CATTANACH,
J.:—This
is
an
appeal
from
a
decision
of
the
Tax
Appeal
Board
((1958),
19
Tax
A.B.C.
431)
dated
June
20,
1958,
allowing
an
appeal
by
the
respondent
(whose
name
at
that
time
was
Pillsbury
Canada
Limited)
from
its
assessments
under
the
Income
Tax
Act,
R.S.C.
1952,
ce.
148,
for
its
1953
and
1954
taxation
years.
The
appeals
relate
to
certain
amounts
that
were
payable
by
the
respondent
in
those
years
as
interest
on
monies
borrowed
from
two
subsidiary
companies,
in
each
of
which
the
respondent
was
a
majority
shareholder.
The
sole
question
in
issue
is
whether
subsection
(1)
of
Section
8
of
the
Income
Tax
Act
requires
that
those
amounts
be
included
in
computing
the
respondent’s
incomes
for
those
taxation
years
by
reason
of
certain
resolutions
passed
by
the
lender
companies
which
purport
to
relieve
the
respondent
of
its
liabilities
to
pay
those
various
amounts.
Subsection
(1)
of
Section
8
of
the
Income
Tax
Act
reads
as
follows
:
“8
(1)
Where,
in
a
taxation
year,
(a)
a
payment
has
been
made
by
a
corporation
to
a
shareholder
otherwise
than
pursuant
to
a
bona
fide
business
transaction,
(b)
funds
or
property
of
a
corporation
have
been
appropriated
in
any
manner
whatsoever
to,
or
for
the
benefit
of,
a
shareholder,
or
(ec)
a
benefit
or
advantage
has
been
conferred
on
a
shareholder
by
a
corporation,
otherwise
than
(i)
on
the
reduction
of
capital,
the
redemption
of
shares
or
the
winding-up,
discontinuance
or
reorganization
of
its
business,
(ii)
by
payment
of
a
stock
dividend,
or
(iii)
by
conferring
on
all
holders
of
common
shares
in
the
capital
of
the
corporation
a
right
to
buy
additional
common
shares
therein,
the
amount
or
value
thereof
shall
be
included
in
computing
the
income
of
the
shareholder
for
the
year.”
The
first
question
that
arises
is
whether,
assuming
that
the
resolutions
referred
to
had
the
effect
of
extinguishing
the
respondent’s
liabilities
to
pay
the
interest
in
question,
the
result
was
that
benefits
or
advantages
were
conferred
on
a
shareholder
by
the
subsidiaries
within
the
meaning
of
paragraph
(c)
of
subsection
(1)
of
Section
8.
As
I
reach
the
conclusion
that
that
question
must
be
answered
in
the
negative,
the
appeal
must
be
dismissed.
If
that
question
were
answered
in
the
affirmative,
a
number
of
other
questions
would
arise
which,
by
reason
of
the
view
that
I
take
of
the
first
question,
I
need
not
consider.
The
facts
relevant
to
the
first
question
may
be
stated
briefly.
On
October
14,
1952,
the
respondent
borrowed
$500,000
from
Renown
Mills
Limited
(hereinafter
referred
to
as
‘‘Renown’’)
and
$560,000
from
Copeland
Flour
Mills
Limited
(hereinafter
referred
to
as
‘‘Copeland’’)
which
money
was
employed
with
other
money
belonging
to
the
respondent
to
pay
for
shares
in
those
two
companies.
In
respect
of
each
loan,
the
respondent
gave
to
the
lender
a
promissory
note
payable
on
demand
bearing
interest
at
the
rate
of
414%
payable
semi-annually.
At
the
time
that
the
loans
were
made,
the
respondent
acquired
over
99
%
of
Copeland’s
issued
shares
and
all
of
Renown’s
issued
shares
except
those
that
already
belonged
to
Copeland.
In
1953,
certain
events
took
place
in
relation
to
the
interest
that
fell
due
on
May
31st
of
that
year.
On
May
22nd,
1953,
the
President
of
the
respondent,
who
was
also
president
of
Copeland
and
of
Renown,
wrote
to
Copeland
as
follows
:
“On
May
31st,
1953,
the
first
payment
of
interest,
amounting
to
$15,810.41
on
the
principal
of
our
loan
of
$560,000
now
outstanding,
is
due
and
payable
to
your
company.
