CAMERON,
J.:—By
its
decision
dated
March
24,
1961
(26
Tax
A.B.C.
198),
the
Tax
Appeal
Board
upheld
with
a
variation
(later
to
be
referred
to)
the
re-assessments
made
upon
the
appellant
for
the
taxation
years
1950
to
1956,
inclusive,
and
from
that
decision
an
appeal
is
now
taken
to
this
Court.
The
following
facts
are
not
in
dispute.
The
appellant
was
formerly
a
member
of
the
Bar
of
Ontario,
but
was
disbarred
in
1933
and
is
now
a
prospector.
He
is
a
son
of
the
late
William
Morris
of
Hamilton
who
died
in
1949
and
of
the
late
Esther
Georgina
Morris
who
died
in
1941.
The
appellant’s
wife
is
Jean
Cairns
Morris,
a
practising
solicitor
in.
Hamilton,
and
both
are
now
over
75
years
of
age.
By
deed
dated
May,
1924
(Exhibits
2
and
‘‘C’’),
Business
Realty
Limited
conveyed
to
William
Morris,
Esther
Georgina
Morris
and
the
appellant
as
joint
tenants
and
not
as
tenants
in
common
parts
of
Lots
23
and
24
on
N.
Hughson’s
survey
in
the
City
of
Hamilton,
known
also
as
street
numbers
22
to
26
John
Street
North,
Hamilton.
On
that
property,
there
was
and
is
situated
a
large
brick
building,
the
ground
floor
being
used
or
rented
as
shops
and
offices
and
the
upper
floors
being
divided
into
a
substantial
number
of
living
apartments.
It
is
located
within
one
block
of
the
main
shopping
and
business
street
in
the
city.
For
the
sake
of
brevity,
I
shall
hereafter
refer
to
it
as
‘‘the
property”.
The
consideration
for
the
above
conveyance
was
$40,000
which
was
paid
by
the
assumption
of
a
registered
mortgage
to
the
Tuckett
Estate
for
$25,000,
and
the
balance
of
$15,000
was
paid
by
William
Morris.
The
grantees
in
that
deed
on
March
8,
1926,
gave
a
mortgage
to
the
Toronto
General
Trusts
Corporation
for
$25,000
(Exhibit
3),
it
being
provided
that
$500
on
principal
as
well
as
interest
should
be
repayable
every
six
months
and
the
balance
on
March
1,
1931.
The
Tuckett
mortgage
was
then
discharged.
By
indenture
dated
April
14,
1944
(Exhibit
4),
the
Toronto
General
Trusts
Corporation
assigned
the
mortgage
to
the
wife
of
the
appellant—Jean
Cairns
Morris
(in
trust),
the
amount
owing
thereon
being
$18,183
for
principal
and
$358.50
for
interest,
plus
interest
on
the
principal
from
March
1,
1944,
at
614
per
cent;
that
assignment
was
registered
on
June
11,
1945,
as
No.
98026
N.S.
By
deed
dated
May
1,
1945
(Exhibit
F)
William
Morris
conveyed
the
property
to
the
appellant
for
the
expressed
consideration
of
natural
love
and
affection
and
$2.
In
the
recitals
thereof
it
is
stated
that
the
grantee
and
grantor
with
Esther
Georgina
Morris,
the
former
wife
of
the
grantor,
were
joint
tenans
and
not
as
tenants
in
common
of
the
property
and
that
Esther
Georgina
Morris
had
died
on
March
30,
1941.
That
deed
was
registered
on
July
10,
1945
as
No.
98349
N.S.
That
deed
was
prepared
in
the
office
of
Morris
and
Morris
(the
appellant’s
wife
being
then
the
sole
partner
in
that
firm)
and
in
the
affidavit
made
under
The
Land
Transfer
Tax
Act,
she
swore
that
she
was
solicitor
for
the
grantee.
As
shown
by
the
Registrar’s
Abstract
of
Title
(Exhibit
“A”),
the
appellant
since
that
date
has
been
the
registered
owner
of
the
property.
It
is
also
shown
by
the
evidence
that
at
least
since
that
date
the
appellant
has
been
assessed
as
sole
owner
of
the
property
and
as
such
owner
has
on
one
or
more
occasions
appealed
the
amount
at
which
the
property
was
assessed
and
applied
for
allowances
due
to
vacancies.
Prima
facie,
therefore,
it
would
appear
that
on
the
facts
which
I
have
mentioned,
the
appellant
as
such
owner
is
bound
to
include
as
part
of
his
taxable
income
all
the
profits
arising
in
each
year
from
the
rents
of
the
property
under
Sections
3
and
4
of
The
1948
Income
Tax
Act
and
the
Income
Tax
Act.
It
may
be
noted
here
that
Jean
Cairns
Morris
(in
trust)
executed
a
discharge
(Exhibit
‘‘B’’)
of
the
mortgage
to
the
Toronto
General
Trusts
Corporation
which
had
been
assigned
to
her,
on
June
11,
1945,
and
registered
on
June
29,
1945
;
and
also
that
four
mortgages
later
to
be
referred
to
in
detail
and
given
by
the
appellant
as
sole
owner
of
the
property
(with
his
wife
joining
to
bar
dower)
have
all
been
discharged,
so
that
the
property
now
stands
in
the
Registry
Office
in
the
name
of
the
appellant
as
sole
owner,
subject
to
this,
that
Exhibit
7,
a
discharge
of
a
mortgage
for
$14,000
given
by
the
appellant
to
the
Canada
Permanent
Mortgage
Corporation
and
dated
February
29,
1956,
has
not
been
registered
by
the
appellant.
