Judgments

Decision Information

Decision Content

T-1614-71
Simard-Beaudry Inc. (Appellant)
v.
Minister of National Revenue (Respondent)
Trial Division, Addy J.—Montreal, March 15; Ottawa, July 16, 1974.
Income tax—Dividend stripping—Transactions in acquisi tion of corporate assets—Claim for depreciation—Whether unduly or artificially reducing income—Income Tax Act, s. 137(1)—Income Tax Act, S.C. 1970-71-72, c. 63, s. 245(1)—Quebec Civil Code Art. 1569a et seq. (Bulk sales).
The appellant S.B. was incorporated to acquire the assets of companies S and B. The business, goodwill and current assets of the two companies were acquired on December 15, 1964. On the same day, M, purchaser of the shares in S and B, transferred them to Bermuda company G. Companies S and B, having elected domicile in Bermuda, gave an option, on January 8, 1965, to company G, for the sum of $1, on the purchase of their fixed assets. On January 13, 1965, appel lant acquired this option from company G for the sum of $5,406,000, representing mainly the accumulated deprecia tion on the fixed assets, companies S and B not having paid any income tax on the depreciation as it was accumulating. On the same day, appellant exercised the option to purchase the fixed assets of S and B, upon payment to them of $1,950,000, representing the depreciated value of the assets as shown on the books. The actual value of the fixed assets at the moment of purchase was about $10,600,000. The case turned on the question on whether the appellant had the right to claim, for the years following the purchase, a depreciation calculated on the additional amount of the $5,406,000 paid to company G for the option, plus the amount of $1,950,000 paid on the purchase, or whether, as the Minister asserted, the deduction of the former sum would unduly or artificially reduce the income, contrary to section 137(1) of the Income Tax Act, and depreciation could be allowed only on the Iatter sum.
Held, allowing the appeal, the total amount of $7,356,000 was paid for the fixed assets. No part of this, as far as the appellant was concerned, could be considered as an artificial payment, in the sense that it represented anything but a payment for the fixed assets of the two vendor companies. The reason why the appellant could acquire the fixed assets at a price lower than their value was by the contrivance of the option. The purchase by means of the option did not constitute a sham in the legal sense. In the absence of sham, section 137(1) could not be invoked to deny depreciation where the revenue of the taxpayer claiming depreciation would not be unduly or artificially reduced.
Cattermole-Trethewey Contractors Ltd. v. M.N.R. 71 DTC 5010; Snook v. London & West Riding Invest-
ments Ltd. [1967] 1 All E.R. 518; Susan Hosiery Lim ited v. M.N.R. [1969] 2 Ex.C.R. 27; Commissioners of Inland Revenue v. Wesleyan and General Assurance Society (1948) 30 T.C. (H.L.) 11; M.N.R. v. Cameron [1972] C.T.C. 380; Concorde Automobile Ltd. v. M.N.R. 71 DTC 5161; West Hill Redevelopment Com pany Limited v. M.N.R. [1969] 2 Ex.C.R. 441; Shulman v. M.N.R. [1961] Ex.C.R. 410; and Harris v. M.N.R. [1966] C.T.C. 226, applied.
INCOME tax appeal. COUNSEL:
Claude P. Desaulniers and Maurice A. Reg - nier for appellant.
Alban Garon, Q.C., and Mme Louise Lamarre-Proulx for respondent.
SOLICITORS:
Stikeman, Elliott, Tamaki & Co., Montreal, for appellant.
Deputy Attorney General of Canada for respondent.
The following are the reasons for judgment delivered in English by
ADDY J.: The facts as established at trial were numerous as well as complicated. The case con cerned the alleged responsibility of the appellant toward respondent for its participation in the operations of two other companies which, by various offshore trading operations, that is to say, various loans, sales and transfers of options, shares and assets to individuals and companies in Canada, as well as companies and agencies in Bermuda, converted or attempted to convert into dividends payable to their share holders the major portion of their assets.
If these transactions had taken place in Canada, and directly between the appellant and the two vendor companies, the latter undoubt edly would be obliged to pay a large amount of income tax, on the recuperation of accumulated depreciation on their fixed assets.
However, to determine the question in issue, it is not necessary nor even helpful, in my view, to describe in detail all the various manoeuvres or to identify the role of each actor in the
complicated drama which unfolded between the months of May 1964 and March 1965, as the issue depends mainly on the role which the appellant might have played either directly or by means of agents, and either as one of the main instigators of the plan or as a participant in certain of the financial operations and transfers of assets.
