessing
        the
        Appellant
        in
        respect
        of
        its
        1973
        and
        1974
        taxation
        years,
        
        
        the
        Respondent
        proceeded
        on
        the
        basis
        that:
        
        
        
        
      
        (a)
        Humber,
        at
        all
        relevant
        times,
        did
        not
        provide
        bona
        fide
        insurance
        protection
        
        
        to
        the
        Appellant
        and
        was
        not
        in
        the
        insurance
        business;
        
        
        
        
      
        (b)
        the
        Appellant
        did
        not
        in
        fact
        or
        in
        law
        make
        or
        incur
        any
        disbursement
        or
        
        
        expense
        which
        would
        be
        deductible
        in
        the
        computation
        of
        its
        income
        while
        it
        
        
        transferred
        its
        funds
        to
        Humber;
        
        
        
        
      
        (c)
        Humber
        had
        no
        permanent
        employees
        and
        was,
        at
        all
        relevant
        times,
        merely
        
        
        acting
        as
        the
        Appellant’s
        agent
        to
        act
        as
        a
        depositary
        for
        funds
        set
        aside
        in
        
        
        Bermuda
        by
        the
        Appellant;
        
        
        
        
      
        (d)
        to
        the
        extent
        that
        the
        funds
        transferred
        by
        the
        Appellant
        to
        Humber
        were
        
        
        used
        for
        “re-insurance”
        and
        stop-loss
        protection,
        such
        amounts
        were
        treated
        as
        
        
        deductible
        expenses.
        The
        said
        expenses
        were
        in
        the
        following
        amounts:
        
        
        
        
      
|  | Taxation
            year |  | 
|  | 1973 | 1974 | 
| Commission | 4,089 | 15,780 | 
| Re-insurance | 53,133 | 242,435 | 
|  | 57,222 | 258,215 | 
        (e)
        the
        deductions
        from
        income
        sought
        to
        be
        made
        by
        the
        Appellant
        in
        respect
        
        
        of
        the
        transfer
        of
        funds
        to
        Humber
        where
        such
        funds
        were
        not
        used
        for
        re-insurance
        
        
        or
        stop-loss
        protection
        purposes
        if
        allowed,
        would
        unduly
        or
        artificially
        
        
        reduce
        the
        Plaintiff's
        income
        for
        income
        tax
        purposes.
        The
        said
        deductions
        are
        
        
        in
        the
        following
        amounts:
        
        
        
        
      
|  | Taxation
            year |  | 
|  | 1973 | 1974 | 
| Amounts
            paid
            to
            Humber
            as
            “premiums”
            under
            in- |  | 
| Surance
            contracts
            (see
            paragraph
            6) | $81,779 | $381,240 | 
| Less:
            amounts
            paid
            for
            “re-insurance”
            or
            stop-loss
            protec |  | 
| tion
            (see
            paragraph
            7(d)) | 57,222 | 258,215 | 
|  | $24,557 | $123,025 | 
        9.
        In
        reassessing,
        the
        Respondent
        further
        proceeded
        on
        the
        basis
        that
        the
        interest
        
        
        income
        purportedly
        earned
        by
        Humber
        was
        in
        fact
        and
        in
        law
        income
        earned
        
        
        by
        the
        Appellant.
        The
        following
        amounts
        were
        therefore
        to
        be
        included
        in
        the
        Appellant’s
        
        
        income:
        
        
        
        
      
| Taxation
            year | Amount | 
| 1973 | $
            4,162 | 
| 1974 | $12,796 | 
      3.
      
        The
       
        Facts
      
      3.01
      The
      appellant
      company
      was
      incorporated
      in
      about
      1940.
      It
      carries
      on
      a
      
      
      fish
      processing
      business
      through
      its
      head
      office
      in
      the
      Province
      of
      Newfoundland
      
      
      and
      in
      the
      course
      of
      doing
      so
      owns
      several
      fishing
      vessels.
      
      
      
      
    
      3.02
      The
      first
      witness
      of
      the
      appellant
      was
      Mr
      David
      Lunnen.
      He
      testified
      
      
      during
      chief
      examination
      that:
      
      
      
      
    
      (a)
      Originally
      and
      during
      the
      years
      involved,
      the
      company
      was
      directly
      
      
      controlled
      by
      the
      Russell
      Family
      (some
      seventy
      percent
      (70%))
      (SN
      I,
      
      
      page
      13).
      
      
      
      
    
      (b)
      From
      1968
      to
      early
      1975,
      he
      was
      the
      controller
      of
      the
      appellant
      and
      as
      
      
      such
      was
      its
      primary
      representative
      and
      spokesman.
      He
      was
      indeed
      re-
      
      
      sponsible
      “for
      the
      accounting
      functions
      and
      financial
      reporting,
      financial
      
      
      planning”
      (SN
      I,
      page
      13).
      
      
      
      
    
      (c)
      The
      placement
      of
      insurance
      on
      the
      company’s
      vessels
      fell
      within
      his
      
      
      jurisdiction
      (SN
      I,
      page
      13).
      He
      was
      never
      a
      shareholder
      or
      principal,
      but
      
      
      a
      senior
      employee.
      
      
      
      
    
      (d)
      The
      company
      in
      1973
      and
      1974
      had
      between
      11
      and
      14
      fishing
      vessels
      
      
      called
      trawlers
      (about
      150
      feet
      long
      and
      400
      to
      500
      tonnage)
      (SN
      I,
      
      
      page
      16).
      The
      company
      also
      owned
      4
      or
      5
      small
      boats
      (40
      to
      60
      feet
      long)
      
      
      called
      “Longliners”.
      They
      were
      used
      seasonally
      and
      only
      in
      shore
      (SN
      I,
      
      
      page
      18).
      All
      the
      vessels
      had
      a
      value
      of
      about
      $13,000,000.
      This
      was
      confirmed
      
      
      during
      cross-examination.
      
      
      
      
    
      (e)
      In
      the
      early
      1970s
      the
      cost
      of
      insuring
      marine
      risks
      for
      the
      vessels
      had
      
      
      become
      very
      expensive.
      The
      rates
      were
      growing;
      inflation,
      the
      state
      of
      
      
      competition
      or
      lack
      of
      competition
      in
      the
      market,
      the
      cost
      of
      repairing
      
      
      vessels,
      loss
      experience,
      etc.
      The
      vessels
      were
      used
      for
      fishing
      off
      the
      
      
      coast
      of
      Newfoundland
      and
      on
      the
      Grand
      Banks
      twelve
      months
      a
      year
      in
      
      
      many
      areas.
      In
      fact,
      some
      vessels
      went
      down
      in
      the
      last
      couple
      of
      years
      
      
      with
      serious
      losses.
      Icebergs
      also
      infested
      the
      waters.
      In
      those
      circumstances,
      
      
      there
      were
      serious
      risks
      involved
      in
      operating
      the
      vessels.
      However,
      
      
      the
      fact
      was
      that
      the
      loss
      experience
      had
      been
      considerably
      lower
      
      
      than
      the
      premiums
      that
      they
      were
      paying.
      The
      insurers,
      in
      order
      to
      maintain
      
      
      the
      premium
      cost
      at
      an
      acceptable
      level,
      would
      have
      been
      obliged
      to
      
      
      increase
      substantially
      the
      “deductible”.
      
      
      
      
    
      (f)
      Before
      1973,
      the
      insurance
      was
      placed
      through
      a
      local
      company
      
      
      called
      Job
      Brothers
      Limited,
      as
      the
      appellant’s
      exclusive
      insurance
      brokers.
      
      
      At
      the
      end
      of
      1972,
      after
      receiving
      tenders
      from
      various
      insurers,
      
      
      Reed,
      Shaw,
      Osler
      Limited
      was
      chosen
      to
      cover
      the
      vessels.
      
      
      
      
    
      (g)
      The
      appellant
      company
      had
      an
      excellent
      insurance
      record
      from
      the
      
      
      years
      1968
      to
      1972:,
      
      
      
      
    
        59.
        Q
        Do
        you
        recall
        how
        your
        actual
        loss
        experience
        was
        in
        those
        years,
        that
        is,
        
        
        immediately
        preceding
        19.
        .
        .
        
        
        
        
      
        A
        We
        had
        an
        excellent
        insurance
        record.
        Usually,
        the
        insurance
        companies
        will
        
        
        go
        by
        your
        last
        five
        or
        eight
        years
        record
        for
        losses
        when
        they
        look
        at
        you
        as
        a
        
        
        company.
        During
        my
        period,
        we
        had
        very
        little
        in
        the
        way
        of
        losses.
        There
        had
        
        
        been
        a
        couple
        of
        losses
        back
        .
        .
        .
        a
        great
        number
        of
        years
        ago,
        but
        nothing
        in
        
        
        recent
        years.
        (SN
        I,
        page
        27)
        
        
        
        
      
      (h)
      Despite
      an
      excellent
      record,
      premiums
      were
      getting
      too
      high:
      
      
      
      
    
        60.
        Q
        Well,
        in
        the
        light
        of
        your
        loss
        experience
        did
        you
        feel
        that
        your
        premiums
        
        
        were
        getting
        too
        high
        or
        were
        just
        right,
        or
        .
        .
        .
        
        
        
        
      
        A
        We
        thought,
        quite
        frankly,
        as
        we
        discussed
        with
        our
        brokers
        many
        times,
        why
        
        
        are
        we
        being
        penalized
        with
        our
        excellent
        records,
        why
        are
        we
        being
        penalized
        
        
        with
        higher
        rates
        on
        a
        yearly
        basis.
        Why
        couldn’t
        we
        get
        some
        recognition
        for
        
        
        the
        fact,
        and
        we
        were
        told,
        yes,
        we
        were
        getting
        recognition
        as
        much
        as
        could
        
        
        be
        given,
        but
        the
        coverage
        had
        to
        be
        placed
        on
        international
        markets
        and
        on
        
        
        that
        market
        we
        are
        only
        a
        pebble
        on
        the
        beach
        as
        opposed
        to
        some
        of
        the
        major
        
        
        companies.
        (SN
        I,
        pages
        27
        and
        28).
        
        
        
        
      
      (i)
      He
      tried
      to
      find
      a
      way
      to
      keep
      insurance
      costs
      down;
      he
      planned
      to
      get
      
      
      into
      the
      insurance
      business:
      
      
      
      
    
        63.
        Q
        Well,
        if
        you
        were
        concerned
        about
        continuing
        increases
        in
        premium
        rates
        
        
        even
        after
        Reed,
        Shaw
        became
        your
        brokers,
        did
        you
        do
        anything
        about
        it?
        
        
        
        
      
        A
        Well,
        I
        was
        looking
        around
        for
        ways
        and
        means
        of
        trying
        to
        keep
        insurance
        
        
        costs
        down.
        We
        looked
        at
        several
        options.
        We
        looked
        at
        an
        actual
        insurance
        
        
        set-up
        in
        Canada.
        A
        Dominion
        Charter,
        whereby
        we
        would
        set
        up
        our
        own
        insurance
        
        
        company
        and
        actively
        get
        involved
        in
        the
        insurance
        business.
        I
        did
        look
        
        
        at
        that,
        and
        did
        some
        study,
        and
        actually
        had
        some
        correspondence,
        at
        the
        
        
        time,
        with
        the
        Superintendent
        of
        Insurance.
        
        
        
        
      
        64.
        Q
        This
        would
        be
        the
        Superintendent
        m
        Ottawa?
        
        
        
        
      
        A
        Yes.
        But,
        the
        Dominion
        thing
        would
        require
        substantial
        deposits
        and
        this
        
        
        type
        thing
        which
        I’m
        just
        taking
        from
        memory,
        now,
        and
        I
        really
        don’t
        know
        too
        
        
        much
        about,
        but
        at
        the
        time
        it
        turned
        us
        off
        because
        of
        the
        dollar
        valuation
        and
        
        
        because
        we
        would
        have
        to
        become
        a
        Dominion
        company,
        as
        opposed
        to
        a
        local
        
        
        Newfoundland
        company.
        So,
        we
        turned
        off.
        ..
        
        
        
        
      
        65.
        Q
        Did
        Reed
        Shaw
        help
        you
        in
        your
        inquiries?
        
        
        
        
      
        A
        Oh,
        yes,
        we
        had
        correspondence
        back
        and
        forth
        as
        to
        .
        .
        .
        I
        wouldn't
        be
        a
        bit
        
        
        surprised
        if
        they
        may
        have
        been
        the
        one
        to
        have
        suggested
        the
        possibility.
        They
        
        
        were
        being
        paid
        to
        advise
        us
        and
        they
        gave
        us
        whatever
        advice
        they
        could.
        
        
        
        
      
        66.
        Q
        Now,
        assuming
        that
        the
        obstacles
        that
        you
        mentioned
        had
        not
        arisen,
        that
        is
        
        
        the
        high
        cost
        and
        inconvenience
        of
        establishing
        a
        Federal
        insurance
        company,
        
        
        what
        function
        would
        it
        have
        performed
        if
        you
        had
        been
        able
        to
        go
        through
        with
        
        
        it’
        
        
        
        
      
        A
        Well,
        had
        we
        done
        that,
        we
        actually
        planned
        to
        get
        into
        the
        insurance
        business,
        
        
        per
        se,
        to
        take
        the
        risk
        of
        our
        own
        company,
        as
        such,
        ah,
        being
        our
        own
        
        
        fishing
        trawlers,
        our
        own
        buildings
        and
        equipment,
        and
        also
        to
        start
        taking
        risks
        
        
        of
        other
        companies,
        and
        possibly
        joining
        forces
        with
        any
        number
        of
        companies
        
        
        if
        they
        had
        similar
        risks.
        So,
        it
        would
        benefit
        the
        group
        of
        companies
        as
        a
        
        
        whole.
        This
        was
        the
        idea.
        (SN
        I,
        pages
        29
        and
        30)
        
        
        
        
      
      (j)
      He
      thought
      this
      operation
      would
      be
      profitable:
      
      
      
      
    
        67.
        Q
        The
        question
        was
        did
        you
        feel
        that
        such
        an
        operation
        .
        .
        .
        an
        insurance
        operation
        
        
        would
        be
        profitable?
        
        
        
        
      
        A
        We
        thought
        that
        it
        would
        be.
        However,
        we
        would
        have
        to
        qualify
        that,
        but
        I
        
        
        would
        have
        to
        qualify
        it
        by
        the
        fact
        that
        I
        wasn’t
        an
        insurance
        person,
        as
        such,
        
        
        but
        presumably
        the
        insurance
        companies
        stay
        in
        business
        and
        the
        only
        way
        
        
        they
        stay
        in
        business
        is
        if
        they
        are
        profitable.
        So,
        using
        that
        analogy
        somewhere
        
        
        down
        the
        road,
        presumably,
        they
        would
        have
        been
        profitable.
        (SN
        I,
        page
        31)
        
        
        
        
      
      (k)
      He
      studied
      the
      possibility
      of
      setting
      up
      an
      insurance
      company
      in
      Bermuda:
      
      
      
    
        68.
        Q
        Having
        rejected,
        is
        as
        I
        believe
        you
        testified.
        Having
        rejected
        this
        particular
        
        
        option
        what
        did
        you
        do
        next?
        
