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Montreal Trust Company, Executor under the last will and codicil of John Stewart Donald Tory (Appellant)
v.
Minister of National Revenue (Respondent)
Court of Appeal, Jackett C.J., St.-Germain and Bastin D.JJ.—Toronto, June 27, 1973.
Income tax—Accounts receivable owing testator trans ferred to legatee—Accounts receivable exceed amount of legacy—Whether a transfer of accounts receivable to beneficiary qua beneficiary—Estate taxable on excess of accounts receivable—Income Tax Act, section 64(2) and (3).
A Toronto solicitor had accounts receivable of $483,350 when he died in 1965. His daughter, who was bequeathed $100,000 by his will, was paid $10,000 and under an agree ment with the executor she released the balance of her legacy and paid the executor $380,000 in return for an assignment of the accounts receivable. The daughter was not resident in Canada.
Held, affirming Walsh J., the solicitor's estate was charge able to tax under section 64(2) of the Income Tax Act on $380,000. The accounts receivable were "rights or things" which "when realized would have been included in comput ing his income" for 1965 within the meaning of section 64(2). On its proper construction, section 64(3), which declares section 64(2) inapplicable to rights or things "trans- ferred or distributed to beneficiaries", did not apply to the assignment of the accounts receivable to the legatee. The noscitur a sociis rule governs, and the word "transferred" in section 64(3) does not apply to property acquired by a beneficiary not qua beneficiary but as a purchaser for value.
APPEAL from Walsh J. [1971] F.C. 248. COUNSEL:
H. L. Morphy and D. Andison for appellant.
G. W. Ainslie, Q.C., and W. J. A. Hobson for respondent.
SOLICITORS:
Tory, Tory, Deslauriers and Binnington, Toronto, for appellant.
Deputy Attorney General of Canada for respondent.
The judgment of the Court was delivered by
BASTIN D.J. (orally)—This is an appeal from a decision of the Trial Division dismissing the appeal of the appellant from a notice of re assessment in respect of the 1965 taxation year. The appeal involves the interpretation of section 64 of the Income Tax Act and specifically the interpretation of section 64(3), reading as follows:
Rights or things transferred to beneficiaries.
64. (3) Where before the time for making an election under subsection (2) has expired, a right or thing to which that subsection would otherwise apply has been transferred or distributed to beneficiaries or other persons beneficially interested in the estate or trust,
(a) subsection (2) is not applicable to that right, or thing, and
(b) an amount received by one of the beneficiaries or other such persons upon the realization or disposition of the right or thing shall be included in computing his income for the taxation year in which he received it.
The essential facts are that the appellant is the executor of the estate of John Donald Tory, a Toronto lawyer, who computed the profits from his practice on a cash received basis. He died on August 27, 1965, leaving surviving him (inter alia) his three children, Mary Virginia Denton, John Arnold Tory and James Maxwell Tory. At his death he had accounts receivable of $483,350. Under the terms of his will Mrs. Denton received a cash legacy of $100,000 and was paid $10,000 of this. On February 8, 1966, she made an agreement with the appellant by which the accounts receivable of $483,350 were to be assigned to her in consideration of her releasing the estate from its liability to pay her $90,000, the balance of her legacy, and paying the executor the sum of $380,000 in Canadian funds within one year.
Mrs. Denton left Canada on February 11, 1966, to join her husband and children in the United States and she has remained a non-resi dent of Canada since that date. She collected the full amount of the accounts receivable assigned to her and on February 16, 1967, she paid the appellant the sum of $380,000.
The appellant did not include these accounts receivable in the income tax return for 1965 of the estate on the ground that the right to receive them had been transferred to a beneficiary of the taxpayer within the time prescribed by sec tion 64(2) of the Income Tax Act. On June 1, 1966, the respondent assessed tax for the 1965 taxation year on the basis that the sum of $483,- 350 should have been included in computing the taxpayer's income for 1965. The appellant duly objected to the assessment and on August 7, 1968, the respondent re-assessed tax for 1965 on the basis that the amount properly included pursuant to the provisions of section 64(2) of the Income Tax Act for 1965 in respect of these accounts receivable was $380,000. The appel lant then commenced the appeal which came before the Trial Division for hearing.
