Judgments

Decision Information

Decision Content

T-2604-90
Her Majesty the Queen (Plaintiff) (Defendant by cross appeal)
v.
Albert Kieboom (Defendant) (Plaintiff by cross appeal)
INDEXED AS. CANADA V. KIEBo0M (TR)
Trial Division, Denault J.—Calgary, May l; Ottawa, July 30, 1991.
Income tax — Corporations — Taxpayer (directing mind of corporation) reducing economic interest in company by increasing equity of other family members — Maintaining same number of shares, but wife and children subscribing to newly created shares at nominal value — Concept of corpora tion as separate legal entity with shareholders having no pro prietary interest apart from shares no longer absolute — Cases eroding concept to reflect realities of business law, particularly where small corporation with main shareholder— Courts lift ing corporate veil where sole motive tax avoidance — "Not- withstanding the form or legal effect of the transactions" in s. 245(2)(c) suggesting Minister to look at substance — As cor poration not raising capital through impugned transactions (purpose behind concept of shares), purpose of transactions to increase shareholdings of family — Transactions whereby tax payer's family acquiring shares at less than fair market value benefit conferred by taxpayer — Deemed disposition by way of gift under s. 245(2)(c).
Income tax — Gifts — Taxpayer reducing economic interest in company by creating shares to which wife and later children subscribed for nominal consideration — Deemed disposition by way of gift under s. 245(2)(c) — As s. 245(2)(c) characteriz ing provision, necessary to go to another Part of Act to find charging provision — Rules re: inter vivos transfers of capital stock of corporation not applicable as right to subscribe to shares transferred, not shares — Spousal attribution rules not applicable as shares, not right to subscribe thereto, generating income — Transaction cannot be both deemed disposition by way of gift under S. 245(2)(c) and spousal transfer under s. 74(l).
Income tax — Income calculation — Capital gains — Tax payer reducing economic interest in company by creating shares to which wife, and later children, subscribed for nomi nal consideration — Deemed disposition by way of gift under s. 245(2)(c) — Transferred property subject to capital gains provisions — Taxpayer deemed to have received proceeds of disposition if disposes of anything at less than fair market value under s. 69(I)(b)(ii).
This was an appeal and cross-appeal from a decision of the Tax Court of Canada. The taxpayer had owned nine common shares in a carpet company and his wife owned one. The tax payer was the controlling mind and will of the company. In 1979, 10,000 class "A" non-voting shares were created. In 1980, taxpayer's wife subscribed to eight of the new shares for nominal consideration, giving her 50% equity while taxpayer retained his nine shares, but reduced his equity from 90% to 50%. In 1981, eight class "A" common shares were issued to each of taxpayer's three children, again for nominal considera tion, thereby reducing the equity of taxpayer and his wife to 21.4% each and giving each of the children 19% of the equity. In 1982, the Company issued dividends. The Minister reas sessed the taxpayer for 1981 on the basis that the issue of shares to the children was a disposition of an economic interest by way of gift from taxpayer and his wife pursuant to Income Tax Act, paragraph 245(2)(c). Paragraph 245(2)(c) provides that where a transaction results in a person conferring a benefit on a taxpayer, that person shall be deemed to have made a pay ment to the taxpayer equal to the amount of the benefit con ferred notwithstanding the form or legal effect of the transac tions; and depending upon the circumstances, the payment shall be deemed to be a disposition by way of gift. The tax payer and his wife were deemed to have received proceeds of disposition equal to the fair market value of the shares. Eighty percent of the taxable capital gain received by taxpayer's wife was attributed to taxpayer and included in his income pursuant to subsection 74(2) of the Act (which deems the gain from property transferred to a spouse to be the capital gain of the transferor). The Minister also reassessed taxpayer for 1982 on the basis that the dividends received by his wife should have been included in his income pursuant to subsection 74(I), which provides that any income from the property transferred to a spouse shall be deemed to be income of the transferor.
The issues were (I) the nature of the transaction; (2) whether paragraph 245(2)(c) imposed a tax; and (3) whether the spousal attribution rules applied.
Taxpayer argued (I) that he did not confer a benefit on the members of his family because he neither received anything directly, nor disposed of anything. The company issued the
shares. He relied on the principle that a corporation is a legal entity separate and distinct from its shareholders. Accordingly, unissued shares are owned exclusively by the corporation. No property was transferred because taxpayer retained the same number of shares before and after the transactions. Alterna tively, it was argued that the Act does not impose tax on a pay ment of a gift. If the capital gains provision (section 69) applied, then subsection 73(5), which allows the taxpayer to reduce the capital gain of a share transfer, must apply, giving the children the benefit of a rollover of the disposition of shares. (2) It was further argued that the spousal attribution rules should not apply because there was no disposition of property from the taxpayer to his wife or children. Further more, income flows from shares and it was an economic inter est, not shares, that was transferred to the children.
Held, the taxpayer's cross-appeal with respect to the capital gain should be dismissed; the cross-appeal with respect to the capital gain attributed to the taxpayer from his spouse should be allowed. The Crown's appeal regarding the dividend income attributed back to the taxpayer should be dismissed.