I
turn
now
to
a
consideration
of
the
issues
in
this
appeal
and
the
manner
in
which
they
have
come
to
this
Court.
The
appellant
first
filed
income
tax
returns
for
the
years
1950
to
1956
on
October
14,
1958,
doubtless
because
he
was
pressed
to
do
so
by
the
tax
officials.
In
each
of
those
returns
he
included
as
income
only
one-
third
of
the
net
income
from
the
rentals
of
the
property
as
taxable
in
his
hands;
and
on
that
basis,
the
returns,
after
allowing
for
exemptions
and
deductions,
showed
no
taxable
income.
The
first
assessments
based
on
these
returns
and
dated
October
28,
1958
show
no
tax
payable
for
any
of
these
years.
Subsequently,
and
following
a
lengthy
investigation,
the
Minister
in
April,
1960
issued
re-assessments
for
each
year,
and,
on
the
assumption
that
the
appellant
was
entitled
to
the
whole
of
the
net
profits
from
the
rentals
of
the
property,
the
total
taxes
so
assessed
for
the
seven
years
aggregated
$4,962.77,
including
some
penalties
for
late
filing
and
interest.
Following
objections
by
the
appellant,
the
Minister
by
his
Notifications
dated
January
3,
1961,
agreed
to
amend
the
re-assessments
by
allowing
further
deductions
in
respect
of
the
capital
cost
of
certain
parts
of
the
property,
the
details
of
which
are
set
out
in
the
reply
of
the
Minister
to
the
appellant’s
Notice
of
Appeal
to
this
Court.
At
the
hearing
before
the
Tax
Appeal
Board,
an
agreement
was
entered
into
by
which
a
further
annual
deduction
of
$500
for
expenses
was
allowed
to
the
appellant.
By
its
decision
the
Tax
Appeal
Board
allowed
the
appeal
in
part
only;
referred
the
matter
back
to
the
Minister
for
re-assessment
based
on
the
adjustments
necessary
by
reason
of
the
allowances
made
in
the
Minister
’s
Notifications
and
the
further
amount
of
$500
for
expenses
in
each
year
as
agreed
by
the
parties,
and
in
all
other
respects
affirmed
the
said
re-assessments.
It
is
from
that
decision
that
the
appellant
now
appeals
to
this
Court.
At
the
commencement
of
the
trial,
the
first
question
that
arose
was
the
effect
of
the
agreement
of
March
15,
1961,
now
filed
in
this
Court.
It
reads
as
follows
:
“
Hamilton,
Ontario,
15th
March
1961
BETWEEN
:
PHILIP
REGINALD
MORRIS
versus
THE
MINISTER
OF
NATIONAL
REVENUE
With
regard
to
the
income
tax
assessment
appeals
relevant
to
the
years
1950,
1951,
1952,
1953,
1954,
1955
and
1956
we
hereby
agree
to
the
expenses
shown
in
the
relevant
forms
T
7
W
for
all
the
above-mentioned
years
being
increased
each
by
the
sum
of
$500.00,
and
with
the
result
that
the
net
rental
income
in
each
year
be
reduced
as
shown
on
the
T
7
W
by
$500.00,
or
the
sum
of
$3,500.00
in
all.
It
is
understood
and
agreed
that
after
providing
for
this
adjustment
the
figures
in
the
various
assessments
shall
be
deemed
as
correct
and
may
form
the
basis
for
re-assessment
accordingly.
These
figures
to
be
so
arrived
at
are
to
be
binding
on
us,
irrespective
of
the
determination
of
the
legal
questions
involved.
All
subject
of
course
to
the
further
adjustments
contained
in
the
Notifications
by
the
Minister
dated
Jan.
3rd,
1961.
|
(sgd.)
F.
J.
Dub
rule,
Solicitor
for
|
Witnessed
|
Minister
of
National
Revenue.
|
(sgd.)
|
Philip
R.
Morris.
|
P.
McCann,
|
Philip
|
Deputy
Registrar.
|
J.
C.
Morris.
|
While
it
is
true
that
the
hearing
of
an
appeal
in
this
Court
from
a
decision
of
the
Tax
Appeal
Board
is
a
trial
de
novo,
I
came
to
the
conclusion
and
so
ruled
that
this
agreement
in
the
circumstances
disclosed
was
a
final
and
complete
settlement
as
to
the
total
net
profits
from
the
property
for
each
year
binding
upon
the
parties
thereto
and
that
the
only
matter
remaining
to
be
determined
by
the
Tax
Appeal
Board
was
a
matter
of
law,
namely,
was
the
appellant
entitled
to
the
whole
of
such
profits
or
part
thereof,
or
none
at
all?
It
was
on
that
basis
that
the
matter
proceeded
before
the
Board.
No
doubt
it
was
a
compromise
settlement
which
both
parties
were
content
to
accept
rather
than
embark
on
a
lengthy
and
involved
investigation
as
to
receipts
and
expenditures.
