Judgments

Decision Information

Decision Content

[2017] 1 F.C.R. 209

A-571-14

2016 FCA 99

McGillivray Restaurant Ltd. (Appellant)

v.

Her Majesty the Queen (Respondent)

Indexed as: McGillivray Restaurant Ltd. v. Canada

Federal Court of Appeal, Dawson, Ryer and de Montigny JJ.A.—Winnipeg, March 3; Ottawa, March 30, 2016.

Income Tax — Corporations — Appeal from Tax Court of Canada (T.C.C.) decision upholding Minister of National Revenue’s decision to deny appellant’s claim for tax deductions — Deductions denied on basis appellant associated with one or more corporations within meaning of Income Tax Act, s. 256(1), no agreement filed with such corporations as contemplated by Act, s. 125(3) — Issue whether appellant associated with other corporations on basis that Gordon R. Howard, having de jure, de facto control thereof, also having de facto control over appellant, within meaning of Act, s. 256(5.1) — Appellant incorporated for purpose of operating new restaurant acquired by corporations — Mr. Howard minority shareholder, sole director, officer of appellant — No written shareholders’ agreements put in place — T.C.C. determining that Court’s decision in Silicon Graphics Limited v. Canada providing narrow interpretation of s. 256(5.1) — Determining that Court’s decisions in Mimetix Pharmaceuticals Inc. v. Canada, Plomberie J.C. Langlois Inc. v. Canada broadening Silicon Graphics test for de facto control — Thus considering broader manners of influence in determining who in fact had effective control of appellant — Finding, inter alia, that Mr. Howard not having more effective factual control over appellant — Whether T.C.C. erring in interpreting requirements of de facto control in s. 256(5.1); in concluding that appellant associated with corporations for purposes of Act, s. 256(1)(b) — T.C.C. applying incorrect test for de facto control — Nothing in 9044 2807 Québec Inc. v. Canada (F.C.A.), which affirmed test in Silicon Graphics, suggesting intention to depart from Silicon Graphics test for de facto control — Mimetix Pharmaceuticals, Plomberie J.C. Langlois not directly challenging narrow test in Silicon Graphics — To extent Mimetix Pharmaceuticals, Plomberie, J.C. Langlois prescribing test inconsistent with Silicon Graphics, not followed herein — Test not based on “operational control” — Ss. 256(1)(b), 256(5.1) referring to control of corporation, not to corporation’s business or operations — List of factors considered when applying Silicon Graphics test open-ended — However, factor not including legally enforceable right, ability to effect change to board of directors, influence shareholders not ought not to be considered — Factor failing to include such requirement running counter to Supreme Court of Canada admonition that Income Tax Act must be interpreted to achieve consistency, predictability, fairness — Interpretation of s. 256(5.1) encompassing “operational” control leading to unpredictability — Mr. Howard not having de jure control of appellant —Nonetheless, Mr. Howard’s right to determine appellant’s board of directors influence of type contemplated by s. 256(5.1) — Appeal dismissed.

This was an appeal from a decision of the Tax Court of Canada (T.C.C.) upholding the Minister of National Revenue’s decision, in reassessments issued in respect of the appellant’s 2007, 2008 and 2009 taxation years, to deny the appellant’s claim for a deduction from its tax otherwise payable. The Minister denied the deduction on the basis that the appellant was associated with one or more corporations in each such taxation year, within the meaning of subsection 256(1) of the Income Tax Act, and had not filed an agreement with any such corporation as contemplated by subsection 125(3).

