CARTWRIGHT,
J.
(all
concur)
:—This
is
an
appeal
from
a
judgment
of
Dumoulin,
J.
pronounced
on
August
6,
1963,
dismissing
the
appellants’
appeal
from
the
confirmation
of
an
assessment
of
estate
tax
made
by
the
respondent
in
respect
of
the
death
of
the
late
Robert
Newmarch
Hickson.
There
is
no
dispute
as
to
the
facts.
Robert
Newmarch
Hickson
died
on
June
19,
1960,
domiciled
in
the
Province
of
Quebec.
He
was
survived
by
his
widow,
the
appellant
Dame
Orian
Hays
Hickson;
no
children
were
born
of
his
marriage
;
he
left
a
will
executed
in
notarial
form
on
October
27,
1959.
By
this
will
he
appointed
the
appellants
his
executors
and
after
making
a
number
of
particular
legacies
gave
the
residue
of
his
estate
to
his
widow
in
the
following
words
:
“And
all
the
rest
residue
and
remainder
of
the
property
real
and
personal
moveable
and
immoveable
of
every
sort
nature
and
description
of
which
I
may
die
possessed
or
in
which
I
may
have
any
interest
or
over
which
I
may
have
the
power
of
appointment
or
disposal
(including
any
lapsed
legacies)
I
give
and
bequeath
to
my
wife
the
said
Dame
Orian
Hays
Hickson
as
her
absolute
property.
’
’
Lady
Hickson,
the
mother
of
Robert
Newmarch
Hickson,
had
predeceased
him
by
many
years,
leaving
a
will
executed
in
notarial
form
on
April
22,
1931.
After
making
a
number
of
particular
legacies
she
bequeathed
the
residue
of
her
estate
to
be
divided
in
equal
shares
amongst
her
five
children
but
provided
that
the
share
of
her
son
Robert
Newmarch
Hickson
should
be
subject
to
the
condition
expressed
as
follows
in
Article
IX
of
the
will:
/■‘I
direct
that
one-half
of
the
share
of
my
son
Robert
Newmarch
Hickson
in
the
residue
of
my
Estate,
less
the
sum
of
Forty
Thousand
Dollars
which
I
have
given
him
some
years
ago,
shall
belong
to
him
in
absolute
ownership,
and
the
other
_.
half
of
his
share
I
give
and
bequeath
the
usufruct
thereof
during
his
lifetime
to
my
said
son
Robert
Newmarch
Hickson
and
the
ownership
to
the
children
of
my
said
son,
and
if
he
leaves
n()
children
to
his
heirs,
legal
or
testamentary.”
-‘
At
the
date
of
the
death:
of
Robert
Newmarch
Hickson,
the
executors
of
Lady
Hickson
held
the
last
mentioned
half
of
his
share
in
his
mother’s
residuary
estate
which
had
a
value
of
$363,702.19.
The
question
to
be
determined
on
this
appeal
is
whether
this
fund
forms
part
of
the
aggregate
taxable
value
of
the
property
passing
on
the
death
of
Robert
Newmarch
Hickson.
The
learned
trial
judge
held
that
Article
IX
of
Lady
Hickson
R
will
created
a
substitution
of
the
fund
in
question
of
which
Robert
Newmarch
Hickson
was
the
institute
and
his
children
the
substitutes,
that
he
left
no
children
the
substitution
lapsed
thereby
vesting
the
full
ownership
of
the
fund
in
him
and
giving
him
‘
‘‘a
general
power
to
appoint,
appropriate
or
dispose
of
this
property
as
he
sees
fit
by
will”.
If
I
have
understood
the
reasons
of
the
learned
trial
judge
correctly,
it
would
follow
from
the
finding
that
at
the
time
of
his
death
Robert
Newmarch
Hickson
was
the
full
owner
of
the
fund,
that
it
formed
part
of
his
estate
and
estate
tax
would
be
payable
upon
it
under
Section
2(1)
of
the
Estate
Tax
Act
(1958)
7
Elizabeth
II,
c.
29,
hereinafter
referred
to
as
‘‘the
Act’’.
In
this
view
it
would
be
unnecessary
to
consider
the
effect
of
Sections
3
and
58
of
the
Act.
Counsel
for
the
respondent
supports
the
reasons
as
well
as
the
judgment
of
the
learned
trial
judge
but
also
argues,
in
the
alternative,
that
the
judgment
should
be
upheld
on
the
ground
that
Robert
Newmarch
Hickson
had
such
a
general
power
to
dispose
of
the
fund
as
to
bring
the
case
within
Section
3
of
the
Act.