For
several
reasons,
principally
due
to
organizational
problems
and
operating
conditions,
this
company
finds
itself
without
sufficient
income
and
funds
to
meet
this
interest
commitment
on
May
31st,
1953.
Accordingly,
we
would
respectfully
ask
that
you
consider
formally
and
unconditionally
waiving
this
interest
charge
for
the
period
ending
May
31st,
1953.
We
have
every
reason
to
feel
confident
our
company
will
be
operating
as
originally
planned,
to
enable
it
to
service
its
commitment
and
we
hope
substantially
retire
its
indebtedness
to
you
during
the
ensuing
year.
We
anticipate
your
favourable
consideration
of
our
request.’’
On
June
30,
1953,
Copeland’s
Board
of
Directors
adopted
a
resolution
reading
as
follows:
“The
Chairman
read
to
the
meeting
a
letter
from
Mr.
R.
J.
Pinchin,
President,
Pillsbury
Canada
Limited,
dated
22nd
day
of
May,
1953,
in
which
he
referred
to
the
loan
which
had
been
made
by
Copeland
of
$560,000
made
to
the
Pillsbury
Co.
on
October
15th
last
repayment
of
which
was
secured
by
a
promis-
sory
note
with
interest.
He
indicated
that
as
of
May
31st
of
this
year
the
amount
of
interest
owing
was
$15,810.41.
The
letter
from
the
President
of
Pillsbury
pointed
out
that
due
to
operating
conditions
and
organization
problems
the
company
was
without
sufficient
funds
or
income
to
meet
this
commitment
and
he
requested
that
this
Board
give
consideration
to
waiving
the
interest
for
this
period.
The
matter
was
discussed,
whereupon
it
was
moved,
seconded
and
unanimously
carried,
RESOLVED
:
that
in
view
of
the
communication
referred
to
above
and
the
financial
situation
of
Pillsbury
Canada
Limited
for
the
reasons
appearing
therein,
this
Company
unconditionally
waive
and
forever
forego
the
right
to
claim
and
receive
from
Pillsbury
Canada
Limited
the
sum
of
$15,810.41,
being
the
interest
on
the
loan
made
to
the
Pillsbury
Company
and
due
on
the
31st
of
May,
1953;
provided
that
such
waiver
and
renunciation
shall
not
be
or
be
deemed
to
be
a
waiver
or
renunciation
of
any
future
commitment
of
the
Pillsbury
Company
to
this
company.”
A
similar
letter
was
written
by
the
President
of
the
respondent
to
Renown
and
a
similar
resolution
was
adopted
by
Renown’s
board
of
directors.
In
1954,
certain
events
took
place
affecting
the
interest
that
came
due
after
May
31,
1953.
On
May
10,
1954,
the
respondent’s
board
of
directors
adopted
a
resolution
reading
as
follows
:
“The
Chairman
stated
that
it
was
desirable
to
repay
to
Copeland
Flour
Mills
Limited
the
sum
of
$560,000
and
to
repay
to
Renown
Mills
Limited
the
sum
of
$500,000
which
had
been
borrowed
from
these
companies
respectively
on
the
14th
day
of
October
1952.
He
further
stated
that
the
creditor
companies
had
each
agreed
to
waive
the
payment
of
interest
on
these
respective
sums
as
and
from
the
31st
day
of
May,
1953
to
date
of
payment
providing
such
payments
of
principal
were
effected
on
or
before
the
31st
day
of
May,
1954.
The
matter
was
discussed,
whereupon
it
was
moved,
seconded
and
unanimously
carried,
RESOLVED
:
that
the
President
be
and
he
is
hereby
authorized
to
effect
repayment
of
monies
borrowed
by
the
company
as
follows:
to
Copeland
Flour
Mills
Limited
the
sum
of
$560,000,
to
Renown
Mills
Limited
the
sum
of
$500,000,
provided
always
that
such
payments
were
in
full
settlement
of
all
monies
owing
on
these
respective
loans.”
On
May
10,
1954,
Renown’s
board
of
directors
adopted
a
resolution
reading
as
follows
:
“The
Secretary
informed
the
meeting
that
he
had
been
advised
that
Pillsbury
Canada
Limited
was
prepared
to
consider
repayment
of
the
sum
of
$500,000
and
interest
owing
to
the
company
by
the
Pillsbury
corporation
on
condition
that
the
company
waive
the
payment
of
interest
owing
on
this
loan
as
and
from
the
31st
day
of
May
1953.
