CATTANACH,
J.:—This
is
an
appal
from
the
assessments
to
income
tax
dated
September
15,
1965
for
the
1963
taxation
years
ending
March
31,
1963
and
August
27,
1963
of
Polestar
Developments
Limited,
a
predecessor
corporation
of
Oakville
Developments
(Toronto)
Limited
the
appellant
named
in
the
style
of
cause
herein.
The
appellant
is
a
private
company
created
pursuant
to
the
laws
of
the
Province
of
Ontario
by
letters
patent
of
amalgamation
dated
October
8,
1964.
Polestar
Developments
Limited
(hereinafter
called
“Pole-
star’’)
was
a
private
company
incorporated
pursuant
to
the
laws
of
the
Province
of
Ontario
by
letters
patent
dated
March
22,
1960.
By
letters
patent
of
amalgamation
dated
August
27,
1963
Polestar
amalgamated
with
Oakview
Developments
Limited
to
form
Polestar
Developments
(1963)
Limited.
By
letters
patent
of
amalgamation
dated
November
12,
1963,
Polestar
Developments
(1963)
Limited
amalgamated
with
Dorset
Land
Developments
Limited
to
form
Polestar
Developments
(Ontario)
Limited.
By
letters
patent
of
amalgamation
dated
October
8,
1964
Polestar
Developments
(Ontario)
Limited
amalgamated
with
eleven
other
private
Ontario
companies
to
form
Oakfield
Developments
(Toronto)
Limited,
the
appellant
herein.
At
all
material
times,
Polestar
was
a
member
of
a
partnership
carrying
on
business
under
the
firm
name
and
style
of
Overbrook
Holdings
which
partnership
was
engaged
in
the
business
of
land
development.
The
taxation
year
of
Polestar
ended
March
31
in
each
and
every
year.
As
a
result
of
the
amalgamation
of
Polestar
with
Oakview
Developments
Limited
to
form
Polestar
Developments
(1963)
Limited
the
taxation
year
of
Polestar
commencing
April
1,
1963
was
ended
on
August
27,
1963.
The
Minister,
in
assessing
the
appellant
in
respect
of
the
tax
payable
by
Polestar
for
its
two
fiscal
periods
ending
March
31,
1963
and
August
27,
1963,
did
so
on
the
basis
that
Polestar
was
a
company
which
was
associated
with
each
and
all
of
42
other
companies,
the
names
of
which
were
set
out
in
paragraph
3
of
the
Reply
to
the
Notice
of
Appeal,
and
which
are
referred
to
as
the
Okun
group,
on
October
8,
1964.
By
reason
of
the
amalgamation,
the
42
companies
were
reduced
to
32
in
number.
During
the
whole
of
the
taxation
years
of
Polestar
now
under
review
there
were
5,000
issued
and
outstanding
common
shares
each
carrying
one
vote
per
share
held
as
follows:
⅕
by
Ardwell
Holdings
Limited
|
1,667
|
⅕
by
Bradford
Investments
Limited
|
1,666
|
⅑
by
Doric
Developments
Limited
|
556
|
⅑
by
Loring
Developments
Limited
|
556
|
⅑
by
Adair
Developments
Limited
|
555
|
|
Total
..
5,000
|
At
the
same
time
the
shares
in
other
companies
in
the
Okun
group
were
held
in
the
same
manner
except
that
in
some
instances
Loring
Developments
Limited
and
El
Ciudad
Limited
were
interchanged.
These
companies
are
referred
to
in
paragraph
4(a)
of
the
Reply
to
the
Notice
of
Appeal
as
the
‘‘inside
group”?
who
were,
in
fact,
the
same
group
namely,
the
estate
of
Benjamin
S.
Okun,
Bernard
M.
Okun,
Meyer
Okun,
Stanley
Leibel,
Sidney
Freedman
Family
Trust,
Morris
Freedman
and
his
wife
Dorothy,
Harry
Freedman
and
his
wife
Lilian
and
Sidney
Freedman.
If
these
were
the
only
facts
applicable
there
is
no
question,
nor
is
there
any
dispute
between
the
parties,
that
the
appellant
would
be
associated
with
the
Okun
group
of
companies
within
the
meaning
of
Section
39(4)
of
the
Income
Tax
Act*.
However,
in
the
budget
speech
of
the
Minister
of
Finance
on
March
31,
1960
he
referred
to
his
previous
comment
on
the
problem
of
associated
companies.
He
said
that
it
was
becoming
too
easy
to
divide
a
corporation
into
a
number
of
smaller
com-
*39.
(4)
For
the
purpose
of
this
section,
one
corporation
is
associated
with
another
in
a
taxation
year,
if
at
any
time
in
the
year,
(a)
one
of
the
corporations
controlled
the
other,
(b)
both
of
the
corporations
were
controlled
by
the
same
person
or
group
of
persons,
(c)
each
of
the
corporations
was
controlled
by
one
person
and
the
person
who
controlled
one
of
the
corporations
was
related
to
the
person
who
controlled
the
other,
and
one
of
those
persons
owned
directly
or
indirectly
one
or
more
shares
of
the
capital
stock
of
each
of
the
corporations,
(d)
one
of
the
corporations
was
controlled
by
one
person
and
that
person
was
related
to
each
member
of
a
group
of
persons
that
controlled
the
other
corporation,
and
one
of
those
persons
owned
directly
or
indirectly
one
or
more
shares
of
the
capital
stock
of
each
of
the
corporations,
or
(e)
each
of
the
corporations
was
controlled
by
a
related
group
and
each
of
the
members
of
one
of
the
related
groups
was
related
to
all
of
the
members
of
the
other
related
group,
and
one
of
the
members
of
one
of
the
related
groups
owned
directly
or
indirectly
one
or
more
shares
of
the
capital
stock
of
each
of
the
corporations.
ponents
so
that
each
may
qualify
for
a
low
rate
of
tax
on
its
first
$25,000
of
income
earned.
