Davies,
C.J.:—For
the
reasons
stated
by
my
brother
Anglin,
J.,
in
which
I
concur,
I
am
of
the
opinion
that
the
appeal
from
the
judgment
of
Orde,
J.,
ante
p.
551,
52
O.L.R.
562,
should
be
dismissed,
the
costs,
including
those
of
the
Attorney-General,
to
be
paid
by
the
appellants;
and
that
the
appeal
from
the
judgment
of
the
Appellate
Division
(1921)
64
D.L.R.
397,
50
O.L.R.
305,
should
be
allowed
and
that
the
costs
in
that
Court
and
here
should
be
paid
by
the
municipal
corporation
to
the
appellant.
IDINGTON,
J.
(dissenting)
:—Two
appeals
by
said
appellant
were
herein
presented
and
heard
together
involving
the
assessment
of
his
income
as
surviving
trustee
under
the
last
will
of
the
late
John
Curry
of
the
said
city,
who
died
on
or
about
May
11,
1912.
By
his
said
last
will,
the
testator
devised
and
bequeathed,
after
payment
of
his
debts,
testamentary
and
funeral
expenses,
all
his
real
and
personal
property
wherever
situate,
to
his
wife,
his
son,
and
his
son-in-law
in
trust
to
convert
same
into
money
and
to
hold,
invest,
accumulate
and
dispose
of
same
under
and
in
accordance
with
the
trusts
thereinafter
set
out.
Said
executors
and
executrix
obtained
probate
of
said
will.
The
said
wife
died
a
few
months
after
the
testator,
and
the
said
son
died
in
March,
1920,
leaving
the
appellant,
who
was
said
son-in-law,
sole
surviving
executor
and
trustee
when
the
assessment
in
question
was
made.
The
appellant,
at
the
time
of
the
testator’s
death
and
ever
since,
has
resided
in
said
City
of
Windsor.
He
was
assessed
in
respect
of
the
John
Curry
estate
for
an
income
assessment
"liable
for
all
taxes’’
of
the
sum
of
$100,000,
and
notice
of
such
assessment
is
dated
October
30,
1920.
The
appellant
then
gave
the
following
notice
of
appeal.
"‘To
the
assessment
commissioner
of
the
municipality
of
the
City
of
Windsor
:
"
"
Sir—Take
notice
that
I
intend
to
appeal
against
the
above
assessment
for
the
following
reasons
:
"
Only
the
income
of
the
estate
payable
to
one
annuitant
under
deceased’s
will
resident
in
Windsor,
to
amount
of
$8,000
is
assessable.
The
rest
of
income
is
accumulated
until
1933
and
is
not
taxable.
J.
B.
McLeod.”
The
Court
of
Revision
of
said
city
confirmed
the
said
assessment.
Thereupon,
the
appellant
appealed
to
the
Senior
Judge
of
the
County
of
Essex,
who
holding
himself
bound
by
the
authority
of
Re
Gibson
and
City
of
Hamilton,
48
D.L.R.
428,
45
O.L.R.
458,
allowed
the
appellant’s
appeal
and
reduced
the
said
assessment
to
$14,000.
He
then,
no
doubt
intending
to
conform
with
the
amendment
of
1916
(Ont.),
ch.
41,
to
the
Assessment
Act,
R.S.O.
1914,
ch.
195
providing
for
an
appeal
to
the
Appellate
Division
of
the
Supreme
Court
of
Ontario,
by
way
of
a
stated
case,
set
forth
the
relevant
facts
of
the
amount
of
the
income
and
what
part
thereof
he
had
held
assessable,
and
the
amount
of
the
income
derivable
from
real
estate
securities,
and
submitted
the
following
questions,
64
D.L.R.
397,
50
O.L.R.
305:
"1.
Whether
the
income
from
the
said
estate
is
assessable
ofr
income
under
the
Assessment
Act.
2.
Whether,
in
the
event
of
income
being
payable
by
the
said
estate
as
found
by
the
Assessment
Commissioner
for
the
City
of
Windsor
and
the
Court
of
Revision
thereof,
the
interest
upon
monies
payable
under
the
said
agreements
for
sale
of
real
estate
of
the
deceased
is
exempt
from
income
tax
under
see.
21(5)
of
the
said
Assessment
Act
or
otherwise.
Dated
this
7th
day
of
February,
1912.1
I
am
of
the
opinion
that
the
income
from
the
said
estate
is
assessable
and
would
answer
the
first
question
in
the
affirmative.
The
legal
owner
thereof
resides
in
Windsor
and
on
the
facts
stated,
the
income
was
not
derived
from
anything
outside
Ontario.
Indeed,
on
the
case
submitted,
we
have
nothing
to
do
with
either
who
may
be
the
ultimate
recipient,
or
his
or
her
residence,
though
we
were
confused
in
argument
by
much
irrelevant
discussion
thereof.
The
case
submitted
to
the
Appellate
Division
of
the
Supreme
Court
of
Ontario,
64
D.L.R.
397,
is
all
we
have
anything
to
do
with,
except
the
decision
of
that
Court
pursuant
thereto.
See
the
case
of
Dreifus
v.
Royds
[1923]
2
D.L.R.
656,
64
Can.
S.C.R.
346.
In
passing
from
the
first
question
and
the
bearing
thereon
of
the
decision
in
Re
Gibson
and
City
of
Hamilton,
48
D.L.R.
428,
45
O.L.R.
458,
I
may
be
permitted
to
say
that
I
fail
to
see
how
it
can
have
any
bearing
on
this
case.
There,
a
very
curious
situation
was
produced
by
reason
of
the
testator
having
been
domiciled
in
Beamsville
and
his
trustees
having
been
scattered
so
that
it
may
have
been
difficult
to
find
in
the
Assessment
Act
language
to
so
fit
such
a
case
as
to
entitle
Hamilton
to
assess
the
income.
Here,
we
have
a
very
simple
case
in
that
regard.
The
point
raised
by
the
second
question
is
quite
as
simple
if
we
correct
the
printing
of
it
from
sec.
21(5),
to
see.
5(2),
as
I
suspect
it
should
be,
to
accord
with
the
reasoning
of
the
Judges
below.
See.
21
of
the
Assessment
Act
has
no
subsec.
(9).
So
interpreting
the
second
question,
I
would
answer
the
question
in
the
affirmative.