Because
of
the
ruling
so
made,
I
need
not
consider
further
the
question
as
to
the
quantum
of
the
net
annual
profits
from
the
property.
The
onus
is
on
the
appellant
to
establish
that
there
is
error
in
fact
or
in
law
in
the
re-assessments
as
so
modified
(M.N.R.
v.
Johnston,
[1948]
S.C.R.
486;
[1948]
C.T.C.
195).
The
appellant
was
not
represented
by
counsel
at
the
hearing,
but
conducted
his
own
case
and
evidence
was
presented
on
his
behalf
by
his
wife,
his
son
Alan
Morris,
his
daughter
Mrs.
Alma
Tefft,
a
practising
solicitor,
J.
L.
Coburn,
local
manager
of
the
Canada
Permanent
Mortgage
Corporation
in
Hamilton,
and
by
the
appellant
himself.
No
witnesses
were
called
on
behalf
of
the
respondent.
Many
grounds
of
appeal
are
raised
in
the
appellant’s
Notice
of
Appeal.
Some
of
these
grounds
are
untenable,
such
as
the
submission
that
the
respondent
had
no
right
to
make
the
reassessments
now
in
appeal.
His
main
submissions
are
that
for
the
years
in
question
he
was
not
the
owner
of
the
property,
was
not
entitled
to
receive
any
profits
from
the
rental
of
the
property
and,
in
fact,
did
not
receive
any;
or
that
at
most
he
was
entitled
to
only
one-third
thereof,
these
amounts
being
so
small
annually
as
to
result
in
no
taxable
income.
For
the
Minister,
it
is
submitted
that
the
re-assessments
were
based
on
the
assumption
that
the
whole
of
the
annual
profits
from
the
property
were
income
in
his
hands
and
that
the
evidence
shows
that
he
was
the
owner
and
did
receive
the
annual
profits.
In
order
to
understand
the
nature
of
the
ease
put
forward
by
the
appellant,
it
is
desirable
at
once
to
set
out
the
terms
of
an
indenture
dated
April
15,
1944
(Exhibit
1)
between
two
parties,
namely,
William
Morris
of
the
First
Part
and
Jean
Cairns
Morris
(in
trust)
called
the
trustee
of
the
Second
Part.
While
the
appellant
is
not
named
as
a
party
to
the
agreement
between
his
father
and
his
wife,
he
did
in
fact
sign
it.
It
reads
as
follows:
‘
‘
THIS
INDENTURE
made
in
TRIPLICATE
THIS
15TH
DAY
OF
APRIL
A.D.
1944.
BETWEEN
William
Morris
of
the
City
of
Hamilton,
in
the
County
of
Wentworth,
Gentleman,
hereinafter
called
the
Party
OF
THE
FIRST
PART
—
and
—
Jean
Cairns
Morris
of
the
said
City
of
Hamilton,
Barrister-at-Law,
hereinafter
called
the
TRUSTEE
OF
THE
SECOND
PART
Whereas
the
said
William
Morris,
Esther
G.
Morris
and
Philip
R.
Morris
made
end
executed
a
mortgage
on
the
property
known
as
22,
24
and
26
John
Street
North,
in
the
said
City
of
Hamilton,
to
The
Toronto
General
Trusts
Corporation
to
secure
$25,000
and
interest,
which
mortgage
is
dated
March
8th,
1926
and
was
registered
March
28th,
1926
at
11.04
A.M.
in
the
Registry
Office
for
the
Registry
Division
of
the
City
of
Hamilton
as
number
284532.
And
WHEREAS
the
said
mortgage
is
now
overdue
and
the
party
of
the
First
Part
desires
to
be
relieved
from
the
obligations
of
the
covenant
in
the
said
mortgage.
AND
WHEREAS
the
Toronto
General
Trusts
Corporation
has
agreed
to
assign
the
said
mortgage
to
the
party
of
the
Second
Part
as
Trustee
and
the
party
of
the
Second
Part
has
agreed
to
relieve
the
party
of
the
First
Part
from
the
covenant
in
the
said
mortgage.
Now
THEREFORE
THIS
INDENTURE
WITNESSETH
that
in
consideration
of
the
abandonment
of
any
claim
to
interest
upon
the
principal
of
the
said
mortgage,
the
party
of
the
Second
Part
hereby
declares
that
no
claim
shall
be
made
to
interest
under
the
said
mortgage
and
the
covenant
in
the
said
mortgage
contained
shall
stand
barred
and
of
no
effect
so
far
as
the
party
of
the
First
Part
or
his
estate
is
concerned
and
the
party
of
the
Second
Part
covenants
promises
and
agrees
with
the
Party
of
the
First
Part
that
in
the
event
of
a
sale
of
the
said
mortgage,
the
transfer
or
assignment
thereof
shall
have
no
recourse
or
rights
or
remedies
on
the
said
covenant
or
otherwise
against
the
party
of
First
Part,
William
Morris.
Awn
the
parties
hereto
agree
that
so
long
as
the
said
mortgage
is
held
by
the
TRUSTEE
there
shall
be
no
interest
payable
or
claimed
upon
the
said
mortgage
but
whatever
principal
can
be
paid
thereon
every
three
months
after
due
provision
for
repairs,
taxes,
water
rates
and
insurance
and
improvements
to
the
property
22,
24
and
26
John
St.
