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T-282-76
Mary Mastronardi, Deanna Louise Bucko and Armando Mastronardi, Executors of the Estate of Umberto Mastronardi, deceased (Plaintiffs)
v.
The Queen (Defendant)
Trial Division, Gibson J.—Windsor, June 29; Ottawa, July 16, 1976.
Income tax—Subject matter deemed realization of capital gain—Meaning of "immediately before his death" re valuation of property—Income Tax Act, S.C. 1970-71-72, c. 63, s. 70(5) as am.
The owner of certain shares died in 1973; the subject matter of this appeal was the deemed realization of the capital gain in relation to the shares. Since 1972, a five year term insurance policy on the life of the deceased for $500,000, reducing by $100,000 each year, was owned by deceased's company. Plain tiffs claimed that the shares had a fair market value of $323.58 each immediately before the death and that no regard should be had to any value which might be added attributable to the insurance policy. Defendant argued that immediately before death, the policy was worth $500,000 and such value was to be considered in determining fair market value. Defendant submit ted that "immediately before his death" in section 70(5) of the Income Tax Act means the instant of death, and on that assumption, the fair market value of the shares would be $778.59 each, because at the instant of death an informed purchaser would know that the company would receive the $500,000 from the policy.
Held, the appeal is allowed. In this case, after the death, the company obtained the proceeds of the policy which appreciated the fair market value of the shares from $323.58 to $778.59. There is a two-step fiction in interpreting section 70(5). First, after death there is a deemed disposition "immediately before ... death", and, second, there is a deemed realization of proceeds "equal to the fair market value of the property at that time". The words "immediately before ... death" should not be taken to mean the instant of death, nor do they import a necessity of valuing capital property taking into account the imminence of death. No value of the policy should be included in determining the fair market value of the shares.
INCOME tax appeal. COUNSEL:
J. Ball for plaintiffs.
G. W. Ainslie, Q.C., and O. A. Pyrcz for
defendant.
SOLICITORS:
Gignac, Sutts, Nosanchuk, Windsor, for plaintiffs.
Deputy Attorney General of Canada for defendant.
The following are the reasons for judgment rendered in English by
GIBSON J.: What is the subject matter in this appeal from assessment is a deemed realization of a gain on capital property consisting of certain common shares in Mastronardi Produce Limited because of the death of the owner of these shares on February 20, 1973 while resident in Ontario. Such deemed realization of a gain is statutorily created by section 70(5) of the Income Tax Act.
By reason of section 70(5) of the Act, the deceased owner is "deemed to have disposed, [of these shares, being capital property] immediately before his death, ... and to have received proceeds of disposition therefor equal to the fair market value of the property at that time."
The applicable "roll-over" provision in respect to the devisees or recipients of these shares from the estate of this deceased owner at the material time was section 70 subsection (5) paragraph (c) of the Income Tax Act, S.C. 1970-71-72, c. 63, s. 1 which read:
(c) any person who, by virtue of the death of the taxpayer, has acquired any particular capital property of the taxpayer (other than depreciable property) that is deemed by para
graph (a) to have been disposed of by him shall be deemed to have acquired it at a cost equal to its fair market value immediately before the death of the taxpayer;
Since then, section 70 subsection (5) paragraphs (a) and (c) of the Income Tax Act have been amended by S.C. 1973-74, c. 14, s. 19, so that each now reads as follows:
(a) the taxpayer shall be deemed to have disposed, immedi ately before his death, of each property owned by him at that time that was a capital property of the taxpayer (other than depreciable property of a prescribed class) and to have received proceeds of disposition therefor equal to the fair market value of the property at that time;
(c) any person who, by virtue of the death of the taxpayer, has acquired any particular capital property of the taxpayer (other than depreciable property of a prescribed class) that is deemed by paragraph (a) to have been disposed of by him at any time shall be deemed to have acquired it immediately after that time at a cost equal to its fair market value immediately before the death of the taxpayer;
The parties have agreed to certain facts, among which are the following:
The Plaintiffs were confirmed as executors and trustees under the Last Will and Testament of the late Umberto Mastronardi. (hereinafter referred to as the deceased), by Grant of Probate dated July 5, 1973 issued by the Surrogate Court of the County of Essex in the Province of Ontario ....
