Gibson,
J.A.:—This
is
an
appeal
by
the
Treasurer
of
Ontario
from
the
judgment
of
Stewart,
J.,
allowing
the
appeals
from
the
statement
of
the
Treasurer
of
Ontario
levying
certain
succession
duties
in
connection
with
the
estate
of
the
late
Harry
C.
Hatch.
The
late
Mr.
Hatch,
who
died
on
May
8,
1946,
had
on
December
27,
1941,
set
up
an
irrevocable
trust
in
favour
of
his
four
children
Mildred
Doyle,
Carr
Hatch,
Clifford
Hatch
and
Douglas
Hatch,
in
which
each
was
granted
a.
one-quarter
interest,
and
on
the
same
date
he
transferred
1,000
shares
of
preference
stock
of
T.
G.
Bright
&
Co.
Ltd.,
to
the
Toronto
General
Trusts
Corporation
as
Trustee
of
the
said
trust.
Further
blocks
of
1,000
shares
each
were
added
to
the
capital
of
the
trust
on
January
2,
1942,
and
January
2,
1943,
bringing
to
3,000
the
total
number
of
shares
of
Bright
preference
stock
held
in
the
trust.
At
later
dates
other
shares
in
various
companies
were
added
to
the
capital
of
the
trust
by
Mr.
Hatch.
Under
the
provisions
of
the
trust
agreement,
the
shares
and
the
securities
held
by
the
trustee
were
to
be
divided
into
four
equal
parts
and
one
part
set
aside
for
each
child
to
whom
the
income
from
the
shares
and
securities
so
allocated
would
be
paid
during
his
or
her
lifetime,
and
upon
the
death
of
such
child
his
part
would
be
divided
equally
amongst
the
issue
of
the
child
so
dying;
after
allocation
of
the
securities
none
was
to
be
sold
without
the
direction
of
the
child
for
whom
such
securities
were
held.
In
1945
the
T.
G.
Bright
&
Co.
Ltd.
redeemed
its
preference
shares
and
on
June
19,
1945,
the
trustee
received
the
sum
of
$300,000
for
the
3,000
preference
shares
held
in
the
trust.
On
July
3,
1945,
the
trustee
invested
the
proceeds
of
the
said
redemption
by
purchasing
4,000
common
shares
of
Hiram
Walker-Gooderham
&
Worts
Ltd.
from
Mr.
Hatch
at
the
price
of
$75
a
share,
which
was
from
1
to
114
points
below
the
existing
market
value.
At
the
date
of
Mr.
Hatch’s
death
in
1946,
these
shares
had
increased
in
value
to
$139.50
a
share,
having
a
total
value
of
$558,000.
In
placing
a
valuation
on
the
capital
of
the
said
trust
for
succession
duty
purposes,
the
Treasurer
of
Ontario
included
this
valuation
of
$558,000.
The
relevant
taxing
provisions
covering
this
valuation
are
now
found
in
The
Succession
Duty
Act,
R.S.O.
1950,
c.
378
:
“1.
(f)
‘disposition’
means,
(iv)
any
payment
during
the
lifetime
of
the
deceased
to
any
person
as
a
result
of
the
creation
of
a
trust
by
the
deceased,
exclusive
of
the
payment
of
any
income
derived
from
any
property
in
which
such
person
had
the
beneficial
interest,’’
“2.
(1)
For
the
purposes
of
this
Act,
(b)
the
value
of
a
disposition
shall
be
the
value
at
the
date
of
death
of
the
deceased
of
the
property
in
respect
of
which
such
disposition
is
made,
provided
that,
(i)
if
such
property
has
been
sold
for
or
converted
into
money
during
the
lifetime
of
the
deceased,
the
amount
of
such
money
shall
be
the
value
of
such
disposition.
On
appeal
it
was
held
by
Mr.
Justice
Stewart
that
Section
2(1)
(b)
and
2(l)(b)(i)
of
the
Ontario
Succession
Duty
Act
apply.
Counsel
for
the
Treasurer
of
Ontario
advances
the
argument
that
unless
the
entire
trust
fund
has
been
converted
into
money,
Section
2(l)(b)(i)
does
not
apply,
and
interprets
the
words
‘‘the
property’’
in
Section
2(1)
(b)
as
meaning
all
the
property
comprising
the
dispositions,
and
the
words
‘‘if
such
property’’
in
Section
2(l)(b)(i)
as
meaning
‘‘if
all
such
property’’
has
been
sold.