The two companies, which engaged in divi dend stripping, were Simard & Frères, Cie Ltée, owned by the two Simard brothers and Beaudry Ltée, owned by the two Beaudry brothers. Simard & Frères, Cie Ltée was engaged mainly in heavy construction while Beaudry Ltée oper ated, above all, as a production company engaged in the manufacture of concrete and cement blocks and also in the exploitation of quarries, etc.
Aubert Brillant, who had more than sixteen years experience in general construction and who was at that time the owner of various construction companies, became interested in the purchase of the two companies: Simard & Frères, Cie Ltée and Beaudry Ltée. To accom plish this, on the 31st of August, 1964, he incorporated the appellant, Simard-Beaudry Inc.
On the 15th of December, 1964, the appellant acquired the business, goodwill and current assets of Beaudry Ltée for the sum of $518,- 162.00 and those of Simard & Frères, Cie Ltée for the sum of $851,941.00. On the 13th of January, 1965, the appellant also acquired from a Bermuda company, Group Investments Lim ited (hereinafter called "Group"), an option to purchase the fixed assets of these two compa nies and paid for this option a sum of approxi mately $5,406,000.00. Five days previously, Group had acquired this option from Beaudry Ltée and from Simard & Frères, Cie Ltée for the sum of $1.00. On the same day that it acquired the option, that is the 13th of January, 1965, the appellant acquired directly from these two companies the fixed assets for an additional sum of $1,950,000.00, in exercising the option which it had acquired from Group. This sum of $1,950,000.00 represented the depreciated value of the assets as shown on the books, while
the sum of $5,406,000.00 represented mainly the accumulated depreciation on these fixed assets, the two vendor companies not having paid any income tax on this depreciation as it was accumulating. The actual value of these fixed assets at the moment of the purchase was approximately $10,600,000.00.
The case turns on the question whether the appellant would have the right to claim for the years following the purchase, a depreciation cal culated on the additional amount of some $5,406,000.00 paid to Group for the option plus the amount of $1,950,000.00 or whether, as alleged by the respondent, the depreciation can be allowed only on the amount of $1,950,- 000.00, that is, the depreciated value as shown in the books of the two vendor companies.
The ultimate decision depends on the inter pretation of and on the effect of subsection (1) of section 137 of the Income Tax Act' . The subsection reads as follows:
137. (1) In computing income for the purposes of this Act, no deduction may be made in respect of a disbursement or expense made or incurred in respect of a transaction or operation that, if allowed, would unduly or artificially reduce the income.
It is interesting to note that, when the Income Tax Act was revised in 1971, although the Eng- lish text of this subsection, now section 245(1), was not touched, the French text was amended slightly: for the word déboursé there was sub stituted the word débours (which is perhaps better French) and the words dépense faite ou engagée were replaced by the words dépense contractée 2 .
To understand the sequence of events, it is useful to note that the matter first arose in the Spring of 1964, during a discussion between Aubert Brillant and one of the Simard brothers, when Brillant let it be known that he would possibly be interested in the acquisition of the company Simard & Frères, Cie Ltée. Soon after that, Mr. Brillant consulted Mr. Jacques Melan- çon of Jacques Melançon et Associés, Inc., financial counsellors. The latter advised Mr. Brillant that he should give some thought at the same time to the possibility of buying Beaudry
R.S.C. 1952, chapter 148.
2 See S.C. 1970-71-72, chapter 63, section 245(1).
Ltée and prepared for the latter's use a plan, for the acquisition of these two companies, dated the 1st of June, 1964. Briefly, this plan provided for the purchase of the shares of these companies.
Mr. Brillant testified at the trial, and I accept his evidence on this point, that, after having considered the report of Mr. Melançon, it seemed evident to him that it would not be profitable for him to acquire these two compa nies in the manner recommended by Mr. Melan- çon, that is, by purchasing the issued shares. In spite of certain testimony to the contrary, the evidence, in my view, establishes clearly that Mr. Brillant, after analyzing Mr. Melançon's report, decided that it would not be profitable for a buyer to purchase the shares of these two companies due to the fact that the future depreciation, such a purchaser could claim on these fixed assets worth $10,600,000.00, would be limited to $1,900,000.00. In addition thereto, it was evident to him that any future sale of these assets would attract a very large amount of tax on the accumulated depreciation of $5,406,000.00.
