Supreme Court of Canada
Minister
of National Revenue v. MacInnes, [1963] S.C.R. 299
Date:
1963-05-10
The Minister of National Revenue Appellant;
and
William Hedley Macinnes Respondent.
1963: May 10.
Present: Taschereau C.J. and Fauteux, Judson, Ritchie and
Hall JJ.
ON APPEAL FROM THE EXCHEQUER COURT OF CANADA.
Taxation—Income tax—Mortgages purchased at a discount
and held to maturity—Whether profits taxable income—Income War Tax Act, R.S.C.
1927, c. 97, s. 3—Income Tax Act, 1948 (Can.), c. 52, ss. 3 and 4—Income Tax
Act, R.S.C. 1952, c. 148, ss. 3 and 4.
[Page 300]
The respondent, an elderly businessman, was principally
occupied as a soap manufacturer. Between 1944 and 1954 he purchased 309
mortgages at a discount from mortgages offered to him by various real estate
agents. The mortgages so purchased were first mortgages but were regarded as
substandard by mortgage companies; they were generally for amounts ranging from
$1,500 to $3,000 and for a term of five to eight years. In the years 1946 to
1954 the respondent realized discounts on 113 of these mortgages which either
matured or were paid off during that period. The discounts thus realized were
assessed as income by the Minister. The Exchequer Court in dismissing an appeal
from a judgment of the Tax Appeal Board held (a) that the discounts realized in
the years 1946 to 1948 were not profits from a trade or business within s. 3 of
the Income War Tax Act, and (b) that the discounts realized in the years
1949 to 1954 were not profits from a business within the meaning of that term
as defined in the Income Tax Act. The Minister appealed to this Court.
Held: The appeal should be allowed.
It was quite impossible to distinguish this case, even on the
facts, from those in Scott v. Minister of National Revenue, [1963]
S.C.R. 223. The respondent was engaged in the highly speculative business of
purchasing mortgages at a discount and holding them to maturity in order to
realize the maximum amount of profit out of the transaction. The discounts
realized by him were taxable income since they were profits or gains from a
trade or business within the meaning of s. 3 of the Income War Tax Act, R.S.C.
1927, c. 97, and income from a business within the meaning of ss. 3 and 4 of
the Income Tax Act, 1948 (Can.), c. 52, or ss. 3 and 4 of the Income
Tax Act, R.S.C. 1952, c. 148.
Argue v. Minister of National Revenue, [1948] S.C.R.
467, distinguished.
APPEAL from a judgment of Thurlow J. of the Exchequer
Court of Canada,
affirming with a variation a judgment of the Tax Appeal Board. Appeal allowed.
D. S. Maxwell, Q.C., and G. Ainslie, for
the appellant.
K. Eaton and B. Crane, for the
respondent.
The judgment of the Court was delivered by
Judson J.:—The
Minister of National Revenue appeals from the judgment of the Exchequer Court, which held (a) that certain
discounts realized in the years 1946 to 1948 on the purchase of mortgages were
not profits from a trade or business within s. 3 of the Income War Tax Act, and
(b) that similar discounts realized in the years 1949 to 1954 were not profits
from a business within the meaning of that term as defined in the Income Tax
Act. It is the unanimous opinion of the Court that these receipts were
taxable under the appropriate legislation.
As we are prepared on the facts, which are not disputed, to
draw inferences different from those of the learned trial judge, it is
necessary to state them in brief outline.
[Page 301]
The Minister, in making the re-assessment for the taxation
years under appeal, added to the respondent's income the following amounts in
respect of discounts realized by the respondent on certain mortgages and
agreements for sale which he had purchased. These realized discounts were:
1946 .................................................................................. $ 750.00
1947 .................................................................................. 968.23
1948 .................................................................................. 1,523.17
1949 .................................................................................. 711.73
1950 .................................................................................. 1,397.00
1951 .................................................................................. 5,798.11
1952 .................................................................................. 8,212.72
1953 .................................................................................. 8,703.35
1954
.................................................................................. 10,667.67
$ 38,731.98
At the time of the hearing of the appeal, the respondent was
83 years of age. He had had a long and varied business career. He had also held
two offices in the Civil Service of the Province of British Columbia, one of
which was that of Official Administrator for the County of Vancouver, which he
held from 1925 to 1929. In the mid-thirties he went into the business of
manufacturing soap and he was carrying on that business at the time of the appeal.