N.
Hamilton
shall
be
paid
to
Isla
Victoria
Ford,
Edna
Marion
Hulbig
and
Philip
Reginald
Morris
in
equal
shares.
PROVIDED
that
in
the
event
of
one
of
the
said
last
mentioned
three
persons
or
any
or
all
of
them
directing
that
the
said
payments
shall
be
paid
otherwise,
the
said
payments
shall,
after
deduction
of
fees
be
so
made.
PROVIDED
F'URTHER
that
in
the
event
of
the
decease
of
the
Trustee
without
appointment
of
a
new
Trustee,
the
said
three
persons
or
the
survivor
or
survivors
of
them
shall
have
power,
if
deemed
necessary
to
appoint
a
new
Trustee.
THE
PARTY
OF
THE
SECOND
PART
and
WILLIAM
MORRIS
shall
have
the
right,
until
the
property
is
sold
to
occupy
the
premises
they
are
at
present
occupying
rent
free,
respectively,
and
until
his
decease
or
until
sale
of
the
said
property
Philip
R.
Morris
shall
manage
it
and
shall
render
a
statement
to
the
TRUSTEE
every
three
months
remitting
at
the
same
time
the
balance
payable
to
the
Trustee.
After
his
decease
or
should
Philip
R.
Morris
desire
to
retire
from
the
management
of
the
said
property,
it
shall
be
managed
by
the
Trustee.
In
the
event
of
a
sale
or
mortgage
of
property
the
proceeds
shall
be
equally
divided
between
the
said
Isla
Victoria
Ford,
Edna
Marion
Hulbig
and
Philip
Reginald
Morris
or
such
other
persons
as
they
shall
individually
in
writing
(filed
with
the
TRUSTEE)
direct
or
appoint.
In
WITNESS
WHEREOF
the
PARTIES
HERETO
HAVE
HEREUNTO
SET
THEIR
HANDS
AND
SEALS
THE
DAY
AND
YEAR
FIRST
ABOVE
WRITTEN.
That
indenture
denoted
on
the
cover
as
a
‘‘trust
agreement”
was
never
registered.
It
was
prepared
in
the
office
of
Morris
and
Morris,
the
only
member
of
that
legal
firm
at
the
time
bein
the
appellant’s
wife.
It
is
to
be
noted
that
it
is
dated
the
day
following
the
date
on
which
the
Toronto
General
Trusts
Corporation
mortgage
was
assigned
to
the
appellant’s
wife
in
trust
as
above
stated.
The
recitals
in
the
trust
agreement
indicate
that
William
Morris
desired
to
be
released
from
his
covenants
in
the
mortgage
and
that
the
party
of
the
Second
Part
had
agreed
to
do
so.
I
find
it
difficult
to
understand
why
this
was
done
in
view
of
the
evi-
dence
that
William
Morris
himself
paid
to
the
Toronto
General
Trusts
Corporation
the
full
amount
they
demanded
at
the
time
they
executed
the
assignment
to
the
appellant’s
wife.
Mrs.
Ford
and
Mrs.
Hulbig,
named
in
the
trust
agreement,
are
sisters
of
the
appellant.
SIGNED,
SEALED
AND
DELIVERED
|
(sgd.)
|
IN
THE
PRESENCE
OF
|
William
Morris
|
(sgd.)
|
Alan
Morris
|
J.
C.
Morris
|
|
Philip
Morris
”’
|
On
the
evidence
of
the
appellant’s
wife,
I
find
that
William
Morris
made
the
arrangements
with
the
Toronto
General
Trusts
Corporation
to
have
the
mortgage
assigned
to
her,
and,
as
I
have
said,
he
supplied
all
the
funds
to
pay
off
the
Corporation.
Undoubtedly,
he
then
wished
to
keep
the
mortgage
alive.
In
construing
the
trust
agreement,
I
must
keep
in
mind
the
fact
that
Mrs.
Ford
and
Mrs.
Hulbig,
the
appellant’s
sisters,
both
of
whom
are
still
alive
and
who
by
the
agreement
were
entitled
to
some
benefits,
are
not
before
me
in
this
case.
Nothing
that
is
said
here,
therefore,
may
be
construed
as
determining
their
rights
either
as
to
an
accounting
by
the
trustee
or
the
appellant,
or
as
to
any
interest
they
may
have
in
the
property
when
sold
or
otherwise.
In
my
view
the
trust
agreement,
in
so
far
as
it
relates
to
the
present
issue
and
to
the
events
that
have
occurred,
provided
as
follows:
(a)
The
appellant
was
appointed
manager
of
the
property
until
his
retirement
from
that
office
with
the
duties
incidental
to
that
office
of
collecting
the
rents
and
after
paying
for
repairs,
taxes,
water
rates,
insurance
and
improvements
to
the
property
to
remit
the
balance
payable
to
his
wife,
the
trustee
of
the
mortgage,
so
long
as
she
held
that
mortgage.