Mr. Brillant, however, remained interested in the purchase of the assets of these two compa nies and, between the end of July and the end of August of the same year, he caused three reports to be prepared on the assets and liabili ties and on the amount of business of these two companies in order to study the possibility of acquiring same. These reports were prepared by Unica Research Company Limited, by Canadian Appraisal Company Limited and by McDonald, Currie & Co., Accountants.
It is evident according to these reports, the testimony given at trial and the events which took place subsequently that, in the opinion of McDonald, Currie & Co. and of Mr. Brillant's legal counsel, the only method by which Mr. Brillant could purchase these companies at the price he wished to pay and at the same time benefit of the full depreciation for the amount paid for the fixed assets, would be to acquire the assets themselves and not the shares. It was equally evident to the sellers, that is, the Beau- dry brothers and the Simard brothers, that in order to avoid income tax on the recuperation
of the accumulated depreciation in their compa nies and also in order to be able to withdraw the assets by means of dividend stripping, it would be necessary to engage in the financial manoeu vre of offshore trading. In other words, in order that the final deal lead to the desired results, it would be necessary to engage in operations involving offshore trading, the details of which were conceived to a large extent by one D. J. MacGregor of McDonald, Currie & Co.
The evidence at trial establishes clearly that Mr. Brillant was perfectly aware at all times of the exact effect of the financial manoeuvring proposed by the Beaudry brothers and by the Simard brothers. He contributed also to the ultimate success of the plan by actively par ticipating in various meetings in Canada and in Bermuda and by being instrumental in obtaining financial aid from at least one finance company, that is, Traders Finance Corporation Limited.
Mr. Melançon, having become the owner of the shares of these two companies by various interim financial operations including back-to- back bank loans, transferred the shares of the vendor companies to Group on the same day that the appellant purchased the current assets, goodwill and business of the companies, that is, the 15th of December, 1964.
Despite certain statements to the contrary by certain witnesses of the appellant, the evidence, in my view, establishes clearly the following facts:
1. That Jacques Melançon et Associés, Inc. and Group were acting as figureheads for the vendor companies and their shareholders;
2. That Jacques Melançon et Associés, Inc. was acting as agent not only of Simard & Frères, Cie Ltée and of Beaudry Ltée but also of Aubert Brillant as well as of the appellant in order to bring to fruition the planned finan cial operations;
3. These financial manoeuvres resulting in the stripping of the surplus and the avoidance of income tax on the recuperation of accumulat ed depreciation did not directly benefit Simard-Beaudry Inc., but this company bene-
fited indirectly from these operations since the purchase of the assets could not have taken place at the agreed price without the operations having succeeded;
4. Aubert Brillant and, by the same token, his company, the appellant, were perfectly aware of this financial manoeuvring and of its ulti mate aim;
5. The option granted Group for one dollar and re-sold to Simard-Beaudry Inc. for the amount of $5,406,000.00 was but an indirect method of effectuating the purchase of the fixed assets at a global price of $7,356,000.00 and at the same time allowing dividend strip ping and ensuring the avoidance of payment of tax by the vendors on the recuperation of the $5,406,000.00 paid on the option.
Simard-Beaudry Inc. cannot be considered, in any way, as an alter ego either of Simard & Frères, Cie Ltée, or of Beaudry Construction, or of the Beaudry brothers or of the Simard brothers who benefited from the dividend strip ping. Mr. Melançon was, without a doubt, the agent and the alter ego of the Simard brothers and of the Beaudry brothers in the transaction relating to dividend stripping and in the sale of the shares in their companies. He was also the agent of Brillant and of the appellant in so far as the first negotiations for the purchase of the business and of the fixed assets are concerned, but he was not the agent of Brillant or of the appellant in the deal concerning dividend strip ping or the sale of the shares.
