M
J
Bonner:—The
assessments
under
appeal
are
based
on
a
direction
made
by
the
respondent
under
subsection
247(2)
of
the
Income
Tax
Act
that
the
following
corporations
be
deemed
to
be
associated
with
each
other
for
the
1974
and
1975
years:
|
hereinafter
called
|
John
Martens
Co
Ltd
|
the
Manitoba
company
|
J
M
Enterprises
Ltd
|
Enterprises
|
Falk
Enterprises
Ltd
|
the
Falk
company
|
Kencar
Enterprises
Ltd
|
Kencar
|
John
Martens
(Sask)
Ltd
|
the
Saskatchewan
company
|
There
are
nine
appeals.
Each
company
appeals
from
its
assessment
for
each
year
save
for
Engerprises
which
appeals
from
its
assessment
for
1974
only.
The
appeals
were
heard
together
on
common
evidence.
At
the
end
of
1971:
(a)
John
Martens
Jr.
held
100%
of
the
issued
shares
of
Enterprises,
which
held
80%
of
the
shares
of
the
Manitoba
company.
(b)
Enterprises
held
an
80%
interest
in
a
partnership,
John
Martens
(Ontario)
Co
(hereinafter
called
“the
partnership”).
(c)
The
remaining
20%
of
both
the
shares
of
the
Manitoba
company
and
the
partnership
were
held
by
the
Falk
company,
the
issued
shares
of
which
were
held
by
Erdman
Falk,
his
wife
Frieda,
and
his
son
Gordon.
Frieda
Falk
is
the
sister
of
John
Martens
Jr.
(d)
The
Manitoba
company
carried
on
the
business
of
a
wholesale
distributor
of
sporting
goods.
It
did
so
from
warehouse
premises
in
Winnipeg.
Salesmen
employed
by
it
called
upon
customers
in
Manitoba,
in
Thunder
Bay
and,
on
an
irregular
basis,
in
Saskatchewan
and
Alberta.
The
Manitoba
company
distributed
catalogues
to
customers
enabling
them
to
place
mail
orders
with
it.
(e)
The
partnership
carried
on
a
similar
business
from
premises
in
Ken-
ora.
Its
salesmen
travelled
in
northwestern
Ontario,
save
for
Thunder
Bay.
The
partnership
also
distributed
catalogues.
The
catalogues
were
common
to
both
the
partnership
and
the
Manitoba
company
but
they
indicated
what
goods
were
stocked
in
Winnipeg
only
and
not
in
Kenora.
(f)
The
building
occupied
by
the
Manitoba
company
was
owned
by
Ken-
car.
Each
of
two
trusts,
one
for
the
son
of
John
Martens
Jr.
and
one
for
his
daughter,
held
50%
of
the
shares
of
Kencar.
The
trustees
in
one
case
were
accountants
for
John
Martens
Jr
and
in
the
other
case
they
were
his
lawyers.
The
sporting
goods
business
was
founded
by
John
Martens
Jr
(hereinafter
referred
to
as
“JMJ”)
in
1947.
JMJ
supplied
the
entrepreneurial
ability
and
drive
which
resulted
in
the
success
of
that
business.
A
company
of
which
JMJ
and
his
father
were
the
principal
shareholders
(hereinafter
called
“the
old
company”)
supplied
the
capital
necessary
to
start
the
business.
Accordingly
the
old
company
carried
on
the
business.
An
expansion
of
the
business
into
northwestern
Ontario
was
effected
by
means
of
a
partnership
between
JMJ
and
his
father
to
prevent
the
sisters
of
JMJ
from
obtaining
such
benefit
from
the
expansion
as
they
would
have
derived
by
virtue
of
the
shares
which
they
owned
in
the
old
company.
The
father
planned
that
his
estate
be
divided
equally
among
his
three
children.
One
daughter
had
made
no
contribution
to
the
business.
Frieda
Falk
had
made
no
contribution.
Her
husband
Erdman
was
employed
in
the
business
but
he
was
not
regarded
by
JMJ
as
having
made
any
significant
contribution
to
its
success.
In
the
early
1960’s
the
Manitoba
company
acquired
the
sporting
goods
business
from
the
old
company
by
a
transaction
designed
by
JMJ
to
limit
participation
by
the
Falk
family
interests
to
20%
and
to
eliminate
participation
by
the
other
sister
and
her
family.
The
Manitoba
company’s
parent,
Enterprises,
also
acquired
the
80%
share
in
the
partnership
formerly
owned
by
JMJ.
The
December
1971
structure
outlined
above
was
the
result.
In
the
late
1960’s
and
early
1970’s
JMJ
concluded
that
the
Manitoba
company
was
not
getting
its
“fair
share”
of
the
wholesale
sporting
goods
market
in
Saskatchewan
and
Alberta.