The
investment
in
agreements
for
sale
of
real
estate
has
become
a
well
recognized
form
of
investment
security.
Its
income
is
neither
interest
on
a
mortgage
nor
rent
of
real
estate.
It
clearly
falls
within
the
definition
of
income
given
by
the
Assessment
Act
as
amended
1922
(Ont.),
ch.
78,
sec.
1,
and
there
is
no
exemption
to
fit
it.
We
must
give
effect
to
the
plain
language
of
the
Act
and
not
try
to
engraft
upon
it
another
meaning
we
may
think
would
in
some
cases
be
more
just.
I,
therefore,
conclude
that
this
appeal
should
be
dismissed
with
costs
throughout.
The
other
appeal
between
same
parties
and
heard
at
same
time
seems
to
me
a
rather
extraordinary
one.
It
arises
in
this
way—after
the
better
part
of
a
year
of
litigation
pursuing
the
prescribed
course
of
lanw
and,
as
I
hold,
the
only
course
of
law
(save
possibly
in
case
of
fraud
or
an
absolutely
clear
violation
of
an
exemption
by
refusing
to
pay
taxes)
open
to
anyone
calling
in
question
a
municipal
assessment
and
rectifying
it,
if
wrong,
the
appellant,
on
June
8,
1921,
two
months
after
the
Second
Appellate
Division
below
had
given
judgment
in
the
other
case
64
D.L.R.
379,
and
a
month
after
the
appeal
therefrom
to
this
Court
had
been
launched,
issued
a
writ
against
respondent
to
restrain
its
officers
from
collecting
the
assessment.
The
Assessment
Act
expressly
declares
the
roll
valid
subject
to
such
appeals
as
duly
taken.
In
the
case
of
Town
of
Macleod
v.
Campbell
(1918)
44
D.L.R.
210,
57
Can.
8.C.R.
517,
which
counsel
seem
to
have
overlooked,
we
decided
that
a
similar
attempt
should
not
be
made
to
rectify
an
erroneous
assessment.
I
still
think
that
is
good
law
though
decided
six
years
ago.
Moreover,
we
have
nothing
to
do
with
assessment
appeals,
save
what
comes
before
us
in
the
prescribed
method
adopted
in
appellant’s
first
case,
unless,
of
course,
by
special
leave
which
has
not
been
given
herein
and
I
respectfully
submit
never
should
be
given
in
such
a
case
as
this
second
one.
I
think
that
appeal
also
should
be
dismissed
with
costs.
Duff,
J.:—It
will
be
more
convenient,
I
think,
to
consider
the
two
appeals
together.
The
effect
of
secs.
5
and
15
of
the
Ontario
Assessment
Act,
R.S.O.
1914,
ch.
195,
is
discussed
in
the
judgment
of
Mulock,
C.J.
Ex.,
in
Re
Gibson
and
City
of
Hamilton,
48
D.L.R.
428,
45
O.L.R.
458.
The
opinion
of
the
Chief
Justice
as
to
these
sections,
in
which
Riddell,
J.,
concurred,
is
thus
stated
by
him,
48
D.L.R.
at
p.
450:
"‘According
to
sec.
5,
‘income’,
to
be
liable
to
taxation,
must
be
income
‘derived’
by
a
person
resident
in
Ontario
or
‘received
in
Ontario
by
or
on
behalf
of
a
person
resident
out
of
Ontario’.
That
is,
the
income
in
respect
of
which
anyone
is
liable
to
taxation
must
be
either
(a)
income
derived
by
such
person
being
resident
in
Ontario,
or
(b)
income
received
by
an
agent,
trustee,
etc.,
for
a
non-resident.
In
the
former
case
the
person
assessable
is
the
beneficiary;
in
the
latter,
it
is
his
representative.
The
beneficiary
‘derives’
the
income,
but
the
representative
merely
receives
it.
Income
to
be
assessable
must,
I
think,
fall
within
one
or
other
of
these
two
classes.”
This
view
seems
to
me
to
be
the
right
view,
not
only
for
the
reasons
appearing
in
the
judgment
of
the
Chief
Justice,
but,
because
the
subsequent
legislation
has
adopted
it.
The
decision
in
Re
Gibson
was
pronounced
in
May
1919
(48
D.L.R.
428),
and
the
amendment
enacted
in
1919
(Ont.),
ch.
50,
sec.
8,
to
sec.
18(la)
provided
that
a
return
to
be
made
by
any
person
as
to
income
should
be
in
the
form
prescribed
by
the
Lieutenant-
Governor
in
Council.
By
order-in-council
passed
on
July
15,
1920,
pursuant
to
this
enactment,
a
form
of
return
was
prescribed,
and
the
frame
of
the
return
so
prescribed
makes
it
quite
clear
that
the
person
making
a
return,
the
prospective
income
taxpayer,
is
to
give
items
of
income
which
he
is
to
receive
beneficially
during
the
current
year,
except
in
the
case
where
the
person
making
the
return
is
in
receipt
if
income
on
behalf
of
a
non-resident
in
capacity
of
agent,
trustee,
guardian
or
executor.
The
order-in-council
proceeds
upon
the
theory
that
where
income
is
received
in
trust
for
persons
resident
within
Ontario,
it
is
the
beneficiary
who
is
to
be
assessed
and
not
the
trustee;
and
this
view
of
the
Act
is
again
the
construction
upon
which
the
legislature
itself
proceeded
in
enacting
1921
(Ont.),
ch.
67,
see.
6,
by
which
it
is
required
that
agents,
trustees,
executors
and
other
persons
who
collect
or
receive
or
have
in
their
possession
or
control
income
for
or
on
behalf
of
a
person
resident
in
Ontario
shall,
on
receipt
of
notice
from
the
assessor,
furnish
a
statement
in
writing
giving
the
names
and
addresses
of
the
persons
resident
in
the
municipality
who
“ought
to
be
assessed
for
their
income
therein,
together
with
the
amount
of
income
payable’’
to
such
person
during
the
current
year.
[See
1922
(Ont.),
ch.
78,
sec.
16,
for
later
amendment.
I
I
am
not
overlooking
the
fact
that
by
force
of
the
provisions
of
the
Interpretation
Act
the
re-enactment
of
legislation
which
has
been
judicially
construed
is
not
to
be
treated
as
a
legislative
adoption
of
such
construction.
