DUMOULIN,
J
:—This
is
an
appeal
from
a
decision
of
the
Tax
Appeal
Board,
25
Tax
A.B.C.
317,
dated
November
14,
1960,
in
respect
of
appellant’s
income
tax
assessment
for
1957,
disallowing
the
latter’s
claim
to
a
deduction
of
$23,000,
alledgedly
representing
a
reserve
for
bad
debts.
The
exact
nature
of
Western
Wood
Products’
activities
was
not
precisely
revealed,
but
its
Memorandum
of
Association
of
April
30,
1946,
Province
of
Alberta
(exhibit
9),
mentions,
amongst
its
many
objects,
the
following
:
“
(a)
To
carry
on
the
business
of
the
manufacture
and
sale
of
wood
veneer
and
plywood
in
all
its
branches
and
phases.
(b)
To
carry
on
the
business
of
wood
distillation
and
the
sale
of
the
products
and
by-products
thereof
in
all
phases.
(e)
.
.
.
(d)
To
carry
on
the
business
of
logging
and
lumbering
and
the
sale
of
lumber
by
wholesale
or
retail
in
all
its
branches”.
Further
powers
worthy
of
notice
are
conferred
by
items
(f)
and
(n):
“(f)
To
enter
into
partnership
or
into
any
arrangement
for
sharing
of
profits,
union
of
interests,
co-operation,
joint
adventure,
reciprocal
concessions,
or
otherwise
with
any
person
or
Company,
wheresoever
incorporated,
carrying
on
or
engaged
in
.
.
.
any
business
or
transaction
which
the
Company
is
authorized
to
carry
on
or
engage
in
.
.
.
(n)
To
invest
and
deal
with
the
moneys
of
the
Company
not
immediately
required
in
such
manner
as
may
from
time
to
time
be
determined”.
Western
Wood
Products
Ltd.
has
its
registered
office
in
the
City
of
Edmonton.
The
appellant
submits
this
interpretaion
of
the
matter
in
paragraph
(1)
of
its
Notice
of
Appeal:
“
(1)
From
time
to
time
over
a
period
of
ten
years
the
Apel-
lant
company
has
made
advances
of
money
to
various
lumber
operators
for
the
purpose
of
increasing
its
purchases
and/or
sales
and/or
net
income.
The
advances
were
to
sawmill
operators
and/or
planer
operators
and/
or
distributors.
The
principal
distributor
to
which
advances
of
money
were
made
was
Direct
Lumber
Company
Ltd.
as
a
result
of
which
the
Appellant
company
received
substantial
commissions.
The
Appellant
company
owns
Over
ninety-nine
per
cent
of
the
issued
shares
of
Sylvan
Lumber
Company
Limited.
The
Appellant
com-
made
advances
of
money
to
Direct
Lumber
Company
Ltd.
which
in
turn
made
advances
of
money
to
Sylvan
Company
Ltd.
with
the
understandnig
that
the
Appellant
would
absorb
any
losses
incurred
by
Direct
Lumber
Company
Ltd.
resulting
from
its
dealings
with
Sylvan
Lumber
Company
Ltd.
Sylvan
Lumber
Co.
Ltd.
sustained
substantial
losses
and
was
unable
to
repay
Direct
Lumber
Co.
Ltd.
and
in
1957
pursuant
to
the
previous
understanding
Direct
Lumber
Co.
Ltd.
charged
to
Wes-
tern
Wood
Products
Ltd.
$23,000.00
of
the
amount
owing
to
it
by
Sylvan
Lumber
Company
Ltd.
As
the
amount
was
uncollectable
from
Sylvan
Lumber
Company
Ltd.
a
Reserve
for
Bad
Debts
in
the
sum
of
$23,000.00
was
set
up
in
the
records
of
Western
Wood
Products
Limited
and
the
same
amount
was
deducted
from
Income.”
As
seen
above,
this
reserve
was
refused
by
the
Department.
The
respondent’s
disallowance
of
this
reserve
fund
is
motivated
quite
plainly
in
paragraphs
(1)
and
(5),
respectively,
found
on
pages
12
and
14
of
the
written
argument
filed
of
record
in
the
ease;
I
quote:
“
(1)
There
is
no
privity
of
contract
in
the
absence
of
assignments
or
guarantees
and,
hence,
no
debtor-creditor
relationship
as
between
Western
Wood
and
Sylvan
Lumber.
(5)
The
indebtedness
of
$26,133.39
(cf.
ex.
B)
arose
from
dealings
between
Sylvan
Lumber
Company
Limited
and
Direct
Lumber
Ltd.
which
did
not
involve
the
appellant
and,
accordingly,
the
appellant
would
not
be
entitled
to
deduct
all
or
any
portion
thereof.’’
Respondent’s
submissions
of
law
pertaining
to
the
above
arguments
are
derived
from
Sections
11(1)
(e),
12(1)
(a)
and
137(1)
of
the
Income
Tax
Act,
R.S.C.
1952,
c.
148.
At
this
very
point,
it
is
appropriate
to
note
that
notwithstanding
the
separate
legal
entity
of
each
of
the
three
firms
herein
concerned,
Western
Wood
Products
acted,
so
to
say,
as
the
fountain-head
of
trilogy,
owning
99
per
cent
of
Sylvan
Lumber’s
issued
shares,
and
controlling
68
per
cent,
or
slightly
more,
of
Direct
Lumber’s
voting
stock.
On
the
left
page
of
exhibit
J,
appellant’s
income
tax
return
sheet
for
1956,
Direct
Lumber
Co.
Ltd.
is
qualified
with
the
caption
‘
i
interlocking
shareholders’’,
and
Sylvan
Lumber
Co.
is
styled
‘‘subsidiary
company’’.
We
are
told,
with
even
a
flourish
of
doggerel
verse,
at
pages
1
and
2
of
the
appellant’s
brief
that:
“The
operations
of
W
(standing
for
Western
Wood
Products)
over
the
years
was
(‘were’
would
appear
better
suited
to
the
current
grammatical
prejudice)
moderately
profitable.