The issue in this appeal was whether, in the years covered by the reassessments, the appellant was associated with G.R.R. Holdings Ltd. (GRR) and MorCourt Properties Ltd. (MorCourt), on the basis that an individual, Mr. Gordon R. Howard, who had de jure and de facto control over GRR and MorCourt, also had de facto control over the appellant, within the meaning of subsection 256(5.1) of the Income Tax Act. Mr. Howard owned all of the issued shares of GRR and MorCourt. MorCourt was incorporated for the purpose of acquiring restaurant buildings and the land upon which they were situated. The appellant was incorporated in 2005 for the purpose of operating the new restaurant, including the franchise that would permit the operation of that restaurant. Upon the appellant’s organization, Mr. Howard’s spouse was issued 760 voting common shares for $76 and Mr. Howard was issued 240 voting common shares for $24. Mr. Howard was elected as the sole director of the appellant and appointed as its only officer. No written shareholders’ agreements were put into place. The T.C.C. determined that that there were two competing interpretations of subsection 256(5.1). It found that the Court’s decision in Silicon Graphics Limited v. Canada, provided a narrow interpretation of subsection 256(5.1) and in contrast determined that the Court’s decisions in Mimetix Pharmaceuticals Inc. v. Canada and Plomberie J.C. Langlois Inc. v. Canada had broadened the test set forth in Silicon Graphics (i.e. “that in order for there to be a finding of de facto control, a person or group of persons must have the clear right and ability to effect a significant change in the board of directors or the powers of the board of directors or to influence in a very direct way the shareholders who would otherwise have the ability to elect the board of directors”). The T.C.C. thus concluded that the test required it to look beyond the right and ability to affect the composition or powers of the board, and to consider broader manners of influence in making the determination of who in fact has effective control of the affairs and fortunes of the corporation in question. In applying this broader test, the T.C.C. found, inter alia, that Mr. Howard could not have had any more effective factual control over the management and operation of the appellant and its business.

The issues were whether the T.C.C. erred in its interpretation of the requirements of de facto control in subsection 256(5.1) of the Act, and whether it erred in concluding that the appellant was associated with GRR and MorCourt for the purposes of paragraph 256(1)(b) of the Act.

Held, the appeal should be dismissed.

The T.C.C. applied an incorrect test for de facto control. The test in Silicon Graphics was affirmed in 9044 2807 Québec Inc. v. Canada. Nothing in 9044 2807 Québec Inc. suggests an intention on the Court’s part to depart from the Silicon Graphics formulation of the test for de facto control, nor does the decision broaden or otherwise alter the test. While it is true that in Mimetix Pharmaceuticals and Plomberie J.C. Langlois a broader test appears to have been considered, the narrow test set out in Silicon Graphics, which was its ratio decidendi, was never directly challenged before this Court in either of these decisions. To the extent that those decisions may be taken as having prescribed a test for de facto control that is inconsistent with the Silicon Graphics test, they ought not to be followed. The test for control in fact is not based on “operational control”. Paragraph 256(1)(b) and subsection 256(5.1) of the Act specifically refer to control of a corporation and not to control of the corporation’s business or operations. Control of a corporation for the purposes of the associated corporation provisions of the Act has never been properly understood to mean control by management or what might otherwise be called “operational” control. The list of factors that may be considered when applying the Silicon Graphics test is open-ended. However, a factor that does not include a legally enforceable right and ability to effect a change to the board of directors or its powers, or to exercise influence over the shareholder or shareholders who have that right and ability, ought not to be considered as having the potential to establish de facto control. An interpretation of de facto control as contemplated by subsection 256(5.1) that fails to include such a requirement runs counter to the admonition of the Supreme Court of Canada in Canada Trustco Mortgage Co. v. Canada wherein it is stated that “the Income Tax Act must be interpreted in order to achieve consistency, predictability and fairness so that taxpayers may manage their affairs intelligently”. An interpretation of subsection 256(5.1) that encompasses “operational” control would import a degree of subjectivity into the de facto analysis that would lead to unpredictability.

The rights possessed by Mr. Howard under the unwritten agreement with his spouse fell short of giving him de jure control of the appellant, as he did not own a majority of its voting shares and the agreement was not a unanimous shareholders agreement within the meaning of the governing corporate legislation. Nonetheless, as long as that agreement was not repudiated by Mrs. Howard, Mr. Howard’s right to determine the appellant’s board of directors was influence of the type contemplated by subsection 256(5.1), within the interpretation of this Court set out in Silicon Graphics.

STATUTES AND REGULATIONS CITED

Income Tax Act, R.S.C., 1985 (5th Supp.), c. 1, ss. 125(1)(a), (3),(7), 256.

CASES CITED

NOT FOLLOWED:

Mimetix Pharmaceuticals Inc. v. Canada, 2003 FCA 106, [2003] 3 C.T.C. 72; Plomberie J.C. Langlois Inc. v. Canada, 2006 FCA 113, [2007] 3 C.T.C. 148; Lyrtech RD Inc. v. Canada, 2014 FCA 267, [2015] 4 C.T.C. 33.