What
we
have
here
is
not
a
re-enactment
merely
of
legislation
which
had
been
construed
judicially,
but
an
adoption
of
a
judicial
construction
by
an
order-
in-council
passed
pursuant
to
specific
statutory
authority
and
subsequent
legislation,
which
is
plainly
founded
and
shaped
upon
the
theory
that
the
construction
so
adopted
by
the
orderin-council
is
the
right
construction.
It
follows
that
the
appellant
was
not
properly
assessed
in
respect
of
that
part
of
the
income
of
the
estate
which
is
in
question
on
the
appeal
from
the
Appellate
Division,
and
that
the
appeal
should
therefore
be
allowed
and
the
judgment
of
His
Honour
Judge
Coughlin
restored.
Such
being
my
view
of
the
effect
of
R.S.O.
1914,
ch.
195,
sec.
5,
in
so
far
as
it
relates
to
‘‘income
derived
.
.
.
by
any
person
resident’’
in
Ontario,
it
is
unnecessary
to
consider
the
question
raised
whether
or
not,
if
the
section,
in
that
branch
of
it
which
deals
with
such
income,
had
the
scope
which
has
been
ascribed
to
it
by
the
Appellate
Division,
it
would
have
been
impeachable
as
ultra
vires
of
the
legislature.
But
as
regards
the
second
branch
of
the
section,
and
as
regards
sec.
13,
provisions
dealing
with
income
received
or
in
possession
or
in
control
of
any
person
in
Ontario
for
or
on
behalf
of
a
non-resident,
the
constitutional
validity
of
these.
provisions
must,
I
think,
be
examined.
The
trust
does
provide
for
the
payment
of
a
certain
annual
sum,
$8,000
to
a
lady
who
is
resident
in
Detroit
and,
as
I
understand
it,
permanently
domiciled
there.
The
municipality
has
asserted
its
rights
to
assess
the
trustee
in
respect
of
this
income.
It
is
necessary
briefly
to
advert
to
the
course
of
the
proceedings.
The
appellant
and
his
co-trustee,
who
has
since
died,
appealed
from
the
assessment
of
1920
to
His
Honour
Judge
Coughlin,
and
before
him
they
expressed
themselves
content
with
the
assessment
in
so
far
only
as
it
included
two
specific
annuities
of
$8,000
and
$6,000
and
their
liability
to
assessment
in
respect
to
these
items
of
income
and
their
liability
to
pay
taxes
in
respect
of
them
for
the
year
1920
are
not
in
question.
The
judgment
of
His
Honour
was
delivered
December
28,
1920,
adopting
the
contention
of
the
trustees,
and
accordingly
reducing
the
assessment
to
$14,000.
On
April
25,
1921,
the
municipal
council,
acting
upon
the
power
conferred
by
sec.
56(1)
of
the
Assessment
Act,
passed
a
by-law
providing
that
the
municipal
taxes
for
1921
should
be
assessed
and
levied
upon
the
assessment
roll
prepared
in
1920,
and
the
action
was
commenced
in
the
following
June.
The
necessary
result
of
the
decision
of
this
Court
in
appeal
No.
1
would
be,
if
sec.
13
were
intra
vires,
that
the
appellant
would
be
taxed
for
1921
upon
income
in
his
control
as
trustee
in
respect
of
the
assessment
of
$8,000,
according
to
the
roll
of
1920,
as
amended
by
His
Honour
Judge
Coughlin.
But
I
can
entertain
no
doubt
that
when
the
objection
to
an
assessment
is
that
the
enactment
professing
to
authorize
it,
is
ultra
vires,
the
roll
whether
attacked
by
appeal
under
the
Assessment
Act
or
not,
is
not
binding
upon
the
person
assessed.
Sec.
83
is
framed
in
sweeping
terms,
no
doubt,
but
it
is
an
enactment
relating
to
procedure,
and
it
must
be
presumed,
in
the
absence
of
specific
words,
that
the
Legislature
in
enacting
that
section
was
not
resorting
to
the
very
questionable
course
of
giving
force
and
effect
to
a
tax
it
had
no
power
to
impose
by
placing
obstacles
in
the
path
of
those
seeking
a
judicial
determination
upon
the
point
of
the
legality
of
the
tax.
Sec.
83,
in
my
opinion,
applies
only
to
assessments
within
the
lawful
authority
of
the
Provinces.
The
course
taken
by
the
appellant
before
Judge
Coughlin
would
not
strictly,
in
view
of
the
appeal
of
the
municipality
from
that
decision,
preclude
the
appellant
from
impeaching
the
assessment
of
1920
on
the
ground
now
taken
in
this
action;
and
there
can
certainly
be
no
impropriety
in
impeaching
it
for
the
purpose
of
disputing
the
liability
of
the
estate
to
taxation
in
respect
of
it
in
1921.
The
action,
in
my
opinion,
lies.
Nor
is
it
any
answer
to
the
action
to
say
that
the
annuity
payable
to
Gladys
Alma
Curry
is
not
income
received
by
the
trustee
by
or
on
behalf
of
her.
It
is
quite
clear
that
this
income
falls
within
see.
13
in
the
sense
that
it
is
income
which
has
been
received
in
Ontario,
and
at
the
moment
when
it
becomes
payable
to
her,
it
is
income
in
possession
and
control
of
the
trustee
for
her
and
on
her
behalf,
at
which
moment
the
funds
in
possession
of
the
trustee
and
applicable
in
payment
of
the
annuity
are
subject
to
a
trust
in
her
favour
to
the
extent
of
the
sum
she
is
entitled
to
receive.
We
come,
then,
to
the
point
of
substance,
whether
secs.
5
and
13,
in
so
far
as
they
apply
to
income
received
or
held
in
trust
for
a
non-resident,
are
within
the
powers
of
the
Legislature
of
the
Province
of
Ontario
to
enact.
The
meaning
and
effect
of
the
words
‘
4
direct
taxation’’
as
they
appear
in
item
No.
2
of
sec.
92
of
the
B.N.A.
Act,
have
been
considered
in
many
cases,
and
as
Lord
Moulton
says
in
Cotton
v.
The
King,
15
D.L.R.
283,
at
p.
292,
[1914]
A.C.
176,
it
‘‘is
no
longer
open
to
discussion”,
that
the
meaning
to
be
attributed
to
that
phrase
is
substantially
the
definition
in
15
D.L.R.
at
p.