The
matter
was
discussed,
whereupon
it
was
moved,
seconded
and
unanimously
carried,
RESOLVED
:
that
this
company
accept
from
Pillsbury
Canada
Limited
the
sum
of
$500,000
as
in
full
payment
for
the
loan
for
the
said
principal
sum
of
$500,000
owing
by
Pillsbury
Canada
Limited
as
and
from
the
14th
day
of
October,
1952,
and
that
the
company
specifically
waive
the
right
to
receive
any
interest
on
such
sum
from
Pillsbury
Canada
Limited
as
and
from
the
31st
day
of
May,
1953,
to
date
of
payment.”
On
May
11,
1954,
Copeland’s
board
of
directors
adopted
an
almost
identical
resolution.
The
evidence
is
that,
apart
from
the
above,
there
were
no
written
communications
between
the
companies
concerning
these
matters.
It
is
not
possible,
by
an
analysis
of
the
language
and
function
of
subsection
(
1
)
of
Section
8,
to
find
a
simple
formula
for
determining
in
advance
the
answer
to
all
the
questions
that
will
arise
under
that
subsection.
Kach
question
will
have
to
be
solved
as
it
arises.
Nevertheless,
some
consideration
must
be
given
to
the
function
of
this
provision
in
the
Income
Tax
Act
and
to
the
wording
of
the
provision
as
a
whole
in
considering
the
ambit
of
paragraph
(c)
in
relation
to
the
facts
of
this
case.
The
normal
payments
and
distributions
by
a
corporation
to
a
shareholder
qua
shareholder
are
(a)
dividends
during
the
lifetime
of
the
corporation,
(b)
payments
and
distributions
in
respect
of
reductions
in
capital
during
the
lifetime
of
the
corporation,
and
(e)
payments
and
distributions
on
the
occasion
of
the
winding-
up
of
the
corporation.
Provisions
in
the
Income
Tax
Act,
other
than
section
8,
govern
the
taxability
of
such
payments
and
distributions
when
made
in
the
orthodox
way.
In
the
remainder
of
this
judgment,
when
referring
to
dividends,
I
intend
to
refer
to
any
of
these
payments
or
distributions
referred
to
in
this
paragraph.
Subsection
(1)
of
Section
8
is
aimed
at
payments,
distributions,
benefits
and
advantages
flowing
from
a
corporation
to
a
shareholder
other
than
those
referred
to
in
the
immediately
preceding
paragraph.
While
the
subsection
does
not
say
so
explicitly,
it
is
fair
to
infer
that
Parliament
intended,
by
Section
8,
to
sweep
in
payments,
distributions,
benefits
and
advantages
that
flow
from
a
corporation
to
a
shareholder
by
some
route
other
than
the
dividend
route
and
that
might
be
expected
to
reach
the
shareholder
by
the
more
orthodox
dividend
route
if
the
corporation
and
the
shareholder
were
dealing
at
arm’s
length.
This
is
true
of
paragraph
(a)
of
subsection
(1).
A
corporation
normally
makes
payments
to
its
shareholders
as
dividends
unless
the
payment
is
pursuant
to
a
bona
fide
business
transaction,
in
which
event
it
is
not
a
payment
accruing
to
the
shareholder
qua
shareholder.
If
a
payment
is
made
to
a
shareholder
qua
shareholder,
paragraph
(a)
requires
that
it
be
brought
into
the
shareholder’s
income
whether
or
not
it
is
made
as
a
dividend.
Similarly,
as
far
as
paragraph
(b)
of
subsection
(1)
is
concerned,
the
normal
method
whereby
a
corporation
appropriates
funds
or
property
to,
or
for
the
benefit
of,
its
shareholders
is
by
a
declaration
of
dividend
payable
in
cash
or
in
kind.
If
funds
or
property
are
appropriated
to
or
for
the
benefit
of
a
shareholder
qua
shareholder
in
any
other
way,
paragraph
(b)
requires
that
they
be
brought
into
his
income.
Paragraph
(ec)
of
subsection
(1)
of
Section
8
may
be
expected,
therefore,
to
apply
to
eases
where
benefits
or
advantages
have
been
conferred
on
a
shareholder
in
such
circumstances
that
the
effect
is,
in
substance,
equivalent
to
the
payment
of
a
dividend
to
the
shareholder.