APPLIED:

Silicon Graphics Limited v. Canada, 2002 FCA 260, [2003] 1 F.C. 447; Housen v. Nikolaisen, 2002 SCC 33, [2002] 2 S.C.R. 235; 9044 2807 Québec Inc. v. Canada, 2004 FCA 23, 325 N.R. 226, sub nom. Transport M.L. Couture Inc. v. Canada; Buckerfield’s Ltd. et al. v. Minister of National Revenue, [1965] 1 Ex. C.R. 299, [1964] C.T.C. 504; Canada Trustco Mortgage Co. v. Canada, 2005 SCC 54, [2005] 2 S.C.R. 601.

CONSIDERED:

Duha Printers (Western) Ltd. v. Canada, [1998] 1 S.C.R. 795, (1998), 159 D.L.R. (4th) 457; Miller v. Canada (Attorney General), 2002 FCA 370, 220 D.L.R. (4th) 149.

appEAL from a decision of the Tax Court of Canada (2014 TCC 357, [2015] 3 C.T.C. 2205) upholding the Minister of National Revenue’s decision, in reassessments issued in respect of the appellant’s 2007, 2008 and 2009 taxation years, to deny the appellant’s claim for a deduction from its tax otherwise payable. Appeal dismissed.

APPEARANCES

Thor J. Hansell for appellant.

Julien Bedard and Neil Goodridge for respondent.

SOLICITORS OF RECORD

Aikins, MacAulay & Thorvaldson LLP, Winnipeg, for appellant.

Deputy Attorney General of Canada for respondent.

The following are the reasons for judgment rendered in English by

[1]        Ryer J.A.: This is an appeal from a decision of Justice Patrick Boyle of the Tax Court of Canada (the Judge), dated November 28, 2014 and cited as 2014 TCC 357, [2015] 3 C.T.C. 2205. The appeal arises out of reassessments issued by the Minister of National Revenue (the Minister) pursuant to the Income Tax Act, R.S.C., 1985 (5th Supp.), c. 1 (the Act) to McGillivray Restaurant Ltd. (the taxpayer) in respect of its 2007, 2008 and 2009 taxation years (the reassessments). Unless otherwise indicated, all references in these reasons to statutory provisions shall be to the corresponding provisions of the Act that applied in respect of the reassessments.

[2]        In each reassessment, the Minister denied the taxpayer’s claim for a deduction from its tax otherwise payable under Part I of the Act for the applicable taxation year, pursuant to paragraph 125(1)(a) (the small business deduction), on the basis that the taxpayer was associated with one or more corporations in each such taxation year, within the meaning of subsection 256(1), and had not filed an agreement with any such corporation as contemplated by subsection 125(3).

[3]        The issue in this appeal is whether, in the years covered by the reassessments, the taxpayer was associated with G.R.R. Holdings Ltd. (GRR) and MorCourt Properties Ltd. (MorCourt) on the basis that an individual, Mr. Gordon R. Howard, who had de jure and de facto control over GRR and MorCourt, also had de facto control over the taxpayer, within the meaning of subsection 256(5.1).

[4]        The Judge determined that MorCourt, GRR and the taxpayer were associated corporations, within the meaning of subsection 256(1) and upheld the reassessments.

[5]        For the reasons that follow, I would dismiss the appeal.

I.          BACKGROUND

[6]        The appeal before the Judge proceeded on the basis of a partially agreed statement of facts. In addition, the Judge made a detailed summary of the evidence presented to him, which consisted of read-ins by the Crown from the examination for discovery of Mr. Howard and an agreed book of documents. The essential facts for the purpose of dealing with the issues raised in this appeal are summarized below.

[7]        At all relevant times, Mr. Howard and Mrs. Ruth Howard were married. Mr. Howard owned all of the issued shares of GRR and MorCourt. GRR was incorporated in the early 1980s and MorCourt was incorporated around the same time as the taxpayer. Like the taxpayer, each of GRR and MorCourt is a Canadian-controlled private corporation, within the meaning of subsection 125(7).