Counsel
for
the
appellant,
while
not
so
admitting,
was
content
to
argue
the
appeal
on
the
assumption
that
Article
IX
of
Lady
Hickson’s
will
did
create
a
substitution
and
I
propose
to
deal
with
the
matter
on
that
basis.
It
is
clear
that
Robert
Newmarch
Hickson
was
the
institute
of
the
substitution,
that
its
opening
took
place
at
his
death,
and
that
had
he
left
children
him
surviving
they
would
have
been
the
substitutes.
With
respect,
I
am
unable
to
agree
with
the
learned
trial
judge
that
the
substitution
lapsed.
The
will
of
Lady
Hickson
provided
for
the
possibility
of
the
institute
dying
without
children
and
in
that
event,
which
happened,
named
as
substitutes
f
‘his
heirs
legal
or
testamentary’’.
By
the
residuary
clause
of
his
will,
quoted
above,
his
widow
was
constituted
the
testamentary
heir
of
Robert
Newmarch
Hickson;
the
character
of
the
gift
to
her
in
this
clause
is
that
of
a
universal
legacy
;
this
character
is
not
altered
by
the
circumstance
that
a
number
of
particular
legacies
had
been
made
to
others;
this
clearly
appears
from
the
provisions
of
Article
873
of
the
Civil
Code.
The
effect
of
the
concluding
words
of
Article
LX
of
Lady
Hickson
’s
will,
‘
‘
and
if
he
leaves
no
children
to
his
heirs,
legal
or
testamentary”
is
to
give
the
fund
on
the
death
of
Robert
Newmarch
Hickson
to
his
testamentary
heir,
These
words
envisage
two
possible
events,
one
that
Robert
Newmarch
Hickson
should
die
intestate
and
the
other,
which
happened,
that
he
should
die
testate.
By
Article
597
of
the
Civil
Code
it
is
provided
that
the
person
to
whom
either
abintestate
succession
or
testamentary
succession
devolves
is
called
heir
and
that
abintestate
succession
takes
place
only
in
default
of
testamentary
succession.
When
the
substitution
opened,
at
the
death
of
Robert
Newmarch
Hickson,
his
widow
as
substitute
took
the
fund
directly
from
the
grantor,
Lady
Hickson,
and
not
from
the
institute
her
husband.
It
is
so
provided
by
Article
962
of
the
Civil
Code,
In
the
simple
case
of
a
substitution
created
by
X,
of
which
Y
is
the
institute
and
Z
the
substitute
and
the
substitution
opens
on
the
death
of
Y,
it
is
clear
that
the
property
would
form
no
part
of
the
estate
of
Y.
The
difficulty
in
the
present
case
arises
from
the
fact
that
the
substitute
is
not
named
as
an
individual
in
the
instrument
creating
the
substitution
but
is
designated,
in
the
events
that
have
happened,
as
the
testamentary
heir
of
the
institute.
The
alternative
argument
of
counsel
for
the
respondent
is
that,
in
these
circumstances,
by
the
combined
effect
of
Sections
3(1)
(a),
3(2)
and
58
of
the
Act
the
fund
in
question
is
required
to
be
included
in
the
aggregate
net
value
of
the
property
passing
on
the
death
of
Robert
Newmarch
Hickson.
There
is
no
doubt
of
the
power
of
Parliament
to
enact
that,
by
a
statutory
fiction
of
law,
property
shall,
for
purposes
of
federal
taxation,
be
deemed
to
form
part
of
the
estate
of
a
deceased
person
although
it
would
not
have
done
so
under
either
the
civil
law
or
the
common
law.
The
question
is
whether
the
words
used
by
Parliament
have
that
effect
having
regard
to
the
facts
of
the
ease
at
bar.
The
sections
referred
to
read
as
follows
:
“3.
(1)
There
shall
be
included
in
computing
the
aggregate
net
value
of
the
property
passing
on
the
death
of
a
person
the
value
of
all
property,
wherever
situated,
passing
on
the
death
of
such
person,
including,
without
restricting
the
generality
of
the
foregoing,
(a)
all
property
of
which
the
deceased
was,
immediately
prior
to
his
death,
competent
to
dispose
;
3.
(2)
For
the
purposes
of
this
section,
(a)
a
person
shall
be
deemed
to
have
been
competent
to
dispose
of
any
property
if
he
had
such
an
estate
or
interest
therein
or
such
general
power
as
would,
if
he
were
sui
juris,
have
enabled
him
to
dispose
of
that
property
;
08.