The deceased died suddenly and without warning of cardiac arrest on February 20, 1973 at which time he was a resident of the Province of Ontario.
(Since 1972, a five year term insurance policy on the life of the deceased Umberto Mastronardi in the face amount of $500,000 reducing by $100,000 on each anniversary date was owned by Mas- tronardi Produce Limited.)
(It is common ground that prior to the death of the deceased, because of the special provisions of this term life insurance policy, that an informed pur chaser of the shares of Mastronardi Produce Lim ited would not pay any more for such shares of that company than he would have if that company did not own this term life insurance policy.) (Mas- tronardi Produce Limited as the owner of this term life insurance policy on the life of the deceased had assigned it to the bank at the time of death of the deceased but such assignment is irrelevant for the purposes of this appeal.)
In accordance with subsection 70(5) of the Income Tax Act as it applied during the 1973 taxation year, the deceased was deemed to have disposed, immediately before his death, of 311.4 common shares in Mastronardi Produce Limited and to have received proceeds of disposition therefor equal to the fair _ market value at that time.
Without having regard to any value attributable to the life insurance policy in question immediately before the death of the deceased each common share in question would have a fair market value equal to $323.58.
If the value of the corporation's assets were deemed to be increased by the face amount of the life insurance policy in question immediately before the death of the deceased it is common ground that each common share held by the deceased would have a fair market value equal to $778.59.
The Minister of National Revenue concluded that immedi ately before the death of the deceased the value of the policy was not less than $500,000.00 and that such amount would have to be taken into account in arriving at the net worth of the company and hence the value of the common shares immediate ly before the death of the deceased.
On re-assessing the deceased's estate in respect of the deceased's 1973 taxation year, notice of which re-assessment was dated July 21, 1975, the Minister of National Revenue
added to taxable income a taxable capital gain of $70,845.05 in respect of the deemed disposition of 311.4 shares of Mastronar- di Produce Limited at $778.59 per share less the valuation day value per share which was $323.58.
Among other things, the plaintiffs submitted that the capital property of the deceased represent ed by the common shares of Mastronardi Produce Limited owned by the deceased had a fair market value equal to $323.58 per share immediately before the death of the deceased and that no regard should be had to any value which might be added to the value of such shares attributable to the said term life insurance policy owned by Mas- tronardi Produce Limited in the amount of $ 500,000.
The respondent in the pleadings submitted that:
... immediately before the death of the deceased, the term insurance policy on his life, which was owned by Mastronardi Produce Ltd., had a value of $500,000.00, and that accordingly such value is to be considered in the determination of the fair market value of the shares in Mastronardi Produce Ltd. which the deceased was deemed to have disposed of pursuant to subsection 70(5) of the Income Tax Act.
In the present Income Tax Act, for the first time, there was enacted a scheme of taxation in respect to capital gains and capital losses. (At the same time, the federal estate tax was abolished.) The provisions in respect to capital gains or losses apply in relation to the disposition of property not included in income under section 3(a) of the Act. Some dispositions provided for in the Act are fictional dispositions.
The capital gain, the subject of this appeal, as stated, is the deemed realization of these shares, which deemed realization is statutorily created by the provisions of section 70(5) of the Income Tax Act.
The provisions of section 70(5) of the Act require valuation of these shares (1) "immediately before" the death of the deceased, and (2) "equal to the fair market value of [these shares]... at that time".
Speaking generally, section 70 subsection (5) of the Income Tax Act applies not only to capital property which appreciates after death but also to capital property which depreciates after death. For example, in the case of a joint tenancy of land, on the death of one joint tenant, that interest disap-
pears and the capital property the joint tenant held during his lifetime depreciates 100% after his death. This result also obtains in other situations as for example in the case of a life interest not secured by way of trust or to any other right being capital property that ceases on death.