[8]        In 1997, GRR entered into franchise agreements with Keg Restaurants Ltd. (the franchisor) and acquired certain territorial exclusivity rights with respect to the operation of Keg Restaurant franchises in Winnipeg. Pursuant to these arrangements, GRR successfully operated three Keg Restaurants in Winnipeg until late 2005. The exclusivity rights were conditional on GRR continuing to operate a minimum of three Keg restaurants in Winnipeg.

[9]        At some time before the incorporation of the taxpayer, Mr. Howard decided that the Pembina Highway Restaurant should be relocated. To that end, arrangements were made to acquire some land on McGillivray Avenue and to obtain the franchisor’s consent to the relocation.

[10]      In conjunction with the relocation transaction, Mr. Howard sought professional advice and, as a consequence, he determined that it would be prudent to “start separating some things”, given the success that had been enjoyed since the acquisition of the three Keg-franchised restaurants.

[11]      To that end, MorCourt was incorporated for the purpose of acquiring the restaurant buildings and the land upon which they were situated. More germane to this appeal, the taxpayer was incorporated for the purpose of acquiring and operating the new McGillivray Avenue restaurant, including the franchise that would permit the operation of that restaurant.

[12]      Consistent with the professional advice that Mr. Howard received, the taxpayer was incorporated in August of 2005. Upon its organization, Mrs. Howard was issued 760 voting common shares for $76 and Mr. Howard was issued 240 voting common shares for $24. In addition, Mr. Howard was elected as the sole director of the taxpayer and appointed as its only officer. No written shareholders’ agreements were put into place. The capitalization of the taxpayer was nominal.

[13]      The record contains little to explain the basis upon which the taxpayer legally acquired or financed the property that it used when it commenced operations at the McGillivray Avenue location in December of 2005, shortly after the closing of the Pembina Highway location. However, the record does disclose documentation that provided for the assignment of the franchise covering the Pembina Highway location from GRR to the taxpayer and the franchisor’s consent to that assignment.

[14]      Mr. Howard was well aware of the importance of complying with the terms of the franchise agreements that related to the three restaurants, and the requirements for the consent of the franchisor to the relocation of the Pembina Highway location and the assignment of the related franchise to the taxpayer. At his examination for discovery, he testified that he assured the franchisor that notwithstanding these changes, things would be run on the same basis as they had in the past. He also testified, at his discovery, that he gave similar assurances to the former Pembina Highway employees whose employment was transferred to the taxpayer. Mrs. Howard had limited involvement in the operations of the taxpayer. She and her husband personally guaranteed the obligations of the taxpayer and GRR to the franchisor.

[15]      The determination of Mrs. Howard’s 76 percent ownership interest in the taxpayer was based upon the professional advice that had been provided to Mr. Howard. Nonetheless, the taxpayer was organized on the basis that Mr. Howard would not need his wife’s approval to make decisions on behalf of the taxpayer. In that regard, Mr. Howard assured his wife that notwithstanding her 76% ownership position in the taxpayer, the restaurants would continue to operate as they always had, and the evidence indicates that this is how things proceeded.

II.         THE DECISION OF THE JUDGE

[16]      The Judge determined that there were two competing interpretations of subsection 256(5.1). He found that this Court’s decision in Silicon Graphics Limited v. Canada, 2002 FCA 260, [2003] 1 F.C. 447 (Silicon Graphics), provided a narrow interpretation under which a person would only be considered to have control in fact if that person had the clear right and ability either to effect significant change in the board of directors or the powers of the board of directors or to influence in a very direct way the shareholders who would otherwise have the ability to elect the board of directors.

[17]      In contrast, he concluded that this Court’s decisions in Mimetix Pharmaceuticals Inc. v. Canada, 2003 FCA 106, [2003] 3 C.T.C. 72 (Mimetix Pharmaceuticals) and Plomberie J.C. Langlois Inc. v. Canada, 2006 FCA 113, [2007] 3 C.T.C. 148 (Plomberie J.C. Langlois) had broadened the test set forth in Silicon Graphics. Thus, he concluded that the test required him to look beyond the right and ability to affect the composition or powers of the board, and to consider broader manners of influence in making the determination of who in fact has effective control of the affairs and fortunes of the corporation in question.