The
operations
of
D
(for
Direct
Lumber
Ltd.)
over
the
years
was
(ditto)
moderately
profitable.
But
to
paraphrase
a
favorite
song
of
a
famous
Canadian:
‘Tho
we
worked
all
night,
and
we
worked
all
day,
We
couldn’t
make
that
Sylvan
Lumber
pay’.”
A
jocose
confession
of
a
melancholy
result.
At
page
2
of
its
argument,
the
appellant
raises
this
question:
44
But,
which
Company—D
or
W—was
the
actual
creditor?”
of
Sylvan
Lumber,
and
suggests
a
solution
which
might
be
somewhat
over-simplified,
saying
that:
From
the
standpoint
of
the
respondent
there
was
no
material
difference.
The
loss
arising
from
the
bad
debt
would
be
deductible
from
the
income
of
either
D
or
W
depending
on
which
was
the
actual
creditor
in
whatever
year
would
suit
their
purpose
and
at
the
same
time
comply
with
the
Income
Tax
Act,
and
the
net
amount
collectable
by
the
respondent
ultimately,
would
for
all
practical
purposes
be
the
same
approximate
amount.”
Some
inkling
at
least
about
the
relative
degree
of
approximation
between
the
‘‘moderately
profitable
operations’’
of
Western
Wood
Products
and
Direct
Lumber
Co.,
for
taxation
year
1957,
would
have
been
welcomed,
and
possibly
explained
why
Western
Wood
and
not
Direct
Lumber
was
arbitrarily
chosen
as
Sylvan
Lumber’s
Creditor.
Moreover,
in
matters
of
strict
law,
the
Court
can
attach
but
slight
concern
to
‘‘practical
purposes’’,
subjectively
volunteered
by
a
taxpayer,
as
compared
with
its
duty
to
comply
with
the
“legal
purposes’’
prescribed
by
statute.
In
keeping
with
this
norm,
three
main
issues
are
now
singled
out
for
examination,
namely:
the
acceptable
plausibility
of
‘
4
the
understanding
”
supposedly
assumed
by
the
appellant
to
secure
Direct
Lumber
against
any
losses
at
the
hands
of
Sylvan
Lumber
;
the
admissibility,
pursuant
to
the
proof
adduced,
of
money
advanced
by
Western
Wood
to
Direct
Lumber,
or
of
transactions
between
Western,
Direct
and
Sylvan;
and
lastly,
the
degree
of
credence
attaching
to
that
roundabout
shifting
of
debts
from
Sylvan,
via
Direct
Lumber,
unto
the
appellant.
One
witness
only
testified,
Mr.
Richard
Carl
D.
Ogilvie,
who
had
qualified
as
chartered
accountant
in
December,
1957,
and
examined
the
appellant’s
books
of
accounts
during
1958,
replacing
in
that
task
the
firm
of
John
B.
White.
On
this
triple
score
what
does
the
evidence
reveal
concerning
:
(a)
An
undertaking
of
guarantee
between
the
appellant
and
Direct
Lumber?
Counsel
for
the
respondent,
Mr.
W.
G.
Morrow,
Q.C.,
on
cross-
examination
puts
these
questions
to
Mr.
Ogilvie
(cf.
transcript
pp.
51
and
62)
:
“Q.
Now,
in
this
cheque
(should
be:
check)
that
you
refer
to
and
in
your
research
for
preparation
for
today
have
you
ever
seen
any
documents
such
as
a
letter
or
a
document
of
assignment
or
anything
of
that
kind
passing
between
one
company
and
another
with
respect
to
the
$26,133.00
or
with
respect
to
the
$23,000.00?
A.
No,
I
have
seen
no
documents.
Q.
And
you
have
not
observed
any
document
for
example
of
Western
dated
December
31st,
1957,
or
subsequent
to
that,
saying
‘we
have
assumed
this
matter’
or
‘we
have
allowed
this
transaction
to
take
place
and
you
can
now
look
to
us’
or
vice
versa,
none
of
that?
A.
Nothing.”
Next
on
page
62:
“Q.
Mr.
Ogilvie,
we
have
already
had
you
say
that
insofar
as
your
research
is
concerned
you
could
find
no
sign
of
a
guarantee
or
any
such
written
undertaking
or
assumption
of
an
obligation
by
Western
Wood
Products
to
take
over
the
obligations
of
Sylvan
to
Direct,
we
have
already
got
that?
A.
That
is
correct.
’’
Since
this
lone
witness
has
seen
nothing
nor
found
anything
to
materialize
the
would-be
plea
of
warranty
we
are
then
left
with
a
totally
uncorroborated
declaration.
(b)
Advances
of
money
to
Direct
Lumber
or
transactions
between
appellant
and
the
two
affiliate
companies.
Pursuing
his
cross-examination,
Mr.
Murrow,
Q.C.,
asks:
“Q.
Is
it
a
fair
statement,
Mr.
Ogilvie,
that
on
your
examination
of
all
of
the
records
of
the
three
companies
that
there
is
no
inclusion
in
the
income
of
Western
Wood
Products,
the
Appellant,
of
these
items
of
debt
that
show
as
owing
from
Sylvan
to
Direct?
A.
I
would
answer
that
by
saying
this.
That
in
my
opinion
it
was
included
in
the
calculation
of
income.
Q.
.
.
.
Now,
concern
yourself
to
what
you
saw
on
the
books,
sir.
I
am
suggesting
it
does
not
show
anywhere?
A.
As
being
included
in
the
income?
Q.
Yes?
A.
I
would
say
‘No’.”
At
page
41
:
‘“Q.
Now
to
go
back
to
my
question.