Where
a
corporation,
for
example,
is
in
a
business
of
providing
services
for
a
fee
or
other
charge,
and
performs
its
services
for
one
or
more
of
its
shareholders
free
of
charge,
the
effect
is,
assuming
that
such
shareholders
would
have
used
such
services
in
any
event,
that
the
revenues
of
the
corporation
are
less
than
they
would
be
if
the
shareholders
paid
on
the
same
basis
as
other
customers
and
consequently
there
are
less
profits
available
for
distribution
to
the
shareholders
by
normal
methods.
Such
a
provision
of
services
by
a
corporation
to
its
shareholders,
is
one
way
whereby
a
corporation
might
confer
a
benefit
or
advantage
on
shareholders
within
the
intent
of
paragraph
(c).
Similarly,
a
corporation
that
rents
or
lets
property,
real
or
personal,
in
the
course
of
its
business,
might
rent
or
let
its
property
to
a
shareholder
for
nominal
amounts.
While
I
have
referred
to
a
corporation
that
does
not
charge
a
shareholder
anything,
or
only
charges
a
shareholder
a
normal
amount
for
something
it
does
in
the
course
of
its
business
for
customers
other
than
shareholders,
any
corporation
might
resort
to
similar
methods
for
conferring
a
benefit
or
advantage
on
shareholders
even
if
it
were
not
in
the
business
of
providing
services
or
letting
or
hiring
property.
By
way
of
contrast,
in
my
view,
there
can
be
no
conferring
of
a
benefit
or
advantage
within
the
meaning
of
paragraph
(c)
where
a
corporation
enters
into
a
bona
fide
transaction
with
a
shareholder.
For
example,
Parliament
could
never
have
intended
to
tax
the
benefit
or
advantage
that
accrues
to
a
customer
of
a
corporation,
merely
because
the
particular
customer
happens
to
be
a
shareholder
of
the
corporation,
if
that
benefit
or
advantage
is
the
benefit
or
advantage
accruing
to
the
shareholder
in
his
capacity
as
a
customer
of
the
corporation.
It
could
not
be
intended
that
the
Court
go
behind
a
bona
fide
business
transaction
between
a
corporation
and
a
customer
who
happens
to
be
a
shareholder
and
try
to
evaluate
the
benefit
or
advantage
accruing
from
the
transaction
to
the
customer.
On
the
other
hand,
there
are
transactions
between
closely
held
corporations
and
their
shareholders
that
are
devices
or
arrangements
for
conferring
benefits
or
advantages
on
shareholders
qua
shareholders
and
paragraph
(c)
clearly
applies
to
such
transactions.
(Compare
Robson
v.
M.N.R.,
[1952]
2
S.C.R.
223;
[1952]
C.T.C.
85.
It
is
a
question
of
fact
whether
a
transaction
that
purports,
on
its
face,
to
be
an
ordinary
business
transaction
is
such
a
device
or
arrangement.
In
applying
paragraph
(c)
full
weight
must
be
given
to
all
the
words
of
the
paragraph.
There
must
be
a
‘‘benefit
or
advantage”
and
that
benefit
or
advantage
must
be
‘‘conferred’’
by
a
corporation
on
a
‘‘shareholder’’.
The
word
‘‘confer’’
means
“grant”
or
‘‘bestow’’.
Even
where
a
corporation
has
resolved
formally
to
give
a
special
privilege
or
status
to
shareholders,
it
is
a
question
of
fact
whether
the
corporation’s
purpose
was
to
confer
a
benefit
or
advantage
on
the
shareholders
or
some
purpose
having
to
do
with
the
corporation’s
business
such
as
inducing
the
shareholders
to
patronize
the
corporation.
If
this
be
so,
it
must
equally
be
a
question
of
fact
in
each
case
where
the
Minister
contends
that
what
appears
to
be
an
ordinary
business
transaction
between
a
corporation
and
a
shareholder
is
not
what
it
appears
to
be
but
is
in
reality
a
method,
arrangement
or
device
for
conferring
a
benefit
or
advantage
on
the
shareholder
qua
shareholder.
I
must
now
consider
whether
paragraph
(c)
applies
to
the
facts
of
this
appeal.