Accordingly
it
was
proposed
to
introduce
legislation
applicable
to
the
1961
and
subsequent
taxation
years
for
the
purpose
of
providing
that
only
one
of
a
group
of
associated
companies
should
receive
the
benefit
of
the
lower
rate
of
tax
on
the
first
$25,000
of
taxable
income.
This
was
to
be
done
by
the
then
applicable
rule
for
determining
whether
one
corporation
is
associated
with
another,
based
on
the
ownership
of
a
specified
percentage
of
shares
being
replaced
by
a
rule
related
to
control
of
the
corporations.
This
proposed
legislation
was
in
fact
enacted
by
Statutes
of
Canada
1960,
c.
48,
Section
11(1)
of
which
amended
Section
39(4)
to
read
as
it
presently
does.
This
proposed
legislation,
the
enactment
of
which
appeared
to
be
a
certainty,
was
brought
to
the
attention
of
Meyer
Okun
by
his
chartered
accountant.
There
is
no
question
that
the
impact
of
the
proposed
legislation
on
the
Okun
group
of
companies
was
discussed
as
well
as
the
means
to
avoid
its
operation.
Legal
opinion
was
obtained
by
the
chartered
accountant
as
to
the
safety
of
a
plan
to
do
this
which
plan
I
expect
was
inspired
by
the
chartered
accountant
who
was
seeking
legal
opinion
in
confirmation
on
behalf
of
his
client
or
clients.
In
any
event
all
32
companies,
including
Polestar,
applied
for
and
obtained
from
the
Provincial
Secretary
for
the
Province
of
Ontario,
supplementary
letters
patent
in
identical
form
to
those
obtained
by
Polestar
which
are
dated
December
20,
1960.
In
each
case
a
number
of
voting
preference
shares
equal
to
the
number
of
authorized,
issued
and
outstanding
common
shares
then
in
existence
in
each
of
the
companies
was
created
by
the
supplementary
letters
patent.
It
was
also
provided
that
an
application
for
the
surrender
of
the
charter
would
be
based
on
the
consent
of
the
shareholders
holding
at
least
50%
of
the
shares
carrying
voting
rights.
This
policy
was
obviously
designed
to
permit
of
the
winding
up
of
the
companies
in
the
event
of
a
deadlock
between
the
common
and
preference
shareholders.
In
the
case
of
each
of
the
32
companies
the
number
of
directors
was
increased
from
three
to
four.
In
each
case
one
of
the
existing
directors
retired
and
steps
were
taken
to
elect
two
of
the
persons
who
became
preference
shareholders
to
the
board
of
directors
of
each
company.
All
these
corporate
actions
took
place
at
meetings
of
the
board
of
directors
of
each
company
held
on
December
21,
1960,
the
day
after
the
date
borne
by
all
supplementary
letters
patent.
The
minutes
of
the
meetings
of
each
company
are
precisely
similar
in
their
terms.
As
intimated
the
meeting
of
the
directors
of
each
company
were
held
on
the
same
day
beginning
at
9:00
a.m.
for
the
first
company
and
those
of
the
other
companies
at
five
minute
intervals
until
10
:40
a.m.
when
the
interval
was
twenty
minutes
followed
by
two
thirty
minute
intervals,
thus
bringing
the
time
to
12:30
p.m.
The
meetings
resumed
at
2
:00
p.m.
and
continued
at
fifteen
minute
intervals
until
the
final
meeting
at
3
:00
p.m.,
although
I
noticed
that
on
two
occasions
two
companies
held
meetings
simultaneously,
one
of
those
companies
being
Polestar.
It
had
been
agreed
by
the
common
shareholders
and
the
directors
of
each
of
the
52
companies
that
preference
shares
in
each
of
the
companies
were
to
be
created
with
voting
rights
equivalent
to
the
number
of
votes
exercisable
by
the
common
shareholders
to
avoid
the
undesirable
consequences
as
the
companies
would
otherwise
be
associated
companies
within
the
meaning
of
the
Income
Tax
Act.
In
almost
every
instance
the
persons
acquiring
preference
shares
received
a
personal
guarantee
from
Meyer
Okun
saving
the
holder
harmless
from
any
loss
by
reason
of
the
sale
of
the
shares
or
on
the
winding
up
of
the
company
to
the
full
amount
subscribed
by
them
for
the
shares.
In
the
case
of
Polestar,
Meyer
Okun
also
guaranteed
the
10%
cumulative
dividend
payable
on
the
preference
shares.
As
a
consequence
of
the
foregoing
circumstances
the
appellant
alleges
in
paragraph
4
of
its
notice
of
appeal,
that
during
the
relevant
taxation
years
5,000
common
shares
carrying
5,000
votes
were
held
as
I
have
indicated
above
and
at
the
same
time
Lionel
H.
Schipper
held
4,999
preference
shares
and
his
wife,
Carol,
held
one
preference
share
making
5,000
votes,
the
equal
to
those
vesting
in
the
holders
of
the
common
shares.
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Schipper
were
strangers
in
the
tax
sense
to
the
holders
of
the
common
shares.