(b)
That
the
trustee
of
the
mortgage,
so
long
as
she
held
the
mortgage,
was
not
entitled
to
any
interest
thereon,
but
that
any
payments
she
received
as
above
from
the
manager
were
to
be
applied
on
the
principal
of
the
mortgage
and
after
deduction
of
fees
were
to
be
divided
equally
between
the
appellant,
Mrs.
Ford
and
Mrs.
Hulbig
or
as
they
might
direct.
If
the
appellant
died
or
retired
from
the
management
of
the
property,
the
trustee
was
to
become
manager
of
the
property.
The
first
submission
of
the
appellant
is
that
whatever
interest
he
may
have
had
in
the
property
as
one
of
the
grantees
in
the
joint
tenancy
created
by
the
conveyance
in
1924
from
Business
Realty
Limited
(Exhibit
‘‘C’’)
w
as
purely
nominal
and
that
his
rights
therein
were
lost
by
the
adverse
possession
of
his
mother
and
father
for
a
period
in
excess
of
ten
years,
any
title
he
may
have
had
being
therefore
extinguished
by
The
Statute
of
Limitations,
R.S.O.
1960,
ce.
214,
and
its
predecessors.
It
is
in
evidence
that
following
the
grant
by
Business
Realty
Limited
the
appellant
at
the
request
of
his
father
acted
as
manager
of
the
property,
collecting
the
rents
and
providing
for
necessary
out-goings
until
about
1931
when
his
father,
being
dissatisfied
with
the
returns,
decided
to
collect
the
rents
himself.
Accordingly,
he
moved
from
Toronto
and
from
about
1931,
with
his
wife
occupied
two
apartments
in
the
property.
There
is
no
evidence
that
either
the
father
or
mother
ever
asserted
any
claim
to
having
become
owner
of
the
property
by
possession
at
any
time
during
their
lives.
The
only
evidence
is
that
the
father
did
collect
the
rents
and
paid
the
necessary
out-goings
for
a
considerable
time.
On
the
contrary,
it
would
appear
from
the
recitals
in
the
deed
of
William
Morris
to
the
appellant,
dated
May
1,
1945,
that
the
father
then
considered
that
following
the
death
of
his
wife
in
1941,
he
and
his
son,
the
appellant,
were
the
owners
as
joint
tenants
of
the
property.
That
deed
was
prepared
in
the
office
of
Morris
and
Morris,
presumably
by
the
appellant’s
wife.
There
is
no
satisfactory
evidence
that
the
appellant’s
mother
did
anything
by
way
of
collecting
rents
or
otherwise
which
would
indicate
that
she
with
her
husband
acquired
any
interest
in
the
property
adverse
to
that
of
the
appellant.
She
merely
resided
with
her
husband
in
the
property.
The
evidence
does
not
warrant
a
finding
that
William
Morris
became
the
sole
owner
of
the
property
and
that
the
title
of
the
appellant
was
lost
by
adverse
possession.
Even
if
that
had
been
the
case,
it
would
not
be
of
any
assistance
to
the
appellant
in
view
of
the
fact
that
by
the
deed
(Exhibit
‘‘F’’)
of
May
1,
1945,
his
father
conveyed
all
his
interest
therein
to
the
appellant.
As
will
be
seen
later,
the
appellant
considered
himself
to
be
thereafter
the
owner
in
fee
simple
of
the
property
when
executing
four
mortgages
thereon.
I
therefore
reject
the
appellant’s
submission
on
this
point.
The
next
submission
of
the
appellant
is
that
by
adverse
possession
for
over
ten
years,
Jean
Cairns
Morris,
his
wife,
personally
has
acquired
sole
ownership
of
the
property.
While
she
frankly
disavowed
any
right
to
any
personal
interest
in
the
property
(except
for
a
possible
claim
to
monies
which
she
may
personally
have
paid
on
the
mortgages
or
any
expenses,
but
of
which
she
had
no
record
and
did
not
attempt
to
prove)
and
alleged
that
whatever
possession
she
may
have
had
was
at
times
referable
to
the
trust
and
for
the
benefit
of
the
cestuis
que
trustent
therein,
the
appellant
maintained
this
point
to
the
end,
realizing,
no
doubt,
that
if
it
could
be
established,
the
property
would
then
be
owned
by
his
wife
and
not
only
would
he
avoid
any
income
tax
in
respect
of
the
profits,
but
any
rights
his
sisters
might
have
had
under
the
trust
might
be
extinguished.
The
facts
are
that
the
appellant’s
wife
had
possession
of
her
office
and
other
space
in
the
building
at
least
since
the
execution
of
the
trust
agreement
and
as
provided
therein
she
paid
no
rent.
It
is
also
shown
that
commencing
in
May,
1948
she
collected
rents,
secured
tenants
and
paid
necessary
out-goings
for
the
property
until
at
least
1956
—
the
last
year
with
which
I
am
concerned.
During
that
time
she
paid
nothing
to
Mrs.
Ford
or
Mrs.
Hulbig,
but
she
did
pay
the
net
revenue
to
her
husband
personally.
While
she
says
at
all
times
her
“possession”
was
referable
to
the
trust
agreement,
she
neither
accounted
to
Mrs.
Hulbig
or
Mrs.
Ford
for
the
income
received
by
her,
nor
paid
them
anything.
