Cattanach,
J:—These
are
appeals
by
James
F
Kennedy
from
his
assessments
to
income
tax
by
the
Minister
of
National
Revenue
for
his
1965
and
1966
taxation
years.
At
all
material
times
the
appellant
was
the
sole
beneficial
owner
of
all
the
shares
in
and
president
of
a
company
incorporated
under
the
name
of
J
F
Kennedy
Ford
Sales
Limited,
which,
as
the
corporate
name
indicates,
was
a
dealer
in
the
automobile
products
of
Ford
Motor
of
Canada
Limited
(hereinafter
referred
to
as
Ford).
In
assessing
the
appellant
as
he
did
the
Minister
had
added
to
the
appellant’s
income
in
the
taxation
years
under
review
the
amounts
of
$85,370.63
in
the
1965
taxation
year
and
$42,439.91
in
the
1966
taxation
year
as
benefits
received
by
the
appellant
from
J
F
Kennedy
Ford
Sales
Limited
to
which
I
shall
subsequently
refer
to
as
“Kennedy
Ford
Sales”,
“Kennedy
Ford”
or
“the
company”
when
it
is
convenient
to
do
so.
The
appellant
had
been
an
executive
of
Ford
for
many
years.
He
first
joined
Ford
in
1940
and
was
with
that
Company
until
1962.
He
served
in
many
executive
capacities
concerned
with
sales.
He
was
at
various
times
the
assistant
manager
in
Winnipeg,
Manitoba,
the
assistant
manager
for
Ontario,
the
manager
for
Quebec
and
the
Ottawa
Valley
and
lastly
at
the
head
office
in
Oakville,
Ontario
where
he
was
the
director
of
vehicle
marketing.
There
he
had
progressed
from
the
third
to
the
second
position
in
the
sales
hierarchy.
His
job
was
to
improve
Ford’s
representatives
and
he
was
in
charge
of
marketing,
marketing
programmes
with
jurisdiction
over
franchised
dealers
and
market
areas.
As
a
consequence
he
was
familiar
with
the
automobile
business
across
the
country.
After
years
of
advising,
directing
and
exhorting
franchised
dealers
in
sales
techniques,
it
is
not
surprising
that
he
should
be
willing
to
put
his
experience
to
advantage
on
his
own
behalf.
Therefore
in
1962
he
left
Ford
to
establish
a
Ford
dealership
of
his
own.
At
that
time
J
F
Kennedy
Ford
Sales
Limited
was
incorporated.
The
appellant
selected
Oakville,
Ontario
as
a
desirable
location
for
the
business
because
it
was
Ford’s
head
office,
it
was
close
to
Metropolitan
Toronto
and
there
was
a
vacancy
there.
For
these
and
other
reasons
he
foresaw
a
bright
future
for
a
dealership
there.
The
company’s
first
premises
on
Navy
Street
in
Oakville
were
leased
from
the
Texaco
Oil
Company
together
with
a
gasoline
outlet
for
a
term
of
seven
years
expiring
in
1969.
The
business
prospered
and
after
three
years,
in
1965,
it
had
outgrown
the
premises
on
Navy
Street.
These
premises
were
not
the
best
either
in
location
or
size
but
were
adequate
for
the
modest
beginning
of
the
business.
It
was
to
be
expected
that
the
business
would
be
successful
because
of
the
appellant’s
experience,
his
close
connection
with
the
executives
of
Ford
and
his
salesmanship
abilities.
I
might
add
that
it
is
not
surprising
that
because
of
his
experience
in
a
large
corporation
that
he
would
apply
the
principles
he
learned
there
to
his
own
affairs.
He
would
not
embark
on
a
new
venture
or
expansion
without
first
securing
the
expert
and
professional
advice
which
he
considered
the
best
and
base
his
decisions
on
that
advice.
The
appellant
began
his
search
for
new
premises.
He
needed
a
site
with
3
acres.
The
Texaco
site
was
not
a
good
service
station
outlet.
The
appellant
was
anxious
to
abandon
his
lease
and
Texaco
was
also
willing
to
abandon
that
site.
Under
a
city
by-law
the
oil
companies
were
limited
in
the
number
of
service
stations
they
could
operate
in
the
city.
Therefore
Texaco
was
willing
to
release
the
company
from
its
lease,
which
had
time
to
run,
if
the
appellant,
on
finding
a
more
suitable
site
acceptable
both
to
himself
and
Texaco,
would
sell
a
portion
thereof
to
Texaco.
This
was
agreed
upon.
The
appellant
found
a
site.
It
was
a
large
property
at
173
Lakeshore
Road
West,
about
one-half
mile
west
of
the
Navy
Street
site
and
at
the
western
extremity
but
within
the
core
of
the
business
area
of
Oakville.
The
property
was
owned
by
the
Chase
Medicine
Company,
a
manufacturer
of
patent
medicines
but
had
not
been
occupied
for
a
considerable
period
of
time.
The
Chase
Medicine
Company
had
been
acquired
by
the
National
Drug
Company
in
whom
title
to
the
property
vested.
Apparently
the
National
Drug
Company
had
granted
an
option
on
the
property
to
a
land
developer
who
let
the
option
lapse.
The
appellant
testified
that
the
owner
of
the
land,
no
doubt
because
of
its
prior
experience,
would
not
sell
to
a
person
other
than
an
incorporated
company
and
it
was
for
this
reason
that
the
sale
was
negotiated
by
and
title
originally
taken
in
the
name
of
the
Company.
I
do
not
place
any
reliance
on
this
because
I
am
certain
that
what
the
vendor
had
in
mind
was
a
sale
to
a
responsible
person
with
financial
means
and
not
necessarily
a
corporate
entity
many
of
which
do
not
have
those
qualifications.
The
property
was
roughly
rectangular
in
shape
with
a
frontage
of
343
feet
on
Lakeshore
Road
west
and
a
depth
of
480
feet.
There
was
access
from
three
streets.
There
was
an
old
brick
building
on
the
western
part
of
the
property.
It
was
built
in
1930,
it
had
not
been
occupied
for
about
five
years
and
it
was
leased
to
several
tenants
for
warehousing
purposes.
The
Company
did
not
have
the
requisite
financing
to
purchase
the
property.
The
financing
was
arranged
by
the
appellant,
before
an
offer
was
made,
through
Industrial
Acceptance
Corporation,
with
whom
the
appellant
had
business
relations
when
he
was
an
executive
of
Ford.
After
a
financing
commitment
was
made,
an
offer
of
purchase
was
made
on
January
5,
1965
and
accepted.