        
        
        
      
        A
        Well,
        basically,
        I
        looked
        around
        for
        some
        means
        of,
        again,
        getting
        reduced
        
        
        premiums.
        This
        was
        the
        purpose.
        At
        some
        point
        down
        the
        road
        to
        keep
        ..
        .
        
        
        either
        to
        level
        off
        or
        to
        reduce
        or
        to
        find
        some
        way
        of
        reducing
        our
        insurance
        
        
        costs.
        So,
        at
        that
        point
        I
        discussed
        with
        our
        Brokers
        was
        there
        any
        area,
        within
        
        
        their
        knowledge,
        any
        tool
        that
        I
        could
        use
        whatsoever
        to
        approach
        from
        that
        
        
        point
        in
        mind,
        and
        they
        at
        that
        point
        suggested
        that
        there
        was
        a
        possibility
        of
        an
        
        
        insurance
        company
        to
        be
        set
        up
        in
        Bermuda.
        (SN
        I,
        pages
        31
        and
        32)
        
        
        
        
      
      (l)
      He
      made
      an
      investigation:
      
      
      
      
    
        69.
        Q
        Did
        you
        investigate
        this
        suggestion?
        
        
        
        
      
        A
        I
        did.
        Yes.
        
        
        
        
      
        70.
        Q
        What
        steps
        did
        you
        take?
        
        
        
        
      
        A
        In
        actual
        fact,
        I
        had
        further
        discussions
        .
        .
        .
        I
        didn’t
        truly
        understand
        the
        principle
        
        
        and
        can’t
        say
        that
        I
        do
        at
        the
        moment
        as
        to
        how
        they
        work
        these
        things,
        
        
        but
        I
        discussed
        it
        .
        .
        .
        I
        had
        great
        confidence
        in
        the
        Broker,
        in
        Jim
        Horrick
        and
        
        
        Peter
        Shelton,
        and
        they
        explained
        the
        thing
        to
        me.
        It
        looked
        good.
        I
        went
        before
        
        
        our
        Directors
        and
        said
        let
        me
        have
        a
        look
        at
        this
        further,
        and
        they
        said
        go
        
        
        ahead,
        have
        a
        look.
        I
        did
        visit
        Bermuda
        and
        talked
        to
        the
        various
        people,
        and
        I
        
        
        said
        that
        I’m
        not
        satisfied,
        at
        this
        stage,
        with
        the
        thing.
        I
        want
        to
        know
        all
        aspects
        
        
        of
        it.
        I
        said
        that
        I
        want
        to
        get
        professional
        opinion
        here,
        and
        so
        we
        did
        
        
        have
        a
        professional
        opinion
        from
        chartered
        accountants.
        
        
        
        
      
        71.
        Q
        In
        Bermuda?
        
        
        
        
      
        A
        No.
        The
        chartered
        accountants
        were
        in
        Canada,
        and
        we
        had
        professional
        
        
        opinions
        from
        a
        firm
        of
        lawyers
        specializing
        in
        tax
        matters
        and
        such,
        incorporations
        
        
        and
        this
        type
        thing.
        
        
        
        
      
        .
        ..
        Because,
        as
        I
        say,
        I
        had
        no
        knowledge
        of
        either
        income
        tax
        or
        insurance,
        or
        
        
        I
        should
        say
        very
        limited
        knowledge,
        and
        I
        wanted
        to
        be
        certain
        as
        to
        what
        we
        
        
        were
        getting
        into,
        and
        we
        received
        the
        professional
        opinion,
        as
        are
        in
        your
        file,
        
        
        and
        based
        on
        that,
        and
        on
        the
        advice
        of
        our
        Brokers,
        I
        approached
        our
        Directors
        
        
        and
        said
        that
        I
        would
        recommend
        that
        we
        take
        this
        route.
        I
        see
        the
        possibil-
        
        
        ity
        somewhere
        down
        the
        road
        that
        it
        will
        benefit
        our
        Company
        and
        they
        said,
        go
        
        
        ahead.
        So,
        I
        did.
        (SN
        I,
        pages
        32
        and
        33)
        
        
        
        
      
      (m)
      It
      was
      decided
      to
      incorporate
      an
      insurance
      company
      in
      Bermuda:
      
      
      
      
    
        72.
        Q
        Alright,
        when
        you
        say
        you
        went
        ahead,
        you
        gave
        instructions
        to
        certain
        
        
        people
        in
        Bermuda?
        
        
        
        
      
        A
        Yes.
        Through
        Jim
        Horrick,
        and
        Reed,
        Shaw,
        Osler,
        I
        was
        told
        that
        they
        had
        a
        
        
        management
        company
        in
        Bermuda
        that
        specialized
        in
        this
        type
        of
        work.
        They
        
        
        were
        well
        aware
        of
        the
        fact
        that
        I
        knew
        nothing
        about
        insurance,
        and
        didn't
        
        
        profess
        to.
        So,
        all
        the
        way
        through
        I
        was
        guided
        by
        their
        advice,
        and
        they
        said
        
        
        the
        .
        .
        .
        we
        were
        aware.
        I’m
        under
        oath
        here,
        so,
        we
        were
        aware
        of
        tax
        implications.
        
        
        I’m
        a
        Chartered
        Accountant,
        so
        I
        would
        assume
        that
        I
        would
        have
        some
        
        
        knowledge
        of
        income
        tax.
        So,
        I
        was
        aware
        of
        income
        tax,
        but
        based
        on
        the
        best
        
        
        professional
        advice
        that
        I
        could
        get,
        the
        thing
        looked
        like
        it
        was
        a
        going
        proposition.
        
        
        So,
        based
        on
        that,
        we
        went
        ahead.
        
        
        
        
      
        73.
        Q
        Alright,
        then,
        did
        you
        engage
        assistance
        in
        Bermuda
        to
        issue
        this
        .
        .
        .
        
        
        
        
      
        A
        We
        did.
        Insurance
        Managers
        Limited,
        in
        actual
        fact,
        had
        the
        full
        package
        so
        
        
        that
        they
        would
        provide
        legal
        services,
        corporate
        services,
        accounting
        services,
        
        
        professional
        services
        in
        the
        insurance
        angle,
        for
        which
        they
        would
        be
        remunerated
        
        
        in
        the
        form
        of
        fees.
        
        
        
        
      
        74.
        Q
        And,
        the
        Insurance
        Managers
        Limited
        is
        situated
        where?
        
        
        
        
      
        A
        They’re
        situated
        in
        Bermuda.
        
        
        
        
      
        75.
        Q
        And,
        there
        is
        in
        evidence
        that
        a
        company
        by
        the
        name
        of
        Humber
        Insurance
        
        
        was
        incorporated
        ..
        .
        
        
        
        
      
        A
        It
        was
        incorporated
        under
        the
        laws
        of
        Bermuda.
        (SN
        I,
        pages
        33
        and
        34)
        
        
        
        
      
      (n)
      Humber
      Insurance
      Company
      was
      incorporated
      in
      1973.
      Forty-eight
      
      
      percent
      (48%)
      of
      the
      shares
      were
      held
      by
      Bonavista
      Fish
      Meals
      and
      Oils
      
      
      Limited
      (a
      wholly-owned
      subsidiary
      of
      the
      appellant)
      and
      47%
      by
      the
      
      
      members
      of
      the
      Russell
      family.
      The
      witness
      himself
      had
      5%
      (SN
      I,
      page
      
      
      35).
      
      
      
      
    
      (o)
      He
      did
      not
      hold
      his
      shares
      “in
      trust”
      for
      anybody
      else.
      He
      paid
      for
      his
      
      
      own
      shares
      with
      his
      own
      money.
      He
      paid
      $6,000
      (5%
      of
      $120,000
      of
      the
      
      
      issued
      shares)
      (SN
      I,
      pages
      36
      and
      37).
      
      
      
      
    
      (p)
      The
      directors
      of
      Humber
      were
      John
      Ellison
      (lawyer),
      Sandy
      McPhed-
      
      
      ran
      (Manager
      of
      a
      bank)
      and
      James
      Mylrea
      (Manager
      or
      Vice-president
      of
      
      
      the
      Insurance
      Managers
      Limited).
      
      
      
      
    
      (q)
      The
      officers
      of
      the
      said
      company
      were
      Sandy
      McPhedran,
      President;
      
      
      James
      Mylrea,
      Vice-President;
      Donald
      Robertson,
      Secretary
      (“some
      sort
      
      
      of
      corporate
      secretary”)
      and
      David
      Brown,
      Treasurer
      (accountant
      for
      Insurance
      
      
      Managers
      Limited)
      (SN
      I,
      pages
      41
      and
      42).
      
      
      
      
    
      (r)
      His
      intention
      was
      to
      keep
      Humber
      going
      for
      a
      long
      period
      of
      time:
      
      
      
      
    
        87.
        Q
        Did
        you
        intend
        to
        keep
        Humber
        going
        for
        a
        short
        period
        of
        time,
        a
        long
        
        
        period
        or
        indefinitely,
        or
        what
        was
        your
        intention
        at
        the
        time?
        
        
        
        
      
        A
        At
        the
        time
        we
        set
        up
        it
        was
        a
        long
        range
        thing
        for
        me.
        I
        was
        looking
        down
        
        
        the
        road
        from
        five
        to
        ten
        years
        and
        presumably,
        had
        I
        still
        been
        with
        the
        company
        
        
        the
        Company
        may
        still
        have
        been
        operating
        as
        an
        insurance
        company.
        I
        
        
        can’t
        really
        say
        that
        for
        a
        certainty.
        But,
        my
        view
        was
        not
        one
        or
        two
        years.
        It
        
        
        goes
        down
        the
        road
        several
        years.
        (SN
        I,
        page
        38)
        
        
        
        
      
      (s)
      If
      his
      loss
      experience
      had
      continued
      favourably,
      there
      would
      have
      
      
      been
      an
      accumulation
      of
      funds
      in
      Humber
      based
      on
      the
      amount
      of
      profit
      
      
      that
      the
      company
      was
      making
      in
      Bermuda
      (SN
      I,
      page
      39).
      However,
      he
      
      
      also
      said
      that
      in
      1973
      and
      1974:
      “I
      don’t
      believe
      there
      were
      any
      real
      loss
      
      
      records
      during
      the
      period
      that
      Humber
      Insurance
      actually
      held
      the
      insurance”
      
      
      (SN
      I,
      page
      43).
      With
      the
      profit,
      the
      intention
      was
      to
      operate
      
      
      Humber
      with
      clients
      other
      than
      the
      appellant
      (SN
      I,
      page
      39).
      The
      profits
      
      
      really
      made
      in
      1973
      and
      1974
      stayed
      in
      Bermuda,
      and
      were
      invested
      in
      
      
      funds:
      
      
      
      
    
        .
        .
        .
        the
        Managers
        decided
        what
        were
        the
        best
        funds
        to
        invest
        them
        in.
        (SN
        I,
        page
        
        
        43)
        
        
        
        
      
      No
      dividends
      were
      paid
      to
      shareholders
      because
      “it
      was
      not
      our
      intent
      to
      
      
      take
      any
      profits”
      in
      the
      first
      years,
      only
      in
      the
      future:
      
      
      
      
    
        .
        .
        .
        we
        would
        have
        accumulated
        enough
        funds
        to
        get
        into
        other
        ventures
        and
        also
        
        
        to
        possibly
        pass
        the
        funds
        in
        the
        way
        of
        reduced
        premiums
        to
        our
        Company
        in
        
        
        Newfoundland.
        (SN
        I,
        page
        44).
        
        
        
        
      
      (t)
      Humber
      had
      engaged
      Insurance
      Managers
      Limited
      to
      provide
      the
      necessary
      
      
      management
      services
      (Exhibit
      A-1):
      
      
      
      
    
        A
        Well,
        they
        provided
        the
        whole
        service
        in
        Bermuda.
        I
        had
        no
        input
        whatsoever
        
        
        into
        the
        operation
        of
        the
        Company.
        I
        knew
        nothing
        about
        insurance,
        and
        even
        
        
        less
        about
        Bermuda.
        Having
        only
        been
        there,
        at
        that
        time,
        only
        once.
        And,
        they
        
        
        completely
        provided
        all
        services
        from
        the
        start
        of
        the
        incorporation
        of
        the
        Company,
        
        
        of
        Legal
        Services
        right
        through
        to
        the
        quarter
        financial
        statements.
        I
        had
        
        
        no
        day
        by
        day
        or
        month
        by
        month
        input
        at
        all.
        (SN
        I,
        page
        40)
        
        
        
        
      
      Moreover,
      he
      said
      that
      nobody
      in
      the
      appellant’s
      organization
      (the
      Russell
      
      
      family
      and
      himself)
      gave
      directions
      or
      advice
      to
      Humber.
      He
      went
      once
      
      
      after
      the
      incorporation,
      when
      Humber
      “was
      starting
      to
      get
      into
      operation”.
      
      
      He
      went
      “.
      .
      .
      to
      see
      what
      the
      operation
      was,
      to
      meet
      the
      people,
      that
      
      
      I
      presumably
      would
      be
      running
      the
      affairs
      .
      .
      .
      (of
      Humber)”
      (SN
      I,
      page
      
      
      46).
      That
      was
      in
      early
      1973.
      He
      spent
      two
      days
      there
      and
      never
      went
      back
      
      
      afterwards.
      He
      never
      had
      contact
      (telephone,
      letter
      or
      telex)
      with
      them.
      
      
      The
      only
      contact
      was
      with
      Jim
      Horrick,
      the
      broker
      in
      Montreal.
      He
      also
      
      
      said
      that
      he
      received
      quarterly
      financial
      statements.
      