On
this
basis
the
appellant
alleges
in
paragraph
5
of
its
notice
of
appeal
that
at
no
time
during
the
taxation
years
under
review
were
the
common
shareholders
of
Polestar
in
control
of
Polestar
because
Lionel
H.
Schipper
and
Carol
Schipper
owned
shares
in
Polestar
representing
the
aggregate
50%
of
the
outstanding
votes
eligible
to
be
cast
at
any
meeting
of
shareholders.
From
this
proposition
it
would
follow
that
at
no
time
during
the
pertinent
taxation
years
was
Polestar
associated
with
any
other
corporation
within
the
meaning
of
Section
39(4)
(b)
which
the
appellant
contends
to
be
the
case
here.
This
appeal,
on
the
matter
in
issue
between
the
parties
which
I
have
to
decide,
will
fail
or
succeed
upon
the
determination
of
the
question,
is
the
control
of
Polestar
vested
in
the
common
shareholders?
This
appeal
was
argued
upon
the
assumption
that
the
group
which
held
the
common
shares
in
Polestar
was
the
group
which
controlled
the
other
31
companies.
Whether
or
not
Polestar
is
an
‘‘associated
company’’
depends
on
the
determination
of
the
question
as
to
control
of
it
being
vested
in
the
common
shareholder.
The
word
‘‘controlled’’
as
used
in
the
above
subsection
has
been
held
by
the
President
of
this
Court
in
Buckerfield’s
Limited,
et
al.
v.
M.N.R.,
[1965]
1
Ex.
C.R.
229;
[1964]
C.T.C.
004
to
mean
the
right
of
control
that
rests
in
the
ownership
of
such
a
number
of
shares
as
carries
with
it
the
right
to
a
majority
of
the
votes,
i.e.
de
jure
control
and
not
de
facto
control.
This
interpretation
by
the
President
was
adopted
with
approval
by
the
Supreme
Court
of
Canada
in
MN.R.
v.
Dworkin
Furs
(Pembroke)
Ltd.,
et
al.,
[1967]
S.C.R.
223;
[1967]
C.T.C.
50.
The
Minister’s
contention
is
that
control
is
vested
in
the
common
shareholders
and
counsel
for
the
Minister’s
attack
upon
the
argument
on
behalf
of
the
appellant
is
two-fold:
(1)
The
inside
group
(as
described
above)
have
a
right
under
a
contract,
in
equity
or
otherwise
with
the
holders
of
the
preference
shareholders
of
Polestar
to
control
the
voting
rights
of
the
preference
shares
and
therefore
by
virtue
of
Section
39
(4a)
(c)
and
Section
139
(5d)
(b)*
were
deemed
to
have
had
the
same
position
in
relation
to
the
control
of
Polestar
as
if
they
owned
the
preference
shares.
(2)
No
preference
shares
were
ever
validly
issued
in
Polestar
and
the
purported
allotment
of
those
shares
was
invalid,
void
and
of
no
force
or
effect
in
law
in
that
at
the
date
of
the
purported
allotment,
i.e.
December
21,
1960,
the
supplementary
letters
patent
to
Polestar
although
dated
December
20,
1960
had
not
been
issued.
The
facts
upon
which
counsel
bases
his
second
contention
are
that
the
receipt
of
the
application
for
supplementary
letters
patent
on
behalf
of
Polestar
was
acknowledged
by
the
Deputy
Provincial
Secretary
by
letter
dated
December
29,
1960
in
which
it
was
intimated
that
the
material
was
in
order
but
that
a
clearance
was
being
awaited
from
the
Corporations
Tax
Branch
of
the
Treasury
Department
with
respect
to
the
payment
of
all
corporation
tax.
The
acknowledging
letter
does
not
indicate
the
date
upon
which
the
application
was
received
by
the
Department,
but
I
assume
it
to
have
been
December
20,
1960
because
the
receipt
for
the
fee,
which
normally
accompanies
the
application
is
dated
December
20,
1960
and
the
supplementary
letters
patent
when
issued
bore
that
date.
By
letter
dated
February
9,
1961
the
Deputy
Provincial
Secretary
advised
the
solicitor
for
the
applicant,
Polestar,
that
the
necessary
clearance
had
been
received
and
that
the
supplementary
letters
patent
had
been
given
a
tentative
engrossing
date
of
December
20,
1960
subject
to
further
consideration
by
the
Department
before
they
would
be
issued.
The
tenor
of
the
letter
leads
me
to
the
conclusion
that
even
as
at
February
9,
1961
a
firm
date
had
not
been
given
for
the
supplementary
letters
patent.
It
was
hedged
with
qualifications.
However
by
letter
dated
February
15,
1961
the
supplementary
letters
patent
were
transmitted
to
the
solicitor
for
Polestar.
Meanwhile,
on
what
I
assume
to
have
been
a
verbal
assurance
that
the
supplementary
letters
patent
would
issue
under
date
of
December
20,
1960,
a
meeting
of
the
directors
of
Polestar
was
held
at
10:30
a.m.
on
December
21,
1960
at
which
were
present
Stanley
Leibel,
Meyer
H.
Okun
and
Morris
Freedman.
The
chairman
announced
that
the
supplementary
letters
patent
varying
the
authorized
capital
had
been
received.
He
also
announced
that
subscription
for
shares
had
been
received
from
Lionel
H.
Schipper
and
Carol
Schipper
for
4,999
preference
shares
and
1
preference
share
respectively
which
upon
motion
made
were
allotted.
Share
certificates
were
directed
to
be
prepared.