I
reject
as
entirely
unsupported
by
the
evidence
the
effort
of
the
appellant
to
establish
that
his
wife
personally
acquired
a
possessory
title
—
a
title
she
does
not
assert,
but
disavows.
In
any
event,
such
possession
as
she
may
have
had
began
only
in
1948
and
could
not
have
ripened
into
a
possessory
title
until
1958,
two
years
later
than
the
years
with
which
I
am
concerned.
I
must
find,
also,
that
she
could
not
have
acquired
a
possessory
title
as
aginst
the
owner
(the
appellant)
in
her
capacity
as
trustee
since
she
acknowledged
his
right
to
the
rents
and
profits
every
three
months
by
the
payments
which
I
have
mentioned
and
will
refer
to
later.
Reference
may
be
made,
also,
to
the
case
of
Andre
v.
Valade,
[1944]
O.R.
257,
a
decision
of
the
Court
of
Appeal
of
Ontario.
There
the
husband,
a
mortgagor,
and
his
wife,
a
mortgagee
of
property,
were
living
together
in
harmony
as
man
and
wife
—
as
they
were
and
are
in
the
present
case
—
and
it
was
held
that
in
those
circumstances
The
Statute
of
Limitations
did
not
run
against
the
mortgagee-wife.
Further
reference
may
be
made
to
Gordon
v.
Ottawa,
[1953]
4
D.L.R.
542,
a
decision
of
McRuer,
C.J.H.C.
See
also
Lewin
on
Trusts,
15
ed.,
p.
809.
I
am
fully
satisfied
that
from
his
whole
course
of
conduct
the
appellant
himself
considered
that
he
was
at
all
relevant
times
the
sole
owner
of
the
property
and
that
his
effort
to
establish
a
possessory
title
in
favour
of
his
wife
and/or
parents
was
but
an
after-thought,
made
with
the
purpose
of
avoiding
income
tax
on
profits
which
he
received
and
for
which
he
has
accounted
to
no
one.
In
March,
1945
the
appellant
consulted
Mr.
J.
L.
Coburn,
the
Hamilton
manager
of
the
Canada
Permanent
Mortgage
Corporation
in
regard
to
a
loan
of
$15,000.
He
advised
Mr.
Coburn
that
he
needed
the
money
for
the
purpose
of
settling
a
family
estate
in
which
he
and
his
sisters
were
interested,
and
that
the
sisters
now
wished
to
be
paid
their
shares
which
he
had
agreed
to
do.
À
loan
of
only
$10,000
was
recommended
and
the
appellant
told
Mr.
Coburn
that
he
had
bonds
and
securities
which
he
was
arranging
to
sell
or
has
sold,
out
of
which
he
would
pay
the
balance
above
$10,000
due
to
his
sisters.
I
accept
unreservedly
the
evidence
of
Mr.
Coburn,
supported
as
it
is
by
his
report
to
head
office
dated
March
16,
1945
(Exhibit
‘‘C’’).
I
also
accept
Mr.
Coburn’s
evidence
that
nothing
was
said
at
that
time
as
to.
any
rights
the
sisters
had
in
any
trust
refereable
to
this
property
and
regard
as
untrue
the
appellant’s
statement
that
he
did
so.
On
July
1,
1945
the
appellant,
with
his
wife
joining
to
bar
dower,
executed
a
mortgage
to
the
Canada
Permanent
Mortgage
Corporation
for
$10,000,
registered
on
June
29,
1945
as
No.
98027
N.S.
(Exhibit
5).
That
mortgage,
as
well
as
all
the
other
mortgages
to
which
I
shall
refer,
was
made
in
pursuance
of
The
Short
Forms
of
Mortgages
Act,
and
contained
a
recital
that
the
mortgagor
was
seized
in
fee
simple
of
the
lands
described
and
a
covenant
that
he
was
the
owner
in
fee
simple
to
the
said
lands
and
had
the
right
to
convey
the
said
lands
to
the
mortgagee.
The
proceeds
of
that
mortgage
were
paid
to
the
appellant,
but
nothing
was
then
paid
to
his
sisters.
Instead,
as
shown
by
Exhibit
“D”,
the
appellant
executed
a
mortgage
to
his
sisters
for
$3,000
on
July
2,1945,
and
registered
on
July
10,1945
as
No.
98350
N.S.
That
mortgage
was
discharged
as
shown
by
Exhibit
“E”
dated
December
12,
1946,
and
registered
on
December
17,
1946
as
No.
116849
N.S.
The
appellant
says
that
he
paid
his
sisters
at
that
time
$2,300
only,
and
that
since
then
he
has
paid
them
nothing
further
or
accounted
to
them
in
any
way
for
the
profits
from
the
property.
Immediately
thereafter
the
appellant
gave
a
further
mortgage
to
the
Canada
Permanent
Mortgage
Corporation
for
$13,500
(Exhibit
6)
dated
and
registered
December
18,
1946,
and
the
former
mortgage
for
$10,000
was
discharged.
The
difference
between
the
amount
due
under
the
former
mortgage
and
the
new
loan
of
$13,500
was
paid
to
the
appellant
who
says
that
it
was
used
on
improvements
to
the
property
arranged
by
h
him
as
were
the
proceeds
of
the
first
mortgage.
