GRAHAM,
J.:—The
Court
has
to
decide
whether
or
not
succession
duty
was
payable
to
the
Province
of
Nova
Scotia
upon
certain
property
to
which,
at
the
time
of
his
death,
W.
II.
Brookfield
was
"
entitled
‘
or
which
passed
upon
his
death,
by
reason
of
dispositions
made
by
him
in
his
lifetime.
He
made
his
will
on
October
6,
1936,
and
died
domiciled
in
Nova
Scotia
November
14,
1944.
Administration,
with
the
will
annexed,
was
granted
on
July
18,
1945,
to
the
Royal
Trust
Co.,
whose
Nova
Scotia
office
is
at
Halifax.
The
value
of
the
assets
exceeded
$450,000.
He
had
had
shares
of
United
States
corporations
to
which
he
was
beneficially
entitled
(which
corporations
had
no
share
registries
nor
transfer
offices
in
Nova
Scotia),
registered
respectively
in
the
names
of
employees
of
the
Royal
Trust
Co.
at
Halifax.
Each
of
these
employees
had
then
endorsed
in
blank
the
certificate
or
certificates
standing
in
his
name,
and
had
signed
and
attached
thereto
a
declaration
of
trust
stating,
inter
alia,
that
he
had
no
right,
title
or
interest
in
the
shares;
and
had
delivered
the
certificate
or
certificates
to
the
Royal
Trust
Co.
That
company
thereafter
held
the
certificates
at
its
Halifax
office
for
Brookfield
‘‘for
management
and
safekeeping’’.
The
conditions
under
which
it
so
held
and
managed
the
property
were
set
out
in
a
memorandum
given
it
by
Brookfield.
The
trust
company,
as
administrator,
paid
in
May,
1946
to
the
Collector
of
Succession
Duties
for
Nova
Scotia,
$65,258.97,
which
included
$14,347.09
paid
on
property
to
which
Brookfield
was
said
to
be
entitled
by
reason
of
the
facts
set
out
in
the
preceding
paragraphs.
Later,
the
Royal
Trust
Co.,
paid
to
the
United
States
Collector
of
Internal
Revenue
$17,897.92,
Canadian
funds,
for
federal
estate
tax
on
the
shares
;
and
then
claimed
a
refund
of
$14,347.09
from
the
Collector
of
Succession
Duties
for
the
Province
of
Nova
Scotia,
basing
the
claim
upon
sec.
9(8)
of
the
Succession
Duty
Act,
1945
(N.S.),
c.
7,
which
is
as
follows:
1’9.
Succession
duty
shall
not
be
leviable
or
payable:—
"‘(8)
On
the
property
which
passed
on
the
death
of
the
deceased
and
which
is
brought
or
sent
as
aforesaid
into
Nova
Scotia
after
his
death
if
any
succession
legacy
or
death
duty
or
tax
has
been
paid
on
such
property
elsewhere
than
in
Nova
Scotia
and
such
duty
or
tax
is
equal
to
or
greater
than
the
duty
payable
on
property
in
this
Province,
but
if
the
duty
or
tax
so
paid
elsewhere
is
less
than
the
duty
payable
on
property
in
this
Province
than
on
the
property
upon
which
such
duty
or
tax
has
been
paid
elsewhere
only
the
difference
between
the
duty
payable
under
this
Act
and
the
duty
or
tax
so
paid
elsewhere
shall
be
payable.”
The
collector
of
succession
duties
refused
to
make
the
rebate
on
the
ground
that
the
tax
was
not
on
‘‘property
brought
or
sent’’
into
Nova
Scotia
within
the
meaning
of
sec.
9(8)
;
but
was
on
‘‘property
situate
in
Nova
Scotia”
at
the
time
of
the
death,
on
which
succession
duty
was
payable,
under
secs.
3
and
8
and
other
relevant
provisions
of
the
Succession
Duty
Act.
If
that
contention
is
untenable,
the
administrator
is
entitled
to
a
refund
of
$14,847.09.
The
question
for
the
opinion
of
the
Court
is:
‘‘
Whether
succession
duty
was
leviable
and
payable
for
the
use
of
the
Province
of
Nova
Scotia
in
respect
of
the
property
to
which
the
said
W.