(I) The transactions which resulted in the taxpayer's wife and children acquiring shares at less than fair market value was a benefit conferred by the taxpayer which was "deemed to be a disposition by way of a gift" under paragraph 245(2)(c). The concept of a corporation as a separate legal entity with share holders having no proprietary interest apart from the shares is no longer absolute. That principle has been eroded by case law to reflect the realities of business law, particularly in relation to small corporations where there is a main shareholder. In larger corporations, directors have been increasingly held liable for the acts of the corporation. In income tax cases, courts have lifted the corporate veil where the sole motive for incorpora tion was tax avoidance. The phrase "notwithstanding the form or legal effect of the transactions" in paragraph 245(2)(c) also suggests that the Minister will examine the substance of the transaction, regardless of form. Where a controlling share holder designs a transaction to increase the family members' proportion in the ownership of the company while decreasing the value of his own shareholdings, that transaction will be reviewed to assess income tax. The purpose behind paragraph 245(2)(c) is consistent with ascertaining the reason for issuing the shares. The concept of shares was created to provide a vehicle through which a corporation could raise capital. The corporation herein did not raise any capital through the impugned transactions. The taxpayer cannot cling to the con cept of the corporation as a legal entity separate from the shareholders whose only proprietary interest is in the shares, when the real purpose behind the transaction was not to raise capital, but to increase the shareholdings of his family. That the taxpayer retained the same number of shares was not the determining factor.
Section 245 is a characterizing provision. It characterizes a benefit as a deemed disposition. It was designed to identify transactions as indirect payments or transfers. It is under Part XVI, which is entitled "Tax Evasion". It is necessary to go to another Part of the Act to find the charging provisions. Under subparagraph 69(l)(b)(ii), the taxpayer is deemed to have received the proceeds of disposition if he disposes of anything at less than fair market value. The reason for the deemed dis position provisions was to prevent taxpayers from transferring an interest in property solely to avoid taxation consequences. Paragraph 245(2)(c) specifies that it is not necessary to have an intention to avoid taxes for a deemed disposition in the transfer of property. The taxpayer reduced his economic interest in the company at less than fair market value, and he is deemed to have received proceeds of disposition. Therefore, the trans ferred property is subject to the capital gains provisions in the Act. The rules with respect to inter vivos transfers of capital stock of a small business corporation (subsection 73(5)) did not apply. Subsection 73(5) requires that the property have been a share immediately before the transfer. What was trans ferred was a right to subscribe to shares and not shares them selves. The transferred property did not become a share until the children took the option and subscribed to shares.
(2) The spousal attribution rules did not apply. Although "transfer" in subsection 74(I) could include an indirect transfer of an economic interest, the more difficult issue was whether it included property through which taxpayer's wife earned income. It was the actual shares that created the income, not the right to subscribe to shares. Taxpayer's wife did not receive a direct right to receive dividends, but a right to acquire shares which she exercised. That right in itself did not create income. It was the exercising of the right through which taxpayer's wife acquired income earning property. Secondly, both trans actions divesting taxpayer of shares were found to be "deemed dispositions by way of gift" pursuant to subsection 245(2)(c). Therefore section 69 applied. The transaction which created a right for the taxpayer's wife to subscribe to shares cannot be both a "deemed disposition by way of gift" under paragraph 245(2)(c) and a spousal transfer under subsection 74(I). If it is not a spousal transfer then the attribution rules do not apply.
STATUTES AND REGULATIONS JUDICIALLY CONSIDERED
Companies Act, R.S.A. 1980, e. C-20, s. 27.
Income Tax Act, S.C. 1970-71-72, e. 63, ss. 69(I)(b)(ii), 73(5) (as am. by S.C. 1979, e. 5, s. 24), 74 (as am. by S.C. 1974-75-76, e. 26, s. 39, 82(1)), 227.1(1) (as enacted by S.C. 1980-81-82-83, e. 140, s. 124), 245(2)(c).
The Companies Act, R.S.A. 1970, c. 60, s. 16 (as am. by S.A. 1975, c. 44, s. 2; 1976, c. 61, s. 2).
CASES JUDICIALLY CONSIDERED APPLIED
Minister of National Revenue v. Dufresne, Didace, [ 1967] Ex.C.R. 128; [1967] C.T.C. 153; (1967), 67 DTC 5105; Levine Estate v. Minister of National Revenue, [1973] F.C. 285; [1973] CTC 219; (1973), 73 DTC 5182 (T.D.); Applebaum v. Minister of National Revenue (1971), 71 DTC 371 (T.A.B.).
DISTINGUISHED:
Kit-Win Holdings (1973) Ltd v The Queen, [1981] CTC 43; 81 DTC 5030 (F.C.T.D.); Fasken, David v. Minister of National Revenue, [1948] Ex.C.R. 580; [1948] CTC 265; (1948), 49 DTC 491.
CONSIDERED
Salomon v. Salomon & Co., [ 1897] A.C. 22 (H.L.); Macaura v. Northern Assurance Co., [1925] A.C. 619 (H.L.); Kosmopoulos et al. v. Constitution insurance Co. of Canada et al. (1983), 42 O.R. (2d) 428; 149 D.L.R. (3d) 77; 22 B.L.R. 11I; 1 C.C.L.I. 83; [1983] I.L.R. I-660 (C.A.); affd [1987] I S.C.R. 2; (1987), 34 D.L.R. (4th) 208; 36 B.L.R. 233; 22 C.C.L.I. 297; [1987] I.L.R. 1- 2147; 74 N.R. 360; 21 O.A.C. 4; Berger v. Willowdale A.M.C. et al. (1983), 41 O.R. (2d) 89; 145 D.L.R. (3d) 247; 23 B.L.R. 19 (C.A.); Sask. Econ. Dev. Corpn. v. Pat- terson-Boyd Mfg. Corpn., [1981] 2 W.W.R. 40; (1981), 6 Sask. R. 325 (C.A.); Glacier Realties Ltd v The Queen, [1980] CTC 308; (1980), 80 DTC 6243 (F.C.T.D.).