The
number
of
directors
was
then
increased
from
three
to
four.
Lionel
H.
Schipper
and
Carol
Schipper
were
appointed
directors
and
Morris
Freedman
resigned.
The
minutes
state
that
Morris
Freedman
then
retired
from
the
meeting
and
that
Lionel
H.
Schipper
and
Carol
Schipper
took
their
places
at
the
meeting.
The
minutes
were
signed
by
Stanley
Leibel,
Meyer
Okun,
Lionel
Schipper
and
Carol
Schipper
and
by
Leibel
and
Okun
as
president
and
secretary
respectively.
The
minutes
were
consented
to
by
all
shareholders
who
appended
their
signatures
thereto.
As
intimated
before,
Lionel
Schipper
was
a
stranger
in
the
tax
sense
to
the
common
shareholders
of
Polestar
although
he
had
met
Meyer
Okun.
He
is
a
barrister
and
solicitor
of
some
10
years
standing
practising
his
profession
in
Toronto,
Ontario.
Meyer
Okun
had
approached
Mr.
Schipper’s
father
with
the
proposal
that
he
should
buy
5,000
preference
shares
of
Polestar
for
$5,000
which
would
bear
dividends
at
10%
and
that
he,
Meyer
Okun,
would
personally
guarantee
the
payment
of
that
dividend
and
save
him
harmless
from
any
possible
loss
thereon.
Mr.
Schipper,
Sr.
nominated
his
son
to
buy
the
shares
on
his
behalf
with
funds
he
provided
and
engaged
his
son
to
take
the
steps
to
acquire
the
shares
and
safeguard
his
interests.
Accordingly,
by
a
document
(Exhibit
A2)
dated
December
19,
1960
addressed
to
Polestar,
Lionel
Schipper
subscribed
for
5,000
preference
shares.
By
letter
also
dated
December
19,
1960
Meyer
Okun
wrote
to
Mr.
Schipper
referring
to
previous
arrangements
as
discussed
between
them
and
enclosed
two
application
forms
for
preference
shares.
Mr.
Okun
advised
that
the
shares
had
been
allotted,
certificate
No.
1
to
Lionel
H.
Schipper
for
4,999
preference
shares
and
certificate
No.
2
to
Carol
Schipper
for
1
preference
share.
Mr.
Okun’s
personal
guarantee
was
also
enclosed.
By
letter
dated
December
22,
1960,
Mr.
Okun
assured
Mr.
Schipper
that
his
personal
guarantee,
in
addition
to
indemnifying
him
from
loss
by
reason
of
sale
of
the
shares
or
winding
up
of
Polestar,
also
included
a
personal
guarantee
of
the
payment
of
dividends.
It
was
also
agreed
between
them
that
Mr.
Schipper
should
be
guaranteed
the
repayment
of
$5,000
paid
for
the
preference
shares
on
thirty
day’s
notice.
Mr.
Schipper
was
fully
cognizant
of
the
purpose
sought
to
be
achieved
by
the
issuance
of
the
preference
shares
carrying
voting
rights
precisely
equivalent
to
the
voting
rights
vested
in
the
issued
common
shares.
He
knew
that
purpose
to
be
that
the
companies
would
not
be
associated
within
the
meaning
of
the
Income
Tax
Act.
By
letter
dated
December
22,
1960
Mr.
Schipper
acknowledged
Mr.
Okun’s
letter
of
December
19,
1960
and
enclosed
his
subscription
for
5,000
preference
shares
and
his
cheque
for
$5,000.
Thereafter
the
dividends
on
the
preference
shares
were
regularly
paid
by
Polestar.
At
no
time
did
Mr.
Schipper
or
his
wife
attend
any
directors’
or
shareholders’
meeting
of
Polestar,
nor
did
either
of
them
at
any
time
exercise
the
voting
rights
in
the
preference
shares
held
by
them.
Minutes
of
directors’
and
shareholders’
meetings
were
sent
to
them
for
their
signature.
Mr.
Schipper
testified
that
he
had
no
real
interest
in
the
management
or
the
affairs
of
Polestar.
His
sole
concern
was
in
the
receipt
of
dividends
at
10%
regularly
and
that
in
this
respect
he
had
placed
his
reliance
on
Mr.
Okun’s
personal
guarantee.
He
did
testify
however
that
there
was
no
discussion
or
arrangement
between
him
and
Meyer
Okun
or
any
other
shareholder
of
Polestar
that
he
would
refrain
from
voting
the
preference
shares
held
by
him
or
that
he
would
vote
them
as
directed
by
the
holders
of
the
common
shares.
He
testified
that
he
was
at
liberty
to
attend
corporate
meetings
either
as
director
or
shareholder
and
to
vote
his
shares
as
he
pleased,
but
he
did
not
find
it
expedient
to
do
so
because
his
sole
interest
in
receiving
dividend
payments
was
complied
with.
He
added
that
no
such
arrangement
was
made
with
his
wife
by
the
common
shareholders
of
Polestar.
Mrs.
Schipper
was
not
called
as
a
witness
to
testify
that
she
was
under
no
agreement
to
refrain
from
voting
or
to
vote
as
directed
by
the
common
shareholders,
nor
was
Mr.
Schipper’s
father
who
was
obviously
the
beneficial
owner
of
the
preference
shares.
Mr.
Okun
was
not
called
to
deny
the
existence
of
such
an
arrangement.
If
it
should
become
incumbent
upon
me
to
do
so
I
would
be
inclined
to
accept
Mr.