On
January
29,
1965
Kennedy
Ford
Sales,
the
appellant’s
company,
purchased
the
property
for
$223,188.
On
May
19,
1965,
by
virtue
of
the
prior
arrangement
with
Texaco,
the
north
east
corner
of
the
land,
about
150
feet
square
was
sold
to
Texaco
for
$64,000.
There
was
no
negotiation
of
the
price.
That
was
what
the
appellant
asked
and
that
is
what
Texaco
paid.
The
appellant
felt
that
he
got
a
good
price.
On
consultation
with
an
architect
the
appellant
decided
that
it
was
more
economic
on
a
short-term
basis
to
renovate
and
remodel
the
existing
building
rather
than
to
demolish
and
replace
it.
The
perimeter
walls
were
sound.
Plans
and
specifications
were
prepared
and
tenders
invited.
The
appellant
wanted
to
convert
the
building
for
no
more
than
$100,000.
The
lowest
tender
received
was
for
$170,000.
Accordingly
certain
economies
were
affected.
It
was
estimated
that
the
conversion
of
the
building
would
cost
approximately
$153,000.
In
fact
it
cost
closer
to
$185,000.
The
purchase
of
the
property
and
the
renovation
of
the
building
was
financed,
in
actuality,
on
the
personal
credit
of
the
appellant.
Without
him,
financing
would
not
be
forthcoming
even
though
it
is
true
that
the
advances
were
secured
by
mortgages
on
the
property
owned,
at
that
time,
by
the
Company.
These
mortgages
were
guaranteed
by
the
appellant
personally.
There
were
first
and
second
mortgages
in
the
amounts
of
$180,000
and
$131,000
for
a
total
of
$311,000.
It
was
the
intention
of
the
appellant
from
the
outset
that
the
Company
would
sell
the
property
to
the
appellant
at
the
price
paid
for
it
by
the
Company
plus
$100,000,
being
a
portion
of
the
improvements
that
the
appellant
would
bear,
but
that
renovations
contracted
for
would
be
completed
at
the
expense
of
the
Company.
The
purchase
price
from
the
National
Drug
Company
to
Kennedy
Ford
Sales
had
been
$223,513
after
adjustments.
A
portion
of
the
site
had
been
sold
to
Texaco
on
May
19,
1965
for
$63,675
so
that
the
purchase
price
to
the
appellant
was
as
follows:
Purchase
price
of
the
property
paid
by
the
Company
—
$223,513.00
Less
price
on
sale
to
Texaco
—
|
63,675.00
|
|
$159,838.00
|
Add
portion
of
renovation
cost
to
be
borne
by
|
|
appellant
—
|
100,000.00
|
|
$259,838.00
subject
|
|
to
adjustments.
|
This
prearrangement
and
the
completion
thereof
was
evidenced
by
an
offer
to
purchase
made
by
the
appellant
to
the
Company
dated
July
28,
1965
and
by
the
deed
from
the
Company
to
the
appellant
(Exhibit
A-9).
The
appellant
paid
the
Company
$259,513
for
the
property
payable
by
$1,513
in
cash
and
by
the
assumption
of
the
first
and
second
mortgages
on
the
property
totalling
$311,000.
Because
there
was
a
difference
between
the
purchase
price
of
$259,513
and
the
mortgage
commitment
of
$311,000,
the
Company
gave
the
appellant
a
promissory
note
in
the
amount
of
$53,000
which
was
paid
subsequent
to
1966.
It
was
also
agreed
between
the
appellant
and
the
Company
that
upon
the
sale
of
the
property
to
the
appellant,
the
appellant
would
lease
the
premises
back
to
the
Company
at
a
monthly
rental
of
$1,935
for
a
five-year
term
with
renewal
privileges.
This
was
done
after
the
sale
to
the
appellant
so
that
the
appellant
and
the
Company
then
stood
in
a
landlord
and
tenant
relationship.
These
arrangements
were
made
upon
the
advice
of
the
appellant’s
accountant
who
computed
the
rent
as
a
9%
return
on
the
appellant’s
investment.
The
appellant
testified
that
there
is
a
great
deal
of
risk
in
an
automobile
dealership.
A
franchise
agreement
may
be
cancelled
by
the
manufacturer
on
30
day’s
notice
and
the
manufacturer,
based
upon
its
market
studies,
may
require
a
dealer
to
relocate.
He
further
testified
that
the
type
of
renovations
made
the
building
suitable
for
use
as
an
automobile
dealership
only
and
that
in
the
event
of
relocation
an
adequate
rental
return
could
not
be
expected
from
the
use
of
the
building
for
purposes
other
than
an
automobile
dealership.
Therefore
the
appellant
was
prepared
to
assume
that
risk
by
personally
purchasing
the
property
rather
than
endanger
the
dealership.
I
would
point
out
that
all
negotiations
between
the
appellant
and
the
Company
were
not
arm’s
length
transactions
so
that
throughout
the
intentions
of
the
Company
and
those
of
the
appellant
are
coincident.
The
sale
of
the
property
was
completed
prior
to
December
31,
1965.
There
were
in
existence
building
contracts
in
the
amount
of
$165,792.56
which
under
the
agreement
between
the
appellant
and
the
Company
were
paid
for
by
the
Company.
In
addition
to
this
amount
the
Company
expended
$11,915.07
in
architect’s
fees
and
$7,662.99
was
spent
to
convert
a
small
store
on
the
property
into
a
used
car
office.
Therefore
the
Company
expended
$185,370.62
on
improvements
to
the
building
in
1965.
The
accuracy
of
this
figure
is
not
in
dispute
between
the
parties.
Therefore
by
deducting
$100,000
which
the
appellant
had
agreed
to
pay
for
renovations
to
the
building
from
the
total
amount
of
$185,370.62
expended
by
the
Company
thereon
in
1965,
the
difference
is
$85,370.62
which
is
the
amount
which
the
Minister
added
to
the
appellant’s
income
for
his
1965
taxation
year
as
a
benefit
received
by
him
from
the
Company.
During
the
1966
taxation
year
the
Company
spent
a
further
sum
of
$42,439.91
in
building
a
body
shop
as
an
addition
to
the
existing
building.
Again
the
accuracy
of
this
figure
is
not
in
dispute
between
the
parties.
The
Minister
added
the
amount
of
$42,439.91
to
the
appellant’s
income
for
the
taxation
year
1966
as
a
benefit
received
by
him
from
the
Company.
