Dubé,
J.:—The
issue
to
be
resolved
in
this
matter
is
whether
the
amount
of
$560,650
paid
to
the
plaintiff
by
the
United
States
Fire
Insurance
Company
(“U.S.
Fire’)
on
June
9,
1980
constituted
income
of
the
plaintiff,
as
assessed
by
the
Minister
of
National
Revenue.
The
plaintiff
("Cartier")
is
an
engineering
consulting
firm
which
was
retained
by
Kruger
Pulp
and
Paper
Ltd.
("Kruger")
in
1974
in
connection
with
Kruger's
major
expansion
of
a
manufacturing
facility
at
Trois
Rivières,
P.Q.
In
1975
Kruger
instituted
legal
proceedings
against
Cartier
(and
two
other
companies)
to
recover
costs
for
overruns
and
for
certain
other
issues.
Cartier
was
insured
by
U.S.
Fire
with
respect
to
professional
liability
suits
up
to
a
maximum
of
$10,000,000
per
claim
subject
to
a
$200,000
deductible,
but
not
insured
for
non-payment
of
professional
fees.
On
December
2,
1975
Cartier
launched
an
action
against
Kruger
in
the
amount
of
$1,121,300
for
unpaid
professional
fees
and
out-of-pocket
expenses.
The
amount
of
the
claim
was
entered
by
Cartier
as
doubtful
accounts
in
1977
and
was
ultimately
written
off
as
a
bad
debt.
U.S.
Fire
pursued
negotiations
with
both
Kruger
and
Cartier
to
minimize
its
actual
liability
under
Cartier’s
insurance
policy.
On
June
9,
1980
a
settlement
was
reached
whereby
U.S.
Fire
paid
Cartier
$560,650
and
Kruger's
attorneys
100,000.
The
position
taken
by
the
plaintiff
is
that
the
amount
received
from
U.S.
Fire
was
not
in
respect
of
unpaid
fees
and
out-of-pocket
expenses
as
it
was
not
paid
by
Kruger,
nor
was
the
non-payment
of
fees
and
out-of-pocket
expenses
insured
by
U.S.
Fire.
Cartier
claims
that
the
amount
was
received
as
consideration
for
Cartier
agreeing
to
discontinue
its
present
and
any
future
legal
actions
against
Kruger,
including
its
potential
action
against
Kruger
for
damages
to
its
reputation,
and
for
giving
a
full
and
final
release
to
U.S.
Fire
on
all
claims
under
its
insurance
policy
with
that
company.
On
the
other
hand,
the
Minister’s
position
is
that
the
amount
was
received
by
the
plaintiff
in
respect
of
unpaid
amounts
relating
to
professional
fees
and
consequently
income
pursuant
to
section
9
of
the
Income
Tax
Act.*
Moreover,
the
amount
was
received
on
account
of
a
debt
in
respect
of
which
a
deduction
for
bad
debts
had
been
made
and
was
properly
included
in
income
by
reason
of
paragraph
12(1)(i)
of
the
Act.
The
Minister
further
submits
that
the
amount
is
a
trading
receipt
notwithstanding
that
it
was
not
received
from
Kruger,
because
it
was
paid
by
U.S.
Fire
in
satisfaction
of
Kruger's
obligation
towards
the
plaintiff
in
respect
of
professional
fees
and
that
said
payment
may
be
made
by
any
person,
although
a
stranger
to
the
obligation,
under
article
1141
of
the
Civil
Code
of
the
Province
of
Québec
which
reads:
1141.
Payment
may
be
made
by
any
person,
although
he
be
a
stranger
to
the
obligation,
and
the
creditor
may
be
in
default
by
the
offer
of
a
stranger
to
perform
the
obligation
on
the
part
of
the
debtor,
without
the
knowledge
of
the
latter,
but
it
must
be
for
the
advantage
of
the
debtor
and
not
merely
to
change
the
creditor
that
the
performance
of
the
obligation
is
so
offered.
In
his
statement
of
defence
the
Minister
pleaded,
as
an
alternative,
that
the
amount
was
an
eligible
capital
receipt
that
ought
to
be
included
in
computing
the
plaintiffs
income
in
accordance
with
section
14
of
the
Act.
That
submission
was
dropped
at
the
trial.
A
basic
test
to
determine
if
a
sum
received
indirectly
from
another
person
as
compensation
ought
to
be
treated
as
income
by
the
taxpayer
is
whether
he
would
have
treated
it
as
income
if
he
had
received
it
directly
in
the
normal
course
of
business.