      
      
      
    
      (u)
      After
      this
      arrangement
      (Exhibit
      A-1)
      was
      set
      up,
      the
      appellant
      gave
      to
      
      
      Reed,
      Shaw,
      Osler
      Limited
      the
      authority
      to
      negotiate
      with
      Humber:
      
      
      
      
    
        A
        Well,
        we
        gave
        Reed,
        Shaw,
        Osler,
        as
        our
        Insurance
        Brokers,
        the
        authority
        to
        
        
        negotiate
        with
        Humber
        Insurance
        to
        place
        our
        insurance,
        the
        best
        way
        and
        the
        
        
        best
        coverage
        that
        they
        could
        obtain
        for
        us.
        We
        relied
        on
        them,
        as
        professionals,
        
        
        as
        we
        did
        before
        and
        presumably
        have
        been
        doing
        since,
        to
        give
        us
        their
        
        
        best
        advice
        to
        get
        up
        the
        lowest
        premiums
        that
        they
        could
        and
        we
        accepted
        
        
        what
        they
        recommended,
        so,
        we
        accepted
        the
        premiums,
        and
        ..
        .
        that
        were
        
        
        charged
        by
        Humber
        Insurance
        to
        Bonavista
        Cold
        Storage,
        as
        being
        legitimate,
        
        
        reasonable
        premiums
        that
        would
        have
        been
        paid
        by
        any
        company
        in
        the
        industry
        
        
        at
        the
        time.
        (SN
        I,
        page
        42)
        
        
        
        
      
      (v)
      Humber
      had
      its
      own
      bank
      account
      and
      its
      own
      stationery.
      It
      had
      its
      
      
      own
      financial
      statements
      prepared
      by
      its
      own
      auditors.
      It
      also
      had
      its
      own
      
      
      lawyers.
      The
      paid
      up
      capital
      of
      one
      hundred
      and
      twenty
      thousand
      dollars
      
      
      ($120,000)
      was
      actually
      paid
      (SN
      I,
      page
      47).
      
      
      
      
    
      (w)
      He
      left
      the
      appellant
      company
      after
      the
      Lake
      Group
      Limited
      had
      acquired
      
      
      the
      ownership.
      It
      was
      at
      that
      time
      that
      the
      arrangement
      ceased
      
      
      with
      Humber.
      
      
      
      
    
        129.
        Q
        Alright.
        Now,
        at
        some
        point
        the
        arrangement
        with
        Humber
        ceased?
        Can
        
        
        
        
      
        you
        explain
        when
        and
        why,
        from
        your
        point
        of
        view?
        
        
        
        
      
        A
        Well,
        the
        actual
        arrangements
        ceased
        some
        time
        after
        I
        was
        left
        .
        .
        .
        I
        left
        
        
        the
        Company,
        but
        what
        was
        happening
        that
        each
        year
        there
        was
        an
        ongoing
        
        
        instruction
        to
        reach
        Osler
        to
        go
        around
        the
        world
        and
        find
        the
        lowest
        
        
        rates
        that
        they
        could,
        for
        Bonavista
        Cold
        Storage,
        with
        Humber
        Insurance
        
        
        also
        in
        mind.
        In
        other
        words,
        Humber
        bid
        on
        the
        insurance
        the
        same
        as
        any
        
        
        other
        company
        did
        and
        to
        provide
        the
        company
        with
        the
        lowest
        insurance
        
        
        rates
        that
        they
        could.
        It
        was
        my
        understanding,
        although
        I
        was
        not
        personally
        
        
        involved
        in
        that,
        at
        some
        point
        it
        came
        to
        pass
        that
        they
        could
        get
        
        
        cheaper
        coverage
        elsewhere
        than
        by
        the
        route
        of
        Humber
        Insurance
        and
        the
        
        
        insurance
        company
        was
        changed.
        I,
        personally,
        had
        no
        input
        into
        that.
        (SN
        I,
        
        
        pages
        48
        and
        49)
        
        
        
        
      
      He
      added
      that
      Lake
      Group
      Limited
      also
      acquired
      the
      shares
      of
      Humber.
      
      
      He
      sold
      his
      own
      shares
      with
      a
      gain.
      They
      were
      sold
      at
      book
      value.
      
      
      
      
    
      (x)
      According
      to
      the
      witness,
      tax
      implications
      were
      really
      of
      no
      importance:
      
      
      
    
        I
        wanted
        to
        be
        aware
        of
        the
        tax
        implication,
        but
        in
        my
        own
        mind
        they
        were
        of
        really
        
        
        no
        importance
        whatsoever.
        The
        purpose
        was
        a
        legitimate
        business
        insurance
        deal,
        
        
        with
        somewhere
        down
        the
        road
        our
        Company
        would
        benefit.
        You
        have
        to
        pay
        the
        
        
        piper
        when
        it
        comes
        to
        taxes
        anyway,
        now
        or
        some
        time
        in
        the
        future.
        So,
        that
        was
        
        
        not
        a
        major
        consideration.
        It
        had
        to
        be
        considered
        by
        the
        fact
        that
        we
        did
        all
        that
        
        
        was
        possible
        legally,
        and
        that
        was
        checked
        out,
        and
        we
        had
        professional
        recommendations
        
        
        as
        to
        each
        step
        that
        we
        took.
        (SN
        I,
        page
        51).
        
        
        
        
      
      3.03
      During
      cross-examination,
      Mr
      Lunnen
      testified
      that:
      
      
      
      
    
      (a)
      The
      insurance
      policy
      (JP72/M/100)
      covering,
      among
      others,
      the
      appellant’s
      
      
      vessels
      (Exhibit
      R-10)
      was
      issued
      for
      the
      period
      commencing
      
      
      September
      4,
      1972,
      and
      ending
      September
      4,
      1973.
      It
      appears
      from
      this
      
      
      document
      that
      8
      of
      the
      13
      vessels
      had
      a
      deductible
      of
      $21,250
      (the
      others
      
      
      $15,000
      and
      $12,500),
      and
      that
      the
      full
      premium
      paid
      for
      the
      vessels
      was
      
      
      $300,975
      (SN
      I,
      page
      60,
      Q
      174),
      detailed
      as
      $272,600
      per
      haul
      and
      machinery
      
      
      (SN
      I,
      page
      61,
      Q
      177)
      plus
      $28,375
      for
      increased
      value
      (SN
      I,
      
      
      page
      62,
      Q
      180).
      The
      value
      of
      the
      insured
      vessels
      was
      $11,680,000.
      This
      
      
      was
      the
      situation
      before
      the
      incorporation
      of
      Humber.
      
      
      
      
    
      (b)
      The
      underwriters
      were
      Lloyd’s
      of
      London
      to
      the
      extent
      of
      75%,
      and
      5
      
      
      other
      insurance
      companies
      for
      25%.
      The
      premium
      was
      paid
      by
      instalments.
      
      
      Ten
      endorsements
      have
      amended
      the
      original
      policy.
      They
      are
      
      
      dated
      from
      October
      18,
      1972,
      to
      July
      8,
      1974.
      In
      the
      sixth
      endorsement
      
      
      dated
      November
      29,
      1973,
      one
      may
      read:
      
      
      
      
    
          Conditions'.
        
        It
        is
        understood
        and
        agreed
        that
        this
        Appendix
        is
        written
        as
        a
        reinsurance
        of
        the
        
        
        Humber
        Insurance
        Company
        and
        is
        to
        pay
        all
        claims
        as
        adjusted
        on
        behalf
        of
        the
        
        
        Reinsured
        in
        accordance
        with
        the
        terms
        and
        conditions
        of
        the
        Humber
        Insurance
        
        
        Company
        Policy.
        It
        is
        understood
        and
        agreed
        that
        said
        policy
        is
        in
        accordance
        with
        
        
        the
        terms
        and
        conditions
        of
        the
        policy
        to
        which
        this
        endorsement
        is
        attached.
        
        
        
        
      
        These
        Insurers
        are
        only
        to
        be
        liable
        hereunder
        for
        any
        loss
        on
        any
        vessel
        insured
        
        
        on
        this
        policy
        when
        the
        total
        amount
        of
        loss
        payable
        on
        the
        original
        policy
        for
        
        
        100%
        interest
        on
        any
        vessel
        exceeds
        $50,000
        over
        all
        insured
        interests
        and/or
        liabilities.
        
        
        
      
      The
      total
      premium
      of
      $259,942.50
      was
      paid
      to
      the
      underwriters
      (SN
      I,
      
      
      pages
      65
      and
      66;
      Q
      192
      to
      Q
      194).
      
      
      
      
    
      (c)
      He
      received
      a
      letter
      dated
      September
      7,
      1972
      (Exhibit
      R-8)
      from
      Mr
      
      
      Dean,
      Vice-President
      of
      Reed,
      Shaw,
      Osler
      Limited,
      showing
      the
      competition
      
      
      on
      a
      tax
      comparison
      between
      the
      conventional
      insurance
      method
      
      
      and
      the
      captive
      insurance
      method.
      The
      result
      for
      the
      appellant
      company
      
      
      iS:
      
      
      
      
    
      Convention
      method:
      $165,000
      net
      profit
      after
      tax
      cost;
      
      
      
      
    
      Captive
      method:
      $118,595
      net
      profit
      after
      tax
      cost.
      
      
      
      
    
      The
      figures
      are
      detailed
      as
      follows:
      
      
      
      
    
        (A)
        
          Conventional
         
          Method
        
        Hull
        and
        Machinery
        insurances
        subject
        $15,000
        deductible
        (say)
        $325,000
        
        
        
        
      
        Losses
        between
        $1,500
        and
        $15,000
        (average
        last
        eight
        years)
        ex-
        
        
        
        
      
        Cluding
        total
        losses
        5,000
        
        
        
        
      
        $330,000
        
        
        
        
      
        After
        tax
        cost
        (Say)
        50%
        $165,000
        
        
        
        
      
        (B)
        
          Captive
         
          Insurance
         
          Method
        
        Hull
        and
        Machinery
        insurances
        subject
        $1,500
        deductible
        ....
        $429,000
        
        
        
        
      
        After
        tax
        cost
        (Say)
        50%
        214,500
        
        
        
        
      
          Less
        
        underwriting
        profit
        as
        per
        proforma
        Financial
        Statement
        $
        95,905
        
        
        
        
      
        Net
        after
        tax
        
          cost
        
        $118,595
        
        
        
        
      
      Mr
      Dean
      wrote:
      
      
      
      
    
        Of
        course,
        to
        compare
        the
        Captive
        approach
        to
        the
        Conventional
        approach,
        
        
        one
        must
        also
        examine
        tax
        implications
        and
        these
        are
        still
        not
        entirely
        clear.
        For
        
        
        the
        moment,
        however,
        it
        appears
        you
        should
        be
        able
        to
        expense
        the
        full
        premium
        
        
        paid
        to
        the
        captive,
        whereas
        any
        profits
        of
        the
        subsidiary,
        if
        domiciled,
        for
        
        
        instance,
        in
        Bermuda,
        would
        not
        be
        taxable
        in
        Canada.
        
        
        
        
      
      (d)
      He
      received
      a
      letter
      dated
      November
      30,
      1972
      (Exhibit
      R-37)
      sent
      by
      
      
      Clarkson,
      Gordon
      &
      Co,
      taxation
      consultants
      of
      the
      appellant
      company.
      
      
      The
      third
      paragraph
      reads
      as
      follows:
      
      
      
      
    
        We
        expressed
        to
        you
        our
        belief
        that
        if
        the
        Canadian
        tax
        authorities
        were
        aware
        
        
        of
        the
        self-insurance
        operation
        being
        carried
        on
        by
        the
        Bermuda
        captive
        insurance
        
        
        company
        on
        behalf
        of
        Bonavista,
        it
        was
        likely
        that
        the
        arrangement
        would
        
        
        be
        attacked.
        The
        tax
        authorities
        would
        appear
        to
        have
        three
        possible
        avenues
        of
        
        
        attack.
        
        
        
        
      
        (1)
        They
        might
        attempt
        to
        assess
        the
        Bermuda
        company
        on
        its
        total
        income
        
        
        as
        a
        resident
        of
        Canada
        on
        the
        basis
        that
        the
        company
        was
        in
        fact
        managed
        
        
        and
        controlled
        in
        Canada.
        
        
        
        
      
        (2)
        They
        might
        attempt
        to
        assess
        the
        Bermuda
        company
        as
        a
        non-resident
        
        
        company
        carrying
        on
        business
        in
        Canada
        if
        they
        felt
        that
        they
        could
        successfully
        
        
        establish
        that
        the
        company
        was
        carrying
        on
        business
        through
        an
        
        
        agent
        in
        Canada.
        
        
        
        
      
        (3)
        They
        might
        attack
        on
        more
        general
        grounds,
        by,
        for
        example,
        taking
        the
        
        
        position
        that
        the
        overall
        arrangement
        amounted,
        in
        substance,
        to
        self-insurance
        
        
        of
        risks
        by
        Bonavista.
        If
        this
        approach
        were
        taken
        the
        tax
        authorities
        
        
        might
        attempt
        to
        disallow
        a
        portion
        of
        the
        premiums
        paid
        by
        Bonavista
        in
        the
        
        
        aggregate
        at
        least
        equal
        to
        the
        profit
        of
        the
        Bermuda
        company.
        While
        we
        
        
        believe
        that
        it
        would
        be
        much
        more
        difficult
        to
        assess
        on
        this
        basis,
        recent
        
        
        court
        decisions
        have
        encouraged
        the
        tax
        authorities
        to
        believe
        that
        they
        
        
        would
        be
        upheld
        by
        the
        courts
        where
        the
        arrangements
        appear
        to
        have
        been
        
        
        devised
        primarily
        for
        tax
        avoidance
        purposes.
        
        
        
        
      
      At
      pages
      4
      and
      5
      one
      can
      read:
      
      
      
      
    
        The
        problem
        outlined
        in
        point
        3
        on
        page
        2
        concerning
        a
        non-resident
        insurance
        
        
        company
        would
        appear
        to
        be
        equally
        applicable
        with
        respect
        to
        premiums
        paid
        
        
        to
        a
        Canadian
        insurer.
        We
        believe
        it
        is
        essential
        that
        such
        a
        company
        be
        in
        fact
        
        
        totally
        separated
        from
        Bonavista
        and
        the
        personnel
        of
        Bonavista.
        We
        also
        believe
        
        
        that
        it
        is
        highly
        desirable
        for
        the
        insurance
        company
        to
        have
        its
        own
        full
        
        
        time
        employees,
        including
        a
        person
        experienced
        in
        the
        insurance
        industry
        (this
        
        
        would
        not
        prohibit
        the
        company
        from
        using
        the
        services
        of
        Reed
        Shaw
        Osler).
        It
        
        
        would
        also
        be
        desirable
        for
        such
        a
        company
        to
        insure
        property
        other
        than
        that
        
        
        belonging
        to
        Bonavista.
        
        
        
        
      
      (e)
      He
      received
      from
      Mr
      Dean,
      Vice-President
      of
      Reed
      Shaw
      Osler
      Limited,
      
      
      a
      letter,
      “Private
      and
      Confidential’,
      dated
      March
      13,
      1973,
      with
      which
      
      
      was
      transferred
      a
      legal
      opinion
      of
      the
      firm
      Stikeman,
      Elliott,
      Robarts
      &
      
      
      Bowman
      dated
      March
      5,
      1973
      (Exhibit
      R-39)
      written
      to
      Mr
      Whiting
      of
      
      
      Reed,
      Shaw,
      Osler
      Limited.
      The
      heading
      reference
      of
      this
      opinion
      reads
      
      
      as
      follows:
      “Re:
      Taxation
      —
      Foreign
      Affiliates
      (Captive
      Insurance
      Companies)”.
      