191,
quoted
from
the
treatise
of
John
Stuart
Mill
in
these
words:
‘‘A
direct
tax
is
one
which
is
demanded
from
the
very
persons
who
it
is
intended
or
desired
should
pay
it.’’
It
is
well
to
remember
a
circumstance
which
has
been
adverted
to
in
the
judgments
of
their
Lordships
of
the
Judicial
Committee
more
than
once,
that
economists
have
not
been
in
entire
agreement
as
to
the
principle
of
the
classification
of
taxes
as
direct
and
indirect.
In
Att’y-
GenT
for
Quebec
v.
Reed
(1884)
10
App.
Cas.
141,
Lord
Sel-
borne
at
p.
143,
pointed
out
in
a
passage
which
is
cited
by
Lord
Moulton
in
Cotton^
case,
that
the
definition
given
by
McCulloch,
for
example,
would
have
been
more
unfavourable
to
the
Provinces
than
the
definition
taken
from
Mill.
And
it
may
be
added
(see
Bastable,
Public
Finance,
ed.
1903,
p.
271)
that
on
the
basis
of
the
distinction
adopted
by
"practical
financiers”
as
the
principle
of
the
classification,
the
Provinces
would
have
been
in
a
still
less
favourable
position;
that
principle
being
that
those
taxes
are
considered
direct
which
are
levied
on
"‘permanent
and
recurring
occasions”
while
charges
on
*
1
occasional
and
particular
events’’
are
brought
under
the
category
of
‘‘indirect
taxation”.
In
this
basis,
death
duties
of
all
kinds
would
be
excluded
from
the
jurisdiction
of
the
Provinces.
Generally
speaking,
income
tax,
according
to
any
basis
of
classification,
would
be
regarded
as
a
direct
tax,
but
it
is,
of
course,
quite
obvious
that
for
the
purpose
of
applying
sec.
92
of
the
B.N.A.
Act,
a
principle
of
classification
having
been
adopted
by
the
Courts
in
giving
effect
to
the
language
of
the
Act
according
to
the
sense
i
nwhich
it
would
most
probably
have
been
understood
by
the
Legislature
which
passed
it,
the
Provinces
cannot
have
that
principle
applied
for
the
purpose
of
empowering
them
to
levy
death
duties
and
at
the
same
time
have
it
discarded
when
it
seems
to
impose
embarrassing
restrictions
upon
the
manner
in
which
provincial
fiscal
authority
is
to
be
exercised.
From
the
terms
of
sec.
11(2)
(amended
1922
(Ont.),
ch.
11)
it
is
manifest
that
the
income
in
respect
of
which
the
assessment
is
made
is
the
income
from
the
current
year—the
year
in
which
the
assessment
is
made.
That
is
the
normal
rule,
and
the
rule
as
given
by
that
section
must,
I
think,
apply
to
assessments
under
sec.
13.
That
seems
to
be
the
construction
under
which
the
order-in-council
proceeds,
as
appears
from
the
form
of
the
prescribed
return,
and
I
think
it
is
the
correct
construction.
True,
sec.
13
applies
only
to
income
11
collected
or
received”
or
‘‘in
possession
or
contrai”,
and
prima
facie
this
means
income
received
in
fact
or
in
fact
in
possession
or
control.
But
the
language
of
sec.
5
and
sec.
11
does
not
materially
differ
from
this
and
it
is
quite
clear
that
where
it
is
a
person
beneficialy
entitled
who
is
assessed,
it
is
sec.
11(2)
that
gives
the
rule
by
which
the
assessor
is
to
be
guided,
and
under
that
section,
the
amount
of
the
assessment
may
be
the
result
of
estimate
or,
if
estimate
is
impossible,
fixed
at
a
sum
not
less
than
an
arbitrary
minimum
determined
by
the
amount
of
income
received
in
the
previous
year.
I
think
sec.
13
must
be
read
as
imposing
the
liability
only,
and
that
sec.
11(1)
must
be
considered
as
prescribing
the
method
by
which
the
amount
of
the
assessment
is
to
be
ascertained.
Sec.
56
must
also
be
adverted
to,
under
which
a
council
may
adopt
the
assessment
of
the
preceding
year—a
proceeding
which
may
entail
the
result
that
a
person
assessed
in
the
year
immediately
preceding,
pursuant
to
sec.
11(2),
for
an
amount
determined
by
his
income
the
year
before
that
may,
in
consequence,
become
liable
to
pay
in
one
year—the
year
following
that
of
the
reduction
of
the
roll—income
tax
in
respect
of
the
amount
of
income
received
two
years
before,
although
such
amount
may
be
far
in
excess
of
the
sum
received
by
him
during
the
year
for
which
he
is
assessed
and
taxed.
The
effect
of
this
section,
then,
is
that
a
trustee
in
receipt
of
an
income
for
a
non-resident
beneficiary
may
be
liable
to
pay
income
tax
in
respect
of
an
income
of
an
estimated
amount
which
he
may
only
in
part
have
received
or
not
have
received
at
all.
It
is
past
question
not
intended
that
he
shall
ultimately
bear
the
tax.
Normally,
he
will
indemnify
himself,
no
doubt
from
moneys
in
his
hands,
but
his
liability
is
in
no
way
conditioned
upon
the
existence
in
his
hands
of
a
fund
out
of
which
the
tax
can
be
paid.
The
tax
is
not
a
lien
upon
the
trust
property,
and
the
municipality
has
no
recourse
against
such
property.
If
he
resort
to
funds
in
his
hands
for
payment,
it
is
not
pursuant
to
any
duty
laid
upon
him
by
the
taxing
authority
so
to
apply
the
funds,
but
as
a
means
of
indenminfying
himself
against
the
personal
liability
which
the
statute
imposes
upon
him
directly.
Where
personal
liability
is
imposed
upon
a
trustee
or
agent
in
respect
of
income
received
by
him
as
such
and
the
tax
is
not
charged
upon
the
income
and
there
is
no
recourse
against
it
by
the
taxing
authority
and
the
trustee
is
under
no
duty
to
the
taxing
authority
to
retain
the
income
in
his
hands
and
apply
it
in
payment
of
the
tax,
we
should
appear
to
have
a
case
in
which
the
trustee
is
the
very
person
from
whom
the
taxing
authority
demands
the
tax
it
being
left
to
him
to
secure
his
indemnity
from
those
who
are
ultimately
intended
to
sustain
the
burden.
