Dubé,
J:—These
are
appeals
from
reassessments
made
by
the
Minister
of
National
Revenue
for
the
taxation
years
1966,
1967,
1968,
1969,
1970
and
1971.
The
plaintiff
is
a
New
Brunswick
company
with
head
office
at
Hartland
engaged
in
the
trucking
business
in
Eastern
Canada.
It
claimed
insurance
premiums,
amounts
payable
for
cargo
and
accident
damages,
and
fines,
as
expense
incurred
for
the
purpose
of
producing
income.
The
Minister
considered
these
amounts
to
be
additions
to
reserve
in
each
of
the
taxation
years
(and
the
deduction
of
fines
to
be
contrary
to
public
policy)
and
disallowed
the
deductions.
In
the
Statement
of
Defence,
the
Deputy
Attorney
General
of
Canada
submitted
that
this
Court
ought
to
quash
the
appeals
of
the
plaintiff
in
respect
of
its
1966,
1967,
1968,
1969
and
1970
taxation
years
on
the
ground
that
the
notices
issued
by
the
Minister
that
no
tax
was
payable
for
those
years
were
not
assessments
within
the
meaning
of
subsection
46(4)
of
the
Income
Tax
Act,*
but
only
notifications.
At
the
outset
of
the
trial,
in
view
of
this
Court’s
decision
in
Her
Majesty
the
Queen
v
Garry
Bowl
Limited,
[1974]
CTC
457;
74
DTC
6401,
counsel
for
plaintiff
agreed
that
these
appeals
be
quashed,
with
the
result
that
the
only
assessment
with
respect
to
which
this
Court
may
grant
relief
is
in
respect
of
the
1971
taxation
year,
which
assessment
allows
a
determination
of
the
issues
for
the
1966,
1968
and
1971
taxation
years,
as
the
losses
incurred
by
the
plaintiff
in
its
1966
and
1968
taxation
years
may
be
applied
to
the
1971
taxation
year
within
the
meaning
of
paragraph
27(1)(e)
of
the
Income
Tax
Act.
Counsel
for
both
parties
agreed
that
the
figures
appearing
in
paragraph
8
of
the
Statement
of
Defence
for
the
year
1971
set
out
the
situation
accurately.
The
paragraph
also
reflects
the
Minister’s
assumptions
and
bears
reproduction
in
toto:
8.
With
respect
to
paragraphs
9,
10,
12
and
13
of
the
Statement
of
Facts
of
the
Re-Amended
Statement
of
Claim
he
says
that
the
Minister
of
National
Revenue
assessed
or
adjusted,
as
the
case
may
be,
the
said
returns
of
income
referred
to
in
paragraph
7
hereof
so
as
to
disallow
as
deductions
from
income
with
respect
to
the
amounts
therein
set
out
the
amounts
of
$11,538.46,
$103,461.54,
$68,560.33,
and
$40,995.34,
for
the
1968,
1969,
1970,
and
1971
taxation
years
respectively
which
amounts
were
considered
by
the
said
Minister
to
be
additions
to
reserves
in
each
of
the
said
taxation
years
determined
in
the
following
manner:
|
Accident
|
|
Yearly
|
|
Cargo
Claims
Claims
|
Premiums
|
Total
Total
|
Addition
|
1968
|
|
$11,538.46
|
$
11,538.46
|
$
11,538.46
|
1969
|
$46.837.00
|
68,163.00
|
115,000.00
|
103,461.54
|
1970
|
$52,275.00
|
$32,292.60
|
99,992.77
|
183,560.53
|
68,560.53
|
1971
|
89,265.00
|
35,363.06
|
99,992.77
|
224,555.87
|
40,995.34
|
RSC
1952,
c
148
and
amendments
thereto.
|
|
and
In
assessing
or
adjusting
as
he
did
he
acted
upon
the
following
assumptions:
(i)
the
amounts
set
aside
at
the
end
of
each
taxation
year
as
Insurance
premiums
payable
were
amounts
in
the
nature
of
a
reserve
set
up
by
the
Plaintiff
to
meet
its
estimated
liability
to
Lloyd’s
of
London
which
liability
was
estimated
on
the
likely
settlement
of
insurance
claims
in
unascertain-
able
amounts
at
uncertain
dates;
(ii)
the
amounts
set
up
at
the
end
of
each
taxation
year
as
Claims
Payable
(Cargo
or
Accident)
were
amounts
in
the
nature
of
a
reserve
set
aside
by
the
Plaintiff
to
meet
the
settlement
of
expected
insuranc
claims
in
unascer-
tainable
amounts
at
uncertain
dates;
and
otherwise
he
does
not
admit
the
said
paragraphs.