Except
for
what
you
can
discern
from
Exhibits
A
and
B,
which
presumably
took
place
on
December
31st,
1957,
in
all
of
your
research
and
preparation
and
examination
of
what
book
you
did
before
you
came
here
can
you
find
anywhere
that
that
$23,000
or
any
part
of
it
or
even
a
fraction
of
it
shows
on
Western’s
books?
A.
This
is
prior
to
December
1957
that
you
are
speaking
of?
Q.
Yes?
<A.
No,
I
can’t.”
On
page
46,
we
find
that
:
“Q.
(by
Mr.
Morrow)
Did:
you
ever
at
any
time
in
any
of
your
research
see
where
it
(Sylvan)
had
invoiced
in
any
way
or
appeared
to
have
done
any
work
for
the
Western
Wood
Company?
A.
No.
I
have
examined
no
records
in
that
regard.
’
’
Ogilvie
agrees
that
in
his
review
of
whatever
records
were
shown
to
him
he
could
find
no
traces
of
arrangements
between
Direct
Lumber
or
Sylvan
Lumber
and
the
appellant
(cf.
Transcript
p.
47).
On
the
preceding
page
46,
the
witness
was
reported
as
stating
that
he
could
find
no
evidence
of
Sylvan
Lumber
performing
any
work
for
Western
Wood,
nor
any
entries
to
such
effect
in
the
books
of
the
two
companies.
And
again
on
page
57
,
we
read
the
following
questions
and
replies
thereto
between
the
same
parties:
“Q.
And
certainly
as
far
as
that
balance
sheet
is
concerned
once
again
we
find
nothing
indicating
an
indebtedness
from
the
Sylvan
Company
to
Western?
A.
Correct.
Q.
.
.
.
Have
you
any
knowledge
yourself
of
why
any
advances
or
payments
were
made
by
Direct
Lumber
to
Sylvan?
A.
No,
I
don’t
know
why
they
were
made
from
Direct
Lumber
to
Sylvan
Lumber.”
Surely,
no
material
of
any
convincing
worth
was
adduced
in
respect
of
this
second
point,
nothing
from
which
the
appellant
could
possibly
derive
any
assistance
for
his
contention
of
a
bona
fide
indebtedness,
created
between
Sylvan
Lumber
and
Direct
Lumber,
guaranteed
by
Western
Wood.
Appellant’
s
theory
must
stand
or
fall
according
to
the
evidence
given
by
his
accountant
and
only
witness,
who,
on
cross-examination,
has
so
far,
negatived
this
basis
for
his
client?
s
plea.
Coming
now
to
the
third
item
:
(ce)
The
credibility
of
the
debt
transfer
from
Sylvan
to
Western
Wood,
some
mention
should
be
made
of
the
pertinent
exhibits
filed.
One
sheet
of
paper
supposedly
holds
good
for
five
exhibits,
viz.
:
A,
B;
G,
H
and
I.
This
document,
a
copy
of
the
appellant’s
ledger
:or
book
of
accounts,
bears
the
date
of
December
31st,
1957,
according
to
information
orally
imparted,
since
only
the
last
figure
of
the
year
appears.
I
do
not
hesitate
to
say
that,
but
for
explanation
obtained
at
the
trial,
this
more
or
less
glorified
scrap
of
paper
might
have
remained
meaningless
due
to
its
practically
illegible
scribbling.
Apparently
(cf.
exhibit
B)
it
debits
Sylvan
Lumber
in
the
sum
of
$26,133.39
and
credits
Direct
Lumber
Limited
with
$26,133.39.
Correspondingly,
exhibit
A
on
the
left
hand
column
has
these
entries:
‘'Dr.
P.
&
L.
(meaning
probably
Proprietorship
and
Liabilities)
|
-
|
.
|
$28,000
|
Cr.
Res.
Bad
Debts
|
.—
|
|
$23,000
|
Re
Sylvan.’’
|
|
I
might
add
that
exhibit
C
Western
Wood
Products
balance
sheet
for
the
six
months
ending
June
30,
1956
under
the
mention
"Advances
to
Affiliated
Companies’’
debits
Direct
Lumber
Company
in
the
sum
of
$33,246.16.
The
appellant’s
income
tax
return
for
1957,
exhibit
I,
is
no
more
explicit
than
exhibits
A
and
B.
It
lists
a
first
and
initial
reserve
for
Bad
Debts
amounting
to
$22,992,
subsequently
carried
over
to
the
round
sum
of
$23,000.
This
too
unconventional
method
of
bookkeeping
led
respondent’s
counsel
to
probe
Mr.
Ogilvie
on
its
dubious
merits
(cf.
Transcript
pp.
50-51).
‘*Q.
So
that
another
piece
of
paper
still
in
Western’s
accounts
shows
a
reserve
for,
what
do
you
call
it,
a
deposit
to
cover
bad
debts
of
$23,000.00?
A.
Yes.
Q.
And
it
says
‘re:
Sylvan’?
A.
That
is
correct.
Q.
And
I
assume
that
you
have
noticed
or
that
there
is
such
a
thing,
there
is
a
similar
type
of
voucher
in
Direct’s
books
and
in
turn
in
Sylvan’s
books
working
this
thing
back
or
forwards
as
the
case
may
be?
A.
I
have
not
seen
these.
However
in
the
audit
report
of
our
1958
examination
we
did
report
that
the
accounts
had
been
checked,
the
inter-company
accounts
had
been
checked
from
the
books
of
one
to
the
other.
Q.
Now,
in
this
cheque
(check)
that
you
refer
to
and
in
your
research
for
preparation
for
today
have
you
ever
seen
any
documents
such
as
a
letter
or
a
document
of
assignment
or
anything
of
that
kind
passing
between
one
company
and
another
with
respect
to
the
$26,133.00,
or
with
respect
to
the
$23,000.00
?
A.
No,
I
have
seen
no
documents.
Q.
And
you
have
not
observed
any
document
for
example
of
Western
dated
December
31st,
1957
or
subsequent
to
that
saying
‘we
have
assumed
this
matter’
or
'we
have
allowed
this
transaction
to
take
place
and
you
can
now
look
to
us’,
or
vice
versa,
none
of
that?
