Judgments

Decision Information

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A-492-81
The Queen (Appellant) v.
Imperial General Properties Limited (formerly Speedway Realty Corporation Limited) (Respondent)
Court of Appeal, Heald, Le Damn JJ. and Kelly D.J.—Toronto, September 29; Ottawa, December 24, 1982.
Income tax — Income calculation — Associated companies — Appeal from Trial Division's reversal of Board decision affirming reassessment — Whether S corporation "controlled" by and thus "associated with" V Ltd. — Voting shares of S held 50% by V with 90 common, 50% by spouses with 10 common and 80 preference — "Control" meaning de jure and consisting in majority voting rights according to Buckerfield's and Dworkin Furs — More comprehensive Oakfield approach only an exception — Appeal dismissed — Income Tax Act, R.S.C. 1952, c. 148, s. 39(4)(a) (as am. by S.C. 1960, c. 43, s. 11(1)).
Speedway had issued a total of 180 voting shares. Of these, 100 were common shares and 80 were preference shares. Vali- dor Limited owned 90 of the common shares. The remaining 10 common shares were owned by Meyer Gasner, who also held 40 of the preference shares, and whose wife Goldie Gasner held the other 40 preference shares. Thus Validor Limited and the Gasner couple each held 50% of Speedway's voting shares.
The preference shares carried the right to a fixed, cumula tive, preferential dividend, at the rate of. 10% per annum, on the amount paid up on the preference shares. In the event of the liquidation or winding-up of Speedway, capital was to be repaid on the preference shares in priority to the common shares. However, the holders of the preference shares had no other right to participate in the profits or assets of the company. The surrender of the company's charter could be authorized by a majority of the votes cast at a general meeting, or by 50% (or more) of all votes entitled to be cast at such a meeting.
The Minister reassessed Speedway on the basis that it and Validor Limited were "associated" corporations within the meaning of subsection 39(4) of the Act. More particularly, the Minister took the view that Validor "controlled" Speedway, as per paragraph (a) of the subsection.
An appeal to the Tax Review Board in respect of the reassessment was dismissed. The Board's decision was reversed by the Trial Division, whereupon the Minister, in turn, appealed.
Held, the appeal should be dismissed.
One definition of "controlled" is that propounded by the Exchequer Court in the Buckerfield's case, and subsequently adopted by the Supreme Court of Canada in Dworkin Furs.
According to these authorities, the reference in paragraph 39(4)(a) is to de jure control, and not to de facto control. The provision is concerned, specifically, with "the right of control that rests in ownership of such a number of shares as carries with it the right to a majority of the votes in the election of the Board of Directors".
The Supreme Court took a somewhat different tack in the Oakfield case, where a certain "inside group" of shareholders was held to control a company even though that group and a pair of individuals each possessed 50% of the voting power. It is difficult, however, to identify with precision the principle which this decision represents. There appear to be at least two possible views as to what it implies for those cases in which each of two persons (or groups) holds 50% of a corporation's voting shares. On the one hand, the proper inferences might be: that the Dworkin Furs approach—whereby the de jure control which section 39 is understood to contemplate is itself identified exclusively with voting rights—should be confined to cases in which only one class of voting shares exists (or at least in which all the shares have the same de jure rights); and that if the voting shares constitute two classes with different de jure rights, then for the purposes of section 39 control should be deemed to reside with the person (or group) holding the greater number of shares with the greater de jure rights. On the other hand, it may be that the Oakfield version of de jure control, which takes into account more than just voting rights, should be regarded as nothing more than an exception to, or qualifica tion of, the still dominant Dworkin Furs rule—that the Oak- field approach should be followed only when one of the persons (or groups) with 50% of the votes holds all of the common shares (or shares having the greater de jure rights).
Given the uncertainty as to the import of Oakfield, together with the nature of Oakfield's departure from the Dworkin Furs definition and the emphasis which the Court in Oakfield placed upon the inside group's ownership of all the shares with the greater de jure rights, the second of these two constructions is to be preferred.
In the instant case, Validor Limited did not hold all of Speedway's common shares (or shares with the greater de jure rights). The Oakfield approach is therefore not called into play, and instead, the Dworkin Furs test applies. According to the latter, Validor Limited did not control Speedway, and the two corporations were not "associated" within the meaning of subsection 39(4).