[18]      In applying this broader test, the Judge found that Mr. Howard could not have had any more effective factual control over the management and operation of the taxpayer and its business.

[19]      In addition, at paragraph 59 of his reasons, the Judge concluded that Mr. and Mrs. Howard had reached an agreement to the effect that the franchise covering the McGillivray Avenue location would be transferred to the taxpayer and Mrs. Howard would acquire a 76 percent interest in the taxpayer for a nominal amount, only if she agreed to ensure that Mr. Howard was the sole director and officer of the taxpayer and that, as he had assured the franchisor, things would be run as they always had been.

[20]      Finally, the Judge concluded that while Mrs. Howard could have replaced her husband as the sole director of the taxpayer (thereby repudiating their unwritten agreement), she did not do so, observing that if she had decided to do so, she would have had to be concerned about the potential consequences that could have resulted from such a decision.

III.        RELEVANT STATUTORY PROVISIONS

[21]      The provisions of the Act that are relevant to this appeal are paragraph 256(1)(b) and subsection 256(5.1), which read as follows:

Associated corporations

256 (1) For the purposes of this Act, one corporation is associated with another in a taxation year if, at any time in the year,

(b) both of the corporations were controlled, directly or indirectly in any manner whatever, by the same person or group of persons;

Control in fact

(5.1) For the purposes of this Act, where the expression “controlled, directly or indirectly in any manner whatever,” is used, a corporation shall be considered to be so controlled by another corporation, person or group of persons (in this subsection referred to as the “controller”) at any time where, at that time, the controller has any direct or indirect influence that, if exercised, would result in control in fact of the corporation, ….

IV.       ISSUES

[22]      There are two issues in this appeal:

(a)       Did the Judge err in his interpretation of the requirements of de facto control in subsection 256(5.1)?

(b)       Did the Judge err in concluding that the taxpayer was associated with GRR and MorCourt for the purposes of paragraph 256(1)(b)?

V.        STANDARD OF REVIEW

[23]      In appellate review of a decision of the Tax Court of Canada, this Court applies the standard of correctness with respect to questions of law and the standard of palpable and overriding error with respect to questions of fact and mixed fact and law in respect of which there are no readily extricable questions of law (see Housen v. Nikolaisen, 2002 SCC 33, [2002] 2 S.C.R. 235, at paragraphs 8, 10 and 37).

VI.       ANALYSIS

A.        Introduction

[24]      The circumstances in which the taxpayer was incorporated, organized, capitalized and then managed make it clear that Mrs. Howard had no meaningful interest in the taxpayer or its affairs beyond her $76 investment in its common shares. Moreover, the totality of these circumstances indicate that the primary purpose of the incorporation of the taxpayer and its acquisition of the Pembina Highway restaurant and the related franchise may have been an attempt to avoid the associated corporation rules in order to obtain an additional small business deduction.

[25]      The associated corporation rules in section 256 are aimed, inter alia, at ensuring that access to the small business deduction is limited. A discussion of the scheme of the Act in respect of that tax incentive is not necessary for the purpose of these reasons.

[26]      Prior to the incorporation of the taxpayer, GRR operated three Keg restaurants and was limited to a single small business deduction. The taxpayer’s incorporation and its acquisition of the McGillivray Avenue restaurant facilitated access to a second small business deduction in respect of one of the three restaurant businesses that were previously carried on by GRR.

[27]      The Minister took exception to the claim for a second small business deduction and issued the reassessments on the basis that GRR and MorCourt were associated with the taxpayer, within the meaning of paragraph 256(1)(b), because those corporations and the taxpayer were all controlled by Mr. Howard. That Mr. Howard had both de jure and de facto control of GRR and MorCourt is not at issue. The Minister alleged that Mr. Howard also had de facto control of the taxpayer, within the meaning of subsection 256(5.1).

[28]      The Minister has not alleged that the parties to the transactions pursuant to which the taxpayer acquired the McGillivray Avenue restaurant and the related franchise were engaged in abusive tax planning. In other words, this is not a case in which the general anti-avoidance rule in subsection 245(2) is engaged and the purpose behind the creation and deployment of the taxpayer is irrelevant.

[29]      The overarching question is whether it can be said that Mr. Howard or GRR had any direct or indirect influence that, if exercised, would result in either of them having control in fact of the taxpayer.