The
appellant
again
gave
a
mortgage
to
the
Canada
Permanent
Mortgage
Corporation
for
$14,000
(Exhibit
7)
on
March
1,
1951,
registered
March
15,
1951
as
No.
184060
N.S.
Again
the
proceeds
of
that
loan,
less
the
amount
due
under
the
former
mortgage,
were
paid
to
the
appellant
and
used
by
him
for
improvements
to
the
property.
A
discharge
of
the
mortgage
for
$13,500
was
registered
on
March
30,
1951.
The
last
mortgage
to
the
Canada
Permanent
Mortgage
Corporation
was
discharged
as
fully
paid
on
February
29,
1956
(Exhibit
7)
but
the
discharge
has
not
been
registered.
The
only
explanation
for
the
failure
to
register
it
is
the
statement
of
the
appellant
that
he
thought
he
might
ask
for
an
assignment
in
lieu
of
the
discharge.
Subject
to
the
registration
of
that
discharge
there
has
been
no
encumbrance
on
the
property
since
1956.
While,
as
I
have
said,
I
am
not
now
directly
concerned
with
the
quantum
of
the
net
annual
profits
derived
from
the
property
over
the
seven
years
in
question,
I
think
it
right
to
note
that
from
March,
1951
to
February
29,
1956,
there
was
paid
not
only
the
interest
on
the
Canada
Permanent
mortgage,
but
also
$14,000
as
principal.
While
it
is
alleged
by
the
appellant’s
wife
that
she
made
the
payments
out
of
her
general
office
account
into
which
all
the
rents
were
paid
and
from
which
the
disbursements
for
taxes,
etc.,
were
paid,
and
it
is
possible
that
some
of
the
payments
may
have
been
made
from
her
own
funds,
I
must
also
find
that
there
is
no
proof
that
such
mortgage
payments
were
made
other
than
from
income
of
the
property,
no
record
having
been
kept
by
the
appellant’s
wife
as
to
any
amount
that
may
have
been
paid
by
her
personally.
In
fact,
her
failure
to
keep
any
record
of
such
payments
from
her
own
funds
strongly
suggests
that
she
was
liable
to
account
to
no
one
but
her
husband.
Now
as
I
have
said,
the
appellant’s
wife
from
May,
1948
to
1956
did
collect
rents
and
pay
the
necessary
out-goings.
In
addition,
it
is
shown
that
during
that
period
she
paid
to
her
husband
by
cheque
each
three
months
$150
on
account
of
the
principal
of
an
alleged
second
mortgage
for
$16,000,
as
well
as
interest
at
4
per
cent.
per
annum,
less
a
rental
of
$25
per
month,
for
the
use
of
an
apartment
in
the
building
occupied
for
considerable
periods
by
her
husband
and
herself.
The
sums
so
paid
in
that
period
aggregated
$6,550
on
account
of
principal
as
well
as
interest,
and
the
payment
made
in
May,
1956
indicates
that
the
principal
of
the
so-called
second
mortgage
had
been
reduced
to
$9,450.
Between
the
date
of
the
execution
of
the
deed
to
the
appellant
and
1948,
the
appellant
as
manager
of
the
property
collected
the
rents
and
paid
the
out-goings.
He
says
that
in
1948
he
retired
as
manager
and
thereafter
did
only
necessary
work
entrusted
to
him
by
his
wife.
Both
the
appellant
and
his
wife
were
repeatedly
asked
to
explain
the
details
of
the
so-called
second
mortgage,
but
neither
was
able
to
say
expressly
that
there
ever
had
been
such
a
mortgage
or
who
was
mortgagee
or
who
was
mortgagor
or
why
it
was
given.
Certainly,
it
was
not
registered
and
no
such
document
was
produced.
I
have
grave
doubts
that
it
ever
existed.
The
only
possible
inference
that
I
have
been
able
to
draw
from
the
facts
is
that
the
appellant
and
his
wife
thought
it
advisable
for
pur-
poses
of
the
appellant
to
keep
alive
in
theory
the
Toronto
General
Trusts’
Mortgage
which
had
been
dsicharged
in
1946;
and
that
as
the
principal
amount
thereof
when
assigned
to
the
appellant’s
wife
was
approximately
$18,300
(of
which
$2,300
had
been
paid
to
the
appellant’s
sisters),
the
balance
of
$16,000
was
to
be
represented
in
some
way
by
the
so-called
second
mortgage
of
$16,000.
Now,
as
all
the
payments
made
by
the
appellant’s
wife
were
made
to
the
appellant
personally
and
thereafter
retained
by
him
and
as
his
wife
as
trustee
made
no
payments
of
any
kind
to
Mrs.
Hulbig
and
Mrs.
Ford,
it
is
also
reasonable
to
infer
that
both
the
appellant
and
his
wife
considered
that
the
sisters
had
accepted
the
mortgage
for
$3,000
in
payment
of
all
their
rights
under
the
trust
agreement
and
in
the
property
and
that
later
on
they
were
content
to
accept
$2,300
in
settlement
of
their
rights.