Herbert
Brookfield
was
at
the
time
of
his
death
entitled
or
which
passed
upon
his
death
by
reason
of
the
facts
related
in
the
preceding
paragraphs.’’
It
was
submitted
that
Brookfield
had
not
full
property
in
the
shares;
but
had
a
title—legal
and
equitable’’—which
enabled
him
to
vest
them
in
himself—Colonial
Bank
v.
Cady
(1890),
15
App.
Cas.
267;
that
his
title
differed
in
qualify
from
full
ownership,
and
was
choses
in
action
enforceable
here;
and
therefore
situate
here.
Favorke
v.
Steinkopff,
[1922]
1
Ch.
174;
that
his
right
to
complete
possession
was
under
Nova
Scotian
trusts,
the
evidence
of
which
right
were
certificates
situate
in
Nova
Scotia;
that
the
cases
which
hold
that
the
situs
of
a
share
for
succession
duty
purposes
is
where
it
can
be
effectively
dealt
with
as
between
the
shareholder
and
the
company,
(1.e.,
the
registry
office)
were
distinguishable—R.
v.
Williams,
[1942]
3
D.L.R.
1,
[1942]
A.C.
541,
because
in
them
the
testator
owned
shares,
that
is,
was
the
registered
owner
in
actual
possession
of
the
rights
of
a
shareholder
;
and
that
Brookfield
was
not
in
possession
of
the
shares
in
that
sense.
However,
the
first
contention
fails
because
no
chose
in
action
had
to
be
enforced
to
enable
the
administrator
”
to
acquire
title.
Any
trusts
that
had
existed,
ended
when
the
certificates
endorsed
in
blank
were
delivered
to
the
trust
company
and
put
by
it
at
Brookfield’s
disposal.
The
second
ground,
upon
which
the
right
to
tax
was
based,
is
that
the
certificates
endorsed
in
blank
by
the
registered
holders
and
delivered
to
the
trust
company,
were
in
the
circumstances,
themselves
property
situate
in
Nova
Scotia—“documents
of
value’’
in
the
hands
of
the
administrator,
‘‘and
therefore
liable
to
the
tax
imposed
here’’.
Stern
v.
The
Queen,
[1896]
1
Q.B.
211,
is
direct
authority
for
holding
that
such
documents
are
taxable.
In
that
case
a
testator
in
England
had
owned
and
had
had
in
his
possession
or
in
that
of
his
agent,
American
shares
registered
in
the
name
of
other
persons
and
endorsed
in
blank.
After
his
death
they
were
taxed
in
England.
Mr.
Justice
Wright,
who
delivered
the
judgment
of
the
Court,
after
stating
that
the
certificates
vouched
a
title
to
the
shares
and
that
delivery
of
them
in
England
affected
the
title,
said:
"‘That
the
certificate
itself
.
.
.
[was]
a
marketable
security
operative,
though
not
completely
operative,
to
pass
the
title
and
having
a
marketable
value
here’’;
and,
""That
it
1s,
itself,
a
.
.
.
document
of
value
in
the
hands
of
the
executor
within
the
jurisdiction
of
the
Ordinary.
Therefore
.
.
.
Crown
is
entitled
to
succeed’’.
The
certificates
in
the
present
case,
like
those
in
the
above
case,
are
in
themselves
valuable,
marketable
securities
operative,
to
pass
a
like
property
when
similarly
dealt
with.
That
being
so,
the
decision
in
the
Stern
case
directly
sustains
the
contention
of
the
Province
that
the
certificates
in
this
case
are
documents
of
value
in
the
hands
of
the
administrator
here
and
so
taxable
here.
The
rights
of
the
holder
of
such
a
certificate
and
transfer
endorsed
in
blank
may
exist
in
one
place,
whereas
the
share
itself
may
be
property
in
another
place?
‘
Counsel
for
the
trust
company
argued
that
the
certificates
were
to
be
regarded
not
as
property
situate
in
Nova
Scotia,
but.
only
as
evidence
found
here
of
Brookfield’s
right
to
shares
in
the
United
States.
As
to
that
Viscount
Maugham,
in
R.
v.
Williams,
[1942]
3
D.L.R.
at
p.