The
case
is,
of
course,
quite
different
where
no
personal
liability
is
imposed,
where,
for
example,
the
liability
of
the
trustee
or
agent
is
limited
to
the
amount
in
his
hands
for
his
beneficiary,
as
in
the
case
of
Burland
v.
The
King,
62
D.L.R.
515,
[1922]
1
A.C.
215.
Where,
too,
trust
property
is
charged
with
the
payment
of
the
tax,
it
is
conceivable
that
the
proper
inference
as
to
the
legislative
intent
would
be
that
the
primary
source
of
payment
should
be
the
trust
fund,
and
the
personal
liability
designed
only
as
security
for
the
proper
application
of
the
fund,
but
this
is
not
a
point
of
view
with
which
we
are
concerned
on
this
appeal.
The
reasoning
above
was
foreshadowed
in
the
judgment
of
Lord
Selborne
in
AWy-Gen
9
l
for
Quebec
v.
Reed,
10
App.
Cas.
141,
at
p.
143,
and
is
that
upon
which
the
judgment
of
Lord
Moulton
proceeds
in
Cotton’s
case,
15
D.L.R.
283,
and
was
expressly
approved.
ANGLIN,
J.:—The
appellant
(plaintiff)
is
the
surviving
trustee
under
the
will
of
the
late
John
Curry
of
the
City
of
Windsor,
Ontario,
who
died
on
May
11,
1912.
By
his
will,
he
directed
certain
properties
to
be
held
by
his
trustees
and
the
income
thereof
accumulated
for
a
period
not
yet
expired.
The
beneficiaries,
who
will
be
definitely
asceratined
only
on
the
expiry
of
this
period,
are
some
resident
in
Ontario,
some
elsewhere,
and
some
yet
unborn.
The
validity
of
the
municipal
assessment
for
the
year
1920
by
the
City
of
Windsor
of
the
appellant
as
such
trustee
in
respect
of
annual
income
derived
from
properties
so
held
forms
the
subject
of
this
appeal.
Following
the
procedure
for
appeal
provided
by
the
Ontario
Assessment
Act,
R.S.O.
1914,
ch.
195,
the
appellant
carried
his
case
to
the
Appellate
Divisional
Court,
64
D.L.R.
397,
unsuccessfully
contending
that,
properly
construed,
the
provisions
of
that
Act
do
not
authorize
the
impeached
assessment.
In
an
action
subsequently
brought
for
a
declaratory
judgment
he
challenged
the
validiiy
of
the
legislation
invoked
by
the
respondent
to
support
the
assessment,
if
it
should
be
given
the
construction
put
upon
it
by
the
Appellate
Division.
He
now
appeals
from
the
judgment
of
the
Divisional
Court
in
the
former
proceeding;
and,
by
consent,
under
sec.
37(b)
of
the
Supreme
Court
Act
as
amended
1920
(Can.),
ch.
32,
sec.
2,
per
saltum
from
the
dicision
of
Order,
J.,
who
dismissed
the
later
action
(ante
p.
551).
The
tax
on
$72,310.57,
the
amount
of
the
assessment
in
dispute,
exceeds
$2,000.
Our
jurisdiction
to
entertain
both
appeals
in
my
opinion
admits
of
no
doubt.
The
late
Charles
Curry,
a
co-trustee
of
the
appellant,
who
lives
in
Windsor,
resided
at
Detroit
in
the
State
of
Michigan
and
died
there
on
March
24,
1920.
A
portion
of
the
income
of
the
estate
derived
from
purchases
of
properties
in
the
City
of
Detroit
it
is
now
claimed
was
in
1920
kept
in
the
First
National
Bank
in
that
city,
certain
payments
being
made
out
of
it
and
only
the
surplus
(how
much
does
not
appear)
was
‘‘
checked
into
the
estate
in
Ontario’’.
The
latter
evidence,
however,
was
not
before
the
Court
on
the
original
assessment
appeal,
having
been
given
only
in
the
subsequent
action.
The
case
stated
by
the
County
Court
Judge
in
the
Assessment
Appeal
makes
no
reference
to
any
foreign
income
but
places
the
"‘net
income
within
Ontario’’
at
$86,310.57,
the
details
of
which
appear
in
an
appended
statement
furnished
by
the
trustee.
For
the
purpose
of
the
appeal
from
the
Divisional
Court,
the
suggestion
that
part
of
the
assessed
income
did
not
come
into
Ontario
must,
therefore,
be
disregarded,
notwithstanding
the
fact
that
the
assessment
of
income
for
1920
would
appear
to
have
been
based
by
the
assessor
on
the
actual
receipts
of
the
year
1919,
as
provided
for
by
sec.
11(2)
of
the
Assessment
Act.
Indeed,
the
sum
of
$86,310.57
appears
to
have
been
treated
throughout
the
proceedings
which
culminated
in
the
pudgment
of
the
Divisional
Court
as
income
received
in
Ontario
by
the
appellant
trustee
for
the
year
1920;
and
it
was
so
treated
in
the
factum
filed
on
his
appeal
to
this
Court
from
that
judgment.
It
is,
I
think,
too
late
now
to
enter
upon
any
discussion
of.
the
actual
amount
of
income
received
in
that
year
in
Ontario.
The
sum
mentioned
in
the
stated
case
must
be
accepted
as
accurate
for
the
purposes
of
this
appeal.
That
income,
however,
included,
as
appears
in
the
stated
case,
a
sum
of
$13,873.34
for
interest
paid
by
purchasers
of
real
estate
in
Ontario,
which
forms
the
subject
of
a
distinct
ground
for
appeal.
Of
the
sum
of
$86,310.57,
$6,000
was
paid
to
a
beneficiary
residing
out
of
Ontario
and
$8,000
to
another
beneficiary
residing
in
the
Province.
To
his
assessment
in
respect
of
this
$14,000,
the
appellant
submitted
before
the
County
Court
Judge.
The
appeal,
therefore,
concerns
his
liability
for
assessment
in
respect
of
the
balance
of
$72,310.57,
of
which
the
stated
case
says,
64
D.L.R.
at
p.