I
shall
first
address
myself
to
the
issue
of
insurance
premiums.
They
were
payable
to
Lloyd’s,
London,
England
under
a
complex
3-year
policy,
from
May
1,
1967
to
May
1,
1970.
The
coverage
included
cargo
claims,
collision
damage
to
tractors
and
trailers,
and
public
liability
and
property
damage.
The
calculation
of
premiums
is
based
on
a
rather
complex
method
which
takes
into
account
the
total
incurred
losses
actually
paid
during
the
year,
plus
an
amount
established
by
Lloyd’s
as
being
its
probable
liability
for
claims
arising
during
that
year
but
unpaid.
The
formula
is
set
out
as
follows
in
Endorsement
No
1
to
the
policy:
It
is
further
agreed
that
this
insurance
is
granted
in
consideration
of
the
payment
of
an
annual
deposit
premium
of
$60,000
payable
in
quarterly
instalments
at
the
inception
of
each
quarter.
The
final
premium
to
be
paid
by
the
Assured
shall
be
100
times
the
total
incurred
losses
as
hereinafter
defined,
divided
by
65,
provided
that
in
no
event
shall
the
final
premium
be
less
than
that
developed
by
the
following
minimum
rate
nor
greater
than
that
developed
by
the
following
maximum
rate:
Minimum
Rate
|
Maximum
Rate
|
$1.20
per
$100
of
total
|
$2.40
per
$100
of
total
|
gross
receipts
|
gross
receipts
|
The
words
“total
incurred
losses"
as
used
herein,
shall
mean
actual
paid
losses,
allocated
loss
expenses
Including
legal
fees
and
the
reserves,
as
estimated
by
the
Insurers
for
unpaid
losses,
outstanding
at
the
time
of
adjustment
and
final
re-adjustment.
Adjustment
of
the
premium
as
provided
herein
shall
be
made
at
each
anniversary
date.
The
premium
so
calculated
is
therefore
subject
to
a
minimum
rate
and
a
maximum
rate
and
involved
the
setting
up
by
Lloyd’s
of
a
reserve
for
unpaid
liabilities.
Relying
on
their
own
calculations,
Lloyd’s
claimed
the
maximum
during
each
year,
whereas
the
plaintiff
contested
Lloyd’s
figures,
established
its
own
premiums
payable
in
the
years
in
question
and
entered
the
amounts
in
its
books
as
accounts
payable,
not
as
a
reserve.
At
the
end
of
each
taxation
year,
the
plaintiff
determined
that
its
outstanding
liabilities
to
Lloyd’s
for
premiums
required
to
be
paid
were
as
Set
out
in
paragraph
8
of
the
Statement
of
Defence
supra
under
the
heading
“Premiums”.
These
sums
are
claimed
by
the
plaintiff
as
deductions
in
computing
its
income
for
each
taxation
year.
The
defendant
says
that
these
amounts
set
aside
at
the
end
of
each
taxation
year
were
in
the
nature
of
a
reserve
to
meet
its
estimated
liability
to
Lloyd’s.
As
it
turned
out,
the
amounts
entered
in
plaintiff’s
books
as
“accounts
payable”
for
premiums
were
inferior
to
the
amounts
they
ended
up
by
paying
Lloyd’s
for
each
and
every
year.
After
much
discussion
between
the
plaintiff
and
Lloyd’s,
plaintiff
paid
close
to
the
maximum
payable
at
the
end
of
each
adjustment
period.
The
secretary-treasurer
of
the
plaintiff
company,
a
chartered
accountant,
testified
that
the
amounts
of
premiums
payable
were
based
on
their
judgment
as
to
what
the
annual
adjustments
would
be.
He
set
the
amounts
up
as
accounts
payable
and
expense,
not
as
a
reserve,
because
“these
were
accounts
payable,
the
events
had
taken
place”.
He
insisted
that
“you
have
to
match
expense
with
revenue”.
The
auditor
of
the
plaintiff
company,
also
a
chartered
accountant,
explained
that
he
applied
proper
accounting
principles
in
approving
the
entries
as
accounts
payable,
the
carefully
estimated
premiums
payable
being
costs
of
doing
business,
thus
a
proper
charge.
I
now
turn
to
the
claims
payable.
The
tractor
vehicles,
except
those
used
for
in-town
deliveries,
are
owned
by
independent
contractors,
whereas
the
trailers
belong
to
the
plaintiff.
Under
operating
agreements,
plaintiff
must
take
out
insurance
for
public
liability
and
property
damage,
cargo
damage
and
collision.