I
cannot
agree
with
these
contentions,
as
paragraph
(b)
refers
to
‘‘the
value
of
a
disposition’’.
Here
there
were
several
dispositions
made
at
different
times
and
held
by
the
trustees
under
the
provisions
of
the
trust
agreement.
Each
was
‘‘a
disposition’’.
When
the
shares
which
had
been
transferred
in
1941,
1942
and
1943
were
redeemed
in
1944
they
were
converted
into
money
during
the
lifetime
of
the
deceased,
and
the
words
in
the
Act
‘‘the
amount
of
such
money
shall
be
the
value
of
such
disposition”
means
the
value
of
each
such
disposition.
If
separate
trust
agreements
had
been
executed
respecting
the
shares
transferred
in
1941,
1942
and
1948,
there
would
then
have
been
three
separate
dispositions
of
property
during
the
lifetime
of
the
deceased
and
three
separate
conversions
of
such
property
into
money
during
that
time
and
the
fact
that
each
disposition
in
turn
was
made
the
subject
matter
of
one
trust
instrument
does
not
have
the
effect
in
law
of
making
each
and
every
separate
disposition
into
one
disposition
only
for
the
purposes
of
the
Act.
Counsel
for
the
Treasurer
of
Ontario
also
claims
that
succession
duties
are
payable
on
income
received
from
the
trust
by
the
three
children
in
Ontario
during
the
lifetime
of
the
deceased.
Section
1(f)
(iv)
provides:
“any
payment
during
the
lifetime
of
the
deceased
to
any
person
as
a
result
of
the
creation
of
a
trust
by
the
deceased,
exclusive
of
the
payment
of
any
income
derived
from
any
property
in
which
such
person
had
the
beneficial
interest’’.
It
is
argued
that
as
each
child
had
a
life
interest
only
in
one-
quarter
of
the
income
from
the
trust,
none
of
the
children
of
Mr.
Hatch
had
the
beneficial
interest,
as
each
had
only
a
beneficial
interest
in
the
assets
making
up
the
trust.
Under
the
provision
of
the
trust
agreement
the
trustee
was
required
to
divide
the
securities
making
up
the
trust
into
four
equal
parts
and
to
set
aside
one
such
part
for
each
of
Mr.
Hatch’s
four
children.
The
net
income
from
such
part
was
to
be
paid
to
the
child
during
his
or
her
lifetime.
There
was
a
further
direction
that
any
securities
held
by
the
trustee
should
be
‘‘retained
by
the
trustee
and
shall
not
be
sold
by
the
trustee
except
on
the
written
direction
of
the
child
or
issue
for
whom
the
said
securities
are
so
held’’.
From
this
it
would
appear
that
four
separate
trusts
were
created
by
the
trust
agreement
and
that
each
of
the
four
children
had
the
right
to
authorize
changes
in
the
capital
investment
of
their
respective
trust
funds.
As
was
stated
by
Kerwin,
J.
(as
he
then
was),
in
M.N.R.
v.
National
Trust
Co.,
[1949]
S.C.R.
127;
[1948]
C.T.C.
339:
‘‘The
property,
the
subject
matter
of
the
gift
.
.
.
is
the
daughter’s
equitable
interest,
and
the
daughter
assumed
bona
fide
possession
and
enjoyment
of
the
property
immediately
upon
the
making
of
the
gift
as
the
nature
of
the
gift
and
the
circumstances
permitted.
I
am
satisfied
that,
here,
the
daughter,
through
the
trustees,
had
actual
as
well
as
bona
fide
possession
and
enjoyment
of
the
property.
’
’
Again
in
Commissioner
for
Stamp
Duties
of
the
State
of
New
South
Wales
v.
Perpetual
Trustee
Co.
Ltd.,
[1943]
1
All
E.R.
525.
it
was
stated
by
Lord
Russell
of
Killowen
at
p.
530
:
“The
son
was
(through
the
medium
of
the
trustee)
immediately
put
in
such
bona
fide
beneficial
possession
and
enjoyment
of
the
property
comprised
in
the
gift
as
the
nature
of
the
gift
and
the
circumstances
permitted.”
I
am
satisfied
that
each
of
Mr.
Hatch’s
children
received
income
derived
from
property
in
which
he
or
she
had
the
beneficial
interest
and
that
such
income
is
exempt
from
taxation
for
succession
duties
under
the
provisions
of
Section
l(f)(iv).
The
appeal
will
be
dismissed
with
costs.
LAIDLAW,
J.A.;—I
concur.