      
      The
      problem
      which
      is
      the
      object
      of
      this
      opinion
      is
      described
      in
      
      
      the
      first
      lines:
      
      
      
      
    
        You
        have
        asked
        us
        to
        consider
        the
        deductibility
        under
        the
        
          Income
         
          Tax
         
          Act
        
        of
        
        
        premiums
        paid
        by
        certain
        of
        your
        clients
        to
        subsidiary
        captive
        insurance
        company.
        
        
        
      
      They
      explained,
      after,
      the
      difference
      between
      the
      funding
      captive
      and
      the
      
      
      pure
      captive.
      
      
      
      
    
        The
        essential
        difference
        between
        the
        funding
        captive
        and
        the
        pure
        captive
        is
        
        
        that
        the
        funding
        captive
        either
        does
        not
        reinsure
        or
        reinsures
        at
        rates
        equal
        to
        
        
        those
        that
        it
        would
        pay
        locally
        for
        insurance
        above
        its
        retention
        level.
        The
        pure
        
        
        captive
        reinsures
        for
        losses
        above
        its
        retention
        level
        at
        premiums
        that
        are
        substantially
        
        
        lower
        than
        conventional
        rates,
        as
        the
        result
        of
        treaties
        set
        up
        to
        accept
        
        
        risks
        of
        companies
        with
        particularly
        high
        quality
        loss
        prevention
        measures.
        
        
        
        
      
        The
        chief
        advantage
        of
        such
        arrangements
        appears
        to
        be
        that
        the
        insured
        company
        
        
        achieves
        in
        substance
        a
        measure
        of
        self-insurance,
        through
        a
        subsidiary,
        
        
        or
        a
        saving
        through
        the
        favourable
        treaty
        rates
        of
        reinsurance,
        although
        it
        deducts
        
        
        the
        full
        amount
        of
        the
        conventional
        premium
        in
        computing
        its
        income.
        
        
        The
        profit
        earned
        by
        the
        captive
        remains
        in
        Bermuda
        and
        may
        be
        returned
        by
        
        
        way
        of
        dividends
        to
        the
        parent.
        
        
        
        
      
        In
        your
        letter
        you
        state
        that
        in
        the
        case
        of
        pure
        captives
        the
        principal
        earnings
        
        
        emanate
        from
        underwriting
        results
        and
        taxation
        benefits
        are
        of
        secondary
        importance.
        
        
        It
        must,
        of
        course,
        be
        borne
        in
        mind
        that
        the
        earnings
        result
        directly
        
        
        from
        payments
        made
        by
        the
        parent
        company,
        to
        the
        extent
        that
        they
        exceed
        the
        
        
        amounts
        necessary
        to
        maintain
        an
        adequate
        degree
        of
        reinsurance
        at
        the
        favourable
        
        
        rates
        available
        under
        the
        treaties.
        The
        advantage
        appears
        to
        consist
        
        
        less
        in
        the
        profits
        earned
        by
        the
        offshore
        captive
        as
        in
        the
        deductibility
        of
        the
        
        
        conventional
        premium
        by
        the
        parent
        coupled
        with
        the
        saving
        of
        the
        difference
        
        
        between
        the
        premiums
        paid
        and
        the
        cost
        of
        reinsurance,
        which
        amount
        can
        be
        
        
        returned
        to
        the
        parent
        by
        way
        of
        dividends.
        
        
        
        
      
        I
        shall
        attempt
        to
        deal
        with
        the
        problem
        under
        five
        headings,
        as
        follows:
        
        
        
        
      
        A:
        The
        Funding
        Captive
        without
        Reinsurance;
        
        
        
        
      
        B:
        The
        “Front
        Company”;
        
        
        
        
      
        C:
        Reinsurance;
        
        
        
        
      
        D:
        Acceptance
        by
        Subsidiary
        of
        risks
        not
        Controlled
        by
        Parent;
        
        
        
        
      
        E:
        Other
        Considerations.
        
        
        
        
      
      The
      heading
      D
      must
      be
      quoted:
      
      
      
      
    
        D:
        
          Acceptance
         
          by
         
          Subsidiary
         
          of
         
          risks
         
          not
         
          Controlled
         
          by
         
          Parent
        
        Assuming
        that
        such
        risks
        are
        bona
        fide
        and
        substantial
        it
        is
        my
        view
        that
        the
        
        
        acceptance
        of
        such
        risks
        decreases
        the
        likelihood
        of
        a
        successful
        attack
        by
        the
        
        
        Department
        of
        National
        Revenue,
        since
        to
        the
        extent
        that
        other
        risks
        are
        accepted,
        
        
        the
        subsidiary
        functions
        less
        as
        a
        vehicle
        for
        the
        parent
        —
        whether
        the
        
        
        purpose
        be
        tax
        or
        otherwise
        —
        and
        more
        as
        a
        genuine
        insurance
        company.
        
        
        
        
      
      (f)
      On
      March
      19,
      1973,
      he
      wrote
      to
      Mr
      Ellison,
      lawyer
      and
      future
      director
      
      
      of
      Humber
      (Exhibit
      R-41),
      asking
      him
      to
      incorporate
      Humber.
      
      
      
      
    
      (g)
      Humber
      was
      incorporated
      on
      May
      10,
      1973.
      
      
      
      
    
      (h)
      An
      insurance
      policy
      No
      JP73/MC/222
      (Exhibit
      R-63)
      was
      issued
      by
      
      
      Humber
      Insurance
      Co
      Ltd
      to
      cover
      the
      vessels
      of
      the
      appellant
      for
      the
      
      
      period
      of
      October
      18,
      1973,
      to
      October
      18,
      1974.
      The
      full
      premium
      payable
      
      
      was
      $392,555.75.
      The
      value
      of
      the
      insured
      vessels
      was
      $13,320,000.
      
      
      The
      deductible
      portion
      for
      each
      vessel
      was
      $2,500.
      
      
      
      
    
      (i)
      He
      recognized
      a
      note
      dated
      March
      13,
      1973,
      written
      by
      Mr
      Horrick
      of
      
      
      Reed,
      Shaw,
      Osler
      Limited
      stating
      that
      the
      witness
      “was
      in
      a
      meeting
      with
      
      
      the
      entire
      Russell
      family.
      According
      to
      Dave
      (the
      witness)
      they
      ruled
      out
      
      
      Nova
      Scotia,
      PEI,
      Quebec,
      and
      now
      Ontario,
      leaving
      NB,
      Nfld,
      Western
      
      
      Provinces
      and
      Bermuda”
      (Exhibit
      R-40,
      SN
      I,
      pages
      75
      and
      76):
      
      
      
      
    
        236.
        Q
        And
        you
        were
        ruling
        out
        a
        Canadian
        Company,
        would
        I
        be
        correct
        .
        .
        .
        
        
        
        
      
        because
        of
        the
        large
        funding
        that
        would
        be
        required?
        
        
        
        
      
        A
        That
        was
        my
        understanding.
        Yes.
        And
        .
        .
        .
        actually
        the
        funding
        and
        the
        
        
        insurance
        aspect
        of
        it.
        I
        believe
        they
        had
        some
        sort
        of
        an
        insurance
        guarantee
        
        
        for
        federal
        governments
        and
        this
        type
        of
        thing.
        I’m
        not
        really
        aware
        of
        it,
        
        
        but
        I
        think
        it
        was
        a
        contributing
        factor.
        It
        was
        just
        too
        big
        for
        us
        to
        handle.
        
        
        
        
      
      (SN
      I,
      page
      77)
      
      
      
      
    
      (j)
      He
      recognized
      a
      letter
      dated
      March
      19,
      1973,
      written
      by
      him
      to
      Mr
      J
      A
      
      
      Ellison,
      lawyer
      from
      Bermuda.
      He
      explained,
      among
      other
      things,
      that
      the
      
      
      directors
      of
      the
      insurance
      company
      .
      .
      can
      be
      Bermuda
      residents”.
      He
      
      
      also
      added:
      
      
      
      
    
        It
        is
        important
        .
        ..
        that
        for
        taxation
        reasons
        the
        company
        should
        be
        managed
        in
        
        
        Bermuda.
        However
        whatever
        legal
        steps
        are
        necessary
        must
        be
        taken
        to
        protect
        
        
        the
        ownership
        interest.
        (Exhibit
        R-41;
        SN
        I,
        pages
        78
        and
        79,
        Q
        241
        to
        Q
        244)
        
        
        
        
      
      (k)
      In
      the
      “Note
      to
      the
      Financial
      Statement
      —
      December
      31,
      1974
      and
      
      
      December
      31,
      1973”
      of
      Humber
      Insurance
      Company,
      one
      can
      read:
      
      
      
      
    
        The
        company
        was
        incorporated
        on
        May
        10,
        1973
        and
        is
        a
        wholly-owned
        subsidiary
        
        
        of
        a
        Canadian
        company,
        the
        Lake
        Group
        Ltd.
        The
        company
        derives
        its
        
        
        insurance
        income
        from
        insuring
        its
        parent’s
        fishing
        fleet
        for
        hull
        and
        machinery
        
        
        risks.
        (Exhibit
        R-82)
        
        
        
        
      
      The
      auditor’s
      report
      is
      dated
      April
      16,
      1975.
      At
      that
      time,
      the
      Russell
      family
      
      
      was
      no
      longer
      involved
      in
      the
      appellant
      company.
      
      
      
      
    
      (l)
      To
      his
      knowledge,
      Humber
      only
      entered
      into
      one
      reinsurance
      contract
      
      
      and
      had
      only
      one
      stop
      less
      insurance
      policy
      (SN
      I,
      page
      100,
      Q
      328
      to
      Q
      
      
      330).
      
      
      
      
    
      (m)
      The
      management
      fees
      of
      Insurance
      Managers
      Limited
      were
      $12,500
      
      
      in
      1974.
      
      
      
      
    
      (n)
      A
      new
      insurance
      policy
      (Policy
      No
      JP/74/M/001)
      was
      issued
      by
      
      
      Humber
      in
      favor
      of
      the
      appellant
      company
      for
      a
      12-month
      period,
      effective
      
      
      from
      October
      18,
      1974.
      The
      annual
      premium
      was
      $315,000.
      The
      value
      
      
      of
      the
      insured
      vessels
      was
      nearly
      $18,000,000.
      The
      deductible
      portion
      for
      
      
      each
      vessel
      was
      $2,500.
      This
      policy
      is
      dated
      January
      18,
      1975.
      (Exhibit
      
      
      R-78)
      
      
      
      
    
      (o)
      In
      a
      memorandum
      dated
      June
      10,
      1976,
      Mr
      David
      Brown,
      the
      financial
      
      
      man
      for
      Insurance
      Managers
      Limited,
      wrote
      to
      Mr
      John
      Tuddenhan
      the
      
      
      following:
      
      
      
      
    
        I
        have
        detailed
        out
        on
        appendix
        1
        a
        summary
        of
        the
        net
        income
        which
        was
        
        
        achieved
        in
        the
        2
        years
        Humber
        underwrote
        the
        Bonavista
        coverage.
        As
        you
        will
        
        
        see
        the
        results
        were
        extremely
        good,
        as
        although
        there
        were
        four
        notifications
        
        
        of
        losses,
        in
        fact,
        none
        of
        these
        became
        a
        claim
        against
        the
        captive.
        Up
        to
        31st
        
        
        December,
        1975,
        the
        retained
        earnings
        amounted
        to
        $217,688.
        With
        such
        profitability
        
        
        it
        was
        indeed
        a
        surprise
        that
        the
        Lake
        Group
        decided
        not
        to
        continue
        the
        
        
        captive
        business
        even
        though
        they
        would
        be
        required
        to
        possibly
        pay
        tax
        to
        the
        
        
        Canadian
        Government
        on
        such
        income.
        The
        company
        remains
        in
        our
        office,
        
        
        however,
        at
        this
        time
        all
        that
        we
        are
        required
        to
        do
        is
        turn
        over
        their
        time
        deposits,
        
        
        and
        pay
        local
        expenses.
        In
        view
        of
        this,
        our
        fee
        was
        adjusted
        down
        to
        a
        
        
        nominal
        $2,500
        per
        annum,
        which
        is
        the
        usual
        fee
        for
        handling
        such
        a
        small
        part
        
        
        of
        a
        captive’s
        business.
        I
        also
        attach
        a
        copy
        of
        the
        latest
        financial
        position
        of
        
        
        Humber
        Insurance
        as
        at
        31st
        March,
        1976,
        (appendix
        6).
        (Exhibit
        R-107)
        
        
        
        
      
      (p)
      Tax
      was
      not
      the
      consideration
      when
      Humber
      was
      formed.
      
      
      
      
    
        As
        I
        have
        said
        under
        oath
        as
        a
        Witness
        here
        and
        as
        my
        job
        at
        that
        time
        was
        
        
        forward
        planning.
        Tax
        was
        to
        be
        considered,
        but
        it
        was
        not
        the
        consideration
        
        
        when
        this
        company
        was
        formed.
        That’s
        what
        I’m
        saying
        under
        oath
        .
        .
        .
        it’s
        as
        
        
        simple
        as
        that.
        I
        didn’t
        care
        what
        the
        tax
        situation
        was
        down
        the
        road,
        pay
        tax
        or
        
        
        otherwise
        .
        .
        .
        it’s
        like
        death
        .
        .
        .
        you
        can’t
        avoid
        it,
        eh
        .
        .
        .
        somewhere
        down
        the
        
        
        road
        we
        had
        to
        pay
        tax.
        (SN
        I,
        page
        97,
        Q
        313)
        
        
        
        
      
      3.04
      In
      is
      examination-in-chief,
      the
      appellant’s
      second
      witness
      Mr
      James
      S
      
      
      Horrick,
      Executive
      Vice-President
      for
      Eastern
      Canada
      of
      Reed
      Shaw
      
      
      Stenhouse
      in
      Toronto,
      testified
      that:
      
      
      
      
    
      (a)
      He
      joined
      the
      original
      firm
      Reed
      Shaw
      McNaught
      in
      1966.
      It
      was
      an
      
      
      international
      insurance
      brokerage
      firm
      founded
      in
      about
      1850.
      It
      merged
      
      
      in
      1968
      with
      a
      firm
      by
      the
      name
      of
      Osler
      Hammond
      and
      Nanton,
      and
      1971
      
      
      with
      a
      firm
      by
      the
      name
      of
      Stenhouse
      and
      Partners.
      In
      the
      years
      involved
      
      
      (1973
      and
      1974),
      he
      was
      the
      Senior
      Vice-President
      and
      Manager
      of
      the
      
      
      Montreal
      operations.
      He
      moved
      to
      Toronto
      in
      late
      1975.
      (SN
      II,
      pages
      4
      
      
      and
      5).
      