CASES JUDICIALLY CONSIDERED
FOLLOWED:
Buckerfield's Limited, et al. v. The Minister of National Revenue, [1965] 1 Ex.C.R. 299; The Minister of Nation al Revenue v. Dworkin Furs (Pembroke) Limited, et al., [1967] S.C.R. 223.
DISTINGUISHED:
Oakfield Developments (Toronto) Limited v. The Minis ter of National Revenue, [1971] S.C.R. 1032.
COUNSEL:
H. Erlichman for appellant. J. E. Swystun for respondent.
SOLICITORS:
Deputy Attorney General of Canada for
appellant.
Goodman & Carr, Toronto, for respondent.
The following are the reasons for judgment rendered in English by
LE DAIN J.: This is an appeal from a judgment of the Trial Division [[1981] CTC 331; 81 DTC 5191 ] allowing an appeal from a decision of the Tax Review Board with respect to a reassessment for the 1962, 1963, 1966 and 1967 taxation years.
The issue is whether the respondent company, which for convenience will be referred to herein- after as "Speedway", was "associated with" Vali- dor Limited ("Validor") within the meaning of paragraph 39(4)(a) of the Income Tax Act, R.S.C. 1952, c. 148, as amended by S.C. 1960, c. 43, subsection 11(1), which reads as follows:
39....
(4) For the purpose of this section, one corporation is associated with another in a taxation year if, at any time in the year,
(a) one of the corporations controlled the other,
Speedway was incorporated on August 29, 1955. A total of 86 of the 100 issued common shares of the company were held by Morris and Louis Win- gold and their respective wives. Ten common shares were held by Meyer Gasner, who was a personal friend and business associate of Morris Wingold but was not related to the Wingolds or their wives. The remaining four shares were held by incorporating counsel. Supplementary letters patent dated December 16, 1960 authorized the issue of an additional 9,900 common shares with out par value and 10,000 voting, non-participating cumulative preference shares with a par value of $1.00 each, carrying the right to a fixed cumula tive preferential dividend at the rate of ten per cent (10%) per annum on the amount paid up on the preference shares, and the right in the event of the liquidation or the winding-up of the company to repayment of capital in priority to the common shares, but without the right to participate in profits or assets. The supplementary letters patent also provided that the surrender of Speedway's
charter could be authorized by a majority of the votes cast at a general meeting or by at least 50% of votes of all the shareholders entitled to vote at such meeting. On December 27, 1960 forty prefer ence shares of Speedway were issued to Meyer Gasner and forty preference shares were issued to his wife Goldie Gasner. On December 21, 1960 the incorporating counsel's four common shares were transferred to the Wingolds, one to Morris Win- gold and one to his wife, and two to Louis Win- gold. On December 28, 1960 the Wingolds trans ferred their 90 common shares in Speedway to Validor, the common shares of which were held entirely by the Wingolds. The Gasners were not shareholders of Validor. Thus at the end of December, 1960 the voting shares, common and preference, in Speedway were held as follows: Validor held 90 of the 100 issued common shares; Meyer Gasner held the remaining 10 of the issued common shares, and he and his wife held the 80 issued preference shares. In other words, Validor held fifty per cent of the voting shares and the Gasners held fifty per cent. The Gasners held their shares in Speedway until October 31, 1968, when they transferred them to Validor.
The issue on the appeal is whether by virtue of this distribution of the common and preference shares of Speedway, Validor "controlled" Speed way within the meaning of paragraph 39(4)(a) of the Act.
On October 31, 1968 Speedway and other com panies in which Validor owned all the common shares were amalgamated to form the respondent Imperial General Properties Limited.
By notices of reassessment dated January 7, 1972, the Minister of National Revenue reassessed Speedway as a division of Imperial General Prop erties Limited on the basis that it was "associated with" Validor during its 1962, 1963, 1966 and 1967 taxation years within the meaning of subsec tion 39(4) of the Act. An appeal to the Tax Review Board in respect of that reassessment was
dismissed. The Trial Division allowed the appeal from the Board's decision. In its reasons for judg ment the Court said [at page 332 CTC, and at pages 5191-5192 DTC]:
The submission of the defendant is that even though 50% voting control or votes which can be cast at a meeting of shareholders were held equally by Validor and the Gasners, nevertheless Validor held control of Speedway within the mean ing of section 39(4) of the Act because the preferred shares held by the Gasners did not have the same de jure rights as the common shares; and for this proposition the defendant relied on Oakfield Developments (Toronto) Limited v M.N.R. (SCC) [1971] SCR 1032; [1971] CTC 283; 71 DTC 5175.