AUTHORS CITED
University of Alberta. Institute of Law Research and Reform. Proposals for a New Alberta Business Corpo rations Act, Volume 1, Report No. 36, Edmonton, Alberta, August 1980.
Welling, Bruce Corporate Law in Canada: The Gov erning Principles, Toronto: Butterworths, 1984.
COUNSEL:
Helen C. Turner for plaintiff (defendant by cross appeal).
H. George McKenzie for defendant (plaintiff by cross appeal).
SOLICITORS:
Deputy Attorney General of Canada for plaintiff (defendant by cross appeal).
Bell, Felesky, Flynn, Calgary for defendant (plaintiff by cross appeal).
The following are the reasons for judgment ren dered in English by
RENAULT J.: This is an appeal by the Minister of National Revenue from a decision of the Tax Court of Canada, as well as a cross-appeal by the taxpayer. It involves two transactions, the first resulted in the defendant's wife acquiring shares of the Company controlled by the defendant, the second resulted in his children acquiring shares. At issue are the 1981 and 1982 income tax years.
FACTS
The material facts were agreed to by the parties in an agreed statement of facts.
The defendant Albert Kieboom is an individual resident in Canada for the purposes of the Income Tax Act [S.C. 1970-71-72, c. 63] (the "Act") who owned nine common shares in the capital of "Carpet Colour Centre (Red Deer) Limited" (the "Company"). The Company was incorporated May 3, 1976 and carried on the business of selling carpets in Red Deer and the surrounding area. It was a "Canadian-controlled pri vate corporation" within the meaning of the Act which means that all or most of the fair market value of the assets were used in active business carried on primarily in Canada. At the time of incorporation, Adriana Kieboom ("Adriana"), Albert's wife, acquired one common share of the capital in the Company. At all material times, the defendant was the controlling mind and will of the Company. The Kiebooms have three children, Sheila Ibbotson ("Sheila"), Yost Kieboom ("Yost") and Alma Kieboom ("Alma"), all of whom were over the age of 18 and were Canadian residents at all material times, for the purposes of the Act.
By a special resolution passed October 31, 1979 and registered with the Alberta Corporate Registry, the share capital of the Company was increased by the creation of 10,000 class "A" non-voting common
shares in the capital of the Company. At a February 12, 1980 meeting to determine the rights attaching to the newly created shares, the defendant declined to subscribe to any of the shares. However, Adriana subscribed to eight of the said shares for considera tion of $1 per share. After the meeting Adriana held one common share plus eight class "A" common shares, giving her 50% equity while the defendant retained his nine common shares with 50% equity. Prior to the meeting, the defendant held nine com mon shares with 90% equity while Adriana held one common share with 10% equity.
On March I, 1981, the defendant and Adriana, who were at that time the directors and only share holders of the Company, held a meeting. They deter mined that eight class "A" common shares of the Company would be issued to each of the three chil dren for a consideration of $1 per share. No shares were issued to either Adriana or the defendant.
After the issuance of shares to the children, the defendant and Adriana owned 21.4% of the equity, while each of the children Yost, Alma and Sheila owned 19% of the equity respectively. The effect of the issuance of shares to Adriana and later to the chil dren was to decrease the defendant's proportionate shareholdings in the Company and to increase the shareholdings of his wife and children. The transac tions were planned and executed by the defendant who desired to have the company issue shares first to his wife and later to his children, thereby decreasing his (and then his wife's) percentage of issued shares in the Company.
During the 1982 taxation year, the Company issued dividends in the amount of $4,000 per com mon share and $3,750 per class "A" share. During the 1982 taxation year, the taxable amount of dividends received by Adriana (after subsection 82(1) "gross- up") in respect of 7.2 of her class "A" shares was $40,500 ($3,750 x 7.2 x 1.5 = $40,500).
By notice of reassessment dated August 10, 1987, the Minister of National Revenue reassessed the
defendant for the 1981 taxation year. The issue of shares to Sheila, Yost and Alma constituted a disposi tion of an economic interest by way of gift from the defendant and Adriana pursuant to paragraph 245(2)(c) of the Act. Therefore, the defendant and Adriana were deemed to have received proceeds of disposition of $1 13,450 each, which is equal to the fair market value economic interest of the shares. Eighty percent of the taxable capital gain received by Adriana was attributed to the defendant and included in his income pursuant to subsection 74(2) [as am. by S.C. 1974-75-76, c. 26, s. 39] of the Act, which are the spousal attribution rules.
By notice of reassessment, dated May 25, 1989, the Minister reassessed the defendant for his 1982 taxation year, on the basis that the dividends received by Adriana ($40,500) were includable in his income pursuant to subsection 74(1) [as am. idem] of the Act.
In the respective reassessments, the Minister assumed the above facts, except that he had origi nally placed the fair market value of the shares issued by the Company to the children at $9,450 on March 1, 1981 'and he is now willing to concede that the fair market value of the shares at that date was $6,800.