398:
‘Under
the
provisions
of
the
said
will
of
the
late
John
Curry
the
balance
of
the
above
mentioned
net
income
together
with
that
of
previous
and
subsequent
years
is
to
be
accumulated
by
the
trustees
for
a
period
of
21
years
commencing
on
the
lith
of
May,
1912
and
expiring
on
the
10th
May,
1933,
whereupon
the
accumulated
trust
fund
is
to
be
divided
among
persons
at
present
unascertained
and
whose
right
and
title
will
depent
on
the
circumstances
at
the
time
fixed
for
the
said
division.
‘
‘
On
behalf
of
the
appellant
it
is
stated
and
is
not
denied
that
some
of
the
beneficiaries
under
this
trust
may
be
persons
still
unborn.
The
material
provisions
of
the
Assessment
Act,
R.S.O.
1914,
eh.
195,
are
as
follows
:
"‘5.
All
real
property
in
Ontario,
and
all
income
derived
either
within
or
out
of
Ontario
by
any
person
resident
therein,
or
received
in
Ontario
by
or
on
behalf
of
any
person
resident
out
of
the
same
shall
be
liable
to
taxation,
subject
to
the
following
exemptions:”.
.
.
(Here
follow
certain
exemptions,
including
subsec.
(21))
:
"
(21)
Rent
or
other
income
derived
from
real
estate,
except
interest
on
mortgages.
"11.
(1)
Subject
to
the
exemptions
provided
for
in
secs.
5
and
10:
(a)
every
person
not
liable
to
business
assessment
under
sec.
10
shall
be
assessed
in
respect
of
income.
“12.
(1)
Subject
to
subsee.
(6)
of
sec.
40,
every
person
assessable
in
respect
of
income
under
sec.
11
shall
be
so
assessed
in
the
municipality
in
which
he
resides,
either
at
his
place
of
residence
or
at
his
office
or
place
of
business.
“13.
(1)
Every
agent,
trustee
or
person
who
collects
or
receives,
or
iS
in
any
way
in
possession
or
control
of
income
for
or
on
behalf
of
a
person
who
is
resident
out
of
Ontario,
shall
be
assessed
in
respect
of
such
income.’’
See.
5
declares
the
liability
of
income
to
taxation.
I
assume
that
it
evinces
a
general
intention
that
all
income
earned,
derived
or
received
in
the
Province,
not
specially
exempted,
shall
be
taxable.
But,
as
Taft,
C.J.,
said
in
delivering
the
judgment
of
the
Supreme
Court
of
the
United
States
in
Smietanka
v.
First
Trust
and
Savings
Bank
(1922)
42
Sup.
Ct.
Rep.
223,
at
p.
224,
such
an
intention
‘‘must
be
carried
into
language
which
can
reasonably
be
construed
to
effect
it.
Otherwise,
the
intention
cannot
be
enforced
by
the
Courts.”
Assessment
is
the
only
basis
of
municipal
taxation
under
the
Ontario
system
(sec.
3).
As
put
by
Mulock,
C.J.
Ex.,
in
Re
Gibson
and
City
of
Hamilton,
48
D.L.R.
428,
at
p.
481,
‘‘there
ean
be
no
taxation
of
income
without
previous
assessment
of
some
person
in
respect
of
such
income.”
A
person
assessed
in
respect
of
income
is
thereby
made
per-
sonally
liable
to
pay
a
tax
upon
it
at
a
rate
imposed
according
to
other
provisions
of
the
law.
The
only
clauses
under
which
it
was
contended
at
Bar
that
the
appellant
is
liable
to
assessment
are
sec.
11(1)
and
sec.
13(1).
The
question
presented
therefore
is,
does
the
appellant
in
respect
of
the
income
for
which
he
has
been
assessed
fall
within
either
of
those
provisions
?
The
first
point
for
determination
is
whether
under
sec.
5,
in
respect
of
income
received
by
him
for
accumulation
under
the
trust
above
stated,
the
trustee
appellant
is
properly
assessable.
There
can
be
no
room
for
doubt
that
by
the
words
‘‘any
person
resident
out
of
the
same’’
in
sec.
5
is
meant
a
beneficiary
for
or
on
whose
behalf
income
is
paid
to
some
agent,
collector,
recipient
or
custodian
in
Ontario.
The
corresponding
words
“by
any
person
resident
therein’’
there
can,
I
think,
be
little
room
for
doubt
are
intended
to
designate
a
person
standing
in
the
like
relation
to
the
income,
that
is,
the
beneficiary
of
it,
who
is
said
to
‘‘derive’’
it,
whereas
the
agent,
trustee,
collector,
recipient
or
custodian
on
behalf
of
the
non-resident
is
said
merely
to
‘‘receive’’
it.
That
distinction
is
carried
out
in
sec.
11(1)
and
sec.
18(1).
Under
the
former,
the
resident
beneficiary
“deriving”
the
income
is
made
assessable;
under
the
latter,
in
respect
of
income
derived
by
the
non-resident
beneficiary,
not
he,
but
the
person
who
collects
or
receives
it
for
or
on
his
behalf
is
to
be
assessed.
There
may
be
little
difficulty
in
applying
these
provisions
where
the
income
got
in
by
the
trustee
or
agent
is
payable
forthwith
to
certain
beneficiaries.
But
other
considerations
arise
where
the
right
of
enjoyment
is
deferred
by
a
trust
for
accumulation
and
where,
as
here,
some
of
the
beneficiaries
are
or
may
be
unborn
and
the
shares
of
those
in
esse
are
not
presently
ascertainable.
For
what
proportion,
if
any,
is
the
trustee
assessable
and
for
what
beneficiaries?
Unborn
beneficiaries
cannot
properly
be
designated
either
as
resident
in
Ontario
or
as
resident
out
of
the
same.
The
proportion
of
the
1920
income
to
which
they
may
eventually
be
en-
titled
is
problematical.
In
so
far
as
that
income
may
ultimately
be
payable
to
persons
now
resident
in
Ontario,
if
the
amounts
held
for
them
had
been
ascertainable
in
1920,
I
should
incline
to
the
view
that
such
beneficiaries
and
not
the
trustee
would
have
been
assessable
in
respect
thereof
had
the
trust
for
accumulation
not
prevented
their
presently
obtaining
it.
I
find
no
provision
in
the
statute
making
a
trustee
for
accumulation
for
the
benefit
of
resident
beneficiaries
assessable
in
respect
of
the
income
ultimately
to
be
41
derived’‘
by
them.
