JJACKETT,
P.:—This
is
an
appeal
from
a
judgment
of
the
Tax
Appeal
Board,
rendered
on
February.
20,
1969,
dismissing
the
appellant’s
appeal
from
its
assessment
under
Part
I
of
the
Income
Tax
Act
for
the
1965
taxation
year.
The
facts
as
revealed
by
the
evidence
in.
this
Court
do
not
differ
in
any
material
respect,
with
one
important
exception,
from
the
facts
as
they
are
fully
set
out
in
the
Reasons
for
Judgment
of
the
Tax
Appeal
Board.
I
shall
content
myself,
therefore,
with
making
only
such
reference
to
the
facts
as
seems
to
me
to
be
necessary
in
order
to
explain
the
reasons
for
the
conclusion
to
which
I
have
come.
The
sole
question
in
issue
in
this
appeal
is
whether
a
profit
of
$399,800
made
by
the
appellant
in
1965
on
the
sale
of
200
shares
in
a
company
called
West
End
Plaza
Inc.
was
a
profit
from
a
"‘business''
within
the
meaning
of
that
word
as
defined
for
the
purposes
of
the
Income
Tax
Act.
Very
briefly,
the
basic
facts
are
as:
follows:
1.
Two
individual
real
estate
men,
Bernard
Kogan
and
Moishe
Katz,
having
conceived
the
idea
of
creating
a
very
large
multiple
purpose
building
development
in
downtown
Montreal,
obtained
an
option
for
an
emphyteutic
lease
of
an
appropriate
site
in
1959,
which
option
they
assigned
to
the
appellant
company,
of
which
company
they
were
the
main
Shareholders.
2.
Having
obtained
satisfactory
evidence:
of
the
feasibility
of
the
proposed
building
project,
but
not
having
succeeded
in
obtaining
the
financing
necessary
to
carry
it
out
itself,
the
appellant
entered
into
an
arrangement,
in
February.
1961,
with
two
other
companies—referred
to
in
the
evidence
as
‘‘Property
and
General
Investments’?
and
‘‘
Anglin-Noreross’’
—under
which
a
new
company,
West
End
Plaza
Inc.,
was
incorporated
to
construct
and
operate
that
project
on
the
basis
that
(a)
the
appellant
would
transfer
the
lease
for
the
site
to
West
End
Plaza,
(b)
Property
and
General
Investments
and
Anglin
Noreross
would
have
the
responsibility
for
the
financing
and
construction
of
the
proposed
project,
(c)
the
appellant
would
be
employed
as
manager
of
the
project,
when
completed,
and
(d)
the
appellant
would
subscribe
for
200
shares
in
West
End
Plaza
at
$1
per
share,
and
Property
and
General
Investments
and
Anglin-Norcross
would
each
subscribe
for
400
shares
at
$1
per
share.
3.
In
1965,
having
already
bought
out
the
shares
in
West
End
Plaza
belonging
to
Property
and
General
Investments,
Anglin-
Norcross
foreed
the
appellant
to
sell
its
200
shares
for
$400,000
by
threatening
to
‘‘abort’’
the
whole
project
if
the
appellant
did
not
sell.
In
these
circumstances,
the
appellant
was
assessed
for
income
tax
on
the
basis
that
the
amount
that
the
appellant
received
for
its
shares
in
West
End
Plaza
over
and
above
what
it
paid
for
them
was
a
profit
from
a
business
and
this
assessment
was
upheld
by
the
Tax
Appeal
Board.
The
one
additional
finding
of
fact
that
I
have
to
make
on
the
evidence
in
this
Court,
and
that
may
not
have
been
established
by
the
evidence
in
the
Tax
Appeal
Board,
is
that
Katz
and
Kogan,
and
through
them
the
appellant,
had
the
unswerving
purpose,
from
the
time
they
first
embarked
on
the
task
of
obtaining
the
lease
for
the
site
until
they
were
finally
forced
to
sell
the
shares
in
West
End
Plaza,
of
creating
and
operating
a
large
building
development
or
at
least
participating
in
the
creation
and
operation
of
such
a
development.
In
these
circumstances,
the
question
to
be
decided
is
whether
the
sale
by
the
appellant
of
its
shares
in
West
End
Plaza
was
an
operation
in
the
carrying
on
of
a
business
or
of
a
venture
in
the
nature
of
trade.