B.        Did the Judge err in his interpretation of the requirements of de facto control in subsection 256(5.1)?

[30]      The determination of who controls a corporation or when an acquisition of control of a corporation occurs has considerable significance under the Act. Prior to the introduction of subsection 256(5.1), the Act included both “control” and “controlled directly or indirectly in any manner whatever” but, in both of those formulations, control was thought of as de jure control.

[31]      In Duha Printers (Western) Ltd. v. Canada, [1998] 1 S.C.R. 795, 159 D.L.R. (4th) 457 (Duha Printers), the seminal decision of the Supreme Court of Canada on corporate control, de jure control was referred to as the ability of the owners of the majority of the voting power in the corporation that would enable those owners to elect directors of the corporation and accordingly to enjoy effective control of the corporation. In colloquial terms, the majority shareholder has the power to get the directors to do what he or she wants in terms of the operation of the corporation, failing which that shareholder will use his or her majority voting power to replace those directors with others who will do his or her bidding.

[32]      It is useful to recall that in paragraph 71 of Duha Printers, the Supreme Court affirmed that an ordinary shareholders agreement, in contradistinction to a unanimous shareholders agreement, is not relevant to the determination of de jure control. Thus, the voting power attributable to shareholdings, determined in light of the constating documents and the share register of a corporation, is generally the determinative factor in the de jure control analysis, except in limited circumstances not relevant to this appeal, in which de jure control may not lie with the person who holds the majority of the voting power in a corporation.

[33]      In the de facto control analysis, as one would expect, there are a broader range of attributes — beyond voting power determined in the context of constating documents and share registers — that must be considered to determine whether the requirements of subsection 256(5.1) have been met in any given case. For example, the rights of a person under the provisions of a shareholders agreement, other than a unanimous shareholders agreement, under which shareholders agree that the person will be able to select the directors, would fall within the definition of “influence”, within the meaning of subsection 256(5.1). So, must the requisite influence arise out of legally binding or enforceable arrangements, or can other kinds of influence lead to a finding of de facto control? For example, does a person who by threats or other vile means, at one end of the spectrum, or by matrimonial or familial love and affection, at the other end of the spectrum, have the requisite influence over a shareholder, who would otherwise have de jure control of a corporation, that would be sufficient to establish that such person has de facto control over that corporation?

[34]      Fortunately, in this appeal we are not obliged to resort to an analysis from first principles because the meaning of de facto control, for the purposes of subsection 256(5.1), has been previously considered by this Court.

[35]      In Silicon Graphics, Justice Sexton formulated the test as follows [at paragraph 67]:

It is therefore my view that in order for there to be a finding of de facto control, a person or group of persons must have the clear right and ability to effect a significant change in the board of directors or the powers of the board of directors or to influence in a very direct way the shareholders who would otherwise have the ability to elect the board of directors.

[36]      This test was affirmed in 9044 2807 Québec Inc. v. Canada, 2004 FCA 23, 325 N.R. 226 [sub nom. Transport M.L. Couture Inc. v. Canada] (Transport Couture), wherein Justice Noël (as he then was), stated [at paragraph 24]:

It is not possible to list all the factors which may be useful in determining whether a corporation is subject to de facto control (Duha Printers, [1998] 1 S.C.R. 795, para. [38]           ). However, whatever factors are considered, they must show that a person or group of persons has the clear right and ability to change the board of directors of the corporation in question or to influence in a very direct way the shareholders who would otherwise have the ability to elect the board of directors (Silicon Graphics, [2002] FCA 260, para. [67]  ). In other words, the evidence must show that the decision-making power of the corporation in question in fact lies elsewhere than with those who have de jure control. [Emphasis added.]

[37]      At the heart of Justice Noël’s description of the legal test for de facto control is essentially a restatement of the test enunciated by Justice Sexton in Silicon Graphics. Nothing in this excerpt from Justice Noël’s reasons suggests an intention on his part to depart from the Silicon Graphics formulation of the test for de facto control.