16,
[1942]
A.C.
at
p.
560
said:
"‘The
certificates
endorsed
and
signed
as
they
were
cannot
be
regarded
as
mere
evidence
of
title.”
Counsel
further
contended
that
the
imposition
of
the
provincial
tax
violated
the
rule
that
a
share
has
only
one
local
situs,
viz.,
where
it
can
be
effectively
dealt
with
as
between
the
shareholder
and
the
company,
and
that
a
tax
could
be
levied
only
there.
In
support
of
his
contention
he
cited
À.
v.
National
Trust
Co.,
[1933]
4
D.L.R.
465,
[1933]
S.C.R.
670.
In
which
case
the
sitîis
of
railway
bonds
guaranteed
by
the
Dominion
Government
was
in
issue,
and
Duff,
C.J.C.,
said:
"‘Property,
whether
movable
or
immovable,
can,
for
the
purposes
of
determining
sit
its
as
among
the
different
Provinces
of
Canada
in
relation
to
.
.
.
a
tax
imposed
by
a
provincial
law
upon
property
transmitted
owing
to
death,
have
only
one
local
situation.
‘
‘
But
the
operation
of
a
decision
is
to
be
determined
in
light
of
the
circumstances
with
which
the
Court
was
dealing.
In
the
above
case
the
property
differed
widely
from
that
taxed
here;
and
the
real
question
here
was
not
discussed.
But
the
material
differentiating
circumstance
is
that
the
above
case
was
a
contention
between
Provinces
and
this
case
is
not.
This
case
is
therefore
distinguishable
from
the
above
case
and
accordingly
is
not
ruled
by
it.
It
was
however
argued
that
in
any
event
the
provisions
of
the
Canada-United
States
of
America
Tax
Convention
Act,
1944-45
(Can.),
c.
31,
which
provides
that
shares
of
a
company
organized
in
the
United
States
be
deemed
property
situate
there
prevented
the
imposition
of
this
tax;
but
that
Act
does
not
purport
to
affect
the
right
of
the
Province
to
tax
such
property
as
was
held
by
Brookfield,
and
in
any
event
it
deals
with
a
tax
under
the
Dominion
Succession
Duty
Act,
1940-41
(Can.),
e.
14.
I
accordingly
have
come
to
the
conclusion
that
the
$14,347.09
succession
duty
paid
by
the
administrator
was
leviable
and
payable
for
the
use
of
the
Province
of
Nova
Scotia.
Hall,
J.,
coneurred
with
DOULL,
J.
DOULL,
J.:—In
this
case,
the
facts
are
that
W.
Herbert
Brookfield
was
domiciled
in
Nova
Scotia,
resident
in
Nova
Scotia
at
the
time
of
his
death
and
that
he
died
in
Nova
Scotia
on
November
14,
1944.
He
left
a
will
appointing
executors
but
as
they
were
unable
or
unwilling
to
act,
the
Royal
Trust
Co.
was
granted
administration
of
the
estate
with
the
will
annexed.
At
the
time
of
the
death
of
the
said
deceased,
succession
duty
was
levied
by
both
the
Province
of
Nova
Scotia
and
the
Dominion
Government.
The
administrator
paid
the
duty
in
each
ease.
Subsequent
to
the
dates
of
these
payments,
the
Federal
Government
of
the
United
States
claimed
payment
of
a
sum
of
$17,897.92
as
United
States
Succession
Duty
on
certain
shares,
in
com-
panies
the
head
offices
of
which
were
in
the
United
States.
This
was
paid
to
the
Collector
of
Internal
Revenue
of
the
United
States
and
a
refund
was
made
by
the
Dominion
authorities
of
the
Dominion
duty
applicable
to
these
shares.
The
administrator
is
now
claiming
a
similar
refund
from
the
Provinee
of
Nova
Scotia.
Before
considering
the
position
of
the
administrator
in
regard
to
the
Province,
it
may
be
as
well
to
note
the
reason
why
the
Dominion
made
its
refund
without
objection.
By
a
convention
made
between
the
Dominion
and
the
United
States,
dated
June
8,
1944
and
applicable
to
all
cases
where
the
deceased
died
after
June
14,
1941,
the
parties
agreed
that
the
situs
of
company
shares
for
the
purpose
of
succession
duty
should
be
in
the
country
(Canada
or
the
United
States)
in
which
the
company
had
been
organized.