That
this
is
the
reasonable
inference
from
the
evidence
is
further
shown
by
the
fact
that
since
this
mortgage
was
discharged,
neither
sister
(one
of
whom
had
a
lawyer
as
husband
and
the
other
a
son
who
is
a
lawyer)
has
made
any
claim
to
any
interest
under
the
trust
agreement
or
in
the
property
to
either
the
appellant
or
his
wife.
I
do
not
find
that
they
have
no
rights,
but
for
the
purpose
of
this
case
I
do
find
that
that
is
the
only
reasonable
inference
to
be
derived
from
the
limited
evidence
before
me.
If
the
trust
agreement
was
still
entirely
in
effect
and
if
the
sisters
were
entitled
to
two-thirds
of
the
principal
of
the
$18,300
Toronto
General
Trusts
Corporation
mortgage
(less
the
$2,300
paid
on
account),
it
would
have
been
the
duty
of
the
appellant’s
wife
as
trustee
to
pay
their
share
regularly
as
it
came
into
her
hands
instead
of
paying
it
all
to
her
husband.
Mrs.
Morris
stated
frankly,
‘‘I
don’t
know
that
it
was
not
his
money
’
’,
and
that
she
did
not
know
what
he
did
with
the
money.
Such
payments
have
been
renewed
and
the
balance
of
principal
on
the
so-called
mortgage
is
now
$5,000.
I
do
not
attribute
bad
faith
to
the
appellant’s
wife.
She
is
now
76
years
of
age
and
admitted
to
some
loss
of
memory
and
confusion
as
to
the
facts.
I
think,
moreover,
that
she
was
possibly
subject
to
pressure
on
the
part
of
her
more
astute
husband.
But
I
am
quite
unable
to
accept
the
evidence
of
the
appellant
when
it
is
in
conflict
with
either
documentary
evidence
or
with
oral
evidence.
His
explanation
of
the
manner
in
which
he
has
dealt
with
these
receipts
is
quite
incredible.
That
he
did
receive
them
in
his
personal
capacity
is
not
open
to
question.
He
has
been
collecting
them
since
1948
and
has
not
paid
one
cent
to
his
sisters
or
accounted
to
them
in
any
way.
At
the
conclusion
of
his
evidence,
he
did
say
that
he
held
them
in
trust
under
the
trust
agreement
and
that
he
still
had
them
‘‘on
hand’’
although
declined
to
state
where
or
in
what
form
they
now
are.
He
said,
also,
that
his
sisters
were
entitled
to
a
share
therein,
but
he
had
not
paid
it
over
as
he
did
not
want
them
to
dissipate
the
money
—
namely,
money
which
he
now
says
belonged
to
them,
each
being
presumably
a
woman
of
mature
years.
Finally,
he
said
that
his
wife
at
some
unspecified
time
had
demanded
that
he
return
the
money
to
her,
but
he
had
refused
to
do
so.
His
wife,
however,
made
no
mention
of
such
demand.
Now
he
says
that
he
is
willing
to
turn
over
the
shares
to
the
sisters
if
they
demand
it.
Frankly,
I
do
not
believe
his
last-minute
conversion
to
the
theory
that
he
held
the
money
in
trust
and
made
for
the
first
time
19
years
after
he
first
began
to
receive
the
payments
and
under
pressure
of
a
demand
for
income
tax
thereon.
On
the
evidence
which
I
have
accepted
in
this
case
and
drawing
the
inferences
therefrom
which
I
have
set
out
above,
I
have
come
to
the
conclusion
that
(a)
at
all
relevant
times
the
appellant
was
the
owner
of
the
property;
and
(b)
that
the
appellant”
s
two
sisters
ceased
to
have
any
interest
in
the
trust
or
in
the
property
upon
executing
a
discharge
of
the
$3,000
mortgage,
or
at
least
until
the
property
has
been
sold,
an
event
which
has
not
occurred
;
and
(c)
that
in
collecting
the
rents
of
the
property
and
paying
the
expenses
of
operation
and
the
principal
and
interest
on
the
Canada
Permanent
mortgages,
the
appellant’s
wife
acted
only
as
the
agent
of
the
owner,
the
appellant;
and
(d)
that
after
providing
for
payment
of
interest
and
principal
of
the
said
Canada
Permanent
mortgages
out
of
income
from
the
property
(of
which
the
principal
amount
would
be
taxable
income
of
the
appellant),
the
balance
was
payable
to
and
was
paid
to
the
appellant
in
his
capacity
as
owner.
In
any
event,
the
appellant
has
completely
failed
to
meet
the
onus
cast
upon
him
to
establish
that
the
assumptions
on
which
the
re-assessments
were
made
upon
him
—
namely,
that
he
was
entitled
as
owner
to
all
the
rents
and
profits
—
was
erroneous.
For
these
reasons,
the
appeal
from
the
decision
of
the
Tax
Appeal
Board
fails.
Its
decision
affirming
the
re-assessments
made
upon
the
appellant
for
each
year,
subject
to
the
allowances
made
in
the
Minister’s
Notifications
and
to
those
made
by
the.
agreement
of
the
parties
on
March
15,
1961,
will
be
affirmed
and
the
matter
remitted
to
the
Minister
to
re-assess
the
appellant
in
accordance
with
these
findings.
.
The
respondent
is
also
entitled
to
be
paid
his
costs
after
taxation.
Judgment
accordingly.