[38]      I do not interpret Justice Noël’s last sentence in the above-quoted paragraph as broadening or otherwise altering the Silicon Graphics test. It immediately follows a clear and direct endorsement of the Silicon Graphics test. Moreover, in my view, its introductory phrase “In other words” indicates that this sentence is intended to constitute only a paraphrase of that test. Although interpreted in isolation this sentence might suggest a broader approach, its immediate context requires an interpretation bounded by the clear endorsement of the Silicon Graphics test.

[39]      As previously mentioned, the Judge concluded that Mimetix Pharmaceuticals and Plomberie J.C. Langlois required him to consider broad manners of influence, including exercise of control over day-to-day operations in the de facto control analysis. While it is true that in these two decisions a broader test appears to have been considered, the narrow test set out in paragraph 67 of Silicon Graphics, which in my view was its ratio decidendi, was never directly challenged before this Court in either of these decisions.

[40]      It is well established that this Court will follow its previous decisions unless “the previous decision is manifestly wrong, in the sense that the Court overlooked a relevant statutory provision, or a case that ought to have been followed” (see Miller v. Canada (Attorney General), 2002 FCA 370, 220 D.L.R. (4th) 149, at paragraph 10). This Court did not address any argument that Silicon Graphics was manifestly wrong and should not be followed in either Mimetix Pharmaceuticals or Plomberie J.C. Langlois. Moreover, in both Mimetix Pharmaceuticals and Plomberie J.C. Langlois, this Court was primarily concerned with the Tax Court’s appreciation of the evidence before it.

[41]      To be clear, in my view, to the extent that those decisions may be taken as having prescribed a test for de facto control that is inconsistent with the Silicon Graphics test, those decisions ought not to be followed.

[42]      At the hearing, Crown counsel asserted that this Court “clarified” the Silicon Graphics test in Lyrtech RD Inc. v. Canada, 2014 FCA 267, [2015] 4 C.T.C. 33 (Lyrtech), a decision that was apparently not before the Judge.

[43]      In Lyrtech, this Court affirmed that the test for de facto control is that in Silicon Graphics, adding that paragraph 24 of the decision in Transport Couture clarified the Silicon Graphics test. As noted above, it is my view that the stipulated paragraph from Transport Couture must be taken as an affirmation of the Silicon Graphics test. Moreover, Lyrtech is another example of the Court responding to asserted errors in factual findings made in the decision under review. Lyrtech cannot, in my view, be read as having determined that the narrow test in Silicon Graphics was manifestly wrong and ought not to be followed. To the extent that Lyrtech may be taken as having repudiated the Silicon Graphics test, it ought not to be followed.

[44]      Crown counsel argued that support for the broader approach to de facto control can be found within Silicon Graphics itself. In paragraphs 63 to 65 of that decision, the Court dealt with a number of arguments that were made to it as to the applicability of broader factors. In dismissing these arguments on the basis that they were unsupported on the record, it is my view that Justice Sexton cannot be taken as having undermined the test that he clearly enunciated in paragraph 67 of his reasons.

[45]      Accordingly, I affirm that the narrow test set out in paragraph 67 of Silicon Graphics is correct and has not been overturned by this Court.

[46]      I reject any assertion that the test for control in fact is based on “operational control”. De facto control, like de jure control, is concerned with control over the board of directors and not with control of the day-to-day operations of the corporation or its business. Paragraph 256(1)(b) and subsection 256(5.1) specifically refer to control of a corporation and not to control of the corporation’s business or operations. Indeed, this view is consistent with the conclusion of President Jackett set out in Buckerfield’s Ltd. et al. v. Minister of National Revenue, [1965] 1 Ex. C.R. 299, at pages 302 and 303:

Many approaches might conceivably be adopted in applying 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 management 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 ….

[47]      While de jure control generally looks only to share ownership in the limited context set forth in Duha Printers, in determining who has control over the election of the board of directors — and thus the corporation — there is nothing to suggest that de facto control is anything other than control by some means short of that necessary to meet the test for de jure control. In my view, control of a corporation for the purposes of the associated corporation provisions of the Act has never been properly understood to mean what President Jackett referred to as control by management or what might otherwise be called “operational” control.

[48]      The difference between de facto and de jure control, then, is limited to the breadth of factors that can be considered in determining whether a person or group of persons has effective control, by means of an ability to elect the board of directors, of a corporation. That said, it remains the case that the list of factors that may be considered when applying the Silicon Graphics test is open-ended. However, in my view, a factor that does not include a legally enforceable right and ability to effect a change to the board of directors or its powers, or to exercise influence over the shareholder or shareholders who have that right and ability, ought not to be considered as having the potential to establish de facto control.