The
law
in
Canada
and
in
the
United
States
had
been
different
and
not
clearly
settled
and
this
convention
was
for
the
purpose
of
making
a
simple
rule.
Notwithstanding
the
supplementary
argument
of
counsel
for
the
administrator,
I
am
of
opinion
that
this
convention
can
have
no
application
to
a
question
of
situs
arising
under
the
Nova
Scotia
Succession
Duty
Act.
I
do
not
agree
with
the
suggestion
that
the
Dominion
Parliament
has
power
to
change
the
Nova
Scotia
enactment,
if
such
enactment
is
within
the
power
of
the
Nova
Scotia
Legislature
under
the
B.N.A.
Act,
but
in
the
present
case,
no
such
question
arises
for
the
convention
by
its
terms
deals
only
with
‘
‘
the
tax
imposed
under
the
Dominion
Succession
Duty
Act
f
’.
Equally
true
it
is
that
while
Canada
is
defined
as
the
“Provinces,
the
Territories
and
Sable
Island’’,
the
definition
is
only
“in
a
geographical
sense’’.
The
convention
does
not
purport
to
affect
any
provincial
power.
The
shares
in
question
had
been
purchased
in
the
names
of
different
persons
who
were
employees
of
the
Royal
Trust
Co.
with
money
supplied
by
the
deceased,
these
purchasers
in
each
case
endorsed
the
certificates
in
blank,
signing
a
power
of
attorney
in
blank
authorizing
the
transfer
of
the
shares
upon
the
books
of
the
company.
These
endorsements
were
completed
with
all
necessary
formalities,
and
were
in
the
possession
of
the
deceased
at
the
time
of
his
death.
The
name
of
the
deceased
did
not
appear
upon
the
certificates
in
any
place,
they
were
received
and
held
by
him
as
bearer
certificates.
In
so
far
as
the
transfer
offices
of
these
companies
were
concerned,
the
death
of
the
deceased
made
no
difference
whatever,
whether
before
or
after
his
death,
any
purchaser
might
have
them
transferred
to
himself.
Of
several
possible
artificial
rules,
our
law
has
chosen
as
the
proper
rule
that
the
situs
of
a
share
registered
in
the
name
of
the
owner
is
the
place
where
it
can
be
effectively
dealt
with,
that
is,
at
the
transfer
office
of
the
corporation:
Brassard
v.
Smith,
[1925]
1
D.L.R.
528,
[1925]
A.C.
371,
38
Que.
K.B.
208.
It
is
also
apparently
clear
that
if
the
shares
are
the
property
of
the
registered
owner,
the
mere
fact
that
he
has
endorsed
them
in
blank,
makes
no
change
in
the
situs:
R
v.
Williams,
[1942]
3
D.L.R.
1,
[1942]
A.C.
541.
On
the
other
hand
certain
companies
issue
bearer
shares,
a
well-known
example
being
Imperial
Oil.
These
shares
pass
by
delivery
of
the
certificate
and
their
situs
is
the
place
where
they
are
found.
In
such
a
ease,
an
effective
transfer
even
as
regards
the
corporation
is
made
by
the
delivery
of
the
certificate.
The
Williams
case,
supra,
is
authority
for
the
proposition
that
the
phrase
used
in
Brassard
v.
Smith,
[1925]
1
D.L.R.
528,
[1925]
A.C.
371,
38
Que.
K.Q.
208,
in
laying
down
the
principle
“clearly
means
‘where
the
shares
can
be
effectively
dealt
with
as
between
the
shareholder
and
the
company,
so
that
the
transferee
will
become
legally
entitled
to
all
the
rights
of
a
member,’
e.g.,
the
right
of
attending
meetings
and
voting
and
of
receiving
divi-
dends.’’
The
present
case
differs
from
the
Williams
case
in
that
in
the
present
case,
the
deceased
had
not
such
property
in
the
shares
as
is
described
in
the
above
phrase.
He
had
not
at
the
time
of
his
death,
and
never
had
the
right
of
attending
meetings,
or
of
voting
or
of
receiving
dividends.