Furthermore
the
Winnipeg
warehouse
was
becoming
crowded.
In
1969
the
general
manager
of
the
Manitoba
company,
Mr
Purves,
prepared
a
memo
outlining
his
“thoughts
on
split
of
company”.
In
it
he
outlined
the
advantages
and
disadvantages
of
several
courses
of
action.
They
included
splitting
the
company
into
two
organizations,
one
for
hunting
equipment
and
the
other
for
sporting
goods,
and
the
opening
of
the
new
branch
in
either
Edmonton,
Saskatoon
or
Thunder
Bay.
A
decision
was
made
by
JMJ
to
incorporate
a
company
in
Saskatoon.
JMJ
then
appointed
Tom
Zaluski,
who
at
the
time
was
a
salesman
employed
by
the
Manitoba
company,
to
the
position
of
general
manager
of
the
Saskatchewan
operation.
Warehouse
premises
were
leased
in
Saskatoon
on
January
27,
1972
by
the
Manitoba
company.
The
Saskatchewan
company
had
not
at
that
time
been
incorporated.
Subsequent
leases
were
taken
by
the
Saskatchewan
company.
The
Saskatchewan
company
commenced
business
in
the
summer
of
1972.
It
had
been
incorporated
in
March
1972.
At
all
material
times
its
sole
beneficial
shareholder
was
Violet
Martens,
wife
of
JMJ.
JMJ
however
was
its
president
for
two
years
until,
as
he
said,
all
the
legal
papers
were
signed.
He
explained
“my
wife
.
.
.
wanted
to
know
whatever
the
documents
were
and
whether
she
was
signing
her
life
away
and
it
just
took
too
long
to
explain
it
to
her.
..”
JMJ
gave
evidence
regarding
his
decision
to
make
his
wife
Violet
sole
shareholder.
There
were
he
said
several
reasons.
First
he
said
that
he
wanted
to
“freeze”
Erdman
Falk
out
of
the
growth.
Mr
Falk’s
performance
was
“a
real
irritant”.
JMJ
therefore
instructed
the
accountants
and
lawyers
that
neither
Mr
Falk
nor
his
family
was
to
be
permitted
to
hold
shares
in
the
Saskatchewan
company.
Secondly,
Mrs
Martens
had
no
real
assets
of
her
own
and
it
was
time
he
said
that
“we
moved
some
that
way”.
Further
JMJ
wished
to
freeze
his
estate
to
some
extent,
his
objective
being
to
save
succession
duties.
He
said
that
he
wanted
to
“divest
himself
of
growth”.
It
is
plain
that
Mrs
Martens,
who
did
not
testify,
had
virtually
nothing
to
do
with
either
the
decision
that
a
sporting
goods
business
should
be
carried
on
from
a
location
west
of
Winnipeg
or
with
the
decision
that
the
business
would
be
that
of
a
company
of
which
she
was
the
sole
shareholder.
JMJ’s
estate
planning
objectives
at
the
end
of
1971
included
the
transfer
of
assets,
particularly
growth
assets,
to
his
children.
It
was
intended
that
Kencar
would
hold
“all
real
estate”.
Some
years
later
it
in
fact
acquired
a
90%
interest
in
the
warehouse
property
in
Kenora
used
by
the
partnership
and
as
well
the
building
occupied
by
the
Saskatchewan
company.
In
1971
however
Kencar
was
experiencing
cash
flow
problems.
Its
rental
income
from
the
Manitoba
company
was
not
enough
to
cover
the
carrying
costs
of
the
Winnipeg
building
which
it
owned
and
leased
to
the
Manitoba
company.
Thus,
according
to
JMJ,
it
was
decided
that
Enterprises
would
sell
its
80%
interest
in
the
partnership
to
Kencar
in
order
to
meet
the
estate
planning
objectives
and
to
alleviate
the
cash
flow
problem.
While
both
JMJ
and
Mr
Newman,
the
chartered
accountant
who
acted
for
and
advised
JMJ
in
connection
with
the
1971-72
reorganization,
testified
that
the
named
reasons
were
the
reasons
for
the
transactions,
it
seems
unlikely
that
cash
flow
was
a
very
important
primary
reason.
Ronald
Cinch,
one
of
the
assessors
who
was
responsible
for
making
a
recommendation
that
the
ministerial
direction
in
question
here
be
made,
gave
unchallenged
testimony
that
at
no
time
prior
to
the
hearing
had
the
cash
flow
been
raised
in
representations
made
on
behalf
of
the
appellants
as
to
the
reasons
for
the
sale
of
the
partnership
interest
to
Kencar.
The
sale
was
accomplished
by
agreement
dated
December
31,
1971.