The
basic
position
taken
by
the
Minister
is,
as
I
understand
it,
that
the
fair
market
value
of
the
property
when
it
was
transferred
to
the
appellant
by
the
Company
was
not
less
than
$344,883.62,
that
is
$85,370.62
more
than
the
amount
of
$259,513,
that
the
appellant
paid
the
Company
for
the
property.
Put
another
way,
the
Minister
is
saying
that
the
amounts
expended
by
the
Company
on
renovations
increased
the
fair
market
value
of
the
property
by
the
like
amount.
The
identical
position
is
taken
by
the
Minister
in
respect
to
the
expenditure
by
the
Company
of
the
amount
of
$42,439.91
in
the
appellant’s
1966
taxation
year.
It
is
the
contention
of
the
Minister
that
the
Company
in
agreeing
to
complete
the
existing
building
contracts
for
the
renovation
of
the
building
and
in
agreeing
to
sell
the
lands
and
premises
at
a
price
of
$85,370.62
below
the
fair
market
value
to
the
appellant,
the
sole
beneficial.
and
controlling
shareholder
in
1965,
thereby
conferred
upon
him
a
benefit
qua
shareholder,
which
is
properly
included
in
the
appellant’s
income
in
that
year
by
virtue
of
subsections
8(1)
and
137(2)
of
the
Income
Tax
Act
and
similarly
so
with
respect
to
the
sum
of
$42,439.71
expended
by
the
Company
on
the
premises
during
the
1966
taxation
year.
Subsection
8(1)
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
(c)
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
(ii)
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.
Subsection
137(2)
reads
as
follows:
137.
(2)
Where
the
result
of
one
or
more
sales,
exchanges,
declarations
of
trust,
or
other
transactions
of
any
kind
whatsoever
is
that
a
person
confers
a
benefit
on
a
taxpayer,
that
person
shall
be
deemed
to
have
made
a
payment
to
the
taxpayer
equal
to
the
amount
of
the
benefit
conferred
notwithstanding
the
form
or
legal
effect
of
the
transactions
or
that
one
or
more
other
persons
were
also
parties
thereto;
and,
whether
or
not
there
was
an
intention
to
avoid
or
evade
taxes
under
this
Act,
the
payment
shall,
depending
upon
the
circumstances,
be
(a)
included
in
computing
the
taxpayer’s
income
for
the
purpose
of
Part
I,
(b)
deemed
to
be
a
payment
to
a
non-resident
person
to
which
Part
III
applies,
or
(c)
deemed
to
be
a
disposition
by
way
of
gift
to
which
Part
IV
applies.
In
answer
to
the
contentions
of
the
Minister
the
appellant’s
position
is,
as
I
understand
it,
that
(1)
the
arrangements
outlined
did
not
confer
a
benefit
on
the
appellant
in
his
1965
and
1966
taxation
years
but
rather
that
any
such
benefit
would
not
mature
until
the
expiration
of
the
lease
and
that
in
any
event
they
were
tenant’s
improvements;
(2)
no
benefit
was
conferred
upon
the
appellant
because
the
fair
market
value
of
the
property
was
not
increased
by
the
improvements
thereto
and
that
the
fair
market
value
does
not
exceed
the
purchase
price
of
$259,513
paid
by
the
appellant
to
the
Company
and
(3)
even
if
it
should
be
found
that
a
benefit
was
conferred
upon
the
appellant
in
1965
and
1966
then
such
benefit
is
taxable
only
to
the
extent
of
the
Company’s
undistributed
income
in
accordance
with
subsection
81(1)
of
the
Income
Tax
Act,
and
since
it
constitutes
a
dividend
that
dividend
is
subject
to
a
dividend
tax
credit
of
20%
under
section
38
of
the
Act.
Subsection
81(1)
provides:
81.
(1)
Where
funds
or
property
of
a
corporation
have,
at
a
time
when
the
corporation
had
undistributed
income
on
hand,
been
distributed
or
otherwise
appropriated
in
any
manner
whatsoever
to
or
for
the
benefit
of
one
or
more
of
its
shareholders
on
the
winding-up,
discontinuance
or
reorganization
of
its
business,
a
dividend
shall
be
deemed
to
have
been
received
at
that
time
by
each
shareholder
equal
to
the
lesser
of
(a)
the
amount
or
value
of
the
funds
or
property
so
distributed
or
appropriated
to
him,
or
(b)
his
portion
of
the
undistributed
income
then
on
hand.
Adverting
to
the
third
proposition
advanced
on
behalf
of
the
appel-
lant,
the
crux
of
the
matter
is
whether
there
has
been
a
“reorganization
of
its
business”
by
Kennedy
Ford
Sales
within
the
meaning
of
section
81
by
the
transactions
in
the
present
case.
Kennedy
Ford
Sales
was
engaged
in
the
sale
of
automobiles,
that
was
its
business,
from
an
inadequate
site
to
accommodate
that
business.
It
bought
larger
premises
from
which
to
do
so.
It
was
not
argued,
nor
do
I
think
it
could
be
successfully
argued,
that
this
was
a
reorganization
of
its
business.
It
was
merely
a
change
in
the
location
of
its
business.
to
better
facilities.
It
represented
a
growth
rather
than
a
reorganization
of
its
business.
The
Company
expended
moneys
on
the
renovation
and
improvement
of
the
better
site
it
had
acquired.
This,
too,
was
done
to
accommodate
the
growth
of
the
business.
In
the
course
of
this
expenditure
on
renovation
of
the
site
and
building
thereon,
the
Company
sold
the
premises.
The
purchaser
of
the
property
was
the
Company’s
controlling
shareholder
and
the
sale
price
did
not
include
the
full
cost
of
the
expenditures
incurred
by
the
Company.
The
purchaser
then
leased
the
premises
back
to
the
Company
which
continued
in
its
business
from
that
site.
The
change
was
that
the
Company
was
no
longer
the
owner
of
the
premises
from
which
it
conducted
its
business
but
rather
it
was
the
tenant
of
those
premises.
The
question
is
whether
the
Company
by
conducting
its
business
from
rented
premises
rather
than
from
premises
that
it
owned
amounts
to
a
reorganization
of
its
business.
In
Hooper
v
Western
Counties
&
South
Wales
Telephone
Co
(1893),
68
LT
78,
Chitty,
J
considered
what
constituted
the
“reconstruction”
of
a
company
as
used
in
a
statute
he
was
called
upon
to
interpret.
He
concluded
that
the
word
“reorganization”
could
have
no
wider
meaning
than
the
word
“reconstruction”.
He
thought
the
words
to
be
alternative
expressions.