Schipper’s
testimony
in
this
respect
because
he
was
the
sole
negotiator
on
his
father’s
behalf
and
also
on
behalf
of
his
wife.
In
argument
counsel
for
the
Minister
advanced
five
points
which
are
set
out
as
I
understood
them
:
(1)
The
appellant
has
failed
to
demolish
the
assumption
of
the
Minister
outlined
in
paragraph
4(b)
of
his
notice
of
reply
to
the
effect
that
the
holders
of
the
common
shares
had
a
right
under
a
contract,
in
equity
or
otherwise
to
control
the
voting
rights
vested
in
the
preference
shares
in
Polestar
which
voting
rights
represented
50%
of
the
total
voting
rights
and
accordingly
by
virtue
of
Section
39
(4a)
(c)
and
Section
139
(5d)
(b)
of
the
Income
Tax
Act
the
common
shareholders
are
deemed
to
be
in
the
same
position
with
respect
to
the
control
of
Polestar
as
if
they
owned
the
preference
shares.
(2)
On
the
basis
of
the
evidence
adduced
I
should
infer
that
such
a
right
as
outlined
immediately
above
subsisted
in
the
holders
of
the
common
shares.
(3)
The
proper
inference
to
be
drawn
from
all
the
circumstances
was
that
the
true
relationship
between
Lionel
Schipper
and
Polestar
was
that
of
creditor
and
debtor
and
that
the
true
substance
of
the
transaction
between
them
was
that
Lionel
Schipper
simply
loaned
the
money
to
Polestar.
(4)
The
preference
shares
were
not
validly
allotted
to
Lionel
and
Carol
Schipper
at
the
meeting
of
the
directors
of
December
21,
1960
and
accordingly
they
never
became
preference
shareholders.
(5)
Polestar
was
not
in
possession
of
preference
shares
at
December
21,
1960
the
date
of
the
meeting
of
the
directors,
because
at
that
date
the
supplementary
letters
patent
creating
the
preference
shares
had
not
been
issued
and
accordingly
no
allotment
ever
took
place.
There
is
no
question
whatsoever
that
the
supplementary
letters
patent
when
issued
bore
date
of
December
20,
1960.
Neither
is
there
any
doubt
that
the
supplementary
letters
patent
were
not
signed,
sealed
and
delivered
until
a
date
approximate
to
February
15,
1961.
In
reply
to
the
foregoing
arguments
advanced
on
behalf
of
the
Minister,
counsel
for
the
appellant
submitted
that,
(1)
the
Minister
had
no
status
to
attack
the
issue
of
the
preference
shares
;
(2)
in
any
event
the
Schippers
were
shareholders
because
they
acted
as
shareholders
and
held
themselves
out
as
such;
(3)
the
issue
of
the
preference
shares
was
ratified
by
Polestar
at
its
first
annual
meeting
held
on
October
2,
1961
when
the
supplementary
letters
patent
creating
the
preference
shares
had
been
delivered
to
Polestar
and
prior
to
the
1963
taxation
years
of
the
appellant,
the
minutes
of
that
meeting
containing
a
statement
in
general
terms
that
all
previous
acts
of
the
directors
were
ratified
and
approved
;
and
(4)
the
supplementary
letters
patent
take
effect
from
their
date.
If,
as
argued
by
the
Minister,
the
supplementary
letters
patent
did
not
issue
until
well
after
the
date
thereof
and
if
the
date
borne
by
the
supplementary
letters
patent
is
not
conclusive
as
against
the
Minister,
it
follows
that,
as
at
December
21,
1960
the
date
of
the
meeting
of
the
directors
at
which
preference
shares
were
purportedly
allotted
to
the
Schippers,
Polestar
was
not
possessed
of
preference
shares
and
any
purported
allotment
of
preference
shares
is
void.
If
the
original
act
was
void
no
subsequent
acts
either
by
Polestar,
or
by
the
Schippers
can
rectify
that
invalidity.
The
authorized
share
capital
of
Polestar
was
fixed
by
its
letters
patent
and
consisted
only
of
common
shares.
The
only
way
that
the
authorized
capital
so
set
out
in
the
original
letters
patent
can
be
increased
or
varied
is
by
supplementary
letters
patent
(see
Section
33,
the
Ontario
Corporations
Act).
The
method
by
which
an
agreement
to
take
shares
is
constituted
is
(1)
by
an
application
for
shares
to
the
company
which
may
be
verbal
or
in
writing,
(2)
the
allotment
of
the
shares
applied
for
and
(3)
notice
to
the
applicant
of
the
allotment.
Allotment
is
a
necessary
element
in
the
contract
to
take
shares
and
is
the
formal
act
of
appropriation
of
a
certain
number
of
unissued
shares,
pursuant
to
an
application
therefor,
to
the
applicant
(see
Lord
Cairns
in
Pellatt’s
Case
(1876),
L.R.
2
Ch.
App.
527
at
p.
535).
Therefore,
if
it
is
open
to
the
Minister
to
prove
that
the
actual
issue
of
the
supplementary
letters
patent
was
not
December
20,
1960,
the
date
they
bore,
but
rather
February
15,
1961
well
subsequent
to
the
date
of
the
meeting
of
the
directors
on
December
21,
1960,
then
the
contract
between
the
Schippers
and
Polestar
to
take
preference
shares
failed
because
the
subject
matter
did
not
exist.
As
against
this
counsel
for
the
appellant
submitted
that
the
supplementary
letters
patent
take
effect
from
their
date
and
that
a
prerogative
act
under
the
Great
Seal
(of
Ontario)
cannot
be
contradicted.