      
      
      
    
      (b)
      In
      his
      dealings
      with
      the
      appellant
      company,
      he
      dealt
      primarily
      with
      
      
      David
      Lunnen
      and
      occasionally
      with
      the
      President,
      Paul
      Russell.
      The
      witness
      
      
      was
      the
      voice
      of
      his
      firm
      but
      he
      was
      backed
      up
      by
      the
      marketing
      
      
      team.
      The
      individuals
      of
      this
      team
      also
      communicated
      with
      the
      appellant
      
      
      company
      (SN
      II,
      pages
      6
      and
      7).
      
      
      
      
    
      (c)
      Mr
      Dean,
      who
      was
      Vice-President
      of
      the
      brokerage
      firm
      in
      the
      years
      
      
      involved,
      is
      the
      marine
      expert
      for
      eastern
      Canada.
      He
      is
      located
      in
      Montreal.
      
      
      
    
      (d)
      An
      insurance
      broker
      is
      an
      individual
      who
      does
      not
      underwrite
      risks
      
      
      himself,
      but
      who
      acts
      as
      a
      middle
      man
      between
      clients
      who
      want
      to
      be
      
      
      insured
      and
      the
      insurance
      companies.
      In
      the
      maritime
      risks,
      there
      are
      
      
      about
      twelve
      companies
      who
      are
      competitive.
      Lloyd’s
      of
      London
      dominates
      
      
      the
      market.
      It
      is
      a
      dominant
      force
      in
      the
      marine
      world:
      “They
      are
      
      
      made
      up
      of
      hundreds
      of
      syndicates
      of
      individuals
      who
      collectively
      form
      
      
      Lloyd’s”.
      However,
      a
      broker
      ordinarily
      counsels
      his
      client
      not
      to
      have
      a
      
      
      single
      underwriter.
      (SN
      II,
      page
      9).
      
      
      
      
    
      (e)
      In
      the
      early
      1970s,
      the
      cost
      of
      insurance
      was
      going
      up.
      Insurance
      
      
      companies:
      
      
      
      
    
        .
        ..
        use
        various
        factors
        to
        set
        their
        rates,
        such
        as
        their
        own
        loss
        experience,
        
        
        world
        loss
        experience,
        inflation,
        which
        affects
        the
        costs
        of
        repairs
        of
        vessels
        
        
        and
        the
        availability
        of
        re-insurance
        to
        them,
        and
        the
        cost
        of
        that
        re-insurance.
        If
        
        
        that
        is
        on
        the
        rise,
        then,
        their
        rates
        have
        to
        increase.
        At
        that
        time,
        I
        believe
        all
        
        
        these
        factors
        were
        placed.
        (SN
        II,
        page
        12,
        Q
        31)
        
        
        
        
      
      (f)
      .
      .
      if
      your
      rates
      are
      on
      the
      increase,
      you
      look
      at
      deductibles”
      provided
      
      
      in
      case
      of
      damages.
      The
      deductibles
      of
      $21,250
      for
      most
      of
      the
      
      
      appellant’s
      vessels
      was
      fairly
      high.
      If:
      
      
      
      
    
        .
        .
        .
        you
        reach
        a
        point
        in
        deductible
        .
        .
        .
        in
        a
        normal
        insurance
        company
        that
        they
        
        
        just
        will
        not
        allow
        further
        credits
        so
        you
        are
        almost
        at
        a
        stalemate,
        then
        .
        ..
        you
        
        
        start
        looking
        for
        different
        markets
        around
        the
        world.
        
        
        
        
      
      In
      the
      world
      market,
      at
      that
      time,
      there
      were
      Lloyd’s
      and
      some
      Canadian
      
      
      and
      American
      companies:
      
      
      
      
    
        .
        ..
        who
        were
        offering
        coverage
        for
        fish
        boats.
        And,
        we
        were
        not
        just
        able
        to
        
        
        come
        up
        with
        the
        proper
        program.
        We,
        within
        the
        Company,
        looked
        at
        captive
        
        
        insurance
        company
        approach.
        
        
        
        
      
      (SN
      Il,
      pages
      12,
      13,
      14
      and
      15)
      
      
      
      
    
      (g)
      In
      his
      opinion:
      
      
      
      
    
        .
        .
        .
        the
        captive
        insurance
        company
        is
        an
        insurance
        company
        formed
        by
        a
        company
        
        
        who
        initially
        starts
        off
        insuring
        risks,
        its
        own
        risks,
        with
        the
        intention
        in
        
        
        mind
        to
        build
        on
        that
        base
        so
        that
        it
        can
        then
        diversify
        and
        have
        a
        subsidiary
        
        
        that
        becomes
        an
        insurance
        company,
        a
        full-fledged
        insurance
        company,
        insuring
        
        
        risks
        of
        others.
        
        
        
        
      
      (SN
      Il,
      page
      16,
      Q
      45)
      
      
      
      
    
      (h)
      He
      had
      a
      lot
      of
      experience
      with
      captive
      insurance
      companies
      through
      
      
      Reed
      Stenhouse.
      
      
      
      
    
      (i)
      He
      was
      personally
      involved
      in
      the
      investigation
      made
      by
      the
      appellant
      
      
      “to
      find
      out
      the
      basis
      involved
      in
      forming
      a
      Canadian
      insurance
      company.”
      
      
      (SN
      II,
      page
      17,
      Q
      52)
      
      
      
      
    
      (j)
      It
      was
      not
      financially
      possible
      to
      incorporate
      a
      Canadian
      insurance
      
      
      company:
      
      
      
      
    
        We
        found,
        number
        one,
        that
        the
        capitalization
        of
        that
        Company
        was
        extremely
        
        
        high,
        somewhere
        in
        the
        vicinity
        of
        a
        million,
        ($1,000,000),
        two
        million
        and
        a
        half
        
        
        dollars
        and
        the
        regulations
        of
        forming
        an
        insurance
        company,
        I
        must
        at
        this
        
        
        point,
        just
        divert
        it
        a
        bit
        to
        say
        thank
        goodness
        we
        have
        these
        regulations
        in
        
        
        Canada
        which
        control
        insurance
        companies
        and
        what
        they
        can
        do,
        but
        if
        you
        
        
        are
        trying
        to
        assist
        a
        client
        in
        forming
        an
        insurance
        company,
        with
        that
        amount
        
        
        of
        money,
        and
        all
        the
        regulations,
        he
        just
        could
        not
        start
        one
        in
        Canada.
        
        
        
        
      
      (SN
      II,
      pages
      17
      and
      18,
      Q
      53)
      
      
      
      
    
      The
      appellant
      company
      could
      not
      invest
      that
      amount
      of
      money.
      
      
      
      
    
      (k)
      The
      appellant
      company
      cannot
      take
      out
      a
      separate
      stop
      loss
      insurance
      
      
      in
      its
      own
      name
      to
      protect
      itself
      against
      a
      major
      disaster.
      It
      is
      available
      
      
      only
      to
      an
      insurer
      such
      as
      Humber
      Insurance.
      
      
      
      
    
        .
        .
        .
        if
        you
        can
        protect,
        normally,
        we
        look
        at
        the
        in-going
        premium
        into
        the
        Captive
        
        
        as
        a
        level
        to
        start
        at
        for
        the
        first
        year,
        and
        we
        say,
        well,
        what
        we
        don’t
        want
        
        
        to
        do
        is
        incur
        a
        loss.
        If
        we
        can
        buy
        insurance,
        excess
        of
        that
        in-going
        premium,
        
        
        at
        a
        reasonable
        cost,
        and
        it
        is
        wise
        to
        protect
        the
        Captive.
        So,
        the
        stop
        loss
        in
        
        
        the
        Bonavista
        case
        was
        .
        .
        .
        the
        losses
        were
        stopped
        at
        one
        hundred
        thousand
        
        
        dollars
        ($100,000).
        So,
        as
        soon
        as
        the
        Insurance
        Company
        had
        lost
        one
        
        
        hundred
        thousand
        dollars
        ($100,000)
        in
        claims,
        then,
        Insurers
        .
        .
        .
        
        
        
        
      
      (SN
      ll,
      pages
      20
      ad
      21,
      Q
      60).
      
      
      
      
    
        Then,
        the
        stop
        loss
        insurers
        would
        come
        in
        for
        the
        next
        two
        hundred
        and
        fifty
        
        
        thousand
        dollars
        ($250,000),
        which
        was
        ..
        .
        the
        maximum
        that
        we
        could
        purchase.
        
        
        
      
      (SN
      II,
      page
      21,
      Q
      62)
      
      
      
      
    
      The
      underwriters
      would
      not
      give
      this
      protection
      to
      a
      company
      that
      is
      not
      
      
      a
      registered
      insurance
      company.
      
      
      
      
    
      (l)
      Insurance
      Managers
      Limited
      was
      formed
      by
      Reed,
      Shaw,
      Osler
      specifically
      
      
      for
      the
      purpose
      of
      providing
      services
      to
      captive
      insurance
      companies
      
      
      (SN
      Il,
      page
      23,
      Q
      71).
      It
      manages
      about
      10
      captive
      insurance
      companies
      
      
      in
      Bermuda.
      
      
      
      
    
      (m)
      In
      1973,
      1974
      and
      1975,
      the
      executives
      were
      Mr
      Jim
      Mylrea
      (former
      
      
      President
      of
      Reed,
      Shaw,
      Osler)
      as
      President,
      Mr
      Bob
      Whiting
      (former
      
      
      Senior
      Vice-President)
      as
      Vice-President
      and
      Mr
      David
      Brown.
      The
      company
      
      
      then
      had
      7
      to
      8
      employees.
      In
      1981,
      there
      were
      40
      employees.
      
      
      
      
    
      (n)
      After
      the
      investigation
      concerning
      Canadian
      incorporation,
      he
      was
      in
      
      
      favor
      of
      a
      captive
      insurance
      company
      being
      set
      up
      in
      Bermuda.
      The
      decision
      
      
      was
      based
      solely
      on
      insurance
      broking
      and
      not
      on
      tax
      consideration
      
      
      because
      “.
      .
      .
      I
      have
      no
      idea
      of
      tax
      .
      ..”
      (SN
      II,
      page
      26,
      Q
      83
      and
      Q
      84).
      
      
      
      
    
      (o)
      The
      capitalization
      of
      an
      insurance
      company
      in
      Bermuda
      was
      
      
      $120,000.
      The
      regulations
      are
      far
      less
      restrictive
      in
      Bermuda
      than
      in
      Canada
      
      
      (SN
      Il,
      page
      27,
      Q
      87
      and
      Q
      88).
      
      
      
      
    
      (p)
      The
      major
      risk
      of
      Humber,
      as
      an
      insurance
      company,
      was
      retaining
      
      
      the
      first
      $50,000
      of
      each
      claim
      over
      and
      above
      the
      $25,000
      which
      was
      the
      
      
      deductible
      of
      the
      appellant.
      (SN
      II,
      pages
      28
      and
      29,
      Q
      93,
      Q
      94
      and
      Q
      
      
      95).
      
      
      
      
    
      (q)
      When
      Humber
      was
      formed,
      it
      was
      contemplated
      to
      insure
      not
      only
      
      
      the
      risks
      of
      the
      appellant
      but
      also
      of
      other
      companies.
      However,
      in
      the
      
      
      initial
      stages,
      it
      was
      too
      small.
      Only
      the
      appellant
      was
      insured.
      
      
      
      
    
      (r)
      With
      Humber,
      the
      appellant
      gained:
      
      
      
      
    
      (a)
      the
      policy
      that
      was
      issued
      to
      it,
      reducing
      its
      deductible
      substantially
      
      
      down
      to
      $2,500;
      
      
      
      
    
      (b)
      the
      capability
      to
      assume
      additional
      coverage
      which
      could
      be
      obtained
      
      
      in
      the
      conventional
      market
      or
      at
      competitive
      rates.
      
      
      
      
    
      (SN
      II,
      page
      34,
      Q
      117)
      
      
      
      
    
      (s)
      The
      premiums
      charged
      to
      the
      appellant
      were
      determined
      by
      Insurance
      
      
      Managers
      Limited
      and
      Reed,
      Shaw,
      Osler,
      after
      going
      to
      the
      market
      
      
      place
      and
      especially
      checking
      with
      Lloyd’s
      (SN
      II,
      page
      35,
      Q
      121).
      
      
      
      
    
      (t)
      The
      first
      year
      (1972-73),
      reinsurance
      was
      purchased
      from
      Lloyd’s
      and
      
      
      a
      group
      of
      other
      companies.
      The
      second
      year
      (1973-74),
      it
      was
      Commonwealth
      
      
      Insurance
      Company
      that
      reinsured
      at
      a
      reduced
      price;
      such
      saving
      
      
      was
      then
      passed
      on
      to
      the
      appellant.
      (SN
      II,
      page
      37,
      Q
      132
      and
      Q
      133).
      In
      
      
      1975,
      the
      appellant
      was
      purchased
      by
      Lake
      Group
      Limited.
      The
      reinsurance
      
      
      was
      purchased
      from
      the
      third
      company.
      Afterwards,
      the
      insurance
      
      
      market
      was
      a
      “soft
      market”,
      the
      rates
      had
      been
      decreasing.
      It
      became
      no
      
      
      longer
      economical
      to
      utilize
      Humber.
      In
      1972-73,
      it
      was
      impossible
      to
      
      
      foresee
      that
      the
      insurance
      market
      was
      going
      to
      change.
      (SN
      II,
      page
      39,
      
      
      Q
      140
      and
      Q
      141).
      
      
      
      
    
      (u)
      Mr
      Dean,
      the
      top
      marine
      individual,
      is
      not
      a
      tax
      expert.
      However,
      he
      
      
      wrote
      the
      letter
      showing
      the
      tax
      comparison
      between
      the
      conventional
      
      
      method
      and
      the
      captive
      method
      (see
      paragraph
      3.03(c)
      above).
      
      
      
      
    
      (v)
      There
      was
      an
      allowance
      on
      reinsurance
      premiums
      of
      $12,997
      which
      
      
      was
      added
      back
      to
      Humber
      as
      a
      commission.
      Such
      a
      rebate
      would
      not
      
      
      have
      been
      granted
      if
      the
      appellant
      had
      decided
      to
      go
      to
      the
      market
      itself,
      
      
      because
      it
      was
      not
      an
      insurance
      company
      (SN
      II,
      pages
      45
      and
      46,
      Q
      169
      
      
      and
      Q
      170).
      