In
Rex
v
Santiago
Mines
Ltd,
[1947]
1
DLR
642,
it
was
unanimously
agreed
by
the
Court
of
Appeal
that
the
words
“reorganization”
and
“reconstruction”
were
synonymous.
Smith,
JA
said
at
page
648:
I
agree,
too,
that
the
word
“reorganization”,
when
applied
to
Company
affairs,
has
substantially
the
same
meaning
as
“reconstruction”,
the
word
mostly
used
in
the
English
authorities.
In
the
Hooper
case
(supra)
Chitty,
J
described
the
usual
mode
of
reconstruction
as
winding-up,
the
formation
of
a
new
company,
the
shareholders
of
the
first
company
to
be
its
shareholders,
to
take
over
the
old
undertaking,
the
old
shareholders
receiving
shares
in
the
new
company.
In
the
Hooper
case
there
was
a
sale
by
the
old
company
to
a
new
company
(the
members
remaining
the
same)
and
the
old
company
ceased
to
exist.
This
is
illustrative
of
what
is
normally
done
in
a
reorganization.
However
this
does
not
mean
that
every
circumstance
outlined
by
Mr
Justice
Chitty
must
be
present
to
constitute
a
reorganization.
If
an
undertaking
of
some
definite
kind
is
being
carried
on
but
it
is
concluded
that
this
undertaking
should
not
be
wound
up
but
should
be
continued
in
an
altered
form
in
such
manner
that
substantially
the
same
persons
will
continue
to
carry
on
the
undertaking,
that
is
what
I
understand
to
be
a
reorganization.
It
is
that
the
same
business
is
carried
on
by
the
same
persons
but
in
a
different
form.
In
In
re
South
African
Supply
&
Cold
Storage
Co,
[1904]
2
Ch
268,
Buckley,
J
said
that
the
word
“reconstruction”
did
not
have
a
definite
legal
meaning
but
that
it
is
a
commercial
term
and
even
as
a
commercial
term
it
bears
no
exact
definite
meaning.
He
therefore
continued
that
in
each
case
one
has
to
decide
whether
the
transaction
is
such
that,
in
the
meaning
of
commercial
men,
it
is
one
comprehended
in
the
term
“reconstruction”.
In
the
end
what
must
be
looked
at
is
the
fact
and
substance
of
the
transaction.
In
subsection
81(1)
the
word
“reorganization”
is
used
in
association
with
the
words
“winding-up”
and
“discontinuance”.
Both
of
those
words
contain
an
element
of
finality.
The
company
is
ended.
It
is
therefore
logical
to
assume
that
the
word
“reorganization”
presupposes
the
conclusion
of
the
conduct
of
the
business
in
one
form
and
its
continuance
in
a
different
form.
In
The
Shorter
Oxford
Dictionary,
3rd
ed,
at
page
1704,
the
word
“reorganization”
is
defined
as
“a
fresh
organization”
and
the
verb
“reorganize”
is
defined
as
“to
organize
anew”.
In
the
circumstances
of
the
present
case
there
has
been
no
“fresh”
organization.
The
same
company
continued
the
same
business
in
the
same
manner
and
in
the
same
form.
The
only
difference
was
that
by
reason
of
the
sale
of
its
premises
the
Company
operated
the
same
business
from
the
same
premises
which
were
rented
by
it
rather
than
being
owned
by
it.
This
was
merely
the
sale
by
the
Company
of
a
capital
asset
which
did
not
result
in
the
end
of
the
business
of
the
Company.
It
might
have
bought
other
premises
from
which
to
carry
on
its
business
but
it
chose
to
continue
its
business
from
the
rented
premises
it
had
owned
formerly.
Obviously
this
would
not
affect
the
conduct
of
its
business
per
se
but
only
the
manner
in
which
the
Company
held
the
premises
from
which
it
conducted
its
business.
In
my
view
this
is
not
a
“reorganization”
of
the
business
in
a
commercial
sense
nor
in
the
sense
of
the
word
as
contemplated
in
subsection
81(1).
This
being
so
it
follows
that
the
appellant’s
contention
in
this
respect
must
fail.
Because
of
the
conclusion
I
have
reached
it
becomes
unnecessary
to
consider
if
any
benefit
which
may
have
been
conferred
upon
the
appellant
was
a
dividend
to
the
extent
of
the
undistributed
income
on
hand
by
the
Company
and
as
a
dividend
would
entitle
the
appellant
to
a
dividend
tax
credit
under
section
38
of
the
Act.
It
was
the
contention
of
the
appellant
that
he
received
no
benefit
from
the
improvements,
first
because
the
improvements
were
tenant
improvements
designed
to
facilitate
the
conduct
of
the
tenant’s
business
from
those
premises
and
so
did
not
enhance
the
value
of
the
premises
to
the
landlord.
Secondly
and
for
substantially
the
same
reason
the
appellant
contended
that
the
fair
market
value
of
the
premises
was
not
increased
by
the
nature
of
the
improvements
and
lastly,
if
there
was
a
benefit
conferred
on
the
appellant
it
was
not
received
by
him
in
the
1965
or
1966
taxation
years.
It
is
clear
from
the
very
nature
of
the
renovations
and
improvements
that
they
were
fixtures
and
as
such
became
part
of
the
realty.
It
was
contemplated
from
the
outset
that
these
improvements
and
additions,
with
the
exception
of
two
items
which
are
not
included
in
the
amounts
in
dispute,
would
not
be
removed
on
the
expiration
of
the
lease.
Further
the
improvements
were
of
a
permanent
character,
integrated
with
the
existing
buildings
and
could
not
be
removed
with
any
economic
advantage
to
the
tenant
even
if
their
removal
had
been
contemplated
which
it
was
not.
This
is
in
accordance
with
the
evidence
adduced
despite
a
provision
in
the
lease
that
the
tenant
may
remove
the
fixtures
if
no
damage
is
done
to
the
realty
or
if
damage
is
done
by
removal
it
shall
be
paid
for
by
the
tenant.
The
appellant
did
contribute
$100,000
towards
the
cost
of
those
renovations.
The
evidence
was
that
the
appellant
was
restricted
by
his
finances
to
that
amount.
He
considered
that
he
could
not
and
he
was
not
prepared
to
commit
himself
to
an
amount
greater
than
$259,000,
which
includes
$100,000
for
renovations.
The
cost
of
the
improvements
in
1965
exceeded
the
amount
of
$100,000
paid
by
the
appellant
by
approximately
$85,000
which
the
Minister
seeks
to
add
to
the
appellant’s
income
in
that
year.
