A profitable Canadian corporation ("Novopharm") acquired losses approximating $20 million of an arm's-length corporation ("Lossco") through a complicated series of transactions, which in simplified form were as follows:
- two special-purpose subsidiaries of Lossco formed a limited partnership ("Millbank") which borrowed $195 million from First Marathon Capital Corporation ("FMCC") and lent $195 million to First Marathon Inc. ("FMI") with FMI then immediately paying $20 million to Millbank as a prepayment of one year's interest and Millbank utilizing $20 million to pay down the principal of loan owing by it to FMCC to $175 million;
- Lossco acquired a 99.99% limited partnership in Millbank shortly thereafter (and immediately prior to the first fiscal year end of Millbank) thereby resulting in $20 million of income of Millbank being allocated to it, which eliminated its losses;
- the 99.99% partnership interest was transferred for nominal consideration by Lossco to an indirect special purpose subsidiary of Lossco ("540") and 540 then was sold to Novopharm;
- FMCC lent $175 million to Novopharm which used those proceeds to subscribe for shares of 540; 540 made a capital contribution of the same amount to Millbank, which paid off the $175 million loan owing by it to FMCC;
- a year later after $20 million of interest had accrued on the loan owing by Novopharm to FMCC, FMI repaid the $195 million principal amount owing by it to Millbank, Millbank distributed this sum to its partners (substantially 540), 540 purchased for cancellation most of the shares of Novopharm and 540 for $195 million (giving rise to a deemed dividend of $20 million), and Novopharm used the $195 million to discharge the amount owing by it to FMCC (including the $20 million of interest).
Bowie T.C.J. found that what distinguished this case and the Mark Resources and Canwest cases from Shell, Ludco and Singleton was that in each of the former cases "an elaborate series of transactions was carried out for no other reason than to create an interest deduction in the profitable corporation, while ensuring that the corresponding yield from the borrowed funds became income of the loss company, which then passed into the hands of the profitable company as an intercorporate dividend, free of taxation".
Notwithstanding that Novopharm received a deemed dividend (see 5 above) on its investment of the borrowed funds in 540, it did not borrow those funds (see 4 above) for an income-producing purpose, and the $20 million of interest was not deductible by it.