The
independent
contractors
are
responsible
to
the
plaintiff
for
the
first
$1,000,
and
the
latter
up
to
the
first
$5,000
to
Lloyd’s,
in
respect
of
claims
and
damage.
On
the
occurrence
of
a
liability,
or
loss,
or
damage,
the
amount
thereof
was
determined
immediately
by
the
plaintiff
on
the
basis
of
the
facts
then
available.
To
the
extent
that
such
amount
exceeded
the
deductible
portion
of
$1,000
payable
by
the
independent
contractors,
and
up
to
plaintiff's
$5,000
deductible,
the
amount
was
recorded
as
an
operation
expense
for
that
year.
At
the
end
of
the
taxation
years
1969,
1970
and
1971
the
plaintiff
determined
that
its
outstanding
liabilities
for
claims
payable
to
Llyod’s
were
as
outlined
above
under
the
headings
“Cargo
Claims”
and
“Accident
Claims”,
and
claimed
these
sums
as
deductible
in
computing
its
income
for
those
years.
According
to
the
president
of
the
plaintiff
company,
each
accident
was
promptly
investigated
and
“if
we
felt
not
at
fault,
we
set
nothing
up
in
our
books.
If
we
felt
at
fault,
then
we
valued
the
damages
and
set
up
the
liability”.
With
reference
to
cargo
claims,
company
officials
would
first
examine
the
PRO
delivery
receipts
to
see
if
they
were
“clean”
or
“dirty”.
Small
claims
were
quickly
processed,
larger
ones
were
investigated.
No
entries
were
made
unless
company
officials
were
satisfied
that
the
company
was
liable.
When
liability
was
accepted,
the
value
of
the
damaged
goods
was
duly
booked
as
an
expense.
The
company
presi-
dent
added
that
“we
were
not
making
profits,
so
we
were
not
interested
in
boosting
expenses.
Our
main
effort
was
to
try
to
balance
the
books”.
On
occasions,
misplaced
cargo
would
later
turn
up
when
delivered
to
the
wrong
party
and
returned
to
the
company.
On
the
other
hand,
claims
for
lost
or
damaged
cargo
would
in
some
instances
be
filed
many
days
later.
The
third
issue
is
the
allowance
of
fines,
mostly
fines
for
violation
by
the
plaintiff
of
provincial
highway
weight
restriction
laws.
Fines
for
speeding
or
other
traffic
violations
were
paid
by
the
responsible
drivers
themselves
and
are
not
in
question
here.
Various
provincial
motor
vehicle
Acts
or
motor
carrier
Acts
stipulate
maximum
weight,
and
other
weight
restrictions,
based
on
the
number
of
axles
of
carriers,
for
certain
provincial
highways.
The
allowable
weights
include
the
weight
of
vehicle,
fuel
and
cargo.
It
appears
that
most
of
the
loads
carried
in
plaintiff’s
trailers
are
not
picked
up
at
plaintiff’s
terminals,
but
along
the
way
from
factories,
potato
farms,
isolated
coastal
fish
plants
and
other
businesses
throughout
Eastern
Canada.
There
are
no
scales
in
the
trailers
and
plaintiff
relies
on
the
weights
declared
by
shippers.
The
government
scales
are
located
at
specific
points,
in
some
instances
at
two
or
three
hundred
mile
intervals,
along
the
highway.
The
driver,
an
independent
contractor,
makes
up
a
full
load
from
the
bills
of
lading
on
the
way.
If
the
total
weight
at
any
scale
exceeds
the
limit,
then
an
overweight
fine
is
levied
(usually
later
by
mail
to
the
plaintiff)
and
the
carrier
is
allowed
to
proceed
to
its
destination
with
the
overweight
cargo.
Where
only
one
shipper
takes
up
the
full
load
and
it
turns
out
to
be
overweight
at
the
government
scale,
then
the
plaintiff
pays
the
fine
and
bills
his
customer.
Overweight
permits
may
also
be
obtained
in
advance
at
the
request
of
a
shipper.
In
those
instances,
where
there
is
but
one
shipper,
the
driver
may
not
even
get
to
see
the
cargo
as
the
trailer
may
be
filled
and
sealed
in
the
customer’s
own
warehouse.
Where
there
are
more
than
one
shipper,
then
the
plaintiff
has
to
bear
the
loss
as
it
would
prove
difficult
to
identify
which
portion
of
the
shipment
was
overweight.
Fines
paid
were
booked
by
plaintiff
as
expense
and
fines
reimbursed
were
entered
as
revenue.
This
category
of
fines
also
includes
some
(less
than
10%)
fines
for
minor
violations,
such
as
misplaced
registration
documents,
lost
licence
plates,
missing
mud
flaps,
etc.