The
Company
paid
that
additional
amount.
As
I
understand
the
appellant’s
position,
it
was
that
only
$100,000
of
the
amount
expended
on
the
property
could
be
regarded
as
ultimately
enhancing
the
value
of
the
appellant’s
interest
as
landlord
and
that
the
balance
of
$85,370.62
was
expended
by
the
Company
for
its
own
benefit
as
tenant.
I
fail
to
follow
the
logic
of
this
segregation.
The
total
expenditure
of
$185,370.62
was
to
render
the
site
a
suitable
one
from
which
to
carry
on
an
automobile
dealership.
Therefore
all
the
improvements
would
be
tenant’s
improvements
in
that
sense.
However
the
appellant
did
expend
$100,000
towards
those
improvements
and
he
did
receive
compensation
therefor
by
way
of
an
increased
rental,
coincident
with
a
9%
return
on
his
investment.
Therefore
he
received
a
benefit
from
his
expenditure
by
way
of
increased
rental.
The
appellant
became
the
owner
of
all
improvements
when
effected
even
though
he
did
not
pay
for
them
in
full.
Upon
the
expiration
of
the
Company’s
lease
the
advantage
of
the
improvements
paid
for
by
the
Company
would
enure
to
the
appellant
in
that
he
could
exact
a
greater
rental
from
another
tenant
engaged
in
the
automobile
business.
In
that
sense
they
are
a
potential
benefit
to
him.
Therefore
the
whole
of
the
improvements
are
within
the
same
category.
The
question
which
arises
is
whether
improvements
effected
by
a
tenant
for
its
own
convenience
but
which
vest
in
the
landlord
as
owner
are
a
benefit
to
the
landlord.
Provided
those
improvements
can
be
utilized
by
the
landlord,
I
fail
to
follow
how
they
cannot
be
other
than
a
benefit
to
the
landlord
and
this
is
more
abundantly
clear
when
the
fair
market
value
of
the
property
is
increased
thereby.
It
is
simply
that
the
landlord
owns
a
more
valuable
property.
In
the
circumstances
of
this
case
there
is
no
question
that
the
additions
to
and
renovations
of
the
property
vested
in
the
appellant
as
owner
from
the
moment
they
were
effected.
The
ancillary
question
which
arises
is
when
the
benefit
was
received
by
the
appellant.
The
Minister,
in
assessing
the
appellant
as
he
did,
obviously
did
so
on
the
basis
that
the
appellant
became
the
owner
of
the
improvements
to
the
property
when
they
were
completed,
that
cost
$85,370.62
in
1965
and
$42,439.71
in
1966
and
that
the
appellant
immediately
benefited
thereby.
It
shoud
be
borne
in
mind
that
the
appellant
had
granted
a
lease
to
the
Company
for
an
unexpired
term
of
4
/2
years
(Exhibit
A-12).
The
lease
expired
on
December
31,
1969.
There
was
a
renewal
privilege
to
the
tenant
for
a
further
period
of
one
year
on
the
identical
terms
and
for
further
periods
of
one
year
upon
notice
until
the
lease
expires
or
is
terminated.
It
is
the
contention
on
behalf
of
the
appellant
that
taxation
must
be
predicated
upon
the
actual
receipt
of
the
benefit
and
that
the
appellant’s
entitlement
to
receive
the
benefit
on
a
future
date,
that
is
upon
the
termination
of
the
lease,
does
not
justify
immediate
taxation.
It
is
inherent
in
this
contention
that
the
benefit
did
not
accrue
when
the
improvements
were
effected.
In
King
v
Earl
Cadogan,
[1915]
3
KB
485
(CA)
there
was
an
agreement
between
the
lessee
of
licensed
premises
and
the
landlord
whereby
the
lessee
expended
the
sum
of
£5,000
in
rebuilding
the
premises
and
had
surrendered
an
unexpired
lease
of
the
premises.
The
lessor
then
granted
the
lessee
another
lease
of
the
premises
for
a
90-year
term
at
an
increased
rental.
The
question
arose
whether
the
lessee
was
entitled
to
recover
a
statutory
debt
described
in
the
Finance
Act
as
being
so
much
of
the
increased
licence
duty
as
is
proportionate
to
the
increased
rent
or
premium
payable
in
respect
of
the
premises
being
let
as
licensed
premises.
Before
Mr
Justice
Bray
in
the
King’s
Bench
Division
([1915]
1
KB
821)
it
was
contended
that
the
£5,000
expended
by
the
lessee
was
a
premium
received
by
the
landlord.
Bray,
J
held
it
was
not
and
in
this
conclusion
he
was
confirmed
by
the
Court
of
Appeal.
He
said
at
page
828:
.
.
.
The
effect
of
giving
that
meaning
would
be
that
the
landlord
would
have
to
pay
exactly
the
same
proportionate
part
of
his
rent,
whether
he
has
received
£5,000
into
his
pocket
or
only
has
whatever
benefit
there
may
be
to
him
when
the
tenant
has
expended
£5,000
upon
the
property
which
he,
the
tenant,
is
to
retain
for
ninety
years.
The
value
to
the
landlord
of
this
covenant
is
only
a
minute
proportion
of
£5,000.
He
gets
the
benefit,
undoubtedly,
of
an
increased
security
during
the
lease,
and
at
the
end
of
the
ninety
years
he
will
get
a
property
which
may
be
increased
in
value.
The
two
things
are
absolutely
different.
In
one
case
the
landlord
would
at
once
get
£5,000
into
his
pocket;
in
the
other
it
would
probably
be
an
exaggeration
to
say
he
would
get
£100.
Mr
Justice
Bray
was
called
upon
to
interpret
a
section
of
a
statute
which
is
for
a
different
purpose
and
in
far
different
language
from
subsection
8(1)
of
the
Income
Tax
Act
which
I
am
obliged
to
interpret.
He
was
obliged
to
determine
if
the
£5,000
expended
by
a
tenant
was
in
the
nature
of
an
increased
rent
or
premium
to
the
tenant.
In
concluding
that
it
was
not
he
posed
himself
the
question
as
to
what
advantage
there
was
to
the
landlord.
He
said
that
the
share
of
the
increased
licence
duty
the
landlord
would
pay
would
be
the
same
if
he
got
the
£5,000
forthwith
in
cash
as
he
would
if,
as
in
the
circumstances
of
the
case,
the
benefit
he
got
was
that
the
tenant
expended
£5,000
upon
the
property
which
the
tenant
would
retain
for
90
years.