The law is too clear for any useful purpose to be served by citing jurisprudence to that effect, that a person may act as an agent of two people without thereby creating joint responsibility between them for all their actions or for those of the agent. The fact that Melançon was acting as agent, but for different objects, for the Simard brothers and their company on the one part and for Brillant and the appellant on the other part, could and should in the present cir cumstances impute a mutual knowledge of their respective actions but not necessarily a mutual responsibility as to those actions. The evidence establishes clearly that Melançon, in acquiring the shares of the two vendor companies, did so as agent and alter ego of the Simard brothers,
the Beaudry brothers and the two vendor com panies and not as agent of Brillant or of the appellant company; the latter had never acquired these shares and never had any inter est in them. Notwithstanding the argument of counsel for the respondent, there is no evi dence, either direct or circumstantial, that would indicate that they would have ever acquired these shares. The evidence establishes clearly that Melançon acquired the shares, but he did so in the name of the shareholders of the two vendor companies. The fact that he had acted as agent for Brillant at the outset of the negotiations is certainly not sufficient to impute to Brillant or to the appellant a real interest in these shares at the time of the subsequent acquisition by Melançon, since it was clearly established that Brillant had already decided for a considerable time previously that he was not interested in the least in the purchase of the shares for himself or his company.
One must first determine whether the $7,356,000.00 that the appellant alleges having disbursed for the fixed assets of the two compa nies were really disbursed for this purpose. If not, it would follow that a depreciation on these fixed assets could not be claimed to the extent that monies were not actually disbursed in attaining this end. When a transaction consti tutes a trick or hoax in the sense that the word "sham" is employed when describing certain financial transactions, one must pierce the veil and decide what the real substance or the intrin sic nature of the transaction is.
A transaction or a financial operation consti tutes a sham when it is not truly what it appears to be or when it is but a veil to dissimulate an entirely different state of affairs. For example, when one uses the pretext of establishing a pension plan for employees of a firm for the purpose of furnishing a means of removing profit from that firm free from tax, without having the true intention of furnishing protec tion to employees or to continue to make dis bursements to the pension plan. See Cattermole- Trethewey Contractors Ltd. v. M.N.R. 3 . An excellent definition of a financial sham was
71 DTC 5010.
given by Lord Diplock in the case of Snook v. London & West Riding Investments, Ltd. 4 at pages 528 and 529:
As regards the contention of the plaintiff that the transac tions between himself, Auto-Finance, Ltd. and the defend ants were a "sham", it is, I think, necessary to consider what, if any, legal concept is involved in the use of this popular and pejorative word. I apprehend that, if it has any meaning in law, it means acts done or documents executed by the parties to the "sham" which are intended by them to give to third parties or to the court the appearance of creating between the parties legal rights and obligations different from the actual legal rights and obligations (if any) which the parties intend to create. One thing I think, how ever, is clear in legal principle, morality and the authorities (see Yorkshire Railway Wagon Co. v. Maclure (1882), 21 Ch. D. 309; Stoneleigh Finance, Ltd. v. Phillips [1965] 1 All E.R. 513;11965] 2 Q.B. 537) that for acts or documents to be a "sham", with whatever legal consequences follow from this, all the parties thereto must have a common intention that the acts or documents are not to create the legal rights and obligations which they give the appearance of creating. No unexpressed intention of a "shammer" affect the rights of a party whom he deceived. There is an express finding in this case that the defendants were not parties to the alleged "sham". So this contention fails.
This definition was approved by our Courts. See Susan Hosiery Limited v. M.N.R. 5 .
On the other hand, in order to determine if a document constitutes or not a sham and for this reason must necessarily attract financial conse quences, one must not take an exaggerated view of the motives of the parties for the sole pur pose of arriving at an interpretation favourable to the taxing authority. The rule which lays down that the substance and the nature of the transaction must be considered, must not serve as a pretext for a detailed search into motives in order to attain a farfetched or exaggerated inter pretation of its exact nature. Lord Greene in the case of Commissioners of Inland Revenue v. Wesleyan and General Assurance Society 6 described the restrictions which must be applied to such a search in the following terms at page 16 of the report:
4 [1967] 1 All E.R. 518.
s [1969] 2 Ex.C.R. 27.
6 (1948) 30 T.C. (H.L.) 11; 176 L.T. 84 (K.B. & C.A.); 64
T.L.R. 173.
It is perhaps convenient to call to mind some of the elementary principles which govern cases of this kind. The function of the Court in dealing with contractual documents is to construe those documents according to the ordinary principles of construction, giving to the language used its normal ordinary meaning save in so far as the context requires some different meaning to be attributed to it. Effect must be given to every word in the contract save in so far as the context otherwise requires.
Another principle which must be remembered is this. In considering tax matters a document is not to have placed upon it a strained or forced construction in order to attract tax, nor is a strained or forced construction to be placed upon it in order to avoid tax. The document must be construed in the ordinary way and the tax legislation then applied to it. If on its true construction it falls within a certain taxing category, then it is taxed. If on its true construction it falls outside the taxing category, then it escapes tax.