PLAINTIFF'S ARGUMENT
The defendant decreased his proportionate eco nomic interest in the Company by issuing eight trea sury shares to Adriana, thereby conferring a benefit on Adriana. The benefit is deemed to be a payment to her under subsection 245(2), and the payment is deemed by paragraph 245(2)(c) to be a disposition by way of a gift. This gift is deemed to be a transfer of capital property, under the provisions of subsection 74(1) and the provisions of this section require the attribution to the defendant of the income arising from that property. Therefore, the Minister was cor rect in including $40,500 as taxable dividends in the defendant's income in 1982.
The defendant and Adriana decreased their propor tionate economic interest in the Company by issuing
eight treasury shares to their children. This transac tion conferred a benefit upon the children. Under the provision of subsection 245(2), the benefit is deemed to be a payment, and the payment is deemed by para graph 245(2)(c) to be a disposition by way of gift. The defendant is deemed to have received proceeds of disposition in the amount of $204,120 in respect of this gift to his children in the following manner: his own interest in the Company under subparagraph 69(1)(b)(ii) and by virtue of Adriana's economic interest, the provisions of subsection 74(2) require her proportion to be included in the defendant's taxa ble income.
DEFENDANT'S ARGUMENT
The defendant's submission relies on the assump tion that there is no separate property interest refera- ble to a corporation which can be described as an economic interest. The proportionate interest of per sons having an interest in a corporation are reflected solely in the shareholdings. Therefore, the defendant denies the plaintiff's assumption that any of the shareholders owned property that constitutes an eco nomic interest separate and apart from the shares of the Company.
The Minister seeks to tax the defendant by a decrease in the value of his shareholdings in the Company, as a result of the increase of the sharehold- ings of his wife and children. This is not sustainable under the provisions of the Act. The issuance of shares by the Company to his wife and children was a benefit conferred on them by the Company and not by him.
Alternatively, if the Court finds that the issuance of shares by the Company to Adriana and the chil dren was a benefit conferred on them by the defen dant under the provisions of paragraph 245(2)(c) by way of a gift, this has no tax consequences for the defendant. There is no provision in the Act which imposes a tax on a payment of a gift.
If the deemed payment of a gift is subject to tax under the provisions of the Act, it does not result in or give rise to a disposition of property by the defen dant to Adriana. Therefore, the provisions of subsec-
tions 74(1) and 74(2) have no application to amounts received by Adriana in respect of her shares.
The defendant appeals the Tax Court finding that the issuance of shares by the Company to the defend ant's children resulted in a disposition of the property of the defendant which is subject to tax under the provisions of the Act.
ANALYSIS
The first question to be addressed is the nature of the transaction through which Adriana acquired shares in the company and later through which the children acquired shares. The defendant's counsel argues that this is the case of a corporate treasury issuing shares to Mrs. Kieboom and later to the chil dren. The defendant did not receive income directly. He received nothing, nor did he dispose of anything. Any tax liability must arise by virtue of some deemed or imputed income.
It is not in dispute that Adriana and then the chil dren received a benefit which falls under the provi sions of paragraph 245(2)(c).
245. ...
(2) Where the result of one or more sales, exchanges, decla rations of trust, or other transactions of any kind whatever is that a person confers a benefit on a taxpayer, that person shall be deemed to have made a payment to the taxpayer equal to the amount of the benefit conferred notwithstanding the form or legal effect of the transactions or that one or more other per sons were also parties thereto; and, whether or not there was an intention to avoid or evade taxes under this Act, the payment shall, depending upon the circumstances, be
(c) deemed to be a disposition by way of a gift.
The ability of Adriana and of the children to acquire shares at less than fair market value is a benefit.
The dispute is whether or not Mr. Kieboom con ferred a benefit on Mrs. Kieboom. The defendant alleges that the Minister failed to allege that Mr. Kieboom conferred the benefit in their pleadings and the appeal should be dismissed on this basis alone. In support of this, counsel for the defendant refers to a decision of Cattanach J. which said that where "the Minister has failed to allege as a fact an essential ingredient to the validity of the assessment under the
applicable statutory provision, there is no onus on the taxpayer to disprove that fact for the assumptions which were made did not of themselves support the assessment."
I am unconvinced by this submission. I find no flaw in the plaintiff's pleadings in this regard. The Minister has pleaded that the defendant was the con trolling mind and will of the corporation in its state ment of facts. In paragraphs 19 and 20 of its state ment of claim, it is pleaded that the defendant planned and executed the transactions and that the economic interest received by Adriana was a gift sub ject to the provisions of paragraph 245(2)(c) and sub section 74(1). In paragraph 28 of the statement of claim, the Minister specifically pleads that the defen dant decreased his economic interest which conferred a benefit on his wife. This is pleaded in paragraph 30 with respect to the transaction conferring a benefit on the children. The facts are different in Kit-Win Hold ings. There, it was necessary for the Minister to allege that one of the motivating factors at the time of acquisition of the land was the possibility of resale. The Minister was seeking to include it in his income as adventure in the nature of trade. In this case, it was necessary to allege that a transaction occurred through which a person conferred a benefit which falls within the provisions of paragraph 245(2)(c). Since this was pleaded, I find no flaw in the plain tiff's pleadings.