In
so
far
as
the
income
in
question
belongs
to
non-residents,
assuming
the
validity
of
sec.
18(1),
I
should
think
the
trustee
is
the
person
to
be
assessed.
But
here
again
arises
the
question,
insolvable
in
1920,
"‘for
how
much’’?
After
giving
to
the
provisions
of
secs.
5,
11(1)
and
13(1)
much
thought
and
consideration,
my
conclusion
is
that
in
respect
to
income
directed
to
be
accumulated
by
a
trustee
for
future
distribution
amongst
person
wholly
or
partially
unascertained,
some
of
them
within
and
some
of
them
without
Ontario,
he
is
not
assessable.
As
to
so
much
of
that
income
as
will
ultimately
be
derived
by
resident
beneficiaries
sec.
11(1)
applies
and
such
beneficiaries
when
ascertained
and
when
they
derive
the
income
are
made
assessable.
The
trustee
is
not.
The
contrast
between
sec.
11(1)
and
sec.
13(1),
when
read
in
the
light
of
the
distinction
made
in
sec.
5
between
resident
and
non-resident
beneficiaries,
seems
to
make
this
reasonably
clear.
On
the
other
hand
as
to
so
much
of
the
income
as
is
received
or
collected
for
or
on
behalf
of
non-resident
beneficiaries
in
esse
and
will
ultimately
go
to
them
the
difficulty
in
the
way
of
assessing
the
trustee
for
it
seems
to
lie
in
the
fact
that
the
amount
is
unascertainable.
As
to
whatever
portion,
likewise
unknown,
is
to
go
to
persons
still
unborn
it
is
impossible
to
classify
them
either
as
resident
or
as
non-resident.
Hence
the
liability
of
the
trustee
to
assessment
is
uncertain
and
that
of
the
beneficiaries
an
impossibility.
We
seem
to
be
confronted
with
another
instance
of
casus
omissus
similar
to
that
dealt
with
by
the
Supreme
Court
of
the
United
States
in
Smietanka
v.
First
Trust
and
Savings
Bank,
42
Sup.
Ct.
R.
223.
For
the
respondent,
it
is
contended
that
the
trustee
is
the
person
who
‘‘derives’’
the
income
of
the
trust
estate;
that
qua
income,
it
is
in
reality
his;
that
the
right
of
the
beneficiaries
is
not
to
receive
income
but
to
share
in
an
accumulated
fund;
that,
therefore,
for
purposes
of
taxation,
the
income
is
that
of
the
trustee
and
not
that
of
the
beneficiaries.
It
accordingly
contends
that
the
word
‘‘trustee’’
in
sec.
13(1)
is
not
used
in
the
ordinary
legal
sense
but
signifies
merely
an
accountable
agent.
I
cannot
accede
to
that
view.
It
involves
deleting
the
word:
"‘trustee’’
from
sec.
13(1).
I
see
no
reason
for
giving
to
that
word
any
such
restricted
meaning.
It
is,
I
think,
most
improbable
that
in
framing
and
enacting
the
Assessment
Act
the
draughtsman
and
the
Legislature
proceeded
on
the
idea
that
income
received
by
a
trustee
belongs
to
him
and
not
to
his
cestur
que
trust—that
he
has
any
real
ownership
of
it
or
a
taxable
interest
in
it.
Where
they
intended
to
make
him
taxable
in
respect
of
such
income,
notwithstanding
lack
of
beneficial
interest,
they
expressly
so
provide—sec.
18(1).
Sees.
5,
11(1)
and
13(1),
when
read
together,
seem
to
me
to
make
it
abundantly
clear
that
only
in
the
case
of
a
non-resident
bene-
gciary
was
it
intended
that
the
trustee
should
be
assessable
in
respect
of
income.
Nor
does
sec.
22,
subsec.
(1)
(h)
of
the
Assessment
Act,
referred
to
by
Lennox,
J.,
64
D.L.R.
at
pp.
402,
et
seg.,
in
my
opinion,
help
the
respondent.
Determination
of
assessability
is
not
the
office
of
sec.
22.
That
is
dealt
with
by
preceding
sections.
Sec.
22
merely
defines
the
method
to
be
pursued
by
the
assessor
in
preparing
the
assessment
rolls
and
in
placing
thereon
the
names
of
persons
made
assessable
under
such
earlier
provisions
and
the
particulars
of
the
various
subjects
of
their
assessments,
etc.
I
agree
with
the
opinion
expressed
by
Sir
William
Mulock,
C.J.
Ex.,
in
Re
Gibson
and
City
of
Hamilton,
48
D.L.R.
428.
In
the
view
I
have
taken,
it
is
unnecessary
to
determine
whether
the
$13,873.34
received
as
interest
upon
unpaid
purchase
money
for
lands
falls
within
the
exemption
provided
for
by
sec.
5(21)
:—"‘rent
and
other
income
derived
from
real
estate
in
Ontario,
except
interest
on
mortgages.
‘
‘
I
incline
to
the
opinion
that
it
does
not.
I
am,
for
these
reasons,
of
the
opinion
that
the
defendant
was
not
assessable
in
respect
of
any
portion
of
the
$72,310.57
income
in
question.
The
appeal
from
the
judgment
of
the
Appellate
Divisional
Court
should,
therefore,
be
allowed
with
costs
in
that
Court
and
here
to
be
paid
by
the
municipal
cor
poration
to
the
appellant.
The
view
I
have
taken
of
the
assessment
appeal
proper—and
which
I
understand
finds
favour
with
the
majority
of
the
members
of
the
Court—suffices
to
dispose
of
the
liability
of
the
appellant
for
the
taxes
in
question
and
renders
unnecessary
consideration
of
the
constitutional
question
presented
in
the
action
tried
before
Orde,
J.
Indeed(
it
does
more:
it
deprives
the
ap-
pellant
of
his
status
to
raise
that
question,
inasmuch
as
in
a
proceeding
already
pending,
when
that
action
was
begun,
the
assessment
which
he
would
impeach
as
involving
indirect
taxation
is
held
not
to
be
within
the
provisions
of
the
legislation
attacked
on
that
ground.
It
is
true
that
he
repeats
in
that
action
his
claim
that
the
assessment
be
set
aside
on
the
ground
already
taken
in
his
assessment
appeal.