A.
Nothing.
Q.
Nothing
of
that
kind.
And
aside
from
these
two
exhibits
À
‘and
B
you
have
no
other
knowledge
of
how
the
$23,
000.00
got
into
their
books?
A.
No.”
A
few
remaining
quotations,
taken
from
pages
59
and
62,
will
suffice
to
complete
this
overlong
sifting
of
the
evidence.
Mr.
Morrow
to
Ogilvie
:
“Q.
Now
would
you
agree
with
me
that
certainly
up
until
one
minute
before
Exhibits
A
and
B
took
place
we
have
Sylvan
as
building
up
an
indebtedness
and
perhaps
the
other
companies
building
up
a
profit?
A.
This
appears
to
be
so.
Q.
Mr.
Ogilvie,
we
have
already
had
you
say.
that
insofar
as
your
research
is
concerned
you
could
find
no
sign
of
a
guarantee
or
any
such
written
undertaking
or
assumption
of
an
obligation
by
Western
Wood
Products
to
take
over
the
obligations
of
Sylvan
to
Direct,
we
have
already
got
that?
A.
That
is
correct.
Q.
Now
starting
from
that
point
I
am
asking
you
that
to
transfer
over
this
$23,000.00
liability
to
Western.
Wood
Products
and
thereby
reduce
Western
Wood
Products
profit
for
the
year
is
that
not
in
effect
an
artificial
attempt
to
reduce
Western
Wood
Products
income?
A.
I
would
answer
by
saying
this,
that
if
we
assume
the
guarantee
was
there
it
is
not.
Q.
Yes,
but
you
have
already
said
that
you
had
no
knowledge
of
a
guarantee?
A.
That
is
correct.
Q.
Well
then
let
us
say
assuming
there
is
no
guarantee?
A.
Assuming
there
is
no
guarantee
it
could
be
looked
upon
in
that
way,
yes.’’
This
protracted
analysis
of
the
case’s
factual
components
scarcely
leaves
any
room
for
doubt.
The
unescapable
result
cannot
be
any
other
but
that:
(a)
Western
Wood
Products
utterly
failed
to
prove
it
had
undertaken
to
hold
Direct
Lumber
Ltd.
secure
against
eventual
losses
in
the
latter’s
dealings
with
the
now
defunct
Sylvan
Lumber
Co.;
(b)
also
failed
to
establish
any
debtor-creditor
relations
between
itself
and
Direct
Lumber,
resulting
from
a
warranty
of
Sylvan’s
debts,
and
(c)
did
not
resort
to
its
so-called
bookkeeping
entries,
viz.
exhibits
A
and
B
to
a
bare
minimum
of
reliable
information.
It
does
appear
that
the
alleged
transfers
of
debts,
guessed
at
more
than
shown
on
exhibits
A
and
B,
dated
December
31,
1957,
are
nothing
better
than
flimsy
traces
of
an
otherwise
easily
discernible
attempt
to
‘‘unduly
or
artificially
reduce
the
income’’
of
appellant,
in
defiance
of
Section
137(1).
A
manipulation
of
this
kind
was
of
course
facilitated
by
the
interwoven
relationship
of
the
three
legal
entities
concerned,
which
were
not
dealing
at
arm’s
length
(cf.
Section
139(5a)
(ce)
(i)
).
The
paramount
motives,
however,
for
waiving
aside
the
appellant’s
averments
are,
as
stated
in
respondent’s
brief,
that
in
the
absence
of
assignments
or
guarantees
Western
Wood
Products
was
not
a
creditor
of
Sylvan
Lumber
whose
indebtedness
to
Direct
Lumber
arose
from
transactions
foreign
to
Western
Wood
Products.
Therefore,
the
appellant
is
excluded
from
the
scope
of
Section
11(1)
and
the
permissive
exception
of
its
subsection
(e)
(i)
thus
worded
:
“(1)
Notwithstanding
paragraphs
(a),
(b)
and
(h)
of
subsection
(1)
of
section
12,
the
following
amounts
may
be
deducted
in
computing
the
income
of
a
taxpayer
for
a
taxation
year
:
(e)
Reserve
for
doubtful
debts.—a
reasonable
amount
as
a
reserve
for
(i)
doubtful
debts
that
have
been
included
in
computing
the
income
of
the
taxpayer
for
that
year
or
a
previous
year.”
For.
the
reasons
above,
the
appeal
is
dismissed
with
all
taxable
costs
allowed
to
the
respondent.
Judgment
accordingly.
JAMES
J.
HALLEY
(EXECUTOR
or
WILLIAM
F.
HALLEY,
DECEASED),
Appellant,
MINISTER
OF
NATIONAL
REVENUE,
Respondent.
Exchequer
Court
of
Canada
(Thurlow,
J.),
February
22,
1963,
on
appeal
from
an
assessment
of
the
Minister
of
National
Revenue.
Estate
tax—Federal—Estate
Tax
Act,
S.C.
1958,
c.
29—Section
7(1)
(d)—Gift
to
charitable
organization—Whether
“absolute”.
The
testator,
who
died
in
January,
1959,
directed
that
the
residue
of
his
estate
be
held
by
his
executor
and
trustee
upon
trust
and
to
pay
the
annual
income
therefrom
to
the
testator’s
sister
for
her
life
and
upon
her
death,
after
paying
two
pecuniary
legacies,
“to
give
all
the
rest
and
residue
of
(his)
estate
to
the
Roman
Catholic
Episcopal
Corporation,
St.
John’s.”
However,
by
another
clause
of
his
will,
the
testator’s
sister
was
given
the
power
to
draw
upon
the
rest
and
residue
at
will
for
her
own
absolute
use
and
benefit.