Counsel for the defendant has submitted that there was no property that was transferred by Mr. Kieboom to his wife Adriana or to the children. Before and after the meeting, which resulted in Mrs. Kieboom acquiring shares, the defendant retained the same number of shares. What occurred, in his submission, is that the corporate treasury issued shares to Mrs. Kieboom. This position assumes that the only link between a corporation and a shareholder is the share. Effectively, the defendant is relying on the long established principle in company law that a corpora tion is a legal entity separate and distinct from its shareholders. Accordingly, unissued shares are
I Kit-Win Holdings (/973) Ltd v The Queen, [ 1981] CTC 43 (F.C.T.D.), at pp. 55-56.
owned exclusively by the corporation. In this respect, counsel has cited section 16 of The Companies Act 2 which describes the formal obligations of a com pany limited by shares. He has also directed my attention to various articles which describe the nature and definition of shares in relation to the corporation. A share is defined to be "simply a proportionate interest in the net worth of a business". 3 Another def inition of share that was cited is: "A share is the interest of a shareholder in the company .... A share is not a sum of money settled in any way suggested, but an interest measured by a sum of money ...." Another interesting point which was addressed by the material submitted by the defendant is the purpose behind the concept of shares. As Professor Welling notes: "[c]orporate design evolved as the legal vehi cle for economic combinations of entrepreneurs, who participated personally, and capitalists, who partici pated financially". 4 In other words, the share permits a corporation to raise capital and investors to invest money in a corporation.
Because the shareholder's only link to the corpora tion is through a share, the Minister's position that the taxpayer had an economic interest in the corpora tion is not sustainable under corporate law nor under the provisions of the Income Tax Act. However, the principle of a corporation as a legal entity separate and apart from its shareholders is no longer absolute. The general legal principle is that a shareholder does not have any proprietary interest in the corporation which as a legal person cannot be owned. The share holder's property is in the shares which confer only the rights that are specified in the corporate constitu tion. However, this principle has been eroded to reflect the realities of business law. I will review
2 The Companies Act, R.S.A. 1970, c. 60, s. 16 (as am. by S.A. 1975, c. 44, s. 2; 1976, e. 61, s. 2).
3 Proposals for a New Alberta Business Corporations Act.
4 Welling, Bruce Corporate Law in Canada: The Governing Principles, "The Corporate Capital Structure" (Toronto: But- terworths), at p. 569.
briefly the development of corporate law in respect of the corporation as a separate legal entity.
Salomon v. Salomon & Co. 5 established the princi ple of the corporation's separate legal personality. There, Mr. Salomon set up a company and sold his shoe business to it. He took shares and a debenture from the company as a payment, thereby making himself a secured creditor of the company. The com pany wound up a year later and the creditors attempted to recover from Mr. Salomon, arguing that the corporation was an alter ego of Mr. Salomon. The House of Lords held that as long as the statutory requirements of incorporation are met, a corporation becomes a legal entity separate and apart from the person who set it up. It does not matter whether it is a sole shareholder or what the purposes of incorpora tion were. The corporation is a separate legal entity apart from its shareholders.
This principle is reflected in company law legisla tion where the certificate of incorporation is conclu sive evidence of incorporation under the Companies Act. 6 The policy reason behind the rule is to encourage business activity without holding the entrepreneur personally liable for the corporation's debts. It also encourages investment in companies by allowing investors to invest at a predetermined loss.
As time went on, the difficulties of the corpora tion's separate legal personality became apparent. In the law of insurance a main shareholder could not recover from loss to the company because his insura- ble interest was in the shares and not in the corpora tion. The business insurance policy had to be in the corporation's name.? However, a 1981 Ontario case 8 allowed a sole shareholder to recover from an insur ance policy which was registered in his name and not
s Salomon v. Salomon & Co., [1897] A.C. 22 (H.L.).
6 Cennpanies Act, R.S.A. 1980, c. C-20, s. 27.
7 Macaura v. Northern Assurance Co., [1925] A.C. 619 (H.L.).
s Kosmopoulos et al. v. Constitution Insurance Co. of Canada et al. (1983), 42 O.R. (2d) 428 (C.A.); affd [1987] I S.C.R. 2.
in the name of the company which he had incorpo rated. The reasoning was that a sole shareholder does not have a proprietary interest in the company assets, but is the only one who can lose if the assets are destroyed. Therefore, if the assets are insured by the shareholder personally, he can recover because there will be a certainty of loss.
Other circumstances in which the corporate veil has been lifted are where a director was held to be personally liable where he refrained from action and could see that the corporation was not carrying out its duties; 9 and where a corporation was created to cir cumvent legal obligations and obtain debt priority. 10
In summary, the concept of the corporation as a separate legal entity with shareholders having no pro prietary interest apart from the shares is no longer absolute. The principle has been eroded to reflect the realities of business law. This is a development which is especially applicable to small corporations where there is a main shareholder as is found in the present case. In larger corporations, directors have been increasingly held liable for the acts of the corpora tion.
In income tax law, the corporate veil has been lifted to ascertain the motive behind incorporation. If the sole motive was tax avoidance, the courts have lifted the corporate veil. In Glacier Realties Ltd v The Queen, Addy J. (as he then was) looked behind the corporate veil to determine the main purpose of a land purchase:
The fact that a company was incorporated for the sole pur pose of holding a single parcel of land and did not engage in any other type of business, is a factor to be considered but is by no means conclusive as to what the object of the taxpayer was in purchasing the land .... The objects clauses of a cor-
9 Berger v. Willowdale A.M.C. et al. (1983), 41 O.R. (2d) 89 (C.A.).
10 Sask. Econ. Dev. Corp. v. Patterson-Boyd Mfg. Corpn., [1981] 2 W.W.R. 40 (C.A.).
poration are also relatively unimportant in determining its intentions as compared with what it actually did .... It is important where [a] private company such as the present one is concerned to go behind the corporate veil and examine the background of the shareholders in order to determine more precisely if possible the purpose or purposes of the purchase."