No
attempt
was
made
to
suggest
that
the
decision
to
effect
the
transaction
between
Enterprises
and
Kencar
was
made
by
anyone
other
than
JMJ.
I
do
not
find
that
the
reasons
advanced
in
evidence
for
the
incorporation
of
the
Saskatchewan
company
as
a
separate
corporation
are
particularly
persuasive.
It
was
suggested
by
JMJ
that
sporting
goods
dealers
(retailers)
prefer
to
buy
from
a
company
identified
with
the
province
in
which
they
do
business.
No
serious
attempt
was
made
to
create
an
image
of
the
Saskatchewan
company
as
a
corporate
native
son
of
the
province.
The
catalogues
for
1973
and
1975
for
example
were
entitled
in
bold
print
“John
Martens
Co
Ltd,
Wholesale
Sporting
Goods”.
Below
that
the
print
indicated
that
the
head
office
was
in
Winnipeg
and
that
there
were
“offices”
in
Kenora
and
Saskatoon.
The
1975
catalogue
differed
from
the
1973
only
in
that
it
described
the
Kenora
operation
as
an
“agency”.
Furthermore
“Trade
News
and
Monthly
Specials”,
being
a
circular
distributed
by
the
Manitoba
company,
the
part-
March
20,
1978
Revenue
Canada,
Taxation,
36
Adelaide
Street
East,
Toronto,
Ontario.
Att:
Mr.
Ft.
Blackman
Gentlemen:
Re:
Gerald
A.
Sian
1976
Income
Tax
Return
Please
be
advised
that
the
partners
of
our
firm
unanimously
agree
that
the
amount
of
$22,526
allocated
to
Gerald
Sian
in
our
January
31,
1976
“Statement
of
Income”
is
properly
considered
a
deduction
from
income
for
purposes
of
allocation
of
profits
to
the
remaining
partners.
This
amount
represents
Mr.
Sian’s
share
of
work
in
progress
at
January
31,1975
and
as
such
represents
a
share
of
partnership
profits.
If
there
is
any
further
information
you
require
in
connection
with
the
above,
please
do
not
hesitate
to
contact
the
writer.
It
would
appear,
therefore,
that
Starkman
et
al
allocated
the
sum
of
$12,695.03
on
account
of
the
balance
of
the
appellant’s
capital
account
in
the
partnership
as
at
January
31,
1975.
By
unanimous
agreement
between
themselves
(exclusive
of
the
presence
and
knowledge
of
the
appellant)
Starkman
et
al
allocated
as
the
appellant’s
share
of
income
of
the
partnership,
the
amount
of
$22,526
In
their
financial
statement
for
the
fiscal
period
of
the
partnership
ending
January
31,
1976.
It
was
the
appellant’s
contention
that
the
$22,526
allocated
by
the
partnership,
as
work
in
progress,
should
have
been
on
capital
account
as
opposed
to
income.
To
this
the
respondent
counters
that
the
appellant
received
the
sum
of
$22,526
by
the
agreement
of
the
members
of
the
partnership
to
allocate
to
the
appellant
the
share
of
the
income
of
the
partnership
in
respect
of
the
fiscal
period
of
the
partnership
ending
January
31,
1976
and,
therefore,
such
amount
was
properly
included
in
computing
the
appellant’s
income
for
his
1976
taxation
year,
by
virtue
of
subsection
96(1.1)
of
the
Income
Tax
Act,
SC
1970-71-72,
c
63,
as
amended.
Issue
The
issue
is
whether
the
payment
of
$22,526
designated
as
“work
in
progress”
by
the
partnership
of
Starkman
et
al
in
its
1976
financial
statement
was
a
pay
out
of
the
appellant’s
capital
interest
in
the
partnership
as
of
the
end
of
the
fiscal
year
of
the
partnership
January
31,
1975
or
whether
it
was
income
to
the
appellant
in
1976.
In
assessing
the
appellant,
the
respondent
relied,
inter
alia,
upon
section
3,
paragraph
34(1
)(d),
sections
96,
98.1
and
paragraph
111
(1
)(b)
of
the
Income
Tax
Act.