In
view
of
their
insignificance
it
will
be
more
convenient
to
include
them
with
the
overweight
fines.
Fines
in
the
amounts
of
$254.65,
$9,016.17,
$8,703.11,
$15,956,
$16,733.75
and
$19,490
for
the
taxation
years
1966,
1967,
1968,
1969,
1970
and
1971
respectively,
paid
to
various
provincial
authorities,
were
claimed
by
plaintiff
as
expense,
but
disallowed
by
the
Minister
as
not
being
amounts
paid
for
the
purpose
of
producing
income
and
alleged
in
the
Statement
of
Defence
to
be
against
public
policy.
The
basic
issue
to
be
determined
is
whether
or
not
these
items
may
be
deducted
as
expense
under
section
4
and
paragraph
12(1)(a)
of
the
Income
Tax
Act,
or,
in
the
case
of
insurance
premiums
and
claims,
whether
they
are
amounts
credited
to
a
reserve
and
not
deductible
under
paragraph
12(1)(e).
The
three
relevant
clauses
read
as
follows:
4.
Subject
to
the
other
provisions
of
this
Part,
income
for
a
taxation
year
from
a
business
or
property
is
the
profit
therefrom
for
the
year.
12.
(1)
In
computing
income,
no
deduction
shall
be
made
in
respect
of
(a)
an
outlay
or
expense
except
to
the
extent
that
it
was
made
or
incurred
by
the
taxpayer
for
the
purpose
of
gaining
or
producing
income
from
property
or
a
business
of
the
taxpayer,
(e)
an
amount
transferred
or
credited
to
a
reserve,
contingent.
account
or
sinking
fund
except
as
expressly
permitted
by
this
Part,
In
order
to
decide
whether
or
not
an
expense
is
incurred
by
the
taxpayer
for
the
purpose
of
gaining
income
within
the
exception
provided
by
paragraph
12(1
)(a),
it
must
first
be
determined
whether
the
outlay
was
incurred
in
accordance
with
the
ordinary
principles
of
commercial
trading
or
well
accepted
principles
of
business
practice
(vide
The
Royal
Trust
Company
v
MNR,
[1957]
CTC
32;
57
DTC
1055).
No
expert
evidence
was
adduced
by
the
plaintiff,
and
consequently
none
in
rebuttal
by
the
defendant,
to
assist
the
Court
in
defining
the
accepted
accounting
practice
to
be
observed
in
setting
out
the
claims
in
question
either
as
accounts
payable
or
as
a
reserve.
Two
chartered
accountants
testified
as
to
the
practice
they
followed
with
reference
to
plaintiff's
books,
but
they
could
not
of
course
be
allowed
to
tender
broad
expert
opinion,
as
plaintiff
did
not
qualify
them
as
experts.
They
were
allowed
however
to
give
factual
evidence
of
the
existence
of
a
practice
of
which
they
had
personal
knowledge
and
which
they
personally
applied
in
the
circumstances
of
this
particular
case
(vide
Robert
L
Fagnan
v
Marion
Frances
Ure
et
al,
[1958]
SCR
377).
In
any
event,
their
expertise
would
not
have
determined
the
ultimate
issue
of
the
case.
It
is
common
ground
that
the
payment
of
insurance
premiums
as
a
protection
against
business
losses
is
an
expense
made
in
accordance
with
the
ordinary
principles
of
commercial
trading,
or
well
accepted
principles
of
business
practice.
It
must
be
determined
in
this
case
if
the
method
of
recording
the
insurance
premiums
and
claims
payable
as
Calculated
by
the
plaintiff
in
the
books
as
current
liabilities
and
expense
for
the
year
is
in
accordance
with
accepted
business
principles.
In
Time
Motors
Limited
v
MNR,
[1969]
SCR
501;
[1969]
CTC
190’
69
DTC
5149,
the
Supreme
Court
of
Canada
held
that
the
wording
of
paragraph
12(1)(e)
of
the
Act
clearly
refers
to
accounting
practice
in
a
business
of
the
kind
with
which
one
is
concerned.
The
evidence
showed
that
in
the
appellant’s
accounts
credit
notes
outstanding
(in
partial
payment
of
used
cars)
were
treated
according
to
standard
practice
as
current
liabilities
until
they
were
redeemed
or
expired.
Pigeon,
J
said
at
page
506
[192,
5151):
The
wording
of
that
provision
clearly
refers
to
accounting
practice.
The
only
expression
applicable
to
the
present
case
is
not
“contingent
liability”
but
“contingent
account”.
This
means
that
the
provision
is
to
be
construed
by
reference
to
proper
accounting
practice
in
a
business
of
the
kind
with
which
one
is
concerned.