Another example in the Act where the veil is lifted is subsection 227.1(1) [as enacted by S.C. 1980-81- 82-83, c. 140, s. 124] which holds directors of a cor poration personally liable for unpaid taxes.
In the present case, the issue is the substance of a transaction. The relevant section of the Act is para graph 245(2)(c). The question is whether the defen dant had an interest in the corporation which allowed him to confer the right to subscribe to shares on his wife and later his children. This section reads as fol lows:
245....
(2) Where the result of one or more sales, exchanges, decla rations of trust, or other transactions of any kind whatever is that a person confers a benefit on a taxpayer, that person shall be deemed to have made a payment to the taxpayer equal to the amount of the benefit conferred notwithstanding the form or legal effect of the transactions or that one or more other per sons were also parties thereto; and, whether or not there was an intention to avoid or evade taxes under this Act, the payment shall, depending upon the circumstances, be
(c) deemed to be a disposition by way of a gift.
The wording of the section states "notwithstanding the form or legal effect of the transactions". This would suggest that irrespective of the form of the transaction, the Minister will examine the substance of the transaction.
Counsel for the plaintiff referred me to Minister of National Revenue v. Dufresne, Didace, 12 a case which interpreted the predecessor section to para graph 245(2)(c). In Dufresne, the taxpayer was the controlling shareholder and the owner of practically all of the shares. Mr. Dufresne owned 164 shares, his wife owned 1 share, while each of his five children
I Glacier Realties Ltd v The Queen, [ 1980] CTC 308 (F.C.T.D.), at p. 310.
12 Minister of National Revenue v. Dufresne, Didace, [1967] Ex.C.R. 128.
owned 15 shares each. He was the head of the family and had the controlling influence in the determina tion of events which led to the reassessment and appeal. The impugned transactions in Dufresne were ones in which the company offered to each of the shareholders the right to purchase three new shares for each share held at a purchase price of $100 a share. Prior to the stock option, the original shares had a value of $1,421.47. The children exercised the options and neither the taxpayer nor his wife exer cised their options. The result was that the taxpayer retained the same number of shares, 164, but the value of the shares had dropped to $78,560 from $243,044. The children's shareholdings had risen from 15 to 360 common shares from a value of $21,315 to $199,400.
The Exchequer Court held that a benefit was con ferred on the children by the taxpayer, Mr. Dufresne. The basis of this decision was that the taxpayer, Mr. Dufresne had an interest separate and apart from his shareholdings. President Jackett (as he then was) gave the underlying reasons behind the transaction: "[t]he sequence of events bears all the earmarks of a series of company transactions that had been arranged in advance by the major shareholder and father, after taking appropriate professional advice, with a view to achieving the result of increasing the children's proportions in the ownership of the stock of the company".) 3
Paragraph 137(2)(c) [R.S.C. 1952, c. 1481, the predecessor to paragraph 245(2)(c), has been inter preted to look behind the corporate veil to look at the substance of the transaction. Where a controlling shareholder designs a transaction to increase the fam ily members' proportion in the ownership of the com pany while decreasing the value of his own share- holdings, that transaction will be reviewed to assess income tax.
While Dufresne was decided under the provisions of paragraph 137(2)(c), which is the predecessor to paragraph 245(2)(c), the wording is identical to the present paragraph except that the words "to which
13 Ibid., at p. 138.
part IV applies" were dropped. The gift tax was abol ished in 1971, an issue which I will address later.
President Jackett held that if there was a benefit conferred upon the children by Mr. Dufresne, then he is deemed to have made a payment to each of the children equal to the amount of the benefit. That pay ment is "deemed to have been a disposition by way of a gift", which attracts taxation under Part IV as it then was.
Dufresne has also been followed in Applebaum v. Minister of National Revenue 14 where the children of the taxpayer acquired the right to subscribe to shares through a behind-the-scenes transfer of the taxpayer's interest in the company. The learned member of the Tax Appeal Board makes the following comments, at page 378:
This relinquishing of control to the other shareholders by the appellant was the direct result of his decision not to exercise his "right" to the full and the subsequent exercise of their "rights" by the other shareholders .... There was no question that the appellant was the head of his family and had their future interests at heart as well as being controlling share holder of the family company, and that he designed the course that was to be followed in full expectation that his wishes would be respected and the plan accepted, as in fact it was.
Dufresne was also followed in Levine Estate v. Minister of National Revenue 15 wherein the deceased's son acquired 5,000 shares in his father's company at a reduced price. It was found that the transactions which implemented the conferral of the right to subscribe to shares were executed at the direction of the controlling mind and will of the cor poration, the late Mr. Abe Levine. Therefore, the benefit was a gift taxable in the hands of Mr. Levine.
The purpose behind paragraph 245(2)(c) is consis tent with ascertaining the reason for issuing the shares. As I noted above, the main reason for the cre ation of the concept of shares was a vehicle through which a corporation could raise capital. In the present case, the corporation raised absolutely no capital through the impugned transactions. On the contrary,
14 Applebaum V. Minister of National Revenue (1971), 71 DTC 371 (T.A.B.).
15 Levine Estate v. Minister of National Revenue, [1973] F.C. 285 (T.D.).
it issued shares for nominal consideration to mem bers of the controlling shareholder's family. The defendant cannot cling steadfastly to the concept of the corporation as a separate legal entity from the shareholders whose only proprietary interest is in the shares when the real purpose behind the transaction was not to raise capital, but to increase the sharehold- ings of his family.