In my view the principle in the Oakfield case is not appli cable to the facts of this case. Instead the principle that should be applied is exemplified in Buckerfield's Limited et al v MNR, [1965] 1 Ex CR 299; [1964] CTC 504; 64 DTC 5301; MNR v Dworkin Furs (Pembroke) Limited et al [1966] Ex CR 228; [1965] CTC 465; 65 DTC 5277; (SCC) [1967] SCR 223, 67 DTC 5035; and Himley Estates Ltd and Humble Invest ments, Ltd v The Commissioners of Inland Revenue (1932), 17 TC 367 at 379.
On the argument in this Court it was agreed that the issue, as reflected in the reasons of the Trial Judge, was whether the definition of "con- trol" that was applied in Buckerfield's Limited, et al. v. The Minister of National Revenue, [1965] 1 Ex.C.R. 299 and The Minister of National Reve nue v. Dworkin Furs (Pembroke) Limited, et al., [1967] S.C.R. 223 is the proper test in this case or whether the approach that was adopted in Oak- field Developments (Toronto) Limited v. The Minister of National Revenue, [1971] S.C.R. 1032 should be applied.
In Buckerfield's the issue was whether certain companies were "associated" within the meaning of section 39 of the Income Tax Act by reason of being "controlled" by a "group of persons" con sisting, in two of the appeals, of two companies each of which held 50% of the issued shares in the two companies said to be associated, and consist ing, in the other two appeals, of three companies, each of which held one third of the issued shares in the two companies said to be associated. In each case there was only one class of shares. The Minis ter had assessed the companies in question on the basis that they were "associated" within the mean ing of section 39, and the Exchequer Court dis missed appeals from his assessments. Jackett P.
[as he then was] considered various possible mean ings of "control", including [at page 303] "de facto control by one or more shareholders whether or not they hold a majority of shares", and con cluded at page 303 that "controlled" in section 39 contemplated "the right of control that rests in ownership of such a number of shares as carries with it the right to a majority of the votes in the election of the Board of Directors". He held that the two sets of shareholding companies, which he found to be "groups of persons" within the mean ing of section 39, clearly controlled the companies in which they held the shares.
In Dworkin Furs there were five companies which the Minister had assessed as "associated" companies within the meaning of section 39. In each case there was only one class of shares involved. In determining whether the companies were "controlled" within the meaning of section 39 so as to make them associated companies, the Supreme Court of Canada approved and applied the definition of "control" adopted in Bucker- field's. Hall J., who delivered the judgment of the Court, said at pages 227-228:
The word controlled as used in this subsection was held by Jackett P. to mean de jure control and not de facto control and with this I agree. He said in Buckerfield's Limited et al v. Minister of National Revenue:
Many approaches might conceivably be adopted in apply ing the word "control" in a statute such as the Income Tax Act to a corporation. It might, for example, refer to control by "management", where management and the Board of Directors are separate, or it might refer to control by the Board of Directors. The kind of control exercised by manage ment officials or the Board of Directors is, however, clearly not intended by section 39 when it contemplates control of one corporation by another as well as control of a corporation by individuals (see subsection (6) of section 39). The word "control" might conceivably refer to de facto control by one or more shareholders whether or not they hold a majority of shares. I am of the view, however, that, in section 39 of the Income Tax Act, the word "controlled" contemplates the right of control that rests in ownership of such a number of shares as carries with it the right to a majority of the votes in the election of the Board of Directors. See British American Tobacco Co. v. I.R.C. (1943) 1 A.E.R. 13 where Viscount Simon L.C., at p. 15, says:
"The owners of the majority of the voting power in a company are the persons who are in effective control of its affairs and fortunes."
See also Minister of National Revenue v. Wrights' Canadian Ropes Ld. (1947) A.C. 109 per Lord Greene M.R. at page 118, where it was held that the mere fact that one corporation had less than 50 per cent of the shares of another was "conclusive" that the one corporation was not "con- trolled" by the other within section 6 of the Income War Tax Act.
This definition of controlled applies to all five appeals. [Footnotes omitted.]