There have been cases in the past where what has been called the substance of the transaction has been thought to enable the Court to construe a document in such a way as to attract tax. That particular doctrine of substance as distinct from form was, I hope, finally exploded by the decision of the House of Lords in the case of Duke of Westminster v. Commissioners of Inland Revenue, 19 T.C. 490. The argu ment of the Crown in the present case, when really under stood, appears to me to be an attempt to resurrect it. The doctrine means no more than that the language that the parties use is not necessarily to be adopted as conclusive proof of what the legal relationship is. That is indeed a common principle of construction.
These remarks were approved by the House of Lords when the case was brought before them on appeal. They describe the precise manner in which the question should be considered.
Since the true value of the fixed assets pur chased was $10,600,000.00 and the payment of $5,406,000.00 for the option cannot be attribut ed to anything except the assets, which were purchased by means of this option, it seems clear that Simard-Beaudry Inc. paid the total amount of approximately $7,356,000.00 for the fixed assets. It seems clear also that no part of this money, in so far as Simard-Beaudry Inc. is concerned, could be considered as an artificial payment in the sense that it represents anything but a payment for the fixed assets of the two vendor companies.
The sole reason why Simard. Beaudry Inc. could acquire these fixed assets at a price lower than their true value was the method of pur chase by the ingenious contrivance of an option. This option covered solely the right to purchase the fixed assets. There is no question here of any artificial increase of the purchase price. On the contrary, the purchase price could only be fixed at this reduced amount because of the financial manoeuvres, of which the option formed an essential part. This reduction in the purchase price was effected of course to the detriment of the taxing authority and to the benefit of Simard-Beaudry Inc., which acquired these fixed assets at a reduced price, as well as to the benefit of the two companies Beaudry Ltée and Simard & Frères, Cie Ltée who profit ed directly from the- avoidance of tax on the recuperated depreciation which had been claimed previously on their assets and also to the benefit of the Simard brothers and of the Beaudry brothers who, by stripping dividends from their respective companies, managed to extract large sums without paying tax.
When one considers the transaction from the standpoint of the appellant, one is driven to the realization that the latter spent monies for the sole purpose of acquiring the assets purchased and for the right to purchase those fixed assets and that the total value of the monies spent by this company is in fact represented by these assets. One must also realize in addition that this company never purchased at any time the shares of other companies. Therefore, I can come to no other conclusion but that the pay ment of $7,356,000.00 was truly made and that the payment can be attributed to nothing else but the purchase of the fixed assets and not to the purchase of shares or other assets.
Having regard to the manner in which the Supreme Court of Canada, in its unanimous judgment in the recent case of M.N.R. v. Carneron 7 , applied the definition contained in the case of Snook v. London & West Riding Investments, Ltd. (supra) to the circumstances of the Cameron case, it is clear, in my view, that the purchase by the appellant by means of an
7 [1972] C.T.C. 380.
option does not constitute a sham in the legal sense. In addition, contrary to the motives of the taxpayer in the case of Concorde Automo bile Ltd. v. M.N.R. 8 who, in order to deduct as expenses revenue otherwise taxable for income tax purposes established a pension plan, in the present case the main object and even the sole object of the appellant was not to avoid the payment of tax, for no tax was payable by it in any event, but in order to purchase the assets of the two vendor companies, as described in the option.
But the question is not finally settled in favour of the appellant by the simple fact that the transaction does not constitute a sham as defined in tax law; one must also determine whether, notwithstanding this, it would not con stitute in whole or in part a disbursement which would reduce unduly or artificially the income of the appellant or whether a depreciation taken on the assets involved in the transaction would not constitute one. See Concorde Automobile Ltd. v. M.N.R. (supra); also West Hill Redevel opment Company Limited v. M.N.R. 9 ; and Shul- man v. M.N.R. 1 ° which deal clearly and precise ly with the definition and the effect of section 137(1). The case Harris v. M.NR." establishes that a disbursement or expense, as mentioned in section 137(1), includes a claim for deprecia- tion—see pages 241 and 242 of the report.