In 1944 the respondent began to purchase substandard
mortgages at a discount. The following table shows by years the number of
mortgages purchased at a discount between 1944 and 1954, and the aggregate of
the amounts owing under the terms of the mortgages at the time they were
acquired by the respondent:
Year Number Purchase
Price Amount Owing
1944 ................... 3 $ 4,144.50 $ 4,860.00
1945 ................... 1 914.00 975.00
1946 ................... 23 46,577.66 51,592.02
1947 ................... 25 50,169.83 62,529.97
1948 ................... 22 9,063.70 60,743.57
1949 ................... 30 72,096.06 85,423.63
1950 ................... 31 78,922.09 96,787.38
1951 ................... 36 89,790.68 115,802.80
1952 ................... 60 170,068.41 212,590.07
1953 ................... 34 115,835.07 148,365.76
1954
................... 44 148,394.86 212,714.51
309 $ 825,976.86 $ 1,053,220.78 (*)
(*) The aggregate of the fourth column in the above table
is, in fact, $1,052,384.71, but the respondent conceded that the figure of
Sl,053,220.78, arrived at by the appellant's assessors was the correct figure.
[Page 302]
Of the 309 mortgages acquired during the period between 1944
and 1954, 113 either matured or were paid off and the respondent realized
discounts in the sum of $38,731.98. In addition to these 113 mortgages, three
or four additional mortgages in respect of which no discounts had been taken either
matured or were paid off.
At the end of the respondent's 1954 taxation year, 196 of
the 309 mortgages were still current and the amount of the unrealized discounts
was $171,000, and between 1954 and the date of the trial before the Exchequer
Court, the bulk of the discounts in relation to these mortgages had been
realized by the respondent.
Between 1954 and the date of the trial before the Exchequer
Court, the respondent was still as actively engaged in obtaining further
mortgages as he had been in the earlier years.
All of the mortgages which had been acquired at a discount
were first mortgages but were regarded as substandard, since in most cases the
principal amount secured represented up to two-thirds of the value of the
property, instead of 45 per cent of the sale value which, according to the
respondent's evidence, was the amount normally secured under a conventional
first mortgage. It was the respondent's view that to the extent that the
principal amount exceeded 45 per cent of the value of the property mortgaged,
there was a "second morgage factor" or a risk similar to that
attaching to a second mortgage. All of the 309 mortgages acquired by the
respondent were mortgages on which the principal repayable was in excess of 50
per cent of the value of the property mortgaged.
The sources of the funds with which the respondent acquired
these mortgages were the profits from the soap business, the sale in the late
forties and fifties of certain assets owned by him in Eastern Canada and the
payments being received by him on the existing mortgages.
Most of the mortgages acquired by the respondent were
mortgages on small old-fashioned houses with fir floors and old-fashioned
plumbing, located in South Vancouver and Burnaby. The mortgages were generally
for amounts ranging from $1,500 to $3,000 and for a term of five to eight
years. They bore the current rate of interest payable on
[Page 303]
first mortgages, and provided for monthly payments of
between $30 to $45 per month on account of interest and principal.
Generally, the respondent, before acquiring a mortgage,
would insist on the purchaser-mortgagor having an equity in the property
equivalent to one-third of its value and would acquire these mortgages at a
discount of 15 per cent.
The mortgages in question were all selected by the
respondent from those offered to him by various real estate agents in whom he
had reasonable confidence and who were constantly canvassing him to acquire
these mortgages. Originally, the respondent purchased most of the mortgages from
two real estate firms, but as time went on he dealt with up to ten or twelve
real estate firms. Persons acting for vendors in the sale of property knew that
the respondent was a person interested in purchasing substandard mortgages. The
respondent never bargained over the amount of the discount; he either accepted
or rejected the offer made by the real estate agent.
During the years in question, the respondent was principally
occupied in carrying on his business as a soap manufacturer. However, he gave evidence
to the effect that at all relevant times, the interest and discounts realized
from the mortgages were as great as his profits from the soap business.
The learned trial judge found:
… In my view there is nothing in the case which
characterizes what the respondnet did as anything but mere investment of funds
which he had available for investment.
… it would I think be unrealistic to look upon what he did
as a course of conduct or scheme directed primarily to the making of profit by
realizing such discounts. The interest return was of greater importance and the
most that could be said on this score is that his object was to get both …
… That these mortgages as a class were in fact good
securities is demonstrated by the result and though each involved some risk and
at that possibly a somewhat greater risk than the types in which the mortgage
companies were interested, I see nothing so unusual about them as to suggest
that the respondent chose them in the course of a gamble or adventure looking
to the realization of a speculative profit.
In our opinion there was error in the judgment of the
learned trial judge in failing to find on the evidence which I have outlined
that the respondent had engaged in the highly speculative business of
purchasing mortgages at a discount and holding them to maturity in order to
realize
[Page 304]
the maximum amount of profit out of the transaction, and in
failing to find that the discounts realized were taxable income since they were
profits or gains from a trade or business within the meaning of s. 3 of the Income
War Tax Act, R.S.C. 1927, c. 97, and income from a business within the
meaning of ss. 3 and 4 of the Income Tax Act, 1948 (Can.), c. 52, or ss.
3 and 4 of the Income Tax Act, R.S.C. 1952, c. 148.
It is quite impossible to distinguish this case, even