At
the
end
of
the
lease
the
landlord
would
get
a
property
increased
in
value,
but
that
the
value
of
that
increase
at
that
time
was
problematical.
For
that
reason
he
held
that
it
was
not
a
premium.
However
different
considerations
are
applicable
under
subsection
8(1)
of
the
Income
Tax
Act.
The
questions
which
I
must
answer
are
first,
was
a
benefit
conferred
upon
the
appellant,
second,
when
was
that
benefit
conferred
and
lastly
what
was
the
value
of
that
benefit
when
conferred.
There
is
no
doubt
that
the
appellant
herein
as
landlord
had
a
benefit
conferred
on
him.
The
comments
of
Bray,
J
confirm
my
conclusion
that
the
appellant
received
a
benefit
but
because
of
the
context
in
which
they
were
made
they
are
not
helpful
to
me
in
determining
when
the
benefit
was
conferred
or
the
value
of
the
benefit
at
that
time.
I
have
found
guidance
in
St-Germain
v
MNR,
[1969]
CTC
194;
69
DTC
5086.
The
material
facts
in
this
case
are
that
the
appellant
was
the
sole
beneficial
owner
of
all
the
shares
in
a
company.
By
an
oral
lease
a
building
owned
by
the
appellant
personally
was
leased
to
the
company
on
a
monthly
tenancy.
The
company
expended
$71,000
in
making
improvements
and
additions
to
the
building.
In
assessing
the
appellant
to
income
tax
in
his
1959,
1960
and
1961
taxation
years
the
Minister
added
to
the
appellant’s
income
the
amounts
expended
by
the
company
in
each
such
year,
a
total
for
the
three
years
of
$71,000,
and
in
doing
so
he
relied
on
paragraph
8(1)(c)
as
the
expenditure
being
a
benefit
or
advantage
conferred
by
the
company
on
the
appellant
as
a
shareholder.
Mr
Justice
Abbott,
speaking
for
the
majority
of
the
Court,
said
at
page
197
[5088]:
At
the
hearing
before
us,
counsel
for
respondent
was
informed
that,
if
the
improvements
and
additions
to
the
property
belonged
to
the
appellant
as
owner,
from
the
time
they
were
effected,
the
Court
was
satisfied
that
Section
8(1)
does
apply
and
that
we
did
not
need
to
hear
him
on
that
point.
While
Mr
Justice
Pigeon
dissented
on
another
point
the
Court
was
unanimous
in
the
above
quotation.
It
is
clear
from
the
quotation
that
the
Supreme
Court
has
characterized
this
type
of
transaction
as
one
within
subsection
8(1).
There
is
no
distinction
in
the
facts
in
the
present
appeals
and
those
in
the
St-Germain
case
(supra)
other
than
that
in
the
St-Germain
case
the
lease
was
on
a
monthly
basis
rather
than
for
a
term
of
five
years
with
renewal
privileges
as
in
the
present
case.
In
both
cases
the
property
was
sold
to
an
outsider
after
the
improvements
had
been
made.
In
neither
case
was
actual
cash
paid
to
the
shareholder
in
the
years
in
which
the
shareholder’s
income
was
increased
by
the
Minister
by
the
amount
of
the
benefit
conferred.
In
both
cases
the
improvements
made
were
of
a
permanent
character
integrated
into
the
buildings
and
could
not
be
economically
removed
by
the
tenant
nor
was
it
contemplated
that
they
would
be
removed.
The
reasoning
of
the
Supreme
Court
concerned
itself
with
the
ownership
of
the
improvements.
In
the
result
it
was
that
the
ownership
of
the
improvements
vested
in
the
landlord
forthwith
upon
their
completion
and
that
a
benefit
was
conferred
at
that
time.
The
matter
of
the
length
of
the
term
of
the
lease
or
free
possession
of
the
improvements
were
not
considerations
in
the
decision.
That
being
so
it
follows
that
the
length
of
the
term
of
the
lease
is
not
a
material
consideration
in
the
present
appeals.
For
the
foregoing
reasons
I
conclude
that
a
benefit
was
conferred
upon
the
appellant
by
the
Company
of
which
he
was
a
shareholder
within
the
meaning
of
paragraph
8(1)(c)
of
the
Act
and
that
that
benefit
was
so
conferred
upon
the
appellant
in
1965
and
1966,
the
years
in
which
the
improvements
were
made
at
the
expense
of
the
Company.
Therefore
the
sole
remaining
question
is
the
value
of
those
improvements.
The
formula
adopted
by
the
Minister
to
arrive
at
the
value
of
the
benefit
conferred
upon
the
appellant
was
the
difference
between
the
purchase
price
of
the
property
without
the
renovation
and
additions
and
the
fair
market
value
after
the
improvements
had
been
effected.
Counsel
for
the
appellant
accepted
that
formula
but
he
disputed
the
Minister’s
conclusion
as
to
what
the
fair
market
value
was.
Evidence
of
expert
witnesses
was
adduced
with
respect
to
the
fair
market
value
of
the
property
as
at
December
31,
1965
and
as
is
usually
the
case
there
was
a
wide
divergence
between
those
opinions.
Mr
Simmons,
who
was
called
on
behalf
of
the
appellant,
expressed
the
opinion
that
the
property
had
a
market
value
of
$260,000.
In
short
he
concluded
that
the
improvements
did
not
contribute
to
the
overall
market
value.
On
the
other
hand,
Mr
Mather,
who
was
called
on
behalf
of
the
Minister,
expressed
the
opinion
that
the
market
value
of
the
property
as
at
December
31,
1965
was
$350,000.
The
Minister
in
assessing
the
appellant
accepted
the
fair
market
value
of
the
lands
and
premises
after
the
buildings
had
been
completed
and
prior
to
the
sale
by
the
Company
to
the
appellant
as
$344,883.
The
difference
between
the
opinions
of
Mr
Simmons
and
Mr
Mather
as
to
the
respective
market
value
of
$260,000
and
$350,000
in
my
opinion
may
be
attributed
fundamentally
to
their
disagreement
as
to
what
constituted
the
highest
and
best
use
of
the
property.
In
this
connection
Mr
Mather
said
in
his
report:
The
highest
and
best
use
of
a
property
is
the
use
which
will
provide
the
greatest
net
return
to
the
investment
in
the
land.
In
the
case
of
the
subject
property,
which
is
consistent
with
other
commercial
uses
along
this
section
of
Lakeshore
Road
West
and
has
a
land
area
much
larger
than
the
usual
commercial
enterprise,
it
is
our
opinion
that
it
was
at
the
date
of
appraisal
developed
to
its
highest
and
best
use
as
an
automobile
dealership.