Putting aside any sympathy that one might naturally feel for the respondent, who finds himself deprived of an enormous sum by these financial manoeuvres, and also for the numer ous citizens of modest means whose contribu tions to public coffers only too frequently involve considerable sacrifice, in order to exam ine from a strict legal standpoint section 137(1) in the light of the above-mentioned conclusions of fact it is, in my view, impossible to imagine how, under this section, the appellant can be deprived of the right to claim a depreciation on
8 71 DTC 5161 at page 5174.
9 ' [1969] 2 Ex.C.R. 441.
' 0 [1961] Ex.C.R. 410 at page 424.
" [1966] C.T.C. 226.
the full amount of $7,356,000.00 paid for the purchase of these fixed assets. If these fixed assets had been acquired directly from the two selling companies at their true value, that is for the sum of $10,600,000.00 without any finan cial manoeuvring, nobody could logically deny that the appellant would have the right to claim an annual depreciation based on this purchase price. The depreciation, in such a case, would be calculated on a total capitalization of fixed assets of approximately $3,244,000.00 more than the amount on which the appellant is claim ing depreciation in the present appeal. As they are the same assets, how can one then conclude that this would be a deduction or an expense which would "unduly or artificially reduce the income" of the appellant?
Furthermore, it seems evident that if the appellant had acquired these assets from the two companies who sold them at the same price and under the same conditions, but only after these two companies had paid to the taxing authority, from the purchase price, income tax calculated on the recaptured depreciation, there would not be the slightest question but that the appellant would be fully entitled to claim the depreciation on the total amount paid, including the cost of the option.
Unless there is a sham, section 137(1), in my view, cannot be invoked to deny an expense or a deduction where the revenue of the taxpayer who is claiming the depreciation, would not be reduced unduly or artificially. The original expense was made for the purchase at the reduced price of fixed assets which, according to the evidence submitted, will undoubtedly be used to produce revenue. There is no evidence that these fixed assets will not be entirely required for this object. The original expense therefore cannot be an undue or an artificial one and the depreciation itself cannot constitute that type of reduction in revenue. It is interesting also to note that the respondent has already in the past allowed a depreciation on this entire amount involving the same fixed assets in the same type of business, at a time when they were actually worth less than at the time the appellant purchased them.
Even when interpreting the section in the most favourable way possible to the respondent, it is impossible for me to attribute to it any other meaning but that advanced by the appellant.
It has been stated too often, to justify citing jurisprudence to establish the validity of the principle, that in interpreting a section of a taxing statute one must not consider moral prin ciples nor even equitable principles. It would undoubtedly seem more equitable to tax the appellant since, by its creator and guiding light, Aubert Brillant, it participated very actively in a manoeuvre which permitted the selling compa nies to deny to the taxing authorities income tax on an accumulated depreciation of $5,406,- 000.00 and also permitted the shareholders of these companies to extract this as a capital gain.
In the event of the operation involving divi dend stripping by means of the option being illegal when it occurred, it is possible that the respondent might recuperate from the appellant, from these assets, the income tax of which the former was deprived by the vendors since the appellant is still in possession of the assets which one might possibly consider as being sub ject to a claim of the respondent. Furthermore the appellant could certainly not be considered as a purchaser in good faith of these assets since it knew in detail of the claims for income tax. At the time of the hearing of the appeal I also brought up the question of the Bulk Sales Act of the Province of Quebec. Counsel for both parties admitted that they had not con sidered this question on the appeal but that, on thinking it over, they were satisfied that the sale was in accordance with this Act. However, it would seem to me that there never at any time was a single contract covering the purchase of both the current assets and the fixed assets and that furthermore the two transactions took place at different moments in time. The evidence ten dered establishes that, after the purchase of the current assets including goodwill, from the two companies on the 15th of December, 1964, there was no contractual obligation on the part of the appellant to purchase the fixed assets nor
was there \ any obligation on the part of the Beaudry brothers or the Simard brothers or their companies to sell these fixed assets. In addition, the purchase of the option and the purchase of the fixed assets took place in Ber- muda and all the vendors were, apparently, at that moment situated in and domiciled in Ber- muda, the two vendor companies having appar ently elected domicile in that country before the sale; one might therefore question whether the sale would not fall under the provisions of the Bulk Sales Act of Bermuda since the option was given in Bermuda and that the purchase of the fixed assets took place in accordance with the rights acquired by the option.
In any event, the question before me is not to determine whether the taxing authorities could, by some other means, recover the income taxes which might be otherwise payable, but to decide as to the application of section 137(1) to the circumstances of the present case.
The appeal is therefore allowed with costs.
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