In
the
first
place,
one
must
recognize
that
we
are
not
here
concerned
with
a
profit
made
on
the
disposition
of
the
lease
of
the
site.
Prima
facie,
an
acquisition
of
a
long-term
lease
of
a
site
for
a
project
that
is
to
be
operated
by
the
acquirer
as
an
income-producing
property
is
a
capital
transaction.
Nevertheless,
having
regard
to
the
many
problems
that
Katz
and
Kogan,
and
the
appellant,
still
had
to
solve
at
the
time
that
they
acquired
the
lease,
and
having
regard
to
their
history
in
real
estate
transactions,
if,
having
failed
to
solve
those
problems,
they
had
subsequently
disposed
of
the
lease
at
a
profit,
one
could
not
escape
the
conclusion
that
this
possible
use
of
the
lease
was
something
that
must
have
been
a
factor
in
their
decision
to
acquire
it.
We
are
not
here
concerned,
however,
with
the
profit,
if
any,
that
the
appellant
made
on
the
disposition
of
the
lease
to
West
End
Plaza.
What
we
are
concerned
with
here
is
the
acquisition
by
the
appellant
of
the
shares
in
West
End
Plaza
and
the
subsequent
disposition
of
those
shares
at
a
profit.
The
arrangement
whereby
the
appellant
and
the
two
other
companies
each
agreed
to
put
part
of
what
was
necessary
for
a
proposed
business
into
a
company
to
be
formed
and
to
take
shares
in
that
company
to
represent
their
respective
interests
in
it
and
the
proposed
business
is
a
typical
example
of
how
a
new
business
is
launched.
Prima
facie,
subscribing
for
shares
in
such
a
company
is
a
capital
transaction.
In
my
view,
it
does
not
become
any
the
less
a
capital
transaction
when
the
real
consideration
for
the
shares
is
a
contribution
to
the
company
of
property
required
as
a
capital
asset
for
the
proposed
business
of
the
company.
I
have
no
doubt
that
there
may
be
circumstances
in
which
a
subscription
for
shares
in
a
new
company,
while
prima
facie
a
capital
transaction,
may
be
a
mere
step
in
the
carrying
on
by
the
acquirer
of
a
profit-making
business
or
venture.
If,
for
example,
the
acquirer
made
a
business
of
taking
over
old
busi-
nesses,
giving
them
new
images
and
corporate
identities
and
then
selling
the
shares
in
the
new
companies,
a
profit
from
the
overall
enterprise
would
be
a
profit
from
a
business
even
though,
looked
at
more
narrowly,
that
profit
were
a
profit
from
the
sale
of
shares
acquired
by
subscribing
for
the
capital
of
a
new
company.
However,
I
find
no
such
enterprise
here.
Katz
and
Kogan,
and
through
them
the
appellant,
had
a
single-minded
purpose
of
owning
"‘all’’
or
a
“‘piece’’
of
the
company
that
was
to
operate
the
building
project
that
they
had
promoted.
In
coming
to
this
conclusion,
I
have
not
overlooked
the
various
bits
of
evidence
on
which
the
respondent
put
considerable
emphasis.
Katz
and
Kogan
had
been
and
were
engaged
in
land
speculations.
Nevertheless,
the
evidence
convinces
me
that
this
particular
project
was
one
that,
from
their
point
of
view,
was
of
an
entirely
different
character.
It
is
also
true
that
they
could
have
been
persuaded
to
sell
the
lease
for
the
site
after
the
appellant
acquired
it,
but
only
at
a
price
that
would
persuade
any
sensible
person
to
depart
from
his
established
purpose.
Finally,
there
is
the
fact
that
the
appellant
did
have
an
"‘escape’’
clause
in
its
agreement
with
the
other
two
companies
concerning
the
operation
of
West
End
Plaza.
That
clause
was,
however,
a
clause
that
any
sensible
junior
"‘partner’’
in
a
closely
held
company
would
have,
if
he
could
get
it,
against
the
event
that
the
other
‘‘partners’’
should
use
their
strength
to
his
detriment.
It
is
my
conclusion,
therefore,
that
the
appeal
should
be
allowed
with
costs
and
that
the
assessment
should
be
referred
back
to
the
respondent
for
re-assessment
on
the
basis
that
the
profit
in
question
was
not
a
profit
from
a
business
within
the
meaning
of
that
word
in
the
Income
Tax
Act.