On
this
subject
Mr
Simmons
reported:
In
considering
the
highest
and
best
use
of
the
subject
property,
which
would
produce
the
greatest
net
revenue
over
the
longest
period
of
time,
the
following
factors
were
considered.
As
of
the
effective
date
of
this
report,
December
31,
1965,
the
property
was
zoned
C-3
for
commercial
purposes,
which
permits
the
use
of
an
automobile
dealership,
together
with
several
other
commercial
industrial
oriented
uses.
However,
it
should
be
pointed
out
that
since
the
original
acquisition
in
January
1965,
there
have
been
several
major
new
developments
in
the
Trafalgar
Road
—
Q.E.
Highway
area,
which
are
indicative
of
the
recent
trend
away
from
the
original
core
area.
The
significance
of
this
northerly
shift
is
that
the
location
of
several
major
commercial
outlets
in
the
northerly
end
has
left
the
downtown
area
considerably
less
desirable
from
a
retail
standpoint.
Principally
due
to
congested
traffic
and
lack
of
adequate
parking
facilities.
With
continued
development
in
the
northerly
areas
it
is
reasonable
to
assume
that
eventually
the
subject
property
will
no
longer
lend
i-self
to
commercial/industrial
uses.
Sometime,
in
the
not
too
distant
future
its
highest
&
best
use
is
likely
to
change
to
a
high
density
apartment
development
use.
However
until
that
time
it
is
the
appraisers
opinion
that
its
current
use
as
a
commercial/industrial
use
represents
its
highest
and
best
use.
It
is
apparent
that
Mr
Simmons,
while
recognizing
that
the
highest
and
best
use
of
the
property
was
its
current
use
as
the
site
of
an
automobile
dealership,
contemplated
that
such
use
would
change
in
the
near
future
to
that
of
high
density
apartment
development
use.
This
factor
obviously
influenced
his
appraisal
and
his
conclusion
that
the
improvements
added
nothing
to
the
market
value
of
the
property.
That
conclusion
must
be
based
on
the
premise
that
there
was
no
market
for
the
property
to
other
automobile
dealers
to
whom
the
improvements
would
be
suitable.
An
event
subsequent
has
a
material
bearing
on
this
subject.
Contrary
to
the
policy
of
other
major
automobile
manufacturers,
Ford
did
not
own
the
premises
from
which
its
franchised
dealers
conducted
their
businesses.
The
dealers
were
responsible
for
providing
their
own
premises.
Sometime
about
1968,
which
is
after
the
taxation
years
here
in
question,
Ford
changed
that
policy
and
in
certain
circumstances
would
acquire
ownership
of
the
premises
of
its
franchised
dealers.
Because
of
his
close
association
with
Ford
the
appellant
learned
of
this
change
in
policy
by
Ford
and
he
forthwith
began
the
negotiation
of
the
sale
of
the
property
owned
by
him
in
Oakville
to
Ford.
He
obtained
an
appraisal
by
Mr
Mason
who
was
a
principal
in
the
Company
which
employed
Mr
Simmons.
Mr
Mason’s
appraisal
was
made
as
of
December
19,
1968.
Mr
Simmons
was
aware
of
that
appraisal
because
he
assisted
Mr
Mason
in
preparing
the
“spade”
work
but
the
responsibility
for
the
conclusions
therein
was
Mr
Mason’s
and
not
that
of
Mr
Simmons.
Mr
Mason
predicated
his
appraisal
on
the
highest
and
best
use
of
the
property
being
a
continuation
of
its
use
as
an
automobile
dealership
and
he
rejected
its
use
as
an
apartment
site
for
which
the
value
was
probably
higher
in
his
opinion.
He
concluded
the
fair
market
value
of
the
property
to
be
$543,400
as
at
December
10,
1968.
Between
1965
and
1968
Kennedy
Ford
had
expended
$54,000
on
further
improvements
of
which
$42,439.17
was
spent
in
1966
and
is
the
subject
of
dispute
in
the
assessment
of
the
appellant
in
that
year.
Because
Ford
was
contemplating
the
purchase
of
the
appellant’s
property
it
naturally
obtained
an
appraisal.
The
appellant
because
of
his
prior
association
with
Ford
knew
that
a
material
consideration
was
the
volume
of
sale
of
new
cars.
With
this
knowledge
in
mine
the
appellant,
as
president
of
Kennedy
Ford,
embarked
upon
an
aggressive
sales
campaign
and
substantially
increased
the
number
of
new
Cars
sold.
The
appraisal
on
behalf
of
Ford
was
done
by
Mr
Gleadow.
He
considered
the
highest
use
of
the
property
to
be
that
of
an
automobile
dealership.
He
concluded
that
the
value
of
the
property
as
at
August
9,
1968
was
$565,00.
In
the
negotiations
between
Ford
and
the
appellant
both
parties
freely
exchanged
the
appraisals
in
their
possession.
The
property
was
sold
by
the
appellant
to
Ford
pursuant
to
ar
option
to
purchase
for
a
total
price
of
$543,400
which
coincides
with
the
estimate
of
market
value
given
to
the
appellant
by
Mr
Mason.
Upon
completion
of
the
sale
to
Ford
the
property
was
leased
back
to
Kennedy
Ford
at
rental
of
$4,200
a
month
which
is
an
increase
over
the
monthly
rental
of
$1,935
paid
by
the
Company
to
the
appellant.
It
was
understood
that
the
property
would
be
leased
back
to
the
Company
prior
to
the
sale
to
Ford
by
the
appellant.
In
my
view
the
highest
and
best
use
of
the
appellant’s
property
is
that
of
the
conduct
of
the
business
of
an
automobile
dealership
for
which
purpose
the
improvements
to
the
property
were
specifically
designed.
Any
appraisal
of
the
property
must
take
into
account
the
value
of
the
buildings
and
improvements
on
the
land
representing
that
highest
and
best
use.
In
Lake
Erie
&
Northern
R
Co
v
Brantford
Golf
and
Country
Club
(1917),
32
DLR
219,
Duff,
J
in
discussing
the
phrase
“‘the
value
to
the
owner’’
after
saying
that
it
did
not
imply
that
“compensation
is
to
be
given
for
value
resting
on
motives
and
considerations
that
cannot
be
measured
by
any
economic
standard,
continued
at
page
229
to
say:
It
does
not
follow,
of
course,
that
the
owner
whose
land
is
compulsorily
taken
is
entitled
only
to
compensation
measured
by
the
scale
of
the
selling
price
of
the
land
in
the
open
market.