      
      
      
    
      (w)
      In
      fact,
      Humber
      had
      to
      pay
      $9,000
      a
      year
      for
      the
      stop
      loss
      protection
      
      
      (SN
      II,
      page
      45,
      Q
      174).
      
      
      
      
    
      (x)
      In
      October
      1972,
      there
      were
      discussions
      between
      the
      appellant’s
      authorities
      
      
      and
      Reed,
      Shaw,
      Osler
      towards
      setting
      up
      a
      captive
      insurance
      
      
      company
      (Exhibit
      R-50).
      
      
      
      
    
      3.05
      In
      cross-examination,
      Mr
      Horrick
      testified
      that:
      
      
      
      
    
      (a)
      Generally
      speaking,
      to
      obtain
      policies
      from
      underwriters
      an
      insurance
      
      
      company
      presents
      to
      them
      the
      risk
      and
      asks
      for
      quotations.
      In
      receiving
      
      
      them,
      the
      best
      are
      selected.
      However,
      if
      a
      company
      such
      as
      Lloyd’s
      has
      
      
      the
      best
      quotation,
      the
      insurance
      company
      goes
      back
      to
      the
      other
      companies
      
      
      asking
      if
      they
      would
      accept
      a
      portion
      of
      the
      risk
      based
      on
      what
      
      
      Lloyd’s
      required.
      If
      they
      agree,
      the
      risk
      is
      shared
      between
      Lloyd’s
      and
      the
      
      
      other
      companies.
      (SN
      II,
      pages
      54
      and
      55,
      Q
      206
      and
      Q
      207).
      
      
      
      
    
      (b)
      After
      the
      incorporation,
      Humber,
      as
      reinsurer,
      asked
      the
      existing
      
      
      underwriters
      if
      they
      would
      accept
      the
      risk
      as
      a
      reinsurance
      instead
      of
      
      
      direct
      insurance;
      they
      agreed.
      There
      was
      a
      clause
      in
      the
      policy
      called
      “no
      
      
      claim
      as
      a
      return”.
      Humber
      did
      not
      receive
      a
      return.
      However,
      the
      appellant
      
      
      had
      a
      rebate.
      (SN
      II,
      pages
      58
      and
      59,
      Q
      226).
      
      
      
      
    
      (c)
      To
      fix
      the
      premium
      of
      $392,000
      (Endorsement
      6),
      they
      used
      the
      rate
      
      
      prevailing
      on
      the
      market.
      
      
      
      
    
      (d)
      Reed,
      Shaw,
      Stenhouse
      manages
      some
      40
      or
      50
      captives
      and
      “they
      
      
      are
      all
      accepting
      reinsurance
      risks
      .
      .
      .
      of
      other
      corporations”
      not
      associated
      
      
      and
      not
      related
      to
      the
      first
      one.
      (SN
      II,
      page
      70,
      Q
      279
      and
      Q
      280).
      
      
      
      
    
      4.
      
        Law
       
        —
       
        Cases
       
        at
       
        Law
       
        —
       
        Analysis
      
      4.01
      
        Law
      
      The
      main
      provisions
      of
      the
      
        Income
       
        Tax
       
        Act
      
      involved
      in
      the
      present
      case
      
      
      are
      sections
      3,
      4,
      9;
      subsection
      245(1)
      and
      paragraphs
      18(1
      )(a)
      and
      (e).
      
      
      However,
      subsection
      245(1)
      is
      the
      provision
      on
      which
      the
      reassessment
      is
      
      
      based.
      It
      reads
      as
      follows:
      
      
      
      
    
          Sec
         
          245
         
          Artificial
         
          transactions
        
        (1)
        In
        computing
        income
        for
        the
        purposes
        of
        this
        Act,
        no
        deduction
        may
        be
        
        
        made
        in
        respect
        of
        a
        disbursement
        or
        expense
        made
        or
        incurred
        in
        respect
        of
        a
        
        
        transaction
        or
        operation
        that,
        if
        allowed,
        would
        unduly
        or
        artificially
        reduce
        the
        
        
        income.
        
        
        
        
      
      4.02
      
        Cases
       
        at
       
        Law
      
      Counsel
      for
      both
      parties
      referred
      the
      Board
      to
      the
      following
      cases:
      
      
      
      
    
      1.
      
        Littlewoods
       
        Mail
       
        Order
       
        Stores
       
        Ltd
      
      v
      
        McGregor
       
        (H
       
        M
       
        Inspector
       
        of
      
        Taxes);
       
        Littlewoods
       
        Mail
       
        Order
       
        Stores
       
        Ltd
      
      v
      
        CIR
      
      (1969),
      45
      TC
      519;
      
      
      
      
    
      2.
      
        Dominion
       
        Taxicab
       
        Association
      
      v
      
        MNR,
      
      [1954]
      CTC
      34;
      54
      DTC
      1020;
      
      
      
      
    
      3.
      
        Dominion
       
        Bridge
       
        Company
       
        Limited
      
      v
      
        The
       
        Queen,
      
      [1975]
      CTC
      263;
      75
      
      
      DTC
      5150;
      
      
      
      
    
      4.
      
        Dominion
       
        Bridge
       
        Company
       
        Limited
      
      v
      
        The
       
        Queen,
      
      [1977]
      CTC
      554;
      77
      
      
      DTC
      5367;
      
      
      
      
    
      5.
      
        Front
       
        &
       
        Simcoe
       
        Limited
      
      v
      
        MNR,
      
      [1960]
      CTC
      123;
      60
      DTC
      1081;
      
      
      
      
    
      6.
      
        Louis
       
        J
       
        Harris
      
      v
      
        MNR,
      
      [1966]
      CTC
      226;
      66
      DTC
      5189;
      
      
      
      
    
      7.
      
        Don
       
        Fell
       
        Limited
       
        et
       
        al
      
      v
      
        The
       
        Queen,
      
      [1981]
      CTC
      363;
      81
      DTC
      5282;
      
      
      
      
    
      8.
      
        Leonard
       
        Mendels
      
      v
      
        The
       
        Queen,
      
      [1978]
      CTC
      404;
      78
      DTC
      6267;
      
      
      
      
    
      9.
      
        Natural
       
        Retreats
       
        of
       
        Nova
       
        Scotia
       
        Ltd
      
      v
      
        MNR,
      
      [1979]
      CTC
      2481;
      79
      DTC
      
      
      391;
      
      
      
      
    
      10.
      
        Carnation
       
        Company
      
      v
      
        CIR,
      
      [1971]
      United
      States
      Tax
      Court
      Reports,
      p
      
      
      400;
      
      
      
      
    
      11.
      
        Massey-Ferguson
       
        Limited
      
      v
      
        The
       
        Queen,
      
      [1977]
      CTC
      6;
      77
      DTC
      5013;
      
      
      
      
    
      12.
      
        Spur
       
        Oil
       
        Ltd
      
      v
      
        The
       
        Queen,
      
      [1981]
      CTC
      336;
      81
      DTC
      5168;
      
      
      
      
    
      13.
      
        E
       
        S
       
        G
       
        Holdings
       
        Ltd
      
      v
      
        The
       
        Queen,
      
      [1976]
      CTC
      295;
      76
      DTC
      6158.
      
      
      
      
    
      4.03
      
        Analysis
      
      4.03.1
      The
      essential
      problem
      in
      a
      case
      such
      as
      this
      is
      always
      the
      same.
      It
      
      
      was
      well
      described
      by
      Justice
      Cattanach
      in
      the
      
        Don
       
        Fell
      
      case
      
        (supra):
      
        Tax
        avoidance
        is
        permissible.
        
        
        
        
      
        The
        dispute
        between
        the
        parties
        to
        these
        appeals
        is
        whether
        the
        course
        followed
        
        
        by
        the
        plaintiffs
        is
        legitimate
        tax
        avoidance
        rather
        than
        tax
        evasion.
        
        
        
        
      
      In
      reassessing
      the
      appellant,
      the
      respondent
      assumed
      that
      it
      did
      not
      in
      fact
      
      
      and
      in
      law
      make
      or
      incur
      any
      disbursement
      or
      expense
      which
      would
      be
      
      
      deductible
      in
      the
      computation
      of
      its
      income
      while
      it
      transferred
      funds
      to
      
      
      Humber
      (see
      subparagraph
      (b)
      of
      the
      assumptions
      of
      fact
      quoted
      above
      in
      
      
      paragraph
      2.02).
      
      
      
      
    
      This
      assumption
      substantially
      refers
      to
      the
      application
      of
      subsection
      
      
      245(1)
      of
      the
      Act
      (quoted
      above).
      Practically,
      the
      dispute
      is
      whether
      the
      expense
      
      
      incurred
      (payment
      of
      premiums)
      in
      respect
      of
      the
      operation
      (formation
      
      
      of
      Humber),
      “would
      unduly
      or
      artificially
      reduce
      the
      income”.
      
      
      
      
    
      For
      the
      interpretation
      of
      subsection
      245(1),
      I
      refer
      to
      Justice
      Cattanach
      in
      
      
      the
      
        Don
       
        Fell
      
      case,
      
        (Supra),
      
      at
      5291:
      
      
      
      
    
        This
        concept
        of
        an
        undue
        or
        artificial
        reduction
        of
        income
        includes
        “sham”
        transactions
        
        
        and
        “artificial”
        transactions.
        
        
        
        
      
        Sham
        transactions
        are
        those
        in
        which
        a
        taxpayer
        has
        resorted
        to
        various
        “cosmetic”
        
        
        technicalities
        or
        devices
        for
        the
        purposes
        of
        tax
        evasion.
        
        
        
        
      
        Lord
        Diplock
        has
        given
        the
        classical
        and
        widely
        accepted
        definition
        of
        the
        “popular
        
        
        and
        pejorative”
        word
        “sham”
        in
        
          Snook
        
        v
        
          London
         
          &
         
          West
         
          Riding
         
          Investments
        
          Ltd
        
        ((1967)
        1
        All
        ER
        518
        at
        528)
        reading:
        
        
        
        
      
        _..
        it
        means
        that
        acts
        done
        or
        documents
        executed
        by
        the
        parties
        to
        the
        “sham”
        
        
        which
        are
        intended
        by
        them
        to
        give
        to
        their
        parties
        or
        to
        the
        court
        the
        appearance
        
        
        or
        creating
        between
        the
        parties
        legal
        rights
        and
        obligations
        different
        from
        
        
        the
        actual
        legal
        rights
        and
        obligations
        (if
        any)
        which
        the
        parties
        intend
        to
        
        
        create.
        
        
        
        
      
      Assumption
      (a)
      of
      the
      respondent
      (see
      paragraph
      2.02
      above)
      is
      susceptible
      
      
      to
      the
      contention
      that
      it
      covers
      a
      “sham”,
      as
      defined
      by
      Lord
      Diplock,
      in
      that
      
      
      it
      was
      not
      intended
      by
      Humber
      to
      “provide
      bona
      fide
      insurance
      protection
      to
      
      
      the
      appellant
      and
      was
      not
      in
      the
      insurance
      business”.
      
      
      
      
    
      However,
      subsection
      245(1)
      of
      the
      Act,
      as
      said
      by
      Justice
      Cattanach,
      is:
      
      
      
      
    
        .
        .
        .
        directed
        not
        only
        to
        sham
        transactions
        but
        to
        something
        less
        as
        well
        where
        the
        
        
        expense,
        although
        real,
        would
        unduly
        or
        artificially
        reduce
        a
        taxpayer’s
        income.
        
        
        
        
      
        In
        
          Seramco
         
          Ltd
         
          Supperannuation
         
          Fund
         
          Trustees
        
        v
        
          ITC
        
        ((1976)
        2
        All
        ER
        28)
        Lord
        
        
        Diplock
        said
        at
        page
        35:
        
        
        
        
      
        “Artificial”
        is
        an
        adjective
        which
        is
        in
        general
        use
        in
        the
        English
        Language.
        It
        is
        
        
        not
        a
        term
        of
        legal
        art;
        it
        is
        capable
        of
        bearing
        a
        variety
        of
        meanings
        according
        
        
        to
        the
        context
        in
        which
        it
        is
        used
        .
        .
        .
        
        
        
        
      
        He
        added
        that
        it
        is
        not
        synonymous
        with
        “fictitious”
        and
        he
        went
        on
        to
        say:
        
        
        
        
      
        Where
        in
        a
        provision
        of
        an
        Act
        an
        ordinary
        English
        word
        is
        used,
        it
        is
        neither
        
        
        necessary
        nor
        wise
        for
        a
        court
        of
        construction
        to
        attempt
        to
        lay
        down
        in
        substitution
        
        
        for
        it,
        some
        paraphrase
        which
        would
        be
        of
        general
        application
        to
        all
        
        
        cases
        arising
        under
        the
        provision
        to
        be
        construed.
        Judicial
        exegesis
        should
        be
        
        
        confined
        to
        what
        is
        necessary
        for
        the
        decision
        of
        the
        particular
        case
        ..
        .
        
        
        
        
      
      Bearing
      this
      in
      mind,
      consideration
      must
      be
      directed
      to
      how
      and
      why
      
      
      Humber
      was
      incorporated,
      and
      how
      the
      payment
      of
      the
      premiums
      came
      into
      
      
      effect
      in
      all
      the
      circumstances
      surrounding
      these
      operations
      in
      order
      to
      see
      
      
      if
      the
      disbursement
      incurred
      “would
      unduly
      or
      artificially
      reduce
      the
      income”.
      
      
      Again,
      I
      quote
      Justice
      Cattanach
      in
      the
      
        Don
       
        Fell
      
      case,
      
        (supra):
      
        Standard
        dictionaries
        are
        not
        authoritative
        as
        to
        the
        meaning
        of
        a
        word
        used
        in
        
        
        the
        context
        of
        a
        Statute
        but
        where
        that
        word
        is
        an
        ordinary
        English
        word
        used
        in
        
        
        that
        sense
        resort
        may
        be
        had
        to
        those
        works
        to
        ascertain
        the
        popular
        meaning
        of
        
        
        the
        word.
        
        
        
        
      
        The
        word
        “unduly”
        relates
        to
        quantum
        and
        means
        “excessively”
        or
        “unreasonably”
        
        
        and
        “artificially”
        means
        “not
        in
        accordance
        with
        normality”.
        