[49]      In my view, an interpretation of de facto control as contemplated by subsection 256(5.1) that fails to include a requirement that the influence in question must be grounded in a legally enforceable right or ability runs counter to the clear admonition of the Supreme Court of Canada in Canada Trustco Mortgage Co. v. Canada, 2005 SCC 54, [2005] 2 S.C.R. 601 [Canada Trustco], wherein, at paragraph 12, the Chief Justice and Justice Major unequivocally stated:

The provisions of the Income Tax Act must be interpreted in order to achieve consistency, predictability and fairness so that taxpayers may manage their affairs intelligently .…

[50]      An interpretation of subsection 256(5.1) that encompasses “operational” control would import a degree of subjectivity into the de facto analysis that, in my view, would lead to unpredictability, rather than predictability, as mandated by the Canada Trustco interpretative approach.

[51]      Having clarified that the Silicon Graphics test remains the test for de facto control, and it appearing that the Judge applied a different test, I now turn to the facts in this appeal.

C.        Did the Judge err in concluding that the taxpayer was associated with GRR and MorCourt for the purposes of paragraph 256(1)(b)?

[52]      Having determined that the Judge applied an incorrect test for de facto control, it is necessary for me to apply the correct test to the facts of this case.

[53]      The Judge determined that Mr. and Mrs. Howard reached an agreement to the effect that the franchise with respect to the Pembina Highway location would only be transferred from GRR to the taxpayer if Mrs. Howard agreed to use the voting power associated with her 760 common shares of the taxpayer to ensure that Mr. Howard was elected as the sole director of the taxpayer and that his directorship endured. In essence, the Judge found that the Howards had made an agreement under which the identity and composition of the board of directors of the taxpayer would be under the control of Mr. Howard.

[54]      At the hearing, counsel for the taxpayer asserted that the Judge made a palpable and overriding error in finding that Mr. and Mrs. Howard had made such an unwritten agreement. Counsel correctly noted that the record contains no direct evidence of such an agreement. However, he agreed that if there had been a written agreement to the same effect, the Minister’s position that the corporations were associated would be unassailable. Counsel asserted correctly that the Franchise Agreement, to which the taxpayer was a party, did not require Mr. Howard to be the taxpayer’s sole director. From this, the taxpayer asks this Court to infer that there was no such oral agreement and that the Judge erred in his inference that there was one.

[55]      A review on a standard of palpable and overriding error requires an appellate court to show meaningful deference to the factual findings of a trial judge. In the circumstances, it is my view that the Judge’s finding that there was an unwritten agreement between Mr. and Mrs. Howard was open to him on the evidence that was before him and in making it, he committed no palpable and overriding error.

[56]      The absence of a written agreement is not proof that there was no unwritten agreement. The Judge was aware of the longstanding and successful relationship between Mr. Howard and the franchisor, underscoring the trust that had been established between them over the years. This relationship indicates that the franchisor may well have been satisfied by Mr. Howard’s verbal assurances that things would be run in the same way they always had in the three restaurants.

[57]      Although the parties stipulated in the partial agreed statement of facts that Mrs. Howard could terminate Mr. Howard’s directorship at any time, she did not do so. As long as the unwritten agreement was in effect, Mr. Howard retained the right to determine the entirety of the taxpayer’s board of directors, i.e. that he would constitute the entire board. It is clear that the rights possessed by Mr. Howard under the unwritten agreement with his wife fell short of giving him de jure control of the taxpayer, as he did not own a majority of its voting shares and that agreement was not a unanimous shareholders agreement within the meaning of the governing corporate legislation. Nonetheless, as long as that agreement was not repudiated by Mrs. Howard, Mr. Howard’s right to determine the taxpayer’s board of directors was influence of the type contemplated by subsection 256(5.1), within the interpretation of this Court set out in Silicon Graphics.

VII.      CONCLUSION

[58]      For the foregoing reasons, I would dismiss the appeal with costs.

Dawson J.A.: I agree.

de Montigny J.A.: I agree.

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