He
is
entitled
to
that
in
any
event,
but
in
his
hands
the
land
may
be
capable
of
being
used
for
the
purpose
of
some
profitable
business
which
he
is
carrying
on
or
desires
to
carry
on
upon
it
and
in
such
circumstances
it
may
well
be
that
the
selling
price
of
the
land
in
the
open
market
would
be
no
adequate
compensation
to
him
for
the
loss
of
the
opportunity
to
carry
on
that
business
there.
.
.
.
The
principle
is
that
in
determining
market
value
the
value
in
the
open
market
is
taken
to
which
is
added
the
value
of
those
features
which
are
of
special
suitability
to
the
highest
and
best
use.
In
my
view
Mr
Simmons
in
appraising
the
property
did
so
on
the
basis
of
it
being
vacant
land
without
regard
to
the
improvements
which
made
the
property
particularly
suitable
for
its
special
use.
He
must
have
done
so
on
the
premise
that
there
was
no
market
for
the
property
as
an
automobile
dealership.
That
was,
in
my
opinion,
an
erroneous
premise.
While
it
is
true
that
the
market
for
property
suitable
for
an
automobile
dealer
is
restricted
to
purchasers
in
that
category,
nevertheless
that
market
exists
as
is
demonstrated
by
the
subsequent
event
in
the
present
case
that
the
property
in
fact
was
sold
for
use
as
an
automobile
dealership.
In
Mr
Simmons’
opinion
the
highest
and
best
use
of
the
property
in
the
near
future
was
for
high
density
apartment
development.
By
the
same
token
the
market
would
be
restricted
likewise
to
land
developers.
Accordingly
I
do
not
accept
Mr
Simmons’
appraisal
of
the
property
at
$260,000
which
attributes
no
value
whatsoever
to
the
improvements
made.
In
my
view
it
is
too
low.
The
mechanics
of
the
sale
by
Kennedy
Ford
to
the
appellant
was
that
the
purchase
price
was
$259,513
in
payment
of
which
the
appellant
paid
$1,513
in
cash
and
assumed
two
mortgages
in
the
total
amount
of
$311,000
for
a
total
of
$312,513.
Because
the
obligations
assumed
by
the
appellant
exceeded
the
agreed
purchase
price
of
$259,513
by
$53,000
Kennedy
Ford
gave
the
appellant
its
promissory
note
in
the
amount
of
the
difference
of
$53,000.
The
note
was
payable
in
monthly
instalments
over
a
period
ending
December
31,
1985,
with
the
entire
amount
falling
due
on
termination
of
the
lease
between
them.
The
net
result
was
that
the
purchase
price
remained
at
what
the
appellant
agreed
to
pay
the
Company
and
was
not
increased
to
the
extent
of
the
additional
commitment
he
assumed
because
that
increase
was
Satisfied
by
the
promissory
note.
The
purchase
price
of
the
property
paid
by
Kennedy
Ford
was
$223,000.
The
Company
spent
the
undisputed
amount
of
$185,370
on
improvements
in
1965.
Those
two
figures
total
$408,370.
By
deducting
$64,000,
being
the
sale
price
to
Texaco
of
a
portion
of
the
land,
there
results
an
amount
of
$344,370.
Added
to
this
is
an
indeterminate
amount
approximating
$24,000
to
reclaim
a
water
course
on
the
property
which
would
bring
that
amount
to
$368,370.
That
figure,
if
taken
as
the
fair
market
value,
would
attribute
to
the
value
of
the
improvements
the
cost
thereof.
Mr
Mather’s
estimate
of
the
fair
market
value
of
$350,000
closely
approximates
the
figure
of
$368,370
which
includes
the
improvements
at
their
cost.
Four
years
subsequent
to
December
31,
1965
the
property
was
sold
to
Ford
in
July
1969
for
$543,400.
In
the
interval
an
additional
$54,000
was
expended
on
improvements.
A
deduction
of
that
amount
from
the
sale
price
would
leave
the
amount
of
$489,400.
It
must
be
borne
in
mind
that
the
property
may
have
appreciated
in
value
over
those
four
years.
Mr
Simmons
indicated
that
appreciation
would
be
10%.
This
would
result
in
an
unappreciated
amount
of
approximately
$440,000
in
1965
which
is
substantially
in
excess
of
the
amount
of
$344,883
which
the
Minister
assumed
to
be
the
fair
market
value
in
assessing
the
appellant
as
he
did
in
the
appellant’s
1965
taxation
year.
In
my
opinion
the
appellant
has
failed
to
discharge
the
onus
that
was
his
to
demolish
the
assumption
of
the
Minister
that
the
fair
market
value
of
the
property
was
not
less
than
$344,883
upon
the
basis
of
which
assumption
taxation
rested.
It
follows
that
the
difference
of
$85,370.62
between
the
price
paid
by
the
appellant
to
Kennedy
Ford
in
the
amount
of
$259,513
and
the
fair
market
value
of
the
property
of
$344,883.62
after
the
improvements
were
effected
in
1965
represents
an
amount
for
which
the
appellant
gave
no
value.
That
difference
coincides
with
the
cost
of
the
improvements
made
by
and
paid
for
by
the
Company.
Thus
that
difference
is
a
benefit
or
advantage
conferred
upon
the
appellant
by
the
Company
within
the
meaning
of
paragraph
8(1
)(c)
of
the
Act
and
is,
therefore,
subject
to
tax
and
accordingly
the
assessment
for
1965
must
stand.
In
the
1966
taxation
year
the
Company
expended
a
further
$42,439.91
in
making
improvements
to
the
hereditament
owned
by
the
appellant
for
which
the
appellant
did
not
pay.
In
St-Germain
v
MNR
(supra)
it
was
held
that
the
improvements
belonged
to
the
owner
of
the
property
from
the
time
they
were
effected.
The
assumption
of
the
Minister
in
assessing.
the
appellant
for
the
1966
taxation
year
was
that
the
benefit
conferred
upon
the
appellant
is
the
cost
of
those
improvements,
that
is,
$42,439.71,
in
that
year.
Again,
in
my
opinion,
the
appellant
has
not
discharged
the
onus
upon
him
to
demolish
the
assumption
on
which
the
assessment
was
based.
The
result
will
be
that
since
the
appellant
has
not
shown
any
error
in
the
assessments
to
which
he
objects,
they
must
stand
and
the
appeals
are
dismissed
with
costs.