The learned Trial Judge in his Reasons for Judgment, [1971] F.C. 248, at p. 261 dated June 25, 1971 held:
Section 64(3) applies to transfers or distributions of the right or thing to a beneficiary or other person beneficially inter ested in the estate or trust only when such transfer or distribution has been made to him qua beneficiary, and not to the extent that he has acquired it as a purchaser for value. Therefore, had Mrs. Denton been a legatee of an amount equal to or in excess of $483,350 and had accepted the accounts in satisfaction of this legacy, no tax would have been collectable from the estate of the deceased when these accounts were paid, and since Mrs. Denton herself was not taxable in Canada, the accounts would have been collected without payment of income tax on them by anyone, and this would have been a perfectly proper and legitimate applica tion of s. 64(3) of the Act. I cannot interpret this section, however, as applying to all rights or things which may be transferred or distributed by way of a sale for value to a purchaser who also happens to be a beneficiary or other person beneficially interested in an estate or trust irrespec tive of how small his benefit or beneficial interest in same may be. I therefore find that with respect to the rights or things so transferred which are in excess of the amount for which the purchaser is a beneficiary or person beneficially interested in the estate he is simply a purchaser for value and the estate or trust is taxable under the provisions of s. 64(2) on the amounts so transferred. The appeal is therefore dismissed, with costs.
To interpret the words of a statute, regard must first be had to the scheme of the legislation. The object of section 64 was to provide for the payment of income tax on rights or things owned by a taxpayer who has died which, when realized or disposed of, would have been includ ed in computing his income. The intention of the
section was that the value of such rights or things would be taxed either in the hands of the deceased's executor or administrator or in the hands of the beneficiaries. The appellant sub mits that the word "transferred" is to be inter preted quite apart from the context in which it is used so that a beneficiary of even a trivial legacy could purchase from the executor rights or things worth any amount. Such an interpreta tion is not justified.
What must be considered is the entire clause: "Where ... a right or thing ... has been trans ferred or distributed to beneficiaries or other persons beneficially interested in the estate or trust ..." The words "distributed to beneficiar ies" clearly restrict the value of the rights or things to be conveyed to each beneficiary to the amount of the bequest to which he is entitled. If what was contemplated by Parliament was a sale of accounts receivable or similar things, to a person who happened to be a beneficiary, the word distributed would be quite inappropriate. If that had been the intention the word "dis- tributed" would not have been inserted in the clause.
In the case at bar, the assignment to Mrs. Denton of $90,000 of the accounts receivable was a distribution pursuant to the terms of the will but the assignment of the balance of the accounts receivable was, in fact, a sale to Mrs. Denton for valuable consideration. To the extent of $90,000, the assignment was made in satisfaction of the balance of her bequest. The word "distributed" is used to cover cases where the conveyance is to several beneficiaries. The word "transferred" is inserted to provide for a case where the conveyance is to only one person.
The meaning of "transferred" in this clause is limited by its association with the word dis tributed. The rule is expressed in the phrase "noscuntur a sociis". To quote from Maxwell on Interpretation of Statutes, 12th ed. at page 289:
Where two or more words which are susceptible of analo gous meaning are coupled together, noscuntur a sociis. They are understood to be used in their cognate sense. They take, as it were, their colour from each other, the meaning of the
more general being restricted to a sense analogous to that of the less general.
The meaning of both the words "transferred" and "distributed" is also coloured by their con junction with the words "beneficiaries or per sons beneficially interested in the estate or trust".
The value of the rights or things is therefore restricted to the amount of the inheritance of the beneficiary. If he acquires more than that he takes as a purchaser for value and the estate is taxable on the amount so transferred.
In the memorandum of fact and law, the appellant points out that, under the terms of the testator's will, Mrs. Denton was a beneficiary not only to the extent of the legacy of $100,000 but also to the extent of her immediate interest in the residue of the estate as provided for in paragraph 3(h) of the will and she also enjoyed a deferred interest in the residue of the funds set aside under paragraphs 3(f) and (g). It would appear that this point was not raised in the appeal argued on an agreed state of facts in the Trial Division nor was any evidence tendered to prove the value of her interest in the estate apart from the bequest of $100,000, so we are unable to consider these deferred interests of Mrs. Denton in the appeal. In any event, she did not acquire these accounts receivable in excess of $90,000 in discharge of her deferred interest in the estate but as a purchaser.
The appeal is dismissed with costs.
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