By
Section
3
of
the
Ontario
Corporations
Act
the
Lieutenant
Governor
may
in
his
discretion
by
letters
patent
issue
a
charter
creating
a
corporation
for
any
of
the
objects
to
which
the
authority
of
the
Legislature
extends
and
by
Section
5
the
Provincial
Secretary
may
in
his
discretion
and
under
his
seal
of
office
exercise
the
rights
conferred
by
the
statute
on
the
Lieutenant
Governor
but
not
those
conferred
upon
the
Lieutenant
Governor-
in-Council.
The
effect
of
the
foregoing
sections
seems
to
me
to
be
that
the
Provincial
Secretary
is
authorized
to
bring
into
being
a
company
resembling
one
created
by
Royal
charter
but
subject
to
the
restrictions
which
are
imposed
on
its
proceedings
by
the
statute
to
which
it
owes
its
origin.
Lord
Dunedin
said
in
Attorney-General
v.
De
Keyser’s
Royal
Hotel,
[1920]
A.C.
508
at
526:
.
.
if
the
whole
ground
of
something
which
could
be
done
by
the
prerogative
is
covered
by
the
statute,
it
is
the
statute
that
rules.
Furthermore,
the
letters
patent
and
the
supplementary
letters
patent
issued
to
Polestar
were
not
issued
under
the
Great
Seal
of
Ontario
but
as
provided
in
the
statute
by
the
Provincial
Secretary
under
the
seal
of
his
office.
It
seems
to
me,
therefore,
that
the
authority
of
the
Provincial
Secretary
is
limited
by
the
restrictions
imposed
upon
him
by
the
Act
and
that
the
Crown
has
curtailed,
to
the
extent
of
the
restrictions
so
imposed,
the
royal
prerogative
delegated
to
the
Lieutenant
Governor
and
sub-delegated
to
the
Provincial
Secretary.
Accordingly
it
follows
that
those
cases
upon
which
counsel
for
the
appellant
relied,
which
dealt
with
documents
issued
under
the
Great
Seal,
have
no
application
to
the
circumstances
of
the
present
appeal.
The
foregoing
point
does
not
appear
to
have
been
raised
before
the
Supreme
Court
of
Canada
in
Letain
v.
Conwest
Exploration
Co.
Ltd.,
[1961]
S.C.R.
98.
In
that
case
the
respondent
had
entered
into
an
option
agreement
with
the
defendant
under
which,
if
the
defendant
caused
a
company
to
be
incorporated
on
or
before
October
1,
1968,
certain
mining
claims
owned
by
the
respondent
were
to
be
transferred
to
the
company
so
incorporated.
An
application
for
letters
patent
was
made
to
the
Secretary
of
State
before
that
date
and
the
applicants
were
advised
that
letters
patent
would
be
prepared
on
the
basis
of
their
bearing
date
of
September
25,
1958.
A
series
of
circumstances
then
occurred
whereby
certain
changes
in
the
corporate
name
were
requested
and
withdrawn
with
the
result
that
the
letters
patent
were
not
signed,
sealed,
recorded
and
delivered
until
October
20,
1958,
but
when
issued
they
bore
the
date
of
September
25,
1959
on
the
basis
of
the
commitment
previously
given
to
the
applicants
therefor.
Action
was
brought
and
the
basis
of
the
action
as
developed
in
the
pleadings
was
that
the
actual
letters
patent
were
signed,
sealed
and
issued
after
October
1,
1958,
the
relevant
date
mentioned
in
the
agreement
between
the
parties
to
the
litigation.
The
matter
first
heard
by
Collins,
J.
before
whom
a
point
of
law
was
raised,
which
was
that
under
Section
133
of
the
Dominion
Companies
Act,
except
in
a
proceeding
for
the
purpose
of
rescinding
or
annulling
the
letters
patent,
the
letters
patent
shall
be
conclusive
proof
of
every
matter
and
thing
therein
set
forth
which,
of
course,
included
the
date
of
September
25,
1958.
The
sections
of
the
Dominion
Companies
Act,
R.S.C.
1952,
ce.
53
before
the
courts
were
Sections
11
and
133
reading
as
follows
:
11.
The
company
shall
be
deemed
to
be
existing
from
the
date
of
the
letters
patent.
133.
Except
in
any
proceeding
by
scire
facias
or
otherwise
for
the
purpose
of
rescinding
or
annulling
letters
patent
or
supplementary
letters
patent
issued
under
this
Part,
such
letters
patent
or
supplementary
letters
patent,
or
any
exemplification
or
copy
thereof
certified
by
the
Registrar
General
of
Canada,
shall
be
conclusive
proof
of
every
matter
and
thing
therein
set
forth.
Mr.
Justice
Collins,
on
the
point
of
law
raised
before
him,
took
the
view
that
as
the
terms
of
the
option
agreement
contemplated
the
incorporation
on
or
before
October
1,
1958,
the
question
before
him
must
be
determined
on
the
basis
that
at
the
time
when
the
option
was
granted
both
parties
should
be
taken
to
have
been
aware
of
the
provisions
of
Section
133
of
the
Dominion
Companies
Act
and
that
section
should
be
applied
in
determining
the
rights
of
the
parties
arising
out
of
the
option.
He
therefore
granted
an
order
dismissing
the
action.
The
matter
was
then
appealed
to
the
Court
of
Appeal
of
British
Columbia.
Sheppard,
J.
said
that
the
substance
of
Section
133
dealt
primarily
not
with
evidence
but
those
rights
which
are
to
flow
from
the
charter
and
which
are
sometimes
called
the
status
of
the
company.