As
indicated
above,
for
the
purposes
of
the
question
I
am
now
considering,
I
am
assuming,
without
deciding,
that
the
resolutions
waiving
the
payments
of
interest
had
the
effect
of
extinguishing
the
respondent’s
liabilities
to
pay
the
interest.
In
considering
whether
paragraph
(c)
applies
to
the
facts
of
this
appeal,
it
is
important
to
have
in
mind
how
the
matter
comes
before
the
Court.
The
Minister,
by
his
Notice
of
Appeal,
set
forth
the
assumptions
on
which
the
assessments
appealed
from
were
based.
See
paragraph
6
of
the
Notice
of
Appeal,
which
reads
as
follows:
“6.
In
assessing
the
taxable
income
of
the
Respondent,
as
referred
to
in
paragraphs
4
and
5
in
respect
of
the
taxation
years
of
1953
and
1954,
the
Appellant
assumed
:
(a)
that
during
the
1953
and
1954
taxation
years
the
Respondent
was
a
shareholder
of
Renown
Mills
Limited
and
Copeland
Flour
Mills
Limited,
both
corporations
incorporated
in
Canada;
(b)
that
on
or
about
the
14th
day
of
October,
1952,
the
Respondent
borrowed
the
sum
of
$500,000.00
from
Renown
Mills
Limited
and
$560,000.00
from
Copeland
Flour
Mills
Limited
for
the
purpose
of
purchasing
shares
in
the
capital
stock
of
each
corporation
and
in
respect
of
each
loan
gave
promissory
notes
dated
the
14th
day
of
October,
1952,
payable
on
demand,
and
bearing
interest
at
the
rate
of
414%
per
annum
due
and
payable
on
the
31st
day
of
May
and
30th
day
of
November
in
each
year;
(c)
that
Renown
Mills
Limited
waived
the
interest
due
and
payable
on
the
dates
referred
to
in
subparagraph
(b)
during
the
1953
taxation
year
in
the
amount
of
$14,166.44,
and
during
the
1954
taxation
year
in
the
amount
of
$22,253.42
;
(d)
that
Copeland
Flour
Mills
Limited
waived
the
interest
due
and
payable
on
the
dates
referred
to
in
subparagraph
(b)
during
the
1953
taxation
year
in
the
amount
of
$15,810.41,
and
during
the
1954
taxation
year
in
the
amount
of
$24,923.84.”
The
relevance
of
this
pleading
appears
from
the
decision
of
the
Supreme
Court
of
Canada
in
Johnston
v.
M.N.R.,
[1948]
S.C.R.
486;
[1948]
C.T.C.
195
per
Rand,
J.,
delivering
the
judgment
of
the
majority,
at
pp.
489,
202
:
4
‘Every
such
fact
found
or
assumed
by
the
assessor
or
the
Minister
must
then
be
accepted
as
it
was
dealt
with
by
these
persons
unless
questioned
by
the
appellant.”
(For
the
word
‘‘appellant’’
in
that
quotation,
may
be
substituted
“respondent”
for
the
purpose
of
this
appeal.)
The
respondent
could
have
met
the
Minister’s
pleading
that,
in
assessing
the
respondent,
he
assumed
the
facts
set
out
in
paragraph
6
of
the
Notice
of
Appeal
by
:
(a)
challenging
the
Minister’s
allegation
that
he
did
assume
those
facts,
(b)
assuming
the
onus
of
showing
that
one
or
more
of
the
assumptions
was
wrong,
or
(c)
contending
that,
even
if
the
assumptions
were
justified,
they
do
not
of
themselves
support
the
assessment.
(The
Minister
could,
of
course,
as
an
alternative
to
relying
on
the
facts
he
found
or
assumed
in
assessing
the
respondent,
have
alleged
by
his
Notice
of
Appeal
further
or
other
facts
that
would
support
or
help
in
supporting
the
assessment.
If
he
had
alleged
such
further
or
other
facts,
the
onus
would
presumably
have
been
on
him
to
establish
them.
In
any
event,
the
Minister
did
not
choose
such
alternative
in
this
case
and
relied
on
the
facts
that
he
had
assumed
at
the
time
of
the
assessment.
)
The
respondent
did
not
challenge
the
Minister’s
allegation
that
he
had,
in
assessing,
assumed
the
facts
set
out
in
paragraph
6
of
the
Notice
of
Appeal.