In
the
present
case,
the
only
evidence
of
accounting
practice
is
that
of
appellant’s
auditor,
a
chartered
accountant.
His
testimony
shows
that
in
appellant’s
accounts
credit
notes
are
treated
according
to
standard
practice
as
current
liabilities
until
they
are
redeemed
or
expired.
They
are
not
classed
as
contingent
liabilities.
The
terms
“reserve”
and
‘‘contingent
account”
of
paragraph
12(1
)(e)
connote
the
setting
aside
of
an
amount
to
meet
a
contingency,
an
unascertainable
and
indefinite
event
which
may
or
may
not
occur;
whereas
the
term
“expense”
in
12(1)(a)
implies
a
liability
present
and
certain,
an
amount
definite
and
ascertainable.
A
standard
yearly
insurance
premium
would
undoubtedly
fit
neatly
under
the
generally
accepted
meaning
of
the
term
“expense”,
and
no
one
would
think
of
describing
it
as
a
“contingency”
or
a
“reserve”:
the
exact
amount
of
the
premium
is
known,
ascertainable,
admitted
and
payable.
The
difficulty
in
the
present
case,
of
course,
lies
with
the
complex
formula
laid
down
by
Lloyd’s
to
establish
plaintiff’s
yearly
premiums.
The
amounts
claimed
by
plaintiff
as
premiums
payable
were
amounts
entered
in
the
books
as
liabilities
in
each
year
because
they
represent
the
cost
of
insurance
coverage
for
the
particular
year.
The
amounts
booked
as
accident
and
cargo
claims
were
so
entered
for
that
year
because
the
specific
events
leading
to
the
claims
had
occurred
in
that
year.
The
accountants
did
not
set
aside
approximate
amounts
as
“reserve”
against
contingencies,
these
amounts
were
booked
as
definitely
payable
because
the
premiums
had
been
earned,
the
accidents
had
occurred,
the
claims
had
been
filed,
the
investigations
had
taken
place,
the
quantum
of
damage
assessed,
and
the
amounts
entered.
In
J
L
Guay
Ltée
v
MNR,
[1969]
Tax
ABC
691;
69
DTC
490;
[1971]
CTC
686;
71
DTC
5423;
[1973]
CTC
506;
73
DTC
5373;
[1975]
CTC
97;
75
DTC
5094,
the
Tax
Appeal
Board,
the
Federal
Court
Trial
and
Appeal
Divisions,
and
the
Supreme
Court
of
Canada
dismissed
appeals
against
the
Minister’s
refusal
to
allow
the
appellant
building
contractor
to
deduct
the
10%
standard
holdbacks
from
subcontractors.
It
was
far
from
certain
that
the
amounts
of
the
holdbacks
would
be
paid
in
full
to
the
subcontractors.
Noël,
ACJ,
at
page
692
[5427],
distinguishes
deductible
expenditure
for
a
period
from
amounts
set
aside
as
a
reserve:
In
most
-tax
cases
only
amounts
which
can
be
exactly
determined
are
accepted.
This
means
that,
ordinarily,
provisional
amounts
or
estimates
are
rejected,
and
it
is
not
recommended
that
data
which
is
conditional,
contingent
or
uncertain
be
used
in
calculating
taxable
profits.
If,
indeed,
provisional
amounts
or
estimates
are
to
be
accepted,
they
must
be
certain.
But
then
it
is
always
difficult
to
find
a
procedure
by
which
to
arrive
at
a
figure
which
is
certain.
.
.
.
As
a
general
rule,
if
an
expenditure
is
made
which
is
deductible
from
income,
it
must
be
deducted
by
computing
the
profits
for
the
period
In
which
it
was
made,
and
not
some
other
period.
The
procedure
adopted
by
appellant,
of
deducting
from
its
income
amounts
withheld
by
it,
which
it
may
one
day
be
required
to
pay
its
subcontractor,
but
which
the
latter
may
not
claim
until
35
days
after
the
work
is
approved
by
the
architect,
is,
as
we
have
just
seen,
contrary
to
the
rule
that
an
expenditure
may
only
be
deducted
from
income
for
the
period
in
which
it
was
made,
and
this
would
suffice
to
dispose
of
the
present
appeal.
However,
as
we
have
seen
above,
there
is
an
additional
reason
for
dismissing
the
appeal:
this
is
that
we
are
dealing
with
amounts
withheld
which
are
not
only
uncertain
as
to
quantum
if
partial
damages
result
from
badly
done
work,
but
which
will
no
longer
even
be
due
or
payable
if
damages
exceed
the
amounts
withheld.