The
sole
point
at
issue
was
whether,
in
the
circumstances,
the
gift
to
the
charitable
organization
was
deductible
under
Section
7(1)
(d)
as
being
“absolute”,
in
accordance
with
the
then
wording
of
the
section.
The
appellant
contended
that
the
word
“absolute”
meant
simply
that
there
must
be
no
possibility
of
reversion
whereas
the
Minister
contended
that
it
implied
both
vesting
and
indefeasibility.
HELD:
(i)
That,
since
there
is
more
than
one
sense
in
which
the
word
“absolute”
is
commonly
used,
its
meaning
in
Section
7(1)
(d)
must
be
resolved
by
reference
to
its
context;
(ii)
That
in
the
context
of
the
Act
it
appears
more
natural
to
interpret
the
word
from
the
point
of
view
of
the
recipient
than
from
the
point
of
view
of
the
deceased,
and
as
referring
to
the
irrevocable
and
undefeat-
able
vesting
rather
than
to
the
unlimited
extent
of
the
interest
given;
(iii)
That
the
word
should
be
interpreted
as
meaning
vested
and
indefeasible
;
(iv)
That
the
charitable
organization
did
not
become
indefeasibly
entitled
to
the
residue
and
the
gift
therefore
cannot
be
established
to
have
been
“absolute”;
(v)
That
the
interpretation
is
not
affected
by
the
1960
amendments
to
Sections
7(la)
and
7(1)
(d)
;
(vi)
That
the
appeal
be
dismissed.
CASES
REFERRED
TO:
Lassence
v.
Tierney
(1849),
Mac.
&
G.
551;
41
E.R.
1379;
Hancock
v.
Watson,
[1902]
A.C.
14;
Adamson
v.
A.-G.,
[1933]
A.C.
257;
Browne
v.
Moody,
[1936]
A.C.
635;
In
re
Williams;
Williams
v.
Williams,
[1897]
2
Ch.
12;
Rhoden
v.
Wicking,
[1947]
V.L.R.
60.
K.
E.
Eaton,
for
the
Appellant.
G.
W.
Ainslie
and
D.
H.
Bowman,
for
the
Respondent.
THURLOW,
J.:—This
is
an
appeal
from
an
assessment
of
estate
tax
in
respect
of
property
passing
on
the
death
of
William
F.
Halley
late
of
St.
John’s,
Newfoundland;
who
died
on
January
17,
1959.
The
appeal,
which
is
the
first
to
come
before
this
Court
under
the
Estate
Tax
Act,
S.C.
1958,
c.
29,
raises
a
question
on
the
interpretation
of
Section
7(1)
(d)
of
the
statute
as
originally
enacted
and
involves
as
well
a
subsidiary
point
as
to
the
effect
on
the
interpretation
of
that
section
of
a
retroactive
amendment
made
by
Section
4
of
S.C.
1960,
ce.
29.
The
issue
is
whether
the
value
of
a
portion
of
the
residue
of
the
estate
of
the
deceased
is
deductible
under
Seetion
7(1)
(d)
of
the
Act
in
computing
the
aggregate
taxable
value
of
the
property
passing
on
his
death.
By
Section
2(2)
of
the
Act,
the
aggregate
taxable
value
of
the
property
passing
upon
the
death
of
a
person
is
declared
to
be
the
aggregate
net
value
of
that
property
computed
in
accordance
with
Division
B
minus
the
deductions
permitted
by
Division
C.
Division
C
is
Section
7
and
by
subsection
(1)
as
originally
enacted,
it
provided
that:
4
7.
(1)
For
the
purpose
of
computing
the
aggregate
taxable
value
of
the
property
passing
on
the
death
of
a
person,
there
may
be
deducted
from
the
aggregate
net
value
of
that
property
computed
in
accordance
with
Division
B
such
of
the
following
amounts
as
are
applicable:
(d)
the
value
of
any
gift
made
by
the
deceased
whether
during
his
lifetime
or
by
his
will,
where
such
gift
can
be
established
to
have
been
absolute,
to
(i)
any
organization
in
Canada
that,
at
the
time
of
the
making
of
the
gift,
was
a
charitable
organization
operated
exclusively
as
such
and
not
for
the
benefit,
gain
or
profit
of
any
proprietor,
member
or
shareholder
thereof,
or
(ii)
Her
Majesty
in
right
of
Canada
or
a
province,
a
Canadian
municipality
or
a
municipal
or
other
publie
body
in
Canada
performing
a
function
of
government,
minus
such
part
of
any
estate,
legacy,
succession
or
inheritance
duties
or
any
combination
of
such
duties
(including
any
tax
payable
under
this
Part)
as
is
either
by
direction
of
or
arrangement
made
or
entered
into
by
the
deceased
whether
by
his
will
or
by
contract
or
otherwise,
or
by
any
statute
or
law
imposing
such
duties
or
relating
to
the
administration
of
the
estate
of
the
de-
ceased,
payable
out
of
the
property
comprised
in
such
gift
or
payable
by
the
donee
as
a
condition
of
the
making
of
such
gift;’’
The
appeal
turns
upon
the
interpretation
of
the
word
“absolute”
in
this
provision.
By
paragraphs
6
and
7
of
‘his
will
the
deceased
gave
the
residue
of
his
estate
to
his
executor
and
trustee
upon
trust
to
convert
it
and
to
invest
the
proceeds
and
to
pay
the
income
therefrom
to
the
testator’s
sister,
Kathleen,
for
her
life
and
upon
her
death
to
pay
therefrom
two
pecuniary
legacies
and
‘‘to
give
all
the
rest
and
residue
of
(his)
estate
to
the
Roman
Catholic
Episcopal
Corporation,
St.
John’s.’’