But
that
was
quite
unnecessary
and
the
only
substantial
purpose
of
the
action
was
to
bring
the
constitutional
question
before
the
Court
in
the
event
of
the
judgment
of
the
Appellate
Division
in
the
assessment
appeal
being
upheld.
As
the
result
of
the
disposition
of
that
appeal
practically
deprives
the
plaintiff
of
any
interest
he
might
otherwise
have
had
to
challenge
the
validity
of
the
provisions
of
the
Assessment
Act
under
which
the
respondent
sought
to
tax
him,
it
follows
that
the
judgment
of
Orde,
J.,
dismissing
that
action,
though
on
other
grounds,
should
be
upheld
and
the
appeal
from
it
dismissed
with
costs,
including
the
costs
of
the
Attorney-General.
BRODEUR,
J.:—These
are
two
appeals
concerning
the
validity
of
an
assessment
on
the
income
of
the
Curry
estate.
Mr.
John
Curry
died
in
1912
leaving
a
will
of
which
the
appellant,
McLeod,
is
the
sole
surviving
executor
and
trustee.
Under
the
provisions
of
this
will,
the
trustees
are
directed
to
pay
from
the
income
certain
annuities
to
the
wife
and
children
of
the
testator
and
to
invest
the
surplus
income
from
the
estate
for
a
period
of
21
years.
At
the
expiration
of
the
accumulation
period,
the
whole
trust
fund
will
be
divided
among
the
children
of
the
testator;
and,
in
the
event
of
the
death
of
any
of
them,
the
share
of
the
one
so
dying
will
be
divided
amongst
the
testator’s
grandchildren.
As
a
consequence
of
the
provisions
of
this
will,
the
fund
is
accumulating
in
trust
for
the
benefit
of
unascertained
persons.
One
of
the
questions
raised
in
whether
unascertained
and
unborn
beneficiaries
are
assessable
under
the
provisions
of
the
Ontario
Assessment
Act.
Sec.
5
of
the
Act
enacts
that
"‘all
.
.
.
income
derived
either
within
or
without
of
Ontario
by
any
person
resident
therein
or
received
in
Ontario
by
or
on
behalf
of
any
person
resident
out
of
the
same
shall
be
liable
to
taxation.’’
In
sec.
13(1)
of
the
same
Act,
it
is
declared
that
‘‘every
agent,
trustee
or
person
who
collects
or
receives
or
is
In
any
way
in
possession
or
control
of
income
for
or
on
behalf
of
a
person
who
is
a
resident
out
of
Ontario
shall
be
assessed
in
respect
of
such
income.”
This
question
is
not
a
new
one.
It
was
considered
in
a
case
of
Re
Gibson,
48
D.L.R.
428,
and
there
it
was
held
by
Mulock,
C.J.
Ex.,
and
by
Riddell,
J.,
that
the
income
in
respect
of
which
anyone
is
liable
to
taxation
must
be
either
income
derived
by
a
person
resident
in
Ontario
or
income
received
by
a
trustee
for
a
non-resident.
In
the
former
case,
the
person
assessable
is
the
beneficiary
;
in
the
latter
case,
it
is
his
representative.
Sec.
13
of
the
Act
says
that
the
trustee
can
be
assessed
only
in
the
case
where
he
collects
the
income
for
a
person
who
resides
out
of
Ontario.
But
quid
where
the
beneficiary
is
unknown
and
where
a
trust
fund
has
been
created,
as
in
this
case,
for
persons
who
cannot
be
identified
or
ascertained
?
It
has
been
contended
that
the
word
"‘person’’
in
see.
5
of
the
Assessment
Act
would
cover
the
trustee;
and
it
is
claimed
then
that
McLeod
as
trustee
of
the
estate
could
be
assessed
for
the
whole
income
of
the
estate.
It
should
not
be
forgotten
in
that
respect
that
McLeod
pays
to
the
living
daughters
of
John
Curry
a
sum
of
$14,000
out
of
the
income.
The
balance
of
the
income,
about
$86,000
goes
into
the
trust
fund.
If
the
City
of
Windsor
can
tax
McLeod
himself
for
these
$14,000
paid
to
the
children,
it
could
also
assess
the
same
persons
if
they
live
in
the
City
of
Windsor;
and,
in
such
a
case,
those
persons
would
be
assessed
twice,
once
through
the
trustee
and
once
of
their
own
right.
That
would
be
the
result
of
the
construction
of
sec.
5
if
"‘any
person’’
who
is
mentioned
there
covers
not
only
the
beneficiaries
but
also
the
trustee.
I
am
of
the
view
that
the
trustees
can
be
taxed
only
for
a
person
when
such
person
resides
out
of
Ontario;
and
where
no
such
person
exists,
as
in
the
present
case
because
we
do
not
know
to
whom
the
trust
fund
which
is
accumulated
will
be
later
on
given,
I
am
of
opinion
that
the
beneficiary
in
this
case
does
not
come
within
the
class
of
persons
mentioned
in
sec.
13,
namely,
persons
residing
out
of
Ontario.
The
assessment
can
be
validly
made
on
a
person
living
at
the
present
time
and
residing
out
of
Ontario.
The
principle
is
that
municipal
corporations
can
levy
no
tax
unless
the
power
be
plainly
conferred.
See
Dillon,
Municipal
Corporation,
5th
ed.,
vol.
4,
sec.
1377
;
Maxwell,
Interpretation
of
Statutes,
5th
ed.,
pp.
463,
464;
City
of
Ottawa
v.
Egan
[1923]
2
D.L.R.
226,
[1923]
S.C.R.
304.
The
Assessment
Act
of
Ontario
does
not
confer
plainly
upon
the
municipal
corporations
the
right
of
assessing
an
income
which
is
not
to
be
paid
to
a
living
person
residing
outside
of
Ontario.
For
these
reasons,
the
appeal
should
be
allowed
with
costs
of
this
Court
and
of
the
Court
below
and
the
assessment
set
aside.
There
is
also
to
be
considered
in
this
appeal
the
declaratory
action
instituted
by
the
appellant
to
have
the
assessment
declared
illegal
and
also
unconstitutional.
I
consider
this
action
useless
and
it
should
be
dismissed
with
costs
throughout.
MIGNAULT,
J.:—I
concur
with
Anglin,
J.
Judgment
accordingly.