The
fact
of
his
death
made
no
change
as
regards
the
Company.
Under
these
circumstances
the
present
case
seems
to
be
on
all
fours
with
the
case
of
Stern
v.
The
Queen,
[1896]
1
Q.B.
211.
In
that
case
Baron
de
Stern
was
at
the
time
of
his
death
domiciled
and
resident
in
England.
In
his
estate
were
shares
in
American
Railway
Companies
which
had
their
head
offices
and
transfer
offices
in
the
United
States.
While
Baron
de
Stern
owned
the
shares,
he
was
not
the
registered
owner—none
of
the
shares
were
in
his
name—but
the
certificates
were
in
other
names
and
were
endorsed
in
blank.
The
Court
of
Appeal
held
that
the
certificates
so
endorsed
were
property
in
England.
This
distinction
is
made
by
Robertson,
C.J.O.,
in
Treasurer
of
Ont.
v.
Blonde,
[1941]
3
D.L.R.
225
at
p.
236,
[1941]
O.R.
227
at
p.
247:
"‘The
nature
of
the
testator’s
property
in
shares
registered
in
his
own
name
as
here,
is
to
be
distinguished
from
that
which
is
taken
by
one
who
holds
the
certificates
for
shares
registered
in
the
name
of
another
who
has
signed
in
blank
a
form
of
transfer
endorsed
on
the
certificates,
and
has
then
delivered
the
certificates
so
endorsed.”
To
the
contention
that
Stern
v.
The
Queen
governs
the
present
ease,
counsel
for
the
administrator
says
that
the
Canadian
‘‘one
local
situation’’
rule
did
not
apply
in
England,
but
here
is
effective.
Falconbridge,
Conflict
of
Laws,
1947
ed.,
pp.
431-2,
comments
on
Stern
v.
The
Queen
as
follows:
"‘If
the
certificate
is
in
fact
in
country
X,
and
the
share
registry
is
in
country
Y,
the
certificate
is
a
document
of
value
.
.
.
although
not
completely
operative
to
transfer
the
title
to
the
shares,
and
therefore
it
may
be
the
subject
of
taxation
in
X,
if
the
legislation
of
X
is
not
subject
to
territorial
limitations
similar
to
those
which
are
applicable
to
provincial
legislation
in
Canada,
and
at
the
same
time,
the
shares
themselves
may
be
the
subject
of
taxation
in
Y.”
Reference
is
made
to
the
case
of
R.
v.
National
Trust
Co.,
[1933]
4
D.L.R.
at
pp.
466-7,
[1933]
S.C.R.
at
p.
673,
where
Duff,
C.J.C.,
laid
down
certain
principles
applicable
to
a
tax
imposed
by
a
provincial
law
upon
property
transmitted
by
death.
These
principles
were
(1)
that
property
movable
or
immovable
for
the
purpose
of
determining
situs
as
among
the
different
Provinces
of
Canada
in
relation
to
the
incidence
of
a
tax
imposed
by
a
provincial
law
upon
property
transmitted
by
death,
can
have
only
one
local
situation,
and
(2)
that
in
defining
the
authority
of
the
Province
in
part
at
all
events,
by
reference
to
the
local
situation
of
such
property,
the
British
Parliament
had
in
view
the
principles
of
the
common
law,
and
(3)
a
provincial
Legislation
can
only
by
legislation
fix
the
situs
for
the
purpose
of
taxation.
I
do
not
think
that
any
of
these
principles
prevents
in
the
particular
case
before
us,
the
application
of
the
rule
in
Stern
v.
The
Queen,
supra.
The
principles
governing
the
Stern
case
were
certainly
common
law
principles.
No
other
Province
of
Canada
is
involved
in
the
present
controversy,
and
finally
the
only
property
which
the
deceased
possessed
was
the
right
to
the
shares
in
question
and
not
the
shares
themselves,
and
it
was
only
the
right
which
was
affected
by
the
death.
In
the
result
therefore,
I
hold
that
the
Province
of
Nova
Seotia
was
right
in
exacting
the
tax
and
is
not
required
to
make
a
refund.
ARCHIBALD,
J.,
concurred
with
DOULL,
J.