How
can
it
be
claimed
in
such
circumstances
that
a
certain
and
current
expense
is
involved,
and
that
the
amounts
withheld,
which
appellant
has
full
enjoyment
of
until
it
pays
the
amounts
owing
to
the
sub-contractor,
or
until
compensation
becomes
due,
may
be
deducted
by
appellant
as
it
receives
them
from
the
owner.
Obviously,
the
holdbacks
in
the
Guay
case
were
“conditional,
contingent
or
uncertain”
and
“should
not
be
used
in
calculating
taxable
profits”:
their
very
purpose
was
to
ensure
the
payment
of
any
damage
which
might
be
incurred
because
of
faulty
performance.
Thus
the
amounts
withheld
were
not
only
uncertain
as
to
quantum
if
partial
damages
resulted,
but
would
no
longer
be
even
due
and
payable
if
damages
exceeded
the
amounts
withheld.
Such
is
not
the
situation
in
the
case
at
bar
where
the
amounts
entered
as
expense
were
definitely
owing
and
payable
and
were
in
fact
paid.
The
judgment
of
Noël,
ACJ
was
affirmed
by
the
Federal
Court
of
Appeal
on
the
ground
that
the
“appellant’s
profit
cannot
be
computed
by
taking,
on
the
one
hand,
90%
of
the
value
of
all
work
done
for
the
owner
and,
on
the
other
hand,
deducting
the
total
sums
paid
by
the
appellant
to
the
subcontractors
for
their
work”.
The
Supreme
Court
of
Canada
gave
no
reason
for
dismissing
the
appeal.
I
am
of
the
view,
therefore,
that
in
the
present
case,
the
amounts
payable,
for
premiums
and
for
cargo
and
accident
claims,
constituted
an
outlay
incurred
in
accordance
with
the
ordinary
principles
of
commercial
trading,
that
they
were
properly
entered
as
expense,
and
were
incurred
for
the
purpose
of
producing
income.
The
Minister’s
reassessment
for
the
1971
taxation
year
should
therefore
be
varied
accordingly.
And
now
the
fines.
The
first
determination
must
be
as
to
whether
or
not
the
payment
of
the
fines
constituted
an
outlay
made
for
the
purpose
of
producing
income
for
the
plaintiff
so
as
to
meet
the
requirement
of
the
exception
to
the
prohibition
of
paragraph
12(1)(a).
If
the
determination
is
affirmative,
then
the
argument
of
public
interest
must
be
met.
In
MNR
v
E
H
Pooler
and
Company
Limited,
[1962]
CTC
527
at
532;
62
DTC
1321
at
1324,
Thurlow,
J
(as
he
then
was)
of
the
Exchequer
Court
of
Canada
dealt
with
the
allowance
of
a
$2,000
fine
imposed
by
the
Toronto
Stock
Exchange
on
the
respondent
company
for
the
conduct
on
the
part
of
one
of
its
vice-presidents
which
was
considered
detrimental
to
the
interests
of
the
Exchange.
The
learned
judge
held
that
there
was
no
conceivable
way
in
which
the
payment
of
the
fine
could
lead
to
the
gaining
of
income.
The
company
was
liable
to
make
the
payment,
whether
it
continued
to
carry
on
the
business
or
not,
and
the
payment
had
no
relation
to
the
carrying
on
of
the
business.
The
vice-president
was
not
endeavouring
to
earn
commissions
for
the
company
but
was
acting
for
reasons
of
his
own.
Thurlow,
J
added:
In
this
view,
apart
from
any
broader
principle
which
may
or
may
not
be
applicable
in
the
particular
circumstances
to
exclude
its
deduction,
the
fine
could
not
in
my
opinion
escape
the
prohibition
of
Section
12(1)(a)
unless
the
inducing
by
Mr
Ramsay
of
other
members
of
the
Exchange
to
open
such
accounts
was
an
act
done
in
the
course
of
or
for
the
purposes
of
the
respondent’s
business.*
The
“broader
principle”
was
not
defined
and
the
payment
of
the
fines
was
disallowed,
not
because
it
was
tainted
with
impurity,
but
because,
on
the
particular
facts
of
the
case,
it
was
not
incurred
for
the
purpose
of
gaining
income.
The
English
Court
of
Appeal
in
Commissioners
of
Inland
Revenue
v
Alexander
Von
Glehn
&
Co,
Ltd,
12
TC
232,
disallowed
the
deduction
of
a
compromise
penalty
paid
by
the
respondent
company
in
respect
of
alleged
infringements
of
the
Customs
(War
Powers)
Act,
1915,
5
Geo
V,
c
31.
Some
comments
by
their
Lordships
are
reported
as
follows:
Lord
Sterndale,
MR
said
at
page
238:
Now
what
is
the
position
here?