In four of the five companies in Dworkin Furs no one person or group of persons held more than 50% of the issued shares. It was held that the fact a shareholder who held 50% of the shares had, as president of the company, a casting vote at meet ings of shareholders and directors did not give him control. In one of the four companies there was an agreement that one of the shareholders holding 50% of the shares would attend to the running of the day-to-day business of the company. Hall J. held that while this agreement might be said to give the shareholder de facto control, it did not give him de jure control, "which is the true test" [at page 229]. In the fifth company a group held two thirds of the shares, but there was a provision in the company's articles of association which required that all motions at meetings of sharehold ers or directors could only be passed by unanimous consent. The Minister had taken the position that this agreement was illegal, but the Court rejected this contention.
In Oakfield the common shares in the company ("Polestar") assessed by the Minister as an "associated" company within the meaning of sub section 39(4) were held by an "inside group". An equal number of voting preferred shares were issued to two individuals who were strangers to the inside group. Thus the voting power was distribut ed on a fifty-fifty basis between the inside group and the two individuals. The preferred shares car ried the right to a fixed cumulative preferential dividend of 10% per annum and the right to repay ment of capital in priority to the common shares in the winding-up of the company, but no rights to further participation in profits or assets. A member of the inside group personally guaranteed the holders of the preferred shares a return upon
thirty days' notice of the money paid by them for the shares and the payment of the 10% dividend. The chairman at meetings of directors of share holders did not have a casting vote. A surrender of the company's charter could be authorized by 50% of the votes of shareholders entitled to vote. The Supreme Court of Canada held that the company was controlled by the inside group, and was thus associated with other companies controlled by them. Judson J., delivering the unanimous judg ment of the Court, said at page 1037:
The inside group controlled 50 per cent of the voting power through their ownership of the common shares. They were entitled to all the surplus profits on a distribution by way of dividend after the payment of the fixed cumulative dividend to the preferred shareholders. On a winding-up of Polestar, they were entitled to all of the surplus after return of capital and the payment of a 10 per cent premium to the preferred sharehold ers. Their voting power was sufficient to authorize the surren der of the company's letters patent. In my opinion, these circumstances are sufficient to vest control in the group when the owners of non-participating preferred shares hold the re maining 50 per cent of the voting power.
The decision of this Court in Minister of National Revenue v. Dworkin Furs (Pembroke) Ltd. et al. can be distinguished from the present case. In the Dworkin Furs case, the voting was split equally between two groùps also, but there was only one class of shares. Each group had the same de jure rights, and each shareholder was entitled to share rateably in the profits and assets of the company by dividends or on winding up. In addition, neither group could itself wind up the company. [Footnote omitted.]
With great respect, I have difficulty perceiving the precise rationale of the conclusion in Oakfield and the principle or criterion that is implied by it. There appear to be at least two possible views of its implications for cases in which 50% of the voting shares of a company are held by one person or group of persons and 50% are held by another person or group of persons: (a) that the definition of de jure control approved and applied in Dwor- kin Furs is to be confined to the case where there is only one class of shares (or at least, where all the shares have the same de jure rights), and that where there are two classes of voting shares having different de jure rights, control for purposes of section 39 is to be deemed to rest with the person or group of persons holding the greater number of shares having the greater de jure rights; or (b)
that the concept of de jure control in Oakfield, which extends beyond voting rights, is an excep tion to or qualification of the traditional concept approved and applied in Dworkin Furs which is to be confined to the case where, as in Oakfield, all the common shares (or shares having the greater de jure rights) are held by one of the persons or groups of persons holding 50% of the votes. (The fact that either of the persons or groups of persons holding 50% of the votes can authorize the wind- ing-up of the company appears to me, with respect, to be a neutral factor.) Given this uncertainty, the nature of the departure in Oakfield from the concept of de jure control approved and applied in Dworkin Furs, and the emphasis in the reasons of Judson J. that all of the shares having greater de jure rights were held by the inside group, I am of the respectful opinion that the second is the better view. Accordingly, since all of the common shares (or shares having the greater de jure rights) were not held by Validor I am of the opinion, applying the definition of "control" approved in Dworkin Furs, that Speedway was not controlled by Vali- dor. Speedway was therefore not an "associated" company within the meaning of paragraph 39(4)(a) of the Act.
For these reasons I would dismiss the appeal with costs.
HEALD J.: I concur. KELLY D.J.: I concur.
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