This reasoning is applicable to the present case. Here the defendant was the controlling mind and will of the Company. It is agreed that the defendant desired to have the company issue shares first to his wife and later to his children, thereby decreasing his, and then both his and later his wife's proportionate interest in the Company. Therefore, the fact that Mr. Kieboom retained the same number of shares is not the determining factor. He divested himself of his economic interest to the benefit of his wife and later his children's. He did this by diluting his own share- holdings and increasing his wife's and later his chil dren. This finding is consistent with the reasoning in Dufresne, as well as the development of the corporate law in respect to shares.
Counsel for the defendant submits that the present case is distinguished from the Dufresne case because it was decided at a time when there was a gift tax. Since there is no longer a gift tax, there are no taxa tion consequences in such a situation. The defendant takes the position that section 245 is a charging pro vision which means that it must bring something into the taxpayer's income. A charging section operates in two stages, there must be a benefit and the benefit is deemed to be a payment. Because the Minister took the position that it was a gift under paragraph (c), there are no taxation consequences since the gift tax was abolished. While the Act taxes dispositions of property elsewhere, the section does not deal with that, it simply says "deemed to be a disposition by way of a gift." The Minister's method of assessing tax on the transaction, it is argued, is a tortuous route through the Act which is not sustainable.
I am unconvinced by this argument. In my opin ion, section 245 is a characterizing provision. It is designed to identify transactions as indirect payments or transfers. The section is under Part XVI which is entitled "Tax Evasion". Even if the gift tax had not been abolished, it would be necessary to go to another Part of the Act in order to find the charging provisions. Therefore, it is not necessary for this sec tion to bring something into the taxpayer's income. The section characterizes a benefit as a deemed dis position.
Other provisions of the Act operate to tax gifts. The technical notes from the Finance Department, referred to by both counsel, indicate that the Depart ment did not consider that repealing the gift tax cre ated a taxation vacuum. The capital gains provisions operate to tax gifts. The applicable section here is subparagraph 69(1)(b)(ii), which provides that the taxpayer is deemed to have received the proceeds of disposition if he disposes of anything at less than the fair market value. The underlying reason for the deemed disposition provisions at fair market value is to prevent taxpayers from transferring an interest in property for the purposes of avoiding taxation conse quences. Paragraph 245(2)(c) specifies that it is not necessary to have an intention to avoid taxes for a deemed disposition in the transfer of property. In this case, I have found that the taxpayer reduced his eco nomic interest in the company at less than the fair market value, and he is deemed to have received pro ceeds of disposition. Therefore, the transferred prop erty is subject to the capital gains provisions in the Act. While the route may be tortuous, the principle is a simple one. A taxpayer cannot give away an inter est in property at less than fair market value without attracting taxation. The rationale behind this principle is to capture transactions which are designed to trans fer ownership without attracting tax consequences.
Alternatively, the defendant argues that if section 69 applies in the circumstances, then subsection 73(5) [as am. by S.C. 1979, c. 5, s. 24] must apply
giving the children the benefit of a rollover of the dis position of shares. Subsection 73(5) allows the tax payer to reduce the capital gain of a share transfer. The qualifying factors of subsection 73(5) are out lined as follows:
73. ...
(5) For the purposes of this Part, where at any particular time a taxpayer has transferred property to his child who was resident in Canada immediately before the transfer and the property was, immediately before the transfer, a share of the capital stock of a small business corporation, except where the rules in subsection 74(2) require any taxable capital gain from the disposition by the taxpayer of that property to be included in the income of a person other than the taxpayer, the follow ing rules apply ....
The same reasoning as the above analysis of para graph 245(2)(c) would apply. The taxpayer trans ferred property to his children who were residents in Canada. However, the requirement for subsection 73(5) to apply, is that immediately before the trans fer, the property must have been a share. In this case, what was transferred was a right to subscribe to shares and not shares itself. The transferred property did not become a share until the children took the option and subscribed to shares. Accordingly, the rules with respect to inter vivos transfers of capital stock of a small business corporation cannot apply in the circumstances.
In summary, the two transactions which resulted in Mrs. Kieboom acquiring shares in consideration of $1 and later the children is a benefit conferred upon them by the defendant which is "deemed to be a dis position by way of a gift". This finding is based on paragraph 245(2)(c) and case law which has inter preted that section to look at the substance of a trans action. The argument that what occurred was a corpo rate treasury issued shares does not allow the defendant to escape income tax consequences. As I have outlined, the corporation as a separate legal entity apart from its shareholders is no longer abso lute, particularly in respect of small corporations.
The remaining question is the operation of the spousal attribution rules. If the spousal attribution rules apply, the income derived from the property transferred from Mr. Kieboom to his wife is attrib uted back to him. In the present case, the income earned from Adriana's shares would be attributed back to the defendant which includes the income received from the deemed disposition from the trans action conferring a benefit on the children. Subsec tion 74(1) reads as follows:
74. (1) Where a person has, on or after August 1, 1917, transferred property either directly or indirectly by means of a trust or by any other means whatever to his spouse, or to a person who has since become his spouse, any income or loss, as the case may be, for a taxation year from the property or from property substituted therefor shall, during the lifetime of the transferor while he is resident in Canada and the transferee is his spouse, be deemed to be income or a loss, as the case may be, of the transferor and not of the transferee.