Findings
The
governing
section
is
section
96,
subsection
(1.1)
of
which
reads
as
follows:
(1.1)
For
the
purposes
of
subsection
(1)
and
sections
101
and
103
(a)
where
the
principal
activity
of
a
partnership
is
carrying
on
a
business
in
Canada
and
the
members
thereof
have
entered
into
an
agreement
to
allocate
a
share
of
the
income
or
loss
of
the
partnership
from
any
source
or
from
sources
in
a
particular
place,
as
the
case
may
be,
to
any
taxpayer
who
at
any
time
ceased
to
be
a
member
of
(i)
the
partnership,
or
(ii)
a
partnership
that
at
any
time
has
ceased
to
exist
or
would,
but
for
subsection
98(1),
have
ceased
to
exist,
and
either
(A)
the
members
thereof,
or
(B)
the
members
of
another
partnership
in
which,
immediately
after
that
time,
any
of
the
members
referred
to
in
clause
(A)
became
members
have
agreed
to
make
such
an
allocation
or
or
to
his
spouse,
estate
or
heirs
or
to
any
person
referred
to
in
subsection
(1.3),
that
taxpayer,
his
spouse,
estate
or
heirs,
or
that
person,
as
the
case
may
be,
shall
be
deemed
to
be
a
member
of
the
partnership;
and
(b)
all
amounts
each
of
which
is
an
amount
equal
to
the
share
of
the
income
or
loss
referred
to
in
this
subsection
allocated
to
a
taxpayer
from
a
partnership
in
respect
of
a
particular
fiscal
period
of
the
partnership
shall,
notwithstanding
any
other
provision
of
this
Act,
be
included
in
computing
his
income
for
the
taxation
year
in
which
that
fiscal
period
of
the
partnership
ends.
There
are
other
sections
in
the
Income
Tax
Act,
of
course,
dealing
with
the
interest
of
a
retiring
partner
from
a
partnership
business
or
profession,
but
I
am
drawn
back
to
the
provisions
of
subsection
96(1.1)
as
being
the
relevant
section
in
this
appeal.
The
appellant
quoted
extensively
from
Interpretation
Bulletins,
issued
by
the
Department
of
National
Revenue,
but
I
feel
that
his
interpretation
of
such
Bulletins
was
not
correct.
In
a
nutshell
he
felt
that
he
should
have
been
involved
in
any
allocation
agreement
whereby
the
partnership
should
have
treated
the
amount
of
$22,526
as
a
capital
interest
as
opposed
to
income
interest
to
him
as
a
retiring
partner
in
that
the
allocation
agreement
was
entered
into
unilaterally
by
the
remaining
partners
at
a
“meeting”
in
the
absence
of
and
without
the
appellant
taking
part
in
their
“deliberations”.
The
appellant
felt
that
the
remaining
partners
had
treated
him
unfairly
and
in
a
cavalier
fashion
by
making
the
allocation
referred
to
above
and
that
their
unilateral
allocation
agreement
was
not
binding
upon
him.
On
the
other
hand,
counsel
for
the
Minister
relied
completely
upon
section
96,
stating
that
it
was
a
deeming
provision
and
that
the
meaning
of
that
section
was
that
an
agreement
made
between
the
existing
partners
of
the
partnership
after
the
retirement
of
the
appellant
enabled
them
to
determine
whether
the
appellant’s
remaining
interest
in
the
partnership
was
income
or
capital.
The
respondent
contends
that
the
section
does
not
contemplate
that
the
former
member
has
to
participate
or
be
a
party
to
the
allocation
agreement.
The
agreement
is
merely
to
allocate
and
then
the
former
partner
should
be
involved.
In
paragraph
96(1.1)(a)
the
relevant
words
are:
.
.
that
taxpayer
.
..
shall
be
deemed
to
be
a
member
of
the
partnership;”.
Then
paragraph
(b)
comes
into
play
whereby
“.
.
.
all
amounts
each
of
which
is
an
amount
equal
to
the
share
of
the
income
or
loss
referred
to
in
this
subsection
allocated
to
a
taxpayer
from
a
partnership
in
respect
of
a
particular
fiscal
period
of
the
partnership
shall,
notwithstanding
any
other
provision
of
this
Act,
be
included
in
computing
his
income
for
the
taxation
year
in
which
that
fiscal
period
of
the
partnership
ends”.
In
that
the
allocation
was
made
in
the
fiscal
period
of
the
partnership
ending
January
31,
1976,
moneys
paid
to
the
appellant
in
1976,
exclusive
of
this
capital
interest,
would
be
income
to
him
in
1976.
It
would
have
been
so
much
more
simple,
equitable,
fair
and
just
for
the
remaining
partners
to
have
allocated
the
full
amount
of
the
adjusted
cost
base
of
$35,221
to
the
appellant
as
his
total
capital
interest
in
the
partnership
as
it
existed
January
31,
1975.
They
chose
to
do
otherwise
for
their
own
personal
tax
positions.
That
under
the
law
was
their
prerogative.
A
partnership
break-up,
like
a
marriage,
is
not
a
happy
event
and
sweet
reason
and
fairness
are
generally
conspicuous
by
their
absence.
I
am
bound
by
the
provisions
of
the
Income
Tax
Act
and
for
the
reasons
given
above,
I
must
dismiss
the
appeal.
Appeal
dismissed.