This
business
could
perfectly
well
be
carried
on
without
any
infraction
of
the
law
at
all.
It
is
perhaps
a
little
difficult
to
put
the
distinction
into
very
exact
language,
but
there
seems
to
me
to
be
a
difference
between
a
commercial
loss
in
trading
and
a
penalty
imposed
upon
a
person
or
company
for
a
breach
of
the
law
which
they
have
committed
in
that
trading.
Warrington,
LJ
said
at
pages
241-2:
Now
it
cannot
be
said
that
the
disbursement
in
the
present
case
is
made
in
any
way
for
the
purpose
of
the
trade
or
for
the
purpose
of
earning
the
profits
of
the
trade.
The
disbursement
is
made,
as
I
have
already
said—and
the
same
remark
applies
to
this
Rule
as
to
the
other—because
the
individual
who
is
conducting
the
trade
has,
not
from
any
moral
obliquity,
but
has
unfortunately,
been
guilty
of
an
infraction
of
the
law.
Then,
Scrutton,
LJ
said
at
page
244.:
I
am
inclined
to
think,
though
I
do
not
wish
finally
to
decide
it,
that
the
Income
Tax
Acts
are
to
be
confined
to
lawful
businesses,
and
to
businesses
carried
on
in
a
lawful
way.
Counsel
for
the
defendant
submitted
that
there
is
a
broader
principle
which
would
exclude
the
deduction
of
a
fine
incurred
by
the
taxpayer,
either
in
the
course
of
business,
or
otherwise,
and
made
reference
to
some
English
decisions:
Fry,
LJ
of
the
English
Court
of
Appeal
said
in
Cleaver
and
Others
v
Mutual
Reserve
Fund
Life
Association,
[1892]
1
QB
147
at
156:
The
italics
are
mine.
It
appears
to
me
that
no
system
of
jurisprudence
can
with
reason
include
amongst
the
rights
which
it
enforces
rights
directly
resulting
to
the
person
asserting
them
from
the
crime
of
that
person.
Lord
Atkin
in
Beresford
v
Royal
Insurance
Company,
Limited,
[1938]
AC
586,
said
at
pages
596-7:
The
cases
establishing
this
doctrine
have
been
fully
discussed
by
Lord
Wright
MR
in
his
judgment
in
the
present
case.
I
mention
some
of
them
in
order
to
call
attention
to
the
fact
that,
while
in
the
earlier
cases
different
reasons
have
been
given
for
the
rule,
the
principle
can
now
be
expressed
in
very
general
terms.
and
at
page
599:
.
.
.
the
absolute
rule
is
that
the
Courts
will
not
recognize
a
benefit
accruing
to
a
criminal
from
his
crime.
In
The
Amicable
Insurance
Society
v
Bolland,
4
Bli
NS
194,
the
Lord
Chancellor
said
at
page
211:
IS
it
not
void
upon
the
plainest
principles
of
public
policy?
Would
not
such
a
contract
(if
available)
take
away
one
of
those
restraints
operating
on
the
minds
of
men
against
the
commission
of
crimes?
namely,
the
interest
we
have
in
the
welfare
and
prosperity
of
our
connexions.
Learned
counsel
then
sought
to
establish
that
the
doctrine
that
criminals
should
not
benefit
from
their
crimes
should
be
applied
under
our
Canadian
income
tax
laws
and
would
have
fines
disallowed
as
deductible
expense,
even
if
incurred
for
the
purpose
of
producing
income.
On
the
other
hand,
counsel
for
plaintiff
argued
very
effectively
that
the
legality
or
illegality
of
the
business
to
which
the
expense
relates
is
irrelevant
in
interpreting
the
Income
Tax
Act.
The
Exchequer
Court
of
Canada
held
in
Rolland
Paper
Company
Limited
v
MNR,
[1960]
CTC
158;
60
DTC
1095,
that
legal
expenses
incurred
by
the
appellant
in
defending
itself
against
a
charge
of
illegal
trade
practice
under
the
Criminal
Code
were
deductible,
under
the
provisions
of
paragraph
12(1)(a)
as
expense
incurred
for
the
purpose
of
gaining
or
producing
income.
These
expenses
were
incurred
in
accordance
with
sound
accounting
and
commercial
practice,
they
were
incurred
to
defend
and
preserve
the
appellant’s
system
that
produced
its
income.
Fournier,
J
had
this
to
say
before
he
quoted
Lord
Haldane
at
page
163
[1097-8]:
That
being
the
case,
it
becomes
necessary
to
determine
if
unlawful
acts
committed
in
earning
income
from
the
operations
of
a
business
or
trade
are
to
be
considered
in
computing
the
income
of
a
taxpayer.