The defendant maintains the position that there was no transfer of anything from the defendant to Adriana or to the children. The corporate treasury issued shares to the respective parties. Therefore, the spousal attribution rules cannot apply. Furthermore, income flows from the shares and shares were not transferred to the children. Since the Minister's posi tion is that an economic interest in the corporation was transferred from the defendant to his wife and later to his children, there is no income earning prop erty that was transferred. While there may have been a decrease in the value of his shares this does not amount to a transfer of property by the taxpayer which would attract taxation under the attribution rules.
The Minister's position is that transfer of property in subsection 74(1) is broad enough to encompass the economic interest which was transferred in the case at bar. In support of this conclusion, counsel for the Minister refers to Fasken, David v. Minister of National Revenue 16 wherein the taxpayer incorpo rated a company in order to purchase property in Texas. He owned all of the shares, but later trans ferred all of his shares. However, at the time of trans fer, the taxpayer maintained his right against the company in respect of the purchase price of the farm
16 Fasken, David v. Minister of National Revenue, [1948] Ex.C.R. 580.
and other advances. In 1924, the company executed an acknowledgement of indebtedness plus interest in favour of three trustees and on the same date the trustees declared the trusts under which they held the indebtedness which included payments of interest to the taxpayer's wife. President Thorson analyzed the meaning of transfer of property within the meaning of the Act. At page 592, he interpreted transfer under the Act to be very broad, all that is required is that the taxpayer divest himself of property and vest it in his wife; it need not be made in any particular form or be made directly. In that case, Thorson P. held that there was a transfer of property from the taxpayer to his wife.
Counsel for the plaintiff submits that the Fasken scenario parallels the present case. The taxpayer's wife in the former did not receive a right to the indebtedness of the corporation to the taxpayer, but she received a right to interest payments. Here, Mrs. Kieboom did not receive shares, but received a right to subscribe to shares. Therefore, the logical conclu sion is that there was a transfer of property within the meaning of subsection 74(1).
In the present case, the broad meaning which is ascribed to the word "transfer" could encompass the transaction through which Adriana acquired shares. I have found that the defendant divested himself of an economic interest in the company which was vested in his wife. Effectively there was an indirect transfer of Mr. Kieboom's economic interest in the company to his wife. The more difficult issue is whether it encompasses property through which Adriana earned income.
In Fasken, the property transferred was a right to receive interest, and this was described as the fruits of the property to which the attribution rules must apply. This, the plaintiff submits, is analogous to the present case through which Adriana acquired a right to subscribe to shares. Therefore, the income earned from those shares must be attributed back. However, the analogy is not as compelling as counsel for the Minister would argue. In Fasken, the recipient
acquired a direct right to receive income, that is a right to receive interest from her husband's company. In the present case, Mrs. Kieboom did not receive a direct right to receive dividends. She received a right to acquire shares which she exercised. The right in itself did not create income. It was the exercising of the right through which Mrs. Kieboom acquired income earning property. Therefore, the logic of the present case requires a step beyond the definition of property as was transferred in Fasken.
In am not prepared to extend the effect of the impugned transaction to include the creation of income earning property. In the present case, I have found that Mr. Kieboom transferred his economic interest in the corporation to his wife and later to his children. The recipients received a right to subscribe to shares at a nominal value, which they exercised, thereby resulting in taxation consequences for the defendant. It was not the right to subscribe to shares that created income, but the actual shares that created the income. Therefore, the spousal attribution rules do not apply to this case. I have found that the tax payer cannot take advantage of the provisions of sub section 73(5) because the property transferred was not a share. Similarly, the Minister cannot attribute income back to the defendant and maximize the taxa tion consequences because the defendant gave a right to subscribe shares and not the actual shares.
There is another reason why the Minister's posi tion is untenable. The Minister takes the position that both transactions, the one in 1980 whereby Mrs. Kieboom acquired shares and secondly in 1981, whereby the children acquired shares, are deemed dispositions by way of a gift pursuant to paragraph 245(2)(c). Therefore section 69 applies absent some other provision in the Act. With respect to the first transaction, the Minister's position is that subsection 74(1) overrides the effect of section 69 resulting in attribution of income through a spousal transfer. I disagree with this submission. I have already con cluded that these identical transactions are "deemed dispositions by way of a gift" which fall under para-
graph 245(2)(c). The 1980 transaction is not in issue, the Minister having decided that no taxable event occurred in that year. The 1980 transaction which created a right for Adriana to subscribe to shares can not be both a "deemed disposition by way of a gift" under paragraph 245(2)(c) and a spousal transfer under subsection 74(1). Paragraph 245(2)(c) creates a deemed disposition to capture transactions. It does not go on to deem there to have been a transfer of property. If it is not a spousal transfer then the attri bution rules do not apply.
CONCLUSION
The defendant's cross-appeal with respect to his 1981 taxation year is dismissed, in respect of the cap ital gain of $81,600. His cross-appeal is allowed with respect to the capital gain attributed to him from his spouse. The plaintiff's appeal with respect to the defendant's 1982 taxation year regarding the divi dend income attributed back to the defendant is dis missed.
The Minister is ordered to vary the reassessment in accordance with the terms of the reasons for judg ment.
No costs are awarded.
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