Neither
did
the
respondent
attempt
to
show
that
the
assumptions
were
wrong
in
fact.
The
respondent
did
however
put
evidence
before
the
Court
to
show
exactly
what
the
facts
were
and
contended
that
those
facts
did
not
support
the
assessments.
It
is
clear
that
the
first
pair
of
transactions
were
ordinary
business
transactions
whereby
the
respondent
borrowed
money
from
the
two
subsidiaries
and
agreed
to
pay
interest.
No
attack
was
made
on
the
bona
fide
of
these
transactions.
They
created
the
relationship
between
the
respondent
and
each
of
the
other
two
companies
of
borrower
and
lender.
The
question
whether
the
act
of
the
lender
corporation
in
extinguishing
the
obligation
to
pay
interest
was
the
conferring
of
a
benefit
on
the
respondent
within
paragraph
(c)
and
subsection
(1)
of
Section
8
must,
as
I
have
already
emphasized,
be
considered
in
each
case
as
a
question
of
fact.
The
Minister,
according
to
his
Notice
of
Appeal,
in
each
case
assumed,
in
making
the
assessment,
that
the
interest
was
waived
(paragraph
6
of
the
Notice
of
Appeal)
and
concluded
that
the
lender
conferred
a
benefit
or
advantage
within
paragraph
(c)
(section
B
of
the
Notice
of
Appeal).
In
effect,
the
Minister
takes
the
position
that
waiver
of
interest
payable
by
a
borrower
who
happens
to
be
a
shareholder
of
the
lender
is
the
conferring
of
a
benefit
or
advantage
within
paragraph
(c)
regardless
of
the
circumstances
surrounding
the
waiver.
In
my
view,
the
mere
fact
of
waiver,
even
if
legally
effective
to
cancel
the
debt,
is
not
sufficient
of
itself
to
bring
the
transaction
within
paragraph
(c).
To
come
within
that
paragraph,
it
must
be
an
arrangement
or
device
whereby
a
corporation
confers
a
benefit
or
advantage
on
a
shareholder
qua
shareholder.
The
Minister
does
not
allege
that
he
assumed,
in
making
the
assessments,
that
the
waiver
was
an
arrangement
or
device
adopted
by
the
corporation
to
confer
a
benefit
or
advantage
on
the
respondent
as
a
shareholder.
There
was
no
onus
on
the
respondent
to
disprove
that
fact,
which
is
essential
to
its
being
taxable,
unless
the
Minister
assumed
that
fact
when
assessing.
It
may
be
that
the
Minister’s
appeal
should
be
dismissed
on
that
ground.
In
any
event,
as
far
as
the
second
round
of
waivers
are
concerned,
they
were
expressed
to
be
settlements
negotiated
by
a
borrower
with
its
lender
under
the
terms
of
which
immediate
payment
of
a
large
amount
of
principal
was
to
be
made
in
consideration
of
interest
being
cancelled.
There
is
no
allegation
that
this
quite
ordinary
type
of
transaction
between
a
debtor
and
lender
is
a
mere
subterfuge
whereby
the
lender
corporation
is
conferring
a
benefit
or
advantage
on
the
borrower
qua
shareholder
and,
in
the
absence
of
any
issue
having
been
made
by
the
Minsiter
of
that
question
of
fact,
I
cannot
so
find.
I
have
more
difficulty,
as
far
as
the
first
round
of
waivers
is
concerned,
inasmuch
as
it
does
seem
improbable
that
the
lender
would
have
cancelled
the
interest
outright,
instead
of
merely
giving
time
for
payment,
on
a
claim
by
the
borrower
that
it
was
in
difficulties,
were
it
not
for
the
fact
that
the
borrower
owned
practically
all
the
shares
in
the
lender
corporation.
However,
there
was
no
allegation
that
the
waiver
was
anything
other
than
what
it
purported
to
be,
that
is,
a
lender
granting
relief
to
a
borrower
in
difficulties.
Had
the
transactions
been
attacked
in
the
Notice
of
Appeal
and
at
the
trial
as
being
a
device
or
arrangement
for
conferring
a
benefit
on
the
respondent
qua
shareholder,
it
might
well
have
been
difficult
for
the
respondent
to
have
resisted
the
attack.
However
no
such
attack
was
made
and
the
assessments
cannot
therefore
stand.
The
appeal
is
dismissed
with
costs.
Judgment
accordingly.