(1)
In
this
Act,
(i)
GENERAL
POWER
—
general
power
includes
any
power
or
authority
enabling
the
donee
or
other
holder
thereof
to
appoint,
appropriate
or
dispose
of
property
as
he
sees
fit,
whether
exercisable
by
instrument
inter
vivos
or
by
will,
or
both,
but
does
not
include
any
power
exercisable
in
a
fiduciary
capacity
under
a
disposition
not
made
by
him,
or
exercisable
as
a
mortgagee
;
The
provision
which
imposes
tax,
if
it
is
imposed,
is
Section
3(1)
(a)
and
the
question
is
whether
Robert
Newmarch
Hickson
immediately
prior
to
his
death
was
competent
to
dispose
of
the
fund.
Section
3(2)
and
Section
58
give
extended
meanings
to
the
phrases
‘‘competent
to
dispose”
and
‘‘general
power’’.
Subject
to
an
argument
made
by
Mr.
Marler
with
which,
for
reasons
that
will
appear,
I
do
not
find
it
necessary
to
deal,
the
words
of
these
sections
appear
to
provide
that
property
is
to
be
deemed
to
form
part
of
the
estate
of
a
deceased
person
if
he
had
power
to
dispose
of
it
by
will
‘‘as
he
sees
fit’’.
In
my
opinion,
it
is
clear
that
Robert
Newmareh
Hickson
had
no
such
power
over
the
fund
in
question.
Article
IX
of
Lady
Hickson’s
will
does
not
in
terms
confer
any
power
upon
him
;
regardless
of
the
terms
of
her
will
he
had
the
power,
which
every
man
has,
to
dispose
of
his
own
property
by
will
or,
by
refraining
from
making
a
will,
to
die
intestate
and
leave
the
distribution
of
his
estate
to
the
operation
of
law.
In
fact
he
chose
the
former
course
and,
by
that
portion
of
his
will
quoted
above,
constituted
his
widow
his
universal
legatee
and
therefore
his
testamentary
heir.
His
widow
takes
the
fund
not
through
the
exercise
of
any
power
given
to
Robert
Newmarch
Hickson
but
because
Lady
Hickson
has
designated
as
substitute
his
testamentary
heir.
It
is
true
that
Robert
Newmarch
Hickson
was
free
to
name
anyone
he
pleased
to
be
his
testamentary
heir
and
that
the
person
so
named
would
become
as
substitute
entitled
to
the
fund;
but
he
could
not
dispose
of
the
fund
to
anyone
else.
A
simple
example
may
be
given.
Suppose
Robert
Newmarch
Hickson
having
made
his
widow
his
testamentary
heir
went
on
in
the
next
clause
of
his
will
to
provide
that
‘‘the
half-share
held
by
the
executors
of
the
late
Lady
Hickson
pursuant
to
Article
IX
of
her
will
shall
be
paid
to
my
cousin
X”.
It
is
obvious
that
this
clause
would
be
without
effect.
A
person
who
can
name
anyone
he
pleases
to
be
the
recipient
of
a
fund
but
only
on
condition
that
he
makes
that
person
his
testamentary
heir
cannot
be
said
to
be
free
to
dispose
of
the
fund
‘‘as
he
sees
fit
’
’.
I
have
reached
the
conclusion
that
Robert
Newmarch
Hickson
did
not
have
power
to
dispose
of
the
fund
by
will
as
he
saw
fit
and
as
it
is
clear
that
apart
from
the
provisions
of
the
Act
the
fund
formed
no
part
of
his
estate
the
appeal
must
succeed.
This
makes
it
unnecessary
to
consider
the
interesting
question,
raised
by
Mr.
Marler,
whether
a
person
who
has
a
power,
however
general,
which
is
exercisable
only
by
will
and
only
in
the
event
of
his
leaving
no
children
can
be
held
to
be
competent
to
dispose
of
the
subject
matter
of
the
power
“immediately
prior
to
his
death
’
’
and
I
express
no
opinion
upon
it.
I
would
allow
the
appeal
with
costs
throughout,
set
aside
the
judgment
of
the
Exchequer
Court
and
direct
that
the
assessment
be
referred
back
to
the
Minister
in
order
that
an
assessment
may
be
made
excluding
the
fund
of
$363,702.19
from
the
aggregate
taxable
value
of
the
estate
of
the
late
Robert
Newmarch
Hickson.
Judgment
accordingly.