In
paragraph
8,
however,
he
provided:
“
(8)
I
hereby
declare
that
notwithstanding
anything
hereinbefore
declared,
it
shall
be
lawful
for
my
executor
and
trustee
upon
the
written
request
of
my
said
sister
Kathleen
at
any
time
or
times
to
raise
any
sum
or
sums
out
of
the
rest
and
residue
of
my
estate
given
to
my
executor
and
trustee
in
clause
6
hereof
and
to
pay
such
sum
or
sums
to
my
said
sister
Kathleen
for
her
absolute
use
and
benefit
in
addition
to
the
income
hereinbefore
given
to
her.’’
It
is
agreed
that
the
deceased’s
sister,
Kathleen,
survived
him
and
that
the
Roman
Catholic
Episcopal
Corporation,
St.
John’s,
was
at
all
times
material.
to
the
appeal
an
organization
of
the
kind
referred
to
in
subparagraph
(i)
of
Section
7(1)
(d).
It
is
also
agreed
that
in
computing
the
aggregate
taxable
value
of
the
property
passing
on
the
death
of
the
deceased,
the
Minister
made
no’
deduction
from
the
aggregate
net
value
of
such
property
under
Section
7(1)
(d)
of
the
Act
in
respect
of
the
gift
made
in
paragraph
7
of
the
will
to
the
Roman
Catholic
Episcopal
Corporation,
St.
John’s,
and
that
in
making
the
assessment
he
assumed
that
such
gift
was
not
‘‘absolute’’
within
the
meaning
of
that
term
in
Section
7(1)
(d)
of
the
Act.
The
Minister’s
case
for
treating
the
gift
as
not
falling
within
the
meaning
of
Section
7(l)(d)
is
that
the
word
‘‘absolute’’
is
used
in
the
enactment
to
denote
certainty
that
the
gift
will
come
into
possession
and
that
as
so
used
the
word
means
both
vested
and
indefeasible.
The
appellant’s
submission
on
the
other
hand
is
that
as
used
in
the
statute
the
word
‘‘absolute’’
is
a
term
of
art
and
simply
means
that
the
gift
must
be
made
in
such
terms
that
there
is
no
possibility
of
the
property
reverting
to
the
donor
or
testator
or
his
heirs.
Applying
this
meaning
counsel
for
the
appellant
submitted
that
the
gift
was
absolute
since
having
regard
to
the
terms
of
the
will
and
the
events
which
have
occurred
there
is
no
possibility
of
intestacy
of
that
portion
of
the
residue
of
the
estate
of
the
deceased
given
to
the
Roman
Catholic
Episcopal
Corporation,
St.
John’s,
and
he
went
on
to
submit
that
the
defeasibility
of
a
vested
gift
does
not
deprive
it
of
its
absolute
character.
Both
parties
took
the
position
that
a
right
to
the
residue
so
given
to
the
Roman
Catholic
Episcopal
Corporation,
St.
John’s,
became
vested
in
that
body
on
the
death
of
the
deceased
but
that
such
right
was
subject
to
its
being
divested
in
whole
or
in
part
of
the
exercise
of
the
power
set
out
in
paragraph
8
of
the
will.
In
my
opinion
the
word
‘‘absolute’’
even
when
used
in
a
technical
sense
in
connection
with
the
vesting
of
property
may
signify
at
least
two
different
legal
concepts.
In
one
sense
it
may
be
used
to
denote
the
lack
of
limitation
of
the
extent
or
duration
of
an
interest
in
personal
property
while
in
another
it
may
mean
the
freedom
of
the
interest
from
dependence
on
other
things
or
persons.
The
word
is
used
in
the
sense
of
absence
of
limitation
by
Lord
Cottenham,
L.C.
in
Lassence
v.
Tierney
(1849),
1
Mac.
&
G.
551;
41
E.R.
1379
and
by
Lord
Davey
in
Hancock
v.
Watson,
[1902]
A.C.
14,
where
in
each
case
the
contest
was
one
between
persons
claiming
under
the
donee
and
persons
claiming
as
next
of
kin
of
the
donor.
Thus
in
the
former
case
Lord
Cottenham,
L.C.
said
at
p.
561
:
“If
a
testator
leave
a
legacy
absolutely
as
regards
his
estate,
but
restricts
the
mode
of
the
legatee’s
enjoyment
of
it
to
secure
certain
objects
for
the
benefit
of
the
legatee—upon
failure
of
such
objects,
the
absolute
gift
prevails;
but
if
there
be
no
absolute
gift
as
between
the
legatee
and
the
estate,
but
particular
modes
of
enjoyment
are
prescribed,
and
those
modes
of
enjoyment
fail,
the
legacy
forms
part
of
the
testator’s
estate,
as
not
having
in
such
event
been
given
away
from
it.’’
And
in
Hancock
v.
Watson
Lord
Davey
said
at
p.
22:
“The
appellants’
second
point
is
that
the
two-fifths
allotted
to
Susan
Drake
on
failure
of
the
gift
over
goes
to
the
next
of
kin
of
the
testator,
and
not
to
Susan’s
representatives
as
declared
by
the
Court
of
Appeal.
I
confess
to
some
surprise
at
hearing
this
point
treated
as
arguable.
For,
in
my
opinion,
it
is
settled
law
that
if
you
find
an
absolute
gift
to
a
legatee
in
the
first
instance,
and
trusts
are
engrafted
or
imposed
on
that
absolute
interest
which
fail,
either
from
lapse
or
invalidity
or
any
other
reason,
then
the
absolute
gift
takes
effect
so
far
as
the
trusts
have
failed
to
the
exclusion
of
the
residuary
legatee
or
next
of
kin
as
the
case
may
be.
Of
course,
as
Lord
Cottenham
pointed
out
in
Lassence
v.
Tierney,
if
the
terms
of
the
gift
are
ambiguous,
you
may
seek
assistance
in
construing
it—in
saying
whether
it
is
expressed
as
an
absolute
gift
or
not—from
the
other
parts
of
the
will,
including
the
language
of
the
engrafted
trusts.
But
when
the
Court
has
once
determined
that
the
first
gift
is
in
terms
absolute,
then
if
it
is
a
share
of
residue
(as
in
the
present
case)
the
next
of
kin
are
excluded
in
any
event.”