The
Act
clearly
States
that
the
income
of
a
taxpayer
is
his
income
from
all
sources.
It
is
a
sweeping
and
positive
statement
and
it
has
been
constantly
held
that
income
tax
is
a
tax
upon
the
person
measured
by
his
income
and
that
the
source
of
his
income
should
not
be
looked
at
when
computing
a
taxpayer’s
taxable
income.
In
the
case
of
Minister
of
Finance
v
Smith,
[1927]
AC
193;
[1917-27]
CTC
251,
wherein
it
was
held
that
upon
a
literal
construction
of
the
Act
the
profits
in
question,
though
by
law
of
the
particular
province
they
are
illicit,
come
within
the
words
employed
in
Section
3(1),
Lord
Haldane
in
his
remarks
said
at
page
197,
in
fine
[[1917-27]
CTC
254]:
“.
.
.
There
is
nothing
in
the
act
which
points
to
any
intention
to
curtail
the
statutory
definition
of
income,
and
it
does
not
appear
appropriate
under
the
circumstances
to
impart
any
assumed
moral
or
ethical
standard
as
controlling
in
a
case
such
as
this
the
literal
interpretation
of
the
language
employed
.
.
.
.”
Four
years
later,
the
Exchequer
Court
held
(MNR
v
Olva
Diana
Eldridge,
[1964]
CTC
54,5;
64
DTC
5338)
that
the
profits
of
the
operator
of
a
Call
girl
organization
was
subject
to
tax
and
that
she
may
deduct
the
expenses
incurred
for
the
purpose
of
earning
income,
including
legal
fees
and
commission
on
bail
bonds.
Cattanach,
J
stated
at
page
551
[5342]:
At
this
point
I
would
mention
it
is
abundantly
clear
from
the
decided
cases
that
earnings
from
illegal
operations
or
illicit
businesses
are
subject
to
tax.
The
respondent,
during
her
testimony,
remarked
that
she
expressed
the
view
to
the
officers
of
the
Taxation
Division
that
it
was
incongruous
that
the
government
should
seek
to
live
on
the
avails
of
prostitution.
However,
the
complete
answer
to
such
suggestion
is
to
be
found
in
the
judgment
of
Rowlatt,
J
in
Mann
v
Nash,
16
TC
523,
where
he
said
at
p
530:
“It
is
said
again:
‘Is
the
State
coming
forward
to
take
a
share
of
unlawful
gains?’
It
is
mere
rhetoric.
The
State
is
doing
nothing
of
the
kind;
they
are
taxing
the
individual
with
reference
to
certain
facts.
They
are
not
partners;
they
are
not
principals
in
the
illegality,
or
sharers
in
the
illegality;
they
are
merely
taxing
a
man
in
respect
of
those
resources.
I
think
it
is
only
rhetoric
to
say
that
they
are
sharing
in
his
profits,
and
a
piece
of
rhetoric
which
is
perfectly
useless
for
the
solution
of
the
question
which
I
have
to
decide.”
In
my
view,
the
fines
paid
by
the
plaintiff
in
the
case
before
me
resulted
from
the
day-to-day
operation
of
its
transport
business
and
were
paid
as
a
necessary
expense.
In
the
absence
of
constant
control
by
the
plaintiff
over
the
exact
cargo
weight
carried
in
its
trailers,
and
the
uncontradicted
evidence
would
suggest
that
such
a
tight
control
would
be
impractical
if
not
impossible
in
a
very
highly
competitive
road
transport
industry,
then
unintentional
violations
of
weight
restrictions
would
seem
to
be
inevitable.
Plaintiff's
method
of
bookkeeping,
with
fines
paid
entered
as
expense
and
fines
recovered
from
customers
booked
as
revenue,
would
also
indicate
that
the
payment
of
fines
was
very
much
a
current
item
in
the
operation
of
plaintiff's
business.
The
ready
availability
of
advance
overweight
permits
at
the
request
of
a
shipper
would
also
tend
to
show
that
weight
restrictions
can
be
easily
overcome
and
that
violations
thereof
are
obviously
not
outrageous
transgressions
of
public
policy.
The
Minister’s
reassessments
with
reference
to
fines
should
therefore
be
varied
accordingly.
Plaintiff's
appeals
in
respect
of
its
1966,
1967,
1968,
1969
and
1970
taxation
years
are
quashed.
Plaintiff's
appeal
is
allowed
in
respect
of
its
1971
taxation
year
allowing
losses
sustained
in
the
five
preceding
taxation
years
under
paragraph
27(1
)(e)
of
the
Act.
Costs
to
the
plaintiff.