It
was
held
that
Section
133
precluded
the
respondent
in
that
action
from
controverting
the
date
of
incorporation
appearing
in
the
letters
patent.
The
matter
was
then
appealed
to
the
Supreme
Court
of
Canada.
Kerwin,
C.
J.
(whose
judgment
was
concurred
in
by
Taschereau,
Fauteux
and
Judson,
JJ.)
after
referring
to
Sections
11,
132
and
133
of
the
Dominion
Companies
Act
said
at
page
102
(supra)
:
The
above
provisions
when
read
together
are
concerned
with
the
status
and
capacity
of
a
company
incorporated
under
the
Act
and
while
in
response
to
a
notice
that
a
constitutional
point
might
be
involved
the
Attorney
General
of
Canada
and
the
Attorney-
General
of
Quebec
intervened
and
were
represented
by
counsel,
my
conclusion
is
that
we
are
not
concerned
with
any
question
as
to
the
right
of
Parliament
to
provide
for
what
shall
be
evidence
in
a
civil
case
in
a
provincial
court.
Kutcho
Creek
Asbestos
Company
Limited
is
not
a
party
to
this
action;
it
continues
to
exist
and
not
one
of
its
powers
is
affected.
The
rights
of
the
appellant
and
respondent
are
to
be
determined
by
the
meaning
to
be
ascribed
to
clause
7
of
the
original
agreement
between
them
and
the
appellant
is
not
precluded
by
the
mere
production
of
the
letters
patent
from
showing
at
the
trial
that
Conwest
did
not
exercise
the
option
in
accordance
with
its
terms.
He
therefore
answered
in
the
negative
the
point
of
law
raised
before
Collins,
J.
that
the
letters
patent
are
conclusive
proof
of
the
fact
that
the
company
was
incorporated
on
the
date
specified
in
the
letters
patent.
The
judgment
of
Locke,
Cartwright,
Abbott,
Martland
and
Ritchie,
JJ.
was
delivered
by
Ritchie,
J.
who
said
at
page
105
(supra)
:
It
is
true
that
by
conclusively
fixing
the
status
and
powers
of
a
Dominion
company
as
being
those
set
forth
in
the
letters
patent,
except
in
a
proceeding
brought
for
the
purpose
of
rescinding
or
annulling
such
letters
patent,
s.
183
may
have
an
effect
on
the
rules
of
evidence
in
provincial
Courts
in
cases
where
the
status
of
a
Dominion
company
is
in
issue
but
this
is
not
legislation
“in
relation
to”
civil
rights,
it
is
rather
legislation
having
an
incidental
and
consequential
effect
upon
civil
rights,
and
as
such
it
is
within
the
power
and
authority
of
the
Parliament
of
Canada
(see
Gold
Seal
Limited
v.
Attorney-General
for
the
Province
of
Alberta
(1921),
62
S.C.R.
424
at
460).
By
its
very
nature,
however
such
effect
is
limited
to
matters
which
are
incidental
to
the
true
character
and
subject-matter
of
the
Dominion
Companies
Act
and
in
a
civil
action
in
which
the
status
and
powers
of
a
Dominion
company
are
not
involved
it
cannot
be
extended
beyond
the
scope
and
purpose
of
that
statute
so
as
to
preclude
a
party
in
a
provincial
Court
from
adducing
evidence
to
establish
that
in
fact
the
letters
patent
bear
an
earlier
date
than
that
upon
which
they
were
actually
signed
and
sealed.
Kutcho
Creek
Asbestos
Company
Limited
is
a
company
incorporated
under
the
authority
of
the
Dominion
Companies
Act,
endowed
with
the
characteristics
enumerated
in
that
statute
and
in
its
letters
patent
granted
pursuant
thereto,
one
of
which
is
that
its
date
of
incorporation
is
to
be
conclusively
taken
for
all
purposes
of
its
corporate
dealings
and
activities
as
being
the
25th
of
September,
1958.
The
date
of
incorporation
is
one
of
the
badges
of
a
company’s
status
and
identity,
it
is
an
integral
part
of
its
corporate
personality
which
flows
from
its
charter
as
do
the
other
ingredients
of
its
status,
the
determination
of
which
is,
as
has
been
said,
a
matter
within
the
exclusive
jurisdiction
of
Parliament.
With
the
greatest
respect,
however,
it
seems
to
me
that
it
is
not
the
status
of
Kutcho
Creek
Asbestos
Company
Limited
but
the
actions
of
the
respondent
Conwest
Exploration
Company
Limited
which
are
at
issue
in
this
case,
and
I
am
unable
to
see
how
conclusive
proof
of
the
fact
that
the
former
company
has
acquired
status
with
effect
from
September
25th
for
the
purposes
of
the
Dominion
Companies
Act
can
preclude
the
appellant
from
proving
whether
or
not
the
latter
company
exercised
its
option
on
or
before
the
1st
of
October.
The
only
method
of
creating
a
body
corporate
under
Part
I
of
the
Dominion
Companies
Act
is
for
the
Secretary
of
State
to
grant
a
charter
by
letters
patent
under
his
seal
of
Office
(see
s.
5(1)).
If
the
charter
so
granted
bears
a
date
earlier
than
that
upon
which
the
Seal
was
affixed,
then,
by
virtue
of
s.
133,
the
company
acquires
status
with
effect
from
the
earlier
date.