And
at
p.
23:
“In
other
words,
as
between
herself
and
the
estate
there
is
a
complete
severance
and
disposition
of
her
share
so
as
to
exclude
an
intestacy,
though
as
between
her
and
the
parties
taking
under
the
engrafted
trusts
she
takes
for
life
only.’’
Examples
of
the
usage
of
‘‘absolute’’
in
the
sense
of
freedom
from
condition
or
dependence
on
other
things
or
persons
may
be
found
in
Adamson
v.
Attorney-General,
[1933]
A.C.
257
and
in
Browne
v.
Moody,
[1936]
A.C.
635.
In
the
Adamson
case
Lord
Buckmaster
said
at
p.
267:
“The
title,
which
had
formerly
been
contingent
and
liable
to
be
divested,
became
absolute.”
And
in
Browne
v.
Moody
Lord
Macmillan
used
the
word
thus
at
p.
649
:
“The
contingency
of
predecease
‘leaving
issue’,
in
other
words,
is
a
resolutive,
though
not
a
suspensive
condition;
it
does
not
prevent
vesting
a
morte
but
it
prevents
that
vesting
from
being
absolute,
and
renders
it
subject
to
divestiture
in
the
event
of
this
specified
contingency
happening.”
The
distinction
between
these
two
senses
is
pointed
out
/n
re
Williams
;
Williams
v.
Williams,
[1897]
2
Ch.
12,
where
Lindley,
L.J.
said
at
p.
21
:
‘“This
case
goes
far
to
shew
that
the
widow
of
the
testator
in
this
case
took
his
property
absolutely,
and
not
for
life
only;
and
I
am
of
opinion
that
she
did
so
take.
I
have,
moreover,
no
doubt
that
she
took
it
absolutely
in
the
sense
of
taking
it
free
from
the
control
of
her
co-trustee.
But
further,
I
think
that
James
V.C.
was
right
when
he
said,
in
Irvine
v.
Sullivan
(1869),
L.R.
8
Eq.
673,
that
‘absolutely’
may
refer
to
extent
of
interest,
but
it
may
mean
a
great
deal
more,
and
that
its
natural
grammatical
meaning
is
unfettered
and
unlimited,
Le.,
unlimited
in
point
of
estate,
and
unfettered
in
respect
of
any
consideration
or
trust.’’
In
the
Law
Journal
report
of
the
case,
66
L.J.
Ch.
485
at
p.
488,
the
word
‘‘condition’’
appears
in
place
of
the
word
“considéra-
tion’’
in
the
last
line
of
the
passage
quoted.
See
also
the
comments
of
Herring,
C.J.
in
In
re
Thompson;
Rhoden
v.
Wicking,
[1947]
V.L.R.
60
at
67.
There
being
more
than
one
sense
in
which
the
word
is
commonly
used
the
problem
which
the
present
case
presents
is
to
determine
in
what
sense
the
word
was
used
in
Section
7(1)
(d)
of
the
Estate
Tax
Act
and
this,
it
appears
to
me,
must
be
resolved
by
reference
to
the
context
in
which
it
is
found.
At
the
outset
it
may
be
observed
that
the
context
is
not
that
of
a
deed
or
will
but
that
of
a
taxing
statute.
In
general
the
Act
exacts
a
tax
on
the
passing
of
property
on
death
and
is
so
worded
as
to
include
in
the
computation
of
the
value
of
such
property
for
the
purposes
of
the
statute
both
property
alienated
by
the
deceased
during
his
lifetime
by
certain
types
of
transactions
and
certain
notional
types
of
property
as
well
in
which
the
deceased
never
had
any
proprietary
right,
the
whole
without
reference
to
the
person
or
persons
who
become
beneficially
entitled
thereto.
But
while
the
value
of
all
such
property
is
initially
brought
into
the
computation,
the
tax
is
imposed
only
in
respect
of
the
amount
by
which
such
value
exceeds
certain
specified
amounts
which
by
Section
7
are
permitted
to
be
deducted,
most
of
which
amounts
are
also
prescribed
without
reference
to
the
person
or
persons
who
become
entitled
to
any
portion
of
the
property.
Only
in
respect
of
the
amounts
referred
to
in
Section
7(1)
(d)
and
Section
7(1)
(h)
does
the
identity
of
the
recipient
become
material.
Under
the
latter
paragraph
the
value
of
property
vesting
in
the
Crown
by
escheat
or
as
bona
vacantia
on
the
death
of
the
deceased
may
be
deducted
from
the
aggregate.
Under
the
former,
with
which
this
case
is
concerned,
the
value
of
property
given
to
a
charitable
organization
or
to
the
Crown
or
to
a
public
body
performing
a
function
of
government
may
also
be
deducted.
The
intention
of
this
provision
is
apparently
to
permit
the
deduction
of
the
value
of
what
is
given
to
the
particular
recipients
and
with
this
in
mind
it
seems
to
me
that
it
is
more
natural
to
interpret
the
word
‘‘absolute’’
in
the
paragraph
from
the
point
of
view
of
the
recipient
than
from
the
point
of
view
of
the
deceased
and
as
referring
to
the
irrevocable
and
undefeatable
vesting
of
the
subject
matter
of
the
gift
in
the
recipient
rather
than
to
the
unlimited
extent
of
the
interest
given
to
the
recipient.
This
interpretation
is,
I
think,
also
supported
by
the
concluding
portion
of
the
paragraph
which
reduces
the
deduction
allowable
in
respect
of
such
a
gift
by
the
amount
of
any
tax
levies
which
may
be
imposed
on
it
or
which
may
become
payable
by
the
donee
on
accepting
it
and
to
this
extent
limits
the
allowable
deduction
to
the
net
value
of
the
gift
accruing
to
the
donee.