The
test
is
valid
whatever
the
source
of
the
legal
right
of
the
taxpayer
to
receive
the
compensation.
That
source,
however,
is
relevant
to
identify
the
reason
for
the
payment
of
the
compensation.
t
That
basic
rule
was
further
refined
by
Lord
Diplock
in
Raja’s
Commercial
College
v.
Gian
Singh
&
Co.
Ltd.,
[1977]
A.C.
312
at
318:
Questions
of
whether
sums
awarded
by
courts
are
income,
liable
to
income
tax,
or
not,
have
arisen
in
a
number
of
reported
cases.
The
names
given
to
the
sums
awarded
have
varied:
“damages”,
“interest”,
“compensation”
have
all
been
used,
but
the
court
has
declined
to
be
bound
by
the
label
and
has
always
tried
to
look
through
it
and
“to
solve
the
question
of
substance”
in
the
words
of
Rowlatt
J.
by
reference
to
the
true
character
of
the
award.
It
matters
not
whether
the
payment
was
voluntary,
or
not,
on
the
part
of
the
person
who
made
it.
In
Henry
Goldman
v.
M.N.R.,
[1953]
C.T.C.
95;
53
D.T.C.
1096,
the
Supreme
Court
of
Canada
adopted
the
language
of
Collins,
MR.
in
Herbert
v.
McQuadet
as
follows
at
99
(D.T.C.
1098):
.
.
.
à
payment
may
be
liable
to
income
tax
although
it
is
voluntary
on
the
part
of
the
persons
who
made
it,
and
that
the
test
is
whether,
from
the
standpoint
of
the
person
who
receives
it,
it
accrues
to
him
in
virtue
of
his
office;
if
it
does,
it
does
not
matter
whether
it
was
voluntary
or
whether
it
was
compulsory
on
the
part
of
the
persons
who
paid
it.
In
the
present
case,
the
evidence
reveals
that
the
sum
represents
50
per
cent
of
the
$1,121,300
in
fees
and
disbursements
claimed
by
Cartier.
In
a
confidential
memorandum,
dated
March
25,
1980,
from
the
plaintiff’s
inhouse
counsel
(for
internal
distribution)
the
matter
of
a
settlement
is
discussed.
The
following
paragraph
bears
reproduction:
I
also
confirmed,
on
behalf
of
Cartier,
that
we
would
be
prepared
to
follow
G.
Emery's
recommendation
to
accept
50%
of
our
original
claim.
This
I
believed
to
be
in
line
with
your
own
earlier
conclusion
of
$500,000.
A
letter
from
the
legal
firm
of
Blain,
Piché,
Emery
&
Associates,
dated
June
5,
1980,
forwarding
the
payment
describes
the
cheque
as
follows:
Chèque
no.
32733
de
Crum
&
Forster
du
Canada
Limitée,
pour
le
compte
de
United
States
Fire
Insurance
Company,
fait
payable
à
l'ordre
de
votre
Société
au
montant
de
$560,650.42,
en
paiement
de
50%
sans
intérêt
de
la
réclamation
de
la
Société
contre
La
Société
des
Pâtes
et
Papiers
Kruger
Limitée;
Again,
it
is
to
be
borne
in
mind
that
the
action
by
Cartier
against
Kruger
that
was
settled
was
not
an
action
for
compensation
for
damages
to
Cartier's
reputation
as
such
an
action
was
never
commenced.
There
is
no
evidence
that
Kruger
was
even
informed
by
Cartier
that
the
latter
intended
to
sue
for
damages
to
its
reputation.
Moreover,
Cartier's
insurance
policy
with
U.S.
Fire
did
not
include
damages
to
reputation.
U.S.
Fire
stood
between
two
actions
involving
its
insured
client,
Cartier:
one
by
Kruger
exposing
U.S.
Fire
to
a
maximum
payment
of
$10,000,000
(less
$200,000
deductible)
with
respect
to
professional
liability
and
the
other
action
by
Cartier
against
Kruger
for
unpaid
professional
fees.
U.S.
Fire
played
the
role
of
the
negotiator
and
successfully
settled
both
matters
by
paying
half
the
fees
owed
by
Kruger
to
its
insured
client.
I
now
return
to
the
basic
test
and
answer
the
question
as
follows:
the
sum
in
question,
had
it
been
received
directly
by
the
taxpayer
from
Kruger,
would
have
been
treated
as
professional
fees
and
taxable
income.
The
plaintiff's
action
is
therefore
dismissed
with
costs.
Action
dismissed.