The
question
here,
however,
is
not
whether
or
not
Kutcho
Creek
Asbestos
Company
Lim-
ited
is
to
be
conclusively
taken
as
having
the
status
of
a
company
incorporated
on
the
25th
of
September,
but
rather
whether
or
not
the
respondent
caused
it
to
be
“incorporated
on
or
before
the
1st
day
of
October,
1958”
within
the
meaning
of
those
words
as
they
are
used
in
para.
7
of
the
agreement
pursuant
to
which
this
action
is
brought.
I
am
of
opinion
that
the
fact
that
the
letters
patent
of
Kutcho
Creek
Asbestos
Company
Limited
bear
date
the
25th
of
September
and
that
company
has
status
as
from
that
date
for
the
purposes
of
the
Dominion
Companies
Act
in
no
way
precludes
the
appellant
from
adducing
evidence
to
prove
whether
or
not
this
option
was
exercised
by
the
respondent
in
accordance
with
the
terms
of
the
contract
now
sued
upon,
and
I
would
accordingly
dispose
of
this
appeal
as
proposed
by
the
Chief
Justice.
The
Ontario
Corporations
Act
contains
Section
11
which
states
that,
A
corporation
shall
be
deemed
to
be
in
existence
on
and
after
the
date
of
its
letters
patent.
Section
11
of
the
Ontario
Act
and
Section
11
of
the
Dominion
Act
are,
in
effect,
identical
in
their
terms.
However
the
Ontario
Act
does
not
contain
a
provision
in
any
way
comparable
to
Section
183
of
the
Dominion
Companies
Act
and
accordingly,
while
the
Ontario
Act
deals
with
the
effective
date
of
letters
patent
it
does
not
deal
with
the
effective
date
of
supplementary
letters
patent.
Counsel
for
the
appellant
submitted
that
only
the
Attorney-
General
of
Ontario
can
raise
the
issue
of
the
validity
of
the
issue
of
letters
patent
or
supplementary
letters
patent.
I
agree
with
that
proposition.
The
validity
of
the
letters
patent
incorporating
a
company
or
supplementary
letters
patent
issued
to
it
cannot
be
collaterally
attached
or
questioned
in
an
action
brought
by
or
against
the
company.
The
validity
of
letters
patent
or
supplementary
letters
patent
can
only
be
brought
into
question
in
an
action
directly
brought
for
that
purpose
by
the
Attorney-
General.
But
what
does
the
Minister
seek
to
do
here?
He
puts
in
issue
the
validity
of
the
contract
of
the
allotment
of
preference
shares
between
Polestar
and
the
Schippers
and
says
that
there
was
no
such
contract
at
the
time
it
was
entered
into,
because
as
of
that
date,
December
21,
1960,
Polestar’s
capital
stock
did
not
include
unissued
preference
shares.
He
says
this
because
the
supplementary
letters
patent
creating
such
shares,
although
dated
December
20,
1960,
did
not
issue
until
February
1961.
He
says
that
he
does
not
attack
the
validity
of
the
issue
of
such
supplementary
letters
patent,
nor
the
status
of
Polestar
but
seeks
to
prove
the
actual
date
upon
which
the
supplementary
letters
patent
did
issue.
There
is
no
provision
in
the
Ontario
Corporations
Act
which
purports
to
give
retroactive
effect
to
supplementary
letters
patent.
As
I
understand
the
decision
in
Letain
v.
Conwest
Exploration
Ltd.
(supra)
it
is
authority
for
the
proposition
that
the
date
of
letters
patent
or
supplementary
letters
patent
may
be
proven
to
be
other
than
that
specified
thereon
in
a
civil
action
in
which
the
status
of
the
company
is
not
in
issue.
Here
I
do
not
think
that
the
status
of
Polestar
is
in
issue
and
accordingly
the
Minister
is
not
precluded
from
establishing
that
in
fact
the
supplementary
letters
patent
bore
a
date
antecedent
to
their
actual
issuance.
It,
therefore,
follows
that
no
preference
shares
were
validly
issued
by
Polestar
and
that
the
common
shareholders
thereof
were
in
control
of
that
company.
In
view
of
the
conclusion
I
have
reached
it
is
not
necessary
for
me
to
consider
the
other
matters
raised
by
counsel
for
the
Minister.
Normally
I
would
dismiss
the
appeal
were
it
not
for
the
Minister’s
prayer
in
paragraph
7(a)
(i)
and
(ii)
of
his
notice
of
reply,
(a)
that
the
appeal
be
allowed
with
costs
and
the
assessments
referred
back
to
the
Minister
to
(i)
increase
the
profit
of
Polestar
Developments
Limited
from
Overbrook
Holdings
for
the
fiscal
period
ending
the
31st
of
March,
A.D.
1963,
by
$7,457.63,
and
decrease
its
profit
from
Overbrook
Holdings
for
the
fiscal
period
ending
the
27th
day
of
August,
A.D.
1963,
by
$10,145.06;
and
(ii)
increase
the
profit
of
Polestar
Developments
Limited
from
Overbrook
Holdings
for
the
fiscal
period
ending
the
24th
of
December,
A.D.
1963
by
the
said
sum
of
$25,300.00,
and
decrease
its
profit
from
Overbrook
Holdings
for
the
fiscal
period
ending
the
30th
of
April,
A.D.
1963,
by
$25,300.00.
The
appeal
is
therefore
allowed
with
costs
and
the
assessments
are
referred
back
to
the
Minister
for
re-assessment
in
accordance
with
paragraph
7(a)
of
the
Minister’s
notice
of
reply.
In
all
other
respects
the
assessments
are
confirmed.