        
        
        
      
        Collier,
        J
        in
        
          Sigma
         
          Explorations
         
          Ltd
        
        v
        
          The
         
          Queen
        
        (1975
        FC
        624)
        has
        said
        at
        page
        
        
        632:
        
        
        
        
      
        The
        test
        in
        deciding
        whether
        a
        deductioin
        is
        prohibited
        by
        subsection
        137(1)
        
        
        must,
        as
        I
        see
        it,
        be
        an
        objective
        one.
        The
        main
        source
        of
        the
        evidence
        relating
        
        
        to
        it
        is
        commonly
        the
        taxpayer.
        The
        evidence
        is
        therefore
        often
        subjective
        in
        
        
        nature.
        An
        assessment
        of
        its
        weight
        and
        reliability
        is
        of
        necessity
        required,
        but
        
        
        in
        the
        final
        analysis
        the
        overall
        finding
        of
        undueness
        or
        artificiality
        (or
        not)
        is
        a
        
        
        value
        judgment
        based
        on
        all
        the
        facts
        and
        factors.
        
        
        
        
      
        I
        repeat
        that
        the
        taxpayer’s
        evidence
        at
        trial
        as
        to
        what
        his
        intention
        was,
        although
        
        
        given
        in
        all
        sincerity,
        is
        only
        part
        of
        the
        evidence.
        Statements
        as
        to
        intention
        
        
        must
        be
        considered
        along
        with
        the
        objective
        facts.
        
        
        
        
      
      4.03.2
      It
      is
      a
      proven
      and
      undisputed
      fact
      that
      Humber,
      during
      the
      years
      involved,
      
      
      was
      a
      captive
      company.
      It
      only
      wrote
      one
      policy
      a
      year:
      the
      one
      
      
      issued
      to
      the
      appellant.
      In
      fact,
      according
      to
      Mr
      Lunnen
      (paragraph
      3.02(n)),
      
      
      48%
      of
      Humber’s
      shares
      were
      owned
      by
      Bonavista
      Fish
      Meals
      and
      Oils
      Limited
      
      
      (a
      wholly
      owned
      subsidiary
      of
      the
      appellant),
      47%
      by
      the
      members
      of
      
      
      the
      Russell
      family
      (which
      own
      about
      70%
      of
      the
      appellant’s
      shares),
      and
      5%
      
      
      by
      Mr
      Lunnen,
      controller
      of
      the
      appellant
      company
      (paragraph
      3.02(b)).
      
      
      Later
      in
      1975,
      Humber
      became
      a
      wholly
      owned
      subsidiary
      of
      the
      Lane
      Group
      
      
      Limited
      (paragraph
      3.03(k)).
      In
      fact,
      at
      any
      time
      during
      the
      years
      involved
      
      
      (1973
      and
      1974),
      Humber
      was
      not
      in
      the
      legal
      control
      of
      the
      appellant.
      It
      was
      
      
      in
      the
      legal
      control
      of
      Bonavista
      Fish
      Meals
      and
      Oils
      Limited
      and
      the
      members
      
      
      of
      the
      Russell
      family.
      In
      such
      circumstances,
      is
      it
      possible
      for
      Humber
      
      
      to
      provide
      bona
      fide
      insurance
      protection
      and
      to
      be
      in
      the
      insurance
      business?
      
      
      
    
      Counsel
      for
      the
      respondent,
      who
      contends
      the
      negative,
      gave
      the
      following
      
      
      arguments.
      First,
      he
      referred
      to
      the
      book
      “Cases
      on
      the
      Canadian
      Law
      of
      
      
      Insurance”
      edited
      by
      Marvin
      G
      Bear,
      James
      A
      Rendall
      and
      Howard
      Snow,
      
      
      Second
      Edition,
      1978,
      published
      by
      Carswell
      Company
      Limited.
      In
      Section
      2
      
      
      of
      Chapter
      1,
      “History
      and
      Basic
      theory
      of
      Insurance”,
      some
      basic
      principles
      
      
      of
      insurance
      theory
      are
      explained
      (pages
      2
      and
      3):
      
      
      
      
    
        At
        the
        heart
        of
        the
        actuarial
        concepts
        relating
        to
        insurance
        are
        probability
        theory
        
        
        and
        the
        ‘law
        of
        large
        numbers”.
        “Probability”
        is
        the
        term
        used
        to
        refer
        to
        the
        arithmetic
        
        
        fraction
        which
        states
        the
        chance
        of
        a
        particular
        event
        occurring.
        For
        example,
        
        
        if
        experience
        shows
        that
        of
        10,000
        houses
        30
        are
        destroyed
        by
        fire
        in
        the
        
        
        course
        of
        a
        year,
        the
        probability
        of
        loss
        by
        fire
        of
        a
        particular
        house
        for
        a
        particular
        
        
        12
        month
        period
        is
        30/10,000.
        
        
        
        
      
        The
        fundamental
        principle
        of
        insurance
        is
        “pooling”
        of
        risks.
        
        
        
        
      
        The
        essence
        of
        insurance
        is
        “risk
        spreading”
        through
        the
        “pooling”
        technique.
        
        
        This
        may
        be
        done
        by
        the
        property
        owners
        themselves
        through
        some
        kind
        of
        mutual
        
        
        arrangement
        whether
        crude
        or
        sophisticated
        in
        design,
        as
        discussed
        above.
        
        
        However,
        the
        essence
        of
        the
        insurance
        industry
        as
        a
        20th
        century
        business
        phenomenon
        
        
        is
        “risk
        shifting”.
        In
        return
        for
        a
        premium,
        carefully
        calculated
        by
        reference
        
        
        to
        amount
        of
        risk
        (ie
        the
        amount
        of
        insurance
        cover)
        and
        degree
        of
        risk
        (ie
        an
        
        
        assessment
        of
        whether
        the
        insured’s
        property
        is
        exposed
        to
        an
        average
        chance
        of
        
        
        loss
        by
        fire,
        or
        is
        more
        or
        less
        likely
        to
        be
        destroyed
        by
        fire
        than
        the
        average
        
        
        property)
        the
        insured
        “shifts”
        his
        risk
        to
        the
        insurance
        company.
        From
        the
        insurer’s
        
        
        point
        of
        view,
        it
        is
        stilll
        the
        “pooling”
        which
        makes
        the
        scheme
        work.
        But
        now
        all
        
        
        the
        organization
        and
        administration,
        and
        much
        of
        the
        solicitation
        of
        participants,
        is
        
        
        handled
        by
        the
        insurance
        company.
        
        
        
        
      
      In
      
        Helvering
      
      v
      
        Le
       
        Gierse,
      
      312
      US
      531
      (1941),
      at
      539
      the
      Court
      says
      concerning
      
      
      the
      above
      principles:
      
      
      
      
    
        Historically
        and
        commonly
        insurance
        involved
        risk-shifting
        and
        risk-distributing.
        
        
        
        
      
      Counsel
      for
      the
      respondent
      also
      referred
      to
      the
      American
      case,
      
        Carnation
      
        Company
      
      v
      
        Commissioner
       
        of
       
        Internal
       
        Revenue,
       
        (supra).
      
      The
      facts
      are
      summarized
      
      
      as
      follows:
      
      
      
      
    
        Petitioner
        and
        an
        unrelated
        insurance
        company
        entered
        into
        an
        “insurance”
        
        
        agreement.
        Simultaneously,
        the
        unrelated
        insurance
        company
        “reinsured”
        90
        percent
        
        
        of
        its
        risk
        under
        that
        agreement
        with
        petitioner’s
        wholly
        owned
        Bermudan
        
        
        subsidiary.
        However,
        before
        the
        unrelated
        insurance
        company
        would
        participate
        in
        
        
        the
        “reinsurance”
        agreement,
        petitioner
        had
        to
        give
        its
        wholly
        owned
        Bermudan
        
        
        subsidiary
        access
        upon
        demand
        to
        an
        additional
        $2,880,000
        in
        capital
        contributions.
        
        
        Without
        regard
        to
        the
        demand
        agreement,
        petitioner’s
        capital
        contribution
        to
        
        
        its
        wholly
        owned
        Bermudan
        subsidiary
        was
        $120,000.
        
        
        
        
      
      Counsel
      for
      the
      respondent
      quoted
      the
      arguments
      given
      by
      the
      Commissioner
      
      
      of
      Internal
      Revenue
      in
      the
      
        Carnation
      
      case,
      
        (supra),
      
      at
      405,
      which
      were
      
      
      finally
      accepted
      by
      the
      Court:
      
      
      
      
    
        While
        the
        organization
        of
        respondent’s
        brief
        makes
        no
        clear
        distinction
        among
        
        
        them,
        four
        separate
        theories
        are
        advanced
        to
        support
        respondent’s
        determination
        
        
        that
        petitioner
        is
        not
        entitled
        to
        deduct
        as
        an
        ordinary
        and
        necessary
        business
        
        
        expense
        the
        entire
        amount
        paid
        to
        American
        Home.
        First,
        citing
        
          Helvering
        
        v
        
          LeGierse,
        
        
        
        312
        US
        531
        (1941),
        and
        
          Commissoner
        
        v
        
          Treganowan,
        
        183
        F
        2d
        288
        (2d
        Cir
        1950),
        
        
        respondent
        argues
        that
        risk-shifting
        is
        an
        ingredient
        necessary
        to
        insurance;
        that
        to
        
        
        the
        extent
        petitioner’s
        risk
        was
        “reinsured”
        with
        its
        own
        subsidiary,
        its
        risk
        was
        not
        
        
        shifted;
        and
        therefore,
        that
        90
        percent
        of
        petitioner’s
        payment
        to
        American
        Home,
        
        
        which
        amount
        ultimately
        was
        received
        by
        petitioner’s
        subsidiary,
        was
        not
        paid
        to
        
        
        American
        Home
        as
        a
        deductible
        insurance
        premium.
        Second,
        citing
        
          Spring
         
          Canyon
        
          Coal
         
          Co
        
        v
        
          Commissioner,
        
        43
        F
        2d
        78
        (10th
        Cir
        1930),
        cert
        denied
        284
        US
        654
        (1931),
        
        
        and
        
          Pan-American
         
          Hide
         
          Co
        
        v
        
          Commissioner,
        
        1
        BTA
        1249
        (1925),
        respondent
        contends
        
        
        that
        no
        deduction
        is
        allowed
        for
        amounts
        set
        aside
        as
        self-insurance;
        that
        to
        the
        
        
        extent
        petitioner’s
        risk
        was
        “reinsured”
        with
        its
        own
        subsidiary
        petitioner
        was
        engaged
        
        
        in
        an
        indirect
        form
        of
        self-insurance;
        and
        therefore
        that
        90
        percent
        of
        petitioner’s
        
        
        payment
        to
        American
        Home,
        which
        amount
        ultimately
        was
        received
        by
        petitioner’s
        
        
        subsidiary,
        was
        an
        amount
        set
        aside
        for
        self-insurance
        and
        nondeductible.
        Third,
        
        
        respondent
        argues
        that
        90
        percent
        of
        petitioner’s
        payment
        to
        American
        Home,
        which
        
        
        amount
        ultimately
        was
        received
        by
        petitioner’s
        subsidiary,
        was
        not
        “paid
        or
        incurred”
        
        
        by
        petitioner
        within
        the
        meaning
        of
        section
        162
        because
        that
        amount
        remained
        within
        
        
        petitioner’s
        economic
        family
        and
        under
        its
        practical
        control.
        Fourth,
        respondent
        
        
        contends
        that
        the
        grant
        of
        a
        deduction
        in
        respect
        of
        any
        expenditure
        is
        predicated
        on
        
        
        value
        being
        received
        in
        exchange
        for
        such
        expenditure;
        that
        nothing
        of
        value
        was
        
        
        received
        by
        petitioner
        in
        exchange
        for
        90
        percent
        of
        its
        payment
        to
        American
        Home
        
        
        because
        ultimately
        petitioner
        bore
        the
        risk
        of
        loss
        on
        all
        reinsurance
        of
        petitioner’s
        
        
        risk
        with
        its
        subsidiary;
        and
        therefore
        that
        90
        percent
        of
        petitioner’s
        payment
        to
        
        
        American
        Home
        was
        not
        a
        deductible
        insurance
        premium.
        
        
        
        
      
      In
      the
      said
      
        Carnation
      
      case,
      the
      Court
      held:
      
      
      
      
    
        Held,
        to
        the
        extent
        that
        petitioner’s
        risk
        was
        “reinsured”
        with
        its
        wholly
        owned
        
        
        Bermudan
        subsidiary,
        its
        risk
        of
        loss
        had
        not
        shifted,
        its
        agreement
        with
        the
        unrelated
        
        
        insurance
        company
        was
        not
        insurance,
        and
        its
        payment
        to
        the
        unrelated
        insurance
        
        
        company
        was
        not
        deductible
        as
        an
        ordinary
        and
        necessary
        business
        expense
        
        
        for
        insurance.
        
          Helvering
        
        v
        
          LeGierse,
        
        312
        US
        531
        (1941),
        followed.
        
        
        
        
      
      At
      415
      of
      the
      
        Carnation
      
      case
      the
      Court
      said:
      
      
      
      
    
        LeGierse
        is
        based
        on
        the
        principle
        that
        an
        agreement
        may
        resemble
        insurance
        in
        
        
        form
        yet
        lack
        an
        ingredient
        essential
        to
        insurance.
        The
        Supreme
        Court
        held
        that
        
        
        such
        an
        agreement
        may
        not
        be
        characterized
        as
        insurance
        and
        the
        proceeds
        therefrom
        
        
        may
        not
        be
        characterized
        as
        proceeds
        from
        insurance.
        
        
        
        
      
      In
      the
      latter
      case
      it
      was
      90%
      of
      the
      risk
      that
      was
      reinsured
      with
      a
      wholly
      
      
      owned
      subsidiary
      of
      Carnation
      which
      was
      declared
      by
      the
      Court
      as
      not
      having
      
      
      been
      shifted
      and
      hence
      not
      deductible.
      
      
      
      
    
      However,
      in
      the
      present
      case
      it
      is
      the
      part
      which
      was
      reinsured
      with
      
      
      Lloyd’s
      
        et
       
        al
      
      that
      the
      respondent
      considers
      as
      having
      been
      shifted
      and
      hence
      
      
      deductible.
      It
      is
      the
      part
      that
      was
      not
      reinsured
      that
      the
      respondent
      considered
      
      
      as
      not
      having
      been
      shifted.
      
