Judgments

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Jack Appleby (Appellant)
v.
Minister of National Revenue (Respondent)
Court of Appeal, Jackett C.J., Thurlow and Cameron JJ.—Ottawa, June 19, 1972.
Income tax—Exemption of profit on shares received under grub-stake arrangement—Shares received by controlling shareholder of brokerage company—Shares sold in sales campaign of brokerage company—Whether shareholder enti tled to exemption—Income Tax Act, section 83(3) and (4).
A received shares of certain companies under a grub stake arrangement and sold the shares at a profit which fell within the exemption of section 83(3) of the Income Tax Act. The shares were, however, sold in the course of a sales campaign carried on by a brokerage company of which A was sole beneficial shareholder, a director, president and the person who dominated and directed its business.
Held, section 83(4) applied to disentitle A to the exemp tion conferred by section 83(3). An officer or employee who in the course of his duties carries on a campaign to sell shares is in fact personally carrying on that campaign even though he does so as part of his employer's business activities.
INCOME tax appeal.
F. E. LaBrie for appellant.
J. Scollin, Q.C., and P. J. Crump for respondent.
The judgment of the Court was delivered by
THURLOW J.—The issue in this appeal is whether, on facts which are not in dispute, the dispositions made by the appellant of certain shares in three companies were made by him while or after carrying on a campaign to sell shares of these companies to the public within the meaning of section 83(4) of the Income Tax Act. If so, the effect of the subsection is to deny the appellant the exemption from tax pro vided by section 83(3) on the profits realized on the sale of the shares.
It is common ground that the shares were sold at a time when a campaign to sell shares of the three companies to the public was in prog ress and that in all three cases the campaign was being carried on by J. Appleby Securities Limited, a company engaged in business as a
broker dealer, distributor and underwriter of which the appellant himself was, at all material times, the sole beneficial shareholder, a direc tor, the president and the person who dominat ed and directed its business.
There seems to be no room to doubt that if the appellant had carried out on his own account and in his own name the campaign for the sale of shares in the three companies to the public, or if J. Appleby Securities Limited had been the person who advanced the money for prospecting and the recipient of the shares referred to in section 83(3), section 83(4) would apply to defeat the claim of either for exemp tion of the profits from the sale of the shares from tax. The question to be resolved is accord ingly whether in the circumstances of this case either (1) the fact that the campaign was carried on by J. Appleby Securities Limited or (2) the fact that the campaign was not carried out as a business operation of the appellant himself serves to render section 83(4) inapplicable.
It is, we think, to be observed that, while the application of section 83(4) requires that the campaign be carried on by the person who would otherwise be entitled to exemption under section 83(3), the question which arises on sec tion 83(4) is not one of resolving which of two persons involved in such a campaign carried it on, or for whose account or in whose name it was carried on or who was the principal and who was agent for him. Rather it is a straight forward question of whether the person seeking exemption under section 83(3) carried on a campaign for the sale of shares of the compa nies to the public. In seeking an answer to this question it could not, we think, be successfully maintained that each of several persons involved in jointly carrying on such a campaign was not a person by whom the campaign was carried on. It would, in our view, be equally untenable to suggest that a father who directed the carrying on of such a campaign by his minor son and in so doing personally supervised and directed the transactions, even to the signing of his son's name to documents, was not himself carrying on a campaign for the sale of shares of
the company to the public. The circumstance that the father had shares of his own to sell and sold them in the course of the campaign would in our opinion make the suggestion even less tenable.
There is, in our view, little to differentiate the present from such a situation and in our opinion it would be difficult to conceive of a less sub stantial or more artificial reason for concluding that the appellant himself did not carry on such a campaign than to say that he did not do so because it was a company that carried it on when the company was owned and completely dominated by the appellant himself.
In our view a distinction must be made between cases where one person contracts or carries on business on behalf of another and certain other cases. Where the question is one of which party is liable on the contract made by the agent it is not difficult to conclude that the principal is party to the contract and the agent is not. Similarly where the agent carries on business on behalf of a principal it is the princi pal who carries on the business and is party to its acts and the agent is not personally a con tracting party. Where, however, an employee does an act for his employer, such as, for exam ple, driving his car, the employee is the doer even though in the eyes of the law for some purposes his driving is also the act of his employer. So, in our view, if, as in the present case, an officer or employee in the course of his duties carries on a campaign to sell shares he is, in fact, personally carrying on that campaign even though he is doing it as part of the busi ness activities of his employer. This distinction is the basis for our conclusion that the appellant falls within the terms of section 83(4) even though he is not taxable under section 3 of the Income Tax Act in respect of the profits from the business that he carries on on behalf of his employer.
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