In this case, after the death of the deceased Mastronardi Produce Limited obtained the pro ceeds of the said $500,000 term life insurance policy which appreciated the fair market value of the shares of that company from an amount equal to $323.58 per share to a fair market value equal to $778.59 per share.
In the process of interpreting this statutory provision in relation to the facts of this case, it is apparent that there is a two-step fiction enacted by section 70 subsection (5) of the Act.
The first fiction is that the taxpayer after he dies is deemed to have disposed of the subject property "immediately before his death".
The second fiction is that he is deemed "to have received proceeds of disposition therefor equal to the fair market value of the property at that time".
The problem is to determine what was the legis lative concept of section 70 subsection (5) of the Act and apply such to the facts of this case.
The submission of the defendant in relation to the shares of Mastronardi Produce Limited is that they should not be valued anterior to the death of the deceased. Instead, the submission is that the words in section 70 subsection (5) of the Act "immediately before his death" are equivalent in meaning and intent to the instant of death. On that assumption then, it is submitted that the price that would be paid for each of the shares in a transaction between an informed vendor and an informed purchaser would be $778.59 because at the instant of death an informed purchaser would know that the company would receive the $500,- 000 proceeds from the said term life insurance policy.
On the other hand, the plaintiffs submit that the words in that subsection "immediately before his death" refer to a span of time before death which
is relevant in determining the fair market value of these shares of the subject private company.
A number of English, Australian and Canadian authorities were submitted by the parties, but none of them are of substantial assistance in determin ing the legislative concept of section 70 subsection (5) of the Income Tax Act.
However, after careful consideration of these authorities, of the provisions of section 70 subsec tion (5) of the Income Tax Act, both as it appeared in S.C. 1970-71-72, c. 63 and as it appeared in S.C. 1973-74, c. 14 and of the facts of this case, I have come to the following conclusions:
The words "immediately before his death" in section 70 subsection (5) of the Income Tax Act should not be construed as meaning the equivalent of the instant of death; and also those words do not import a necessity of valuing capital property taking into account the imminence of death.
In the subject case, at the date of death of the deceased Umberto Mastronardi, section 70 subsec tion (5) of the Act, S.C. 1970-71-72, c. 63, pre scribed that the deemed realization took place "immediately before [the deceased's] death" and that at that time, as owner, he was deemed "to have received proceeds of disposition therefor equal to the fair market value of the property at that time".
And the "roll-over" provision at the date of death of the deceased in respect to the recipients or the devisees in this case of these shares from the estate of this deceased owner was section 70 sub section (5) paragraph (c) of the Income Tax Act, S.C. 1970-71-72, c. 63 and it provided that these persons "acquired" these shares "that is deemed by paragraph (a) to have been disposed of by him shall be deemed to have acquired [these shares] at a cost equal to its fair market value immediately before the death of the taxpayer".
In my view, therefore, in this case, both such valuations must be considered as having taken place at some other time rather than at the instant of death of the deceased and no premise of immi nence of death of the deceased should form any part of such valuations.
It follows, therefore, as a result and I so find that the defence as pleaded is untenable, namely that "immediately before the death of the deceased, the term insurance policy on his life, which was owned by Mastronardi Produce Ltd., had a value of $500,000.00, and that accordingly such value is to be considered in the determination of the fair market value of the shares in Mas- tronardi Produce Ltd. which the deceased was deemed to have disposed of pursuant to subsection 70(5) of the Income Tax Act". On the contrary, the finding is that no value of this term insurance policy is to be considered in the determination of the fair market value of these shares.
Accordingly, this appeal is allowed and the assessment is referred back for further reassess ment, not inconsistent with these reasons.
The plaintiffs are entitled to costs.
Either party, by appearance of counsel or under Rule 324, may move for judgment based on these reasons.
Judgment shall not issue until settled by the Court.
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