Moreover
while
I
can
see
no
reason
why
Parliament
should
have
intended
to
draw
a
distinction
between
a
gift
of
an
unlimited
interest
and
an
indefeasible
gift
for
a
lesser
interest
and
to
permit
deduction
of
the
value
in
the
one
case
but
not
in
the
other
it
is
not
difficult
to
understand
that
in
authorizing
the
deduction
of
the
value
of
a
gift
to
such
a
body
Parliament
would
be
concerned
to
ensure
that
the
deduction
should
not
be
permitted
when,
because
of
the
provisions
attaching
to
the
gift,
the
body
referred
to
in
Section
7(1)
(d)
might
never
receive
it.
The
word
used
is
an
apt
one
to
make
such
a
distinction
and
secure
this
object.
I
am
accordingly
of
the
opinion
that
the
word
‘‘absolute’’
in
Section
7(1)
(d)
should
be
interpreted
as
meaning
vested
and
indefeasible.
Applying
this
interpretation
to
the
facts
of
the
present
case,
it
is
I
think
plain
that
the
Roman
Catholic
Episcopal
Corporation,
St.
John’s,
did
not
become
indefeasibly
entitled
on
the
death
of
the
deceased
to
the
residue
given
to
it
by
paragraph
7
of
the
will
and
that
because
of
this
the
gift
cannot
be
established
to
have
been
‘‘absolute’’
within
the
meaning
of
Section
7(1)
(d).
Nor
in
my
opinion
is
this
result
affected
by
the
retroactive
amendment
to
Section
7(1)
(d)
made
by
S.C.
1960,
c.
29,
s.
4
which
came
into
force
on
July
7,
1960.
By
subsection
(2)
of
Section
4
of
that
Act,
Section
7
was
amended
by
adding
after
subsection
(1)
a
subsection
numbered
(la)
which
as
made
applicable
by
subsection
(3)
in
the
case
of
a
person
who
died
after
1958
and
before
July
7,
1960,
reads
as
follows:
“7.
(la)
For
the
purposes
of
paragraph
(d)
of
subsection
(1)
where
any
gift
was
made
by
the
deceased
during
his
lifetime
or
by
his
will,
(a)
subject
to
a
power
in
favour
of
any
person
to
appoint
the
donee
or
donees
thereof,
or
(b)
subject
to
a
power
in
favour
of
any
person
to
appropriate
the
whole
or
any
part
thereof
for
his
own
use
or
benefit,
to
the
extent
that
the
power
described
in
paragraph
(a)
was
exercised
not
later
than
one
year
after
the
coming
into
force
of
this
subsection
in
favour
of
a
donee
described
in
paragraph
(d)
of
subsection
(1),
the
gift
so
made
by
the
deceased
shall
not,
by
reason
only
of
having
been
made
as
described
in
paragraph
(a),
be
considered
not
to
have
been
absolute
and
indefeasible
and
shall
be
deemed
to
have
been
made
by
the
deceased
to
that
donee,
and
to
the
extent
of
any
estate
or
interest
of
a
donee
described
in
paragraph
(d)
of
subsection
(1)
in
the
property
comprised
therein
that
became
absolute
and
indefeasible
by
virtue
of
the
renunciation
of
the
power
described
in
paragraph
(b)
not
later
than
one
year
after
the
coming
into
force
of
this
subsection,
the
gift
so
made
by
the
deceased
shall
be
deemed
to
have
been
absolute
and
indefeasible.”
By
subsection
(1)
of
Section
4
of
the
same
amending
Act
the
portion
of
Section
7(1)
(d)
preceding
paragraph
(ii)
thereof
was
repealed
and
replaced
by
wording
which
differs
in
some
respects
not
material
for
the
present
purpose,
from
the
former
wording
of
subparagraph
(i),
but.
which
repeated
the
preceding
portion
of
the
paragraph
in
terms
exactly
the
same
as
they
had
previously
been
worded
save
for
the
addition
after
the
word
“absolute”
of
the
words
‘‘and
indefeasible’’.
This
amendment
was,
however,
made
applicable
only
in
the
case
of
persons
dying
after
the
coming
into
force
of
the
section
on
July
7,
1960.
In
cases
to
which
its
wording
applies
the
added
Section
7(la)
appears
to
me
to
have
the
effect
of
expanding
the
deductions
permitted
by
Section
7(1)
(d)
so
as
to
include
not
only
gifts
made
during
the
lifetime
of
the
testator
or
by
his
will,
but
also
gifts
perfected
by
appropriate
action
taken
after
the
death
of
the
deceased
within
the
time
limited
by
the
subsection.
It
was
not
suggested
that
Section
7
(la)
applies
in
the
present
situation
or
that
the
gift
in
question
has
become
deductible
under
its
terms
but
it
was
submitted
that
the
use
made
by
Parliament
in
the
amending
Act
of
1960
of
the
expression
‘‘absolute
and
indefeasible”
indicated
that
the
expression
‘‘absolute’’
in
the
statute
as
originally
enacted
was
intended
to
refer
to
gifts
which
were
absolute
but
defeasible
as
well
as
gifts
which
were
absolute
and
indefeasible.
Without
expressing
any
view
as
to
what,
if
any,
effect
the
change
of
expression
may
have
in
a
case
to
which
the
amendment
applies,
I
am
of
the
opinion
that
the
amendment
has
no
effect
on
the
interpretation
of
the
wording
of
the
Act
as
originally
enacted
in
its
application
to
gifts
not
falling
within
the
scope
of
the
amendment
and
that
the
amendment
has
no
effect
at
all
on
the
application
to
the
present
situation
of
the
wording
of
the
Act
as
originally
enacted.
Nor
do
I
think
that
the
change
of
the
expression
used
by
Parliament
from
‘‘absolute’’
to
“absolute
and
indefeasible’’
indicates
that
the
expression
formerly
used
meant
anything
less
than
vested
and
indefeasible.
The
appeal
therefore
fails
and
it
will
be
dismissed
with
costs.
Judgment
accordingly.