      
      
      
    
      Humber
      was
      not
      a
      wholly
      owned
      subsidiary
      of
      the
      appellant.
      It
      was
      not
      
      
      under
      the
      legal
      control
      of
      the
      appellant.
      Indeed,
      the
      appellant
      did
      not
      own
      
      
      one
      share
      of
      Humber;
      the
      shareholders
      being
      Bonavista
      Fish
      Meals
      and
      Oils
      
      
      Limited
      (48%)
      and
      the
      members
      of
      the
      Russell
      family,
      as
      explained
      at
      the
      
      
      beginning
      of
      this
      paragraph.
      Humber,
      the
      appellant
      and
      Bonavista
      Fish
      
      
      Meals
      and
      Oils
      Limited
      have
      their
      own
      legal
      entities
      which
      are
      different
      from
      
      
      the
      entities
      of
      their
      own
      shareholders.
      One
      of
      the
      requirements
      to
      allow
      the
      
      
      appeal
      would
      be
      that
      the
      corporate
      veil
      not
      be
      lifted.
      If
      the
      corporate
      veil
      
      
      was
      lifted,
      Humber
      would
      be
      considered
      as
      the
      same
      company
      as
      the
      appellant,
      
      
      and
      the
      part
      of
      the
      risk
      not
      reinsured
      by
      Humber
      would
      be
      considered
      
      
      as
      not
      shifted
      by
      the
      insured
      (the
      appellant)
      to
      the
      insurance
      company
      
      
      (Humber).
      
      
      
      
    
      To
      lift
      the
      corporate
      veil,
      the
      Board
      must
      answer
      affirmatively
      to
      the
      following
      
      
      question:
      In
      the
      present
      case,
      was
      the
      appellant
      really
      carrying
      on
      
      
      the
      business?
      To
      answer
      such
      a
      question,
      Atkinson,
      J,
      in
      the
      matter
      of
      
      
      
        Smith,
       
        Stone
       
        and
       
        Knight
       
        Ltd
      
      v
      
        Lord
       
        Mayor,
       
        Aldermen
       
        and
       
        Citizens
       
        of
       
        the
      
        City
       
        of
       
        Birmingham,
      
      [1939]
      4
      All
      ER
      116,
      established
      (on
      the
      basis
      of
      cases
      
      
      at
      law)
      six
      criteria
      which
      were
      used
      in
      the
      
        Dominion
       
        Bridge
       
        Co
       
        Ltd
      
      case,
      
      
      
        (supra),
      
      by
      Décary,
      J;
      and
      in
      the
      
        Natural
       
        Retreats
       
        of
       
        Nova
       
        Scotia
      
      case,
      
      
      
        (supra).
      
      They
      are
      summarized
      and
      adapted
      to
      the
      present
      case
      as
      follows:
      
      
      
      
    
      1.
      Q
      Were
      the
      profits
      of
      Humber
      treated
      as
      those
      of
      the
      appellant?
      
      
      
      
    
      A
      This
      question
      must
      be
      answered
      in
      the
      negative.
      The
      profits
      were
      
      
      totally
      used
      by
      Humber
      as
      reinvestment
      —
      no
      evidence
      is
      to
      the
      effect
      
      
      that
      an
      amount
      was
      lent
      without
      interest
      to
      the
      appellant.
      
      
      
      
    
      2.
      Q
      Were
      the
      persons
      conducting
      the
      business
      of
      Humber
      appointed
      by
      
      
      the
      appellant?
      
      
      
      
    
      A
      The
      answer
      is
      negative.
      Humber
      was
      administered
      by
      Insurance
      
      
      Managers
      Limited,
      a
      company
      unrelated
      to
      the
      appellant
      and
      located
      
      
      in
      Bermuda
      (paragraph
      3.02(m)).
      The
      directors
      and
      officers
      of
      Insurance
      
      
      Managers
      Limited
      were
      not
      shareholders
      or
      employees
      of
      the
      
      
      appellant
      company
      and
      were
      not
      nominated
      by
      the
      appellant
      (paragraphs
      
      
      3.02(p)
      and
      (q)
      and
      3.04(m)).
      
      
      
      
    
      3.
      Q
      Was
      Humber
      the
      head
      and
      the
      brain
      of
      the
      transaction?
      
      
      
      
    
      A
      The
      answer
      is
      positive.
      Insurance
      Managers
      Limited,
      which
      administered
      
      
      Humber,
      was
      formed
      by
      Reed,
      Shaw,
      Osler,
      for
      the
      purpose
      of
      
      
      providing
      services
      to
      captive
      insurance
      companies
      (paragraph
      
      
      3.04(1)).
      It
      was
      experienced
      —
      it
      managed
      about
      10
      captive
      insurance
      
      
      companies
      in
      Bermuda.
      
      
      
      
    
      4.
      Q
      Did
      Humber
      govern
      the
      transaction
      and
      decide
      on
      an
      objective
      
      
      basis
      the
      amount
      of
      insurance
      premiums?
      
      
      
      
    
      A
      The
      answer
      is
      positive.
      To
      fix
      the
      rates
      of
      the
      insurance
      premiums,
      
      
      Humber
      used
      the
      rates
      prevailing
      on
      the
      market
      (paragraph
      3.05(a),
      
      
      
      
    
      (b)
      and
      (c)).
      
      
      
      
    
      5.
      Q
      Did
      Humber
      make
      the
      profits
      by
      its
      skill
      and
      direction?
      and
      
      
      
      
    
      6.
      Q
      Was
      Humber
      in
      effectual
      and
      constant
      control?
      
      
      
      
    
      A
      The
      answers
      are
      positive,
      as
      it
      appears
      from
      the
      answers
      to
      the
      
      
      above
      questions
      and
      from
      the
      testimonies
      of
      Messrs
      Lunnen
      and
      Hor-
      
      
      rick
      (paragraph
      3.02(t)
      and
      (u)).
      
      
      
      
    
      Because
      of
      the
      substance
      of
      the
      answers
      to
      the
      preceding
      questions,
      the
      
      
      Board
      must
      conclude
      that
      Humber
      was
      really
      carrying
      on
      the
      business
      and
      
      
      that
      the
      corporate
      veil
      must
      not
      be
      lifted.
      
      
      
      
    
      4.03.3
      Because
      of
      the
      evidence
      adduced,
      as
      summarized
      below,
      the
      Board
      
      
      must
      conclude
      that
      there
      was
      a
      valid
      business
      purpose
      to
      the
      incorporation
      
      
      of
      Humber:
      
      
      
      
    
      (a)
      In
      the
      early
      1970s,
      the
      cost
      of
      insurance
      was
      going
      up
      (paragraphs
      
      
      3.02(e)
      and
      3.04(e)
      and
      (f))
      and
      it
      was
      normal
      to
      try
      to
      find
      a
      way
      to
      
      
      minimize
      the
      cost.
      
      
      
      
    
      (b)
      The
      appellant
      made
      investigations
      with
      a
      view
      to
      forming
      a
      Canadian
      
      
      insurance
      company
      and
      determined
      that
      it
      was
      not
      financially
      possible
      
      
      because
      of
      the
      capitalization
      of
      $1,000,000
      (paragraphs
      3.02(i)
      and
      3.04(i)
      
      
      and
      (j)).
      
      
      
      
    
      (c)
      It
      was
      easier
      to
      form
      an
      insurance
      company
      in
      Bermuda
      because
      the
      
      
      capitalization
      was
      only
      $120,000
      (paragraphs
      3.02(o)
      and
      (v),
      and
      
      
      3.04(o)).
      
      
      
      
    
      (d)
      The
      decision
      to
      incorporate
      Humber,
      pursuant
      to
      the
      testimonies,
      
      
      was
      based
      mainly
      on
      insurance
      broking
      (paragraphs
      3.02(x),
      3.03(p)
      and
      
      
      3.04(n)).
      
      
      
      
    
      (e)
      The
      formation
      of
      Humber
      gave
      financial
      advantages
      to
      the
      appellant
      
      
      concerning
      insurance
      (deductible
      before
      incorporation
      of
      Humber:
      
      
      $22,500
      (paragraph
      3.03(a);
      after
      incorporation:
      $2,500
      (paragraph
      
      
      3.03(h)).
      The
      increase
      in
      premiums
      was
      due
      in
      great
      part
      to
      the
      increase
      
      
      in
      value
      of
      the
      vessels.
      To
      fix
      the
      rates
      of
      the
      premium,
      Humber
      used
      the
      
      
      rates
      prevailing
      on
      the
      market
      (paragraph
      3.05(a),
      (b)
      and
      (c)).
      
      
      
      
    
      4.03.4
      There
      is
      an
      argument
      which
      was
      pointed
      out
      by
      counsel
      for
      the
      respondent
      
      
      and
      explained
      above
      in
      paragraph
      4.03.2:
      the
      fundamental
      principle
      
      
      of
      insurance
      is
      “pooling
      risk”.
      As
      Humber
      had
      only
      one
      client,
      ie
      the
      
      
      appellant,
      this
      requirement
      was
      not
      met.
      Therefore,
      the
      respondent
      concludes
      
      
      that
      Humber
      was
      not
      in
      the
      insurance
      business.
      
      
      
      
    
      The
      Board
      thinks
      that
      the
      “pooling”
      principle,
      which
      is
      based
      on
      the
      probability
      
      
      theory
      and
      the
      “law
      of
      large
      numbers”,
      applies
      on
      tangibles
      (houses,
      
      
      vessels)
      and
      not
      necessarily
      on
      number
      of
      clients.
      In
      the
      present
      case,
      there
      
      
      were
      about
      20
      vessels
      (trawlers
      and
      longliners)
      valued
      at
      $13,000,000.
      It
      is
      
      
      true
      that
      in
      maritime
      insurance
      that
      is
      not
      a
      large
      number
      or
      amount.
      However,
      
      
      it
      seems
      to
      the
      Board
      that,
      in
      theory,
      the
      principle
      is
      respected.
      In
      
      
      practice,
      Humber
      applied
      it
      and
      it
      was
      financially
      possible.
      It
      must
      also
      be
      
      
      added
      that
      in
      the
      initial
      stages
      of
      Humber
      (1973
      and
      1974),
      the
      intention
      was
      
      
      to
      keep
      Humber
      going
      for
      a
      long
      period
      of
      time
      and
      later
      to
      have
      other
      
      
      clients
      than
      the
      appellant
      (paragraphs
      3.02(r)
      and
      (s),
      3.04(q)
      and
      (r),
      and
      
      
      3.05(d)).
      
      
      
      
    
      4.03.5
      The
      evidence
      shows
      another
      important
      issue.
      Despite
      the
      testimonies
      
      
      of
      Messrs
      Lunnen
      and
      Horrick
      to
      the
      effect
      that
      the
      decision
      to
      incorporate
      
      
      Humber
      was
      based
      solely
      on
      insurance
      broking
      and
      not
      on
      tax
      considéra-
      
      
      tions
      (paragraphs
      3.02(x),
      3.03(p)
      and
      3.04(n)),
      it
      is
      difficult
      for
      the
      Board
      to
      
      
      find
      that,
      after
      the
      long
      and
      detailed
      letters
      received
      from
      the
      taxation
      consultants:
      
      
      Clarkson
      Gordon
      &
      Co
      in
      November
      1972
      (paragraph
      3.03(d)),
      
      
      Stikeman,
      Elliot,
      Robarts
      and
      Bowman
      in
      March
      1973
      (paragraph
      3.03(e)),
      
      
      and
      also
      from
      Mr
      Ellison’s
      lawyer
      from
      Bermuda
      in
      March
      1973
      (paragraph
      
      
      3.03(j)
      ),
      the
      appellant
      company
      and
      Reed,
      Shaw,
      Osler
      Limited
      were
      not
      
      
      aware
      of
      the
      taxation
      problems
      and
      how
      to
      avoid
      the
      main
      errors
      so
      as
      not
      
      
      to
      be
      attacked
      by
      the
      Minister
      of
      National
      Revenue.
      In
      May
      1973,
      they
      knew
      
      
      what
      to
      do:
      who
      would
      buy
      the
      shares,
      what
      risks
      would
      be
      reinsured,
      the
      
      
      management
      of
      Humber
      in
      Bermuda,
      etc.
      
      
      
      
    
      The
      Board
      knows
      all
      this;
      however,
      it
      is
      not
      subsection
      247(2)
      of
      the
      Act
      
      
      which
      is
      the
      basis
      of
      the
      reassessment,
      it
      is
      subsection
      245(1).
      Subsection
      
      
      247(2)
      reads
      as
      follows:
      
      
      
      
    
        (2)
        Associated
        corporations.
        Where,
        in
        the
        case
        of
        two
        or
        more
        corporations,
        
        
        the
        Minister
        is
        satisfied
        
        
        
        
      
        (a)
        that
        the
        separate
        existence
        of
        those
        corporations
        in
        a
        taxation
        year
        is
        not
        
        
        solely
        for
        the
        purpose
        of
        carrying
        out
        the
        business
        of
        those
        corporations
        in
        the
        
        
        most
        effective
        manner,
        and
        
        
        
        
      
        (b)
        that
        one
        of
        the
        main
        reasons
        for
        such
        separate
        existence
        in
        the
        year
        is
        to
        
        
        
        
      
        reduce
        the
        amount
        of
        taxes
        that
        would
        otherwise
        be
        payable
        under
        this
        Act
        
        
        
        
      
        the
        two
        or
        more
        corporations
        shall,
        if
        the
        Minister
        so
        directs,
        be
        deemed
        to
        be
        
        
        associated
        with
        each
        other
        in
        the
        year.
        
        
        
        
      
      In
      the
      present
      case,
      the
      problem
      is
      not
      whether
      one
      of
      the
      main
      reasons
      for
      
      
      the
      separate
      existence
      of
      two
      corporations
      in
      a
      year
      is
      to
      reduce
      the
      amount
      
      
      of
      taxes
      that
      would
      otherwise
      be
      payable
      under
      the
      Act.
      The
      problem
      is
      
      
      whether
      an
      expense
      incurred
      in
      respect
      of
      a
      transaction
      “unduly
      or
      artificially”
      
      
      reduces
      the
      income.
      
      
      
      
    
      According
      to
      the
      evidence
      adduced,
      the
      Board
      thinks
      that
      the
      preponderance
      
      
      of
      evidence
      is
      to
      the
      effect
      that
      the
      premiums
      paid
      as
      expenses
      did
      not
      
      
      “unduly”
      (ie
      excessively
      or
      unreasonably)
      or
      “artificially”
      (ie
      not
      in
      accordance
      
      
      with
      normality)
      reduce
      the
      income.
      The
      Board
      also
      thinks
      that
      the
      
      
      “acts
      done
      and
      documents
      executed”
      created
      actual
      legal
      rights
      and
      obligations
      
      
      and
      not
      only
      the
      appearance
      of
      rights
      and
      obligations,
      which
      is
      a
      
      
      “sham”
      pursuant
      to
      the
      definition
      of
      Lord
      Diplock
      (quoted
      above).
      
      
      
      
    
      5.
      
        Conclusion
      
      The
      appeal
      is
      allowed
      and
      the
      matter
      referred
      back
      to
      the
      respondent
      for
      
      
      reassessment
      in
      accordance
      with
      the
      above
      reasons
      for
      judgment.
      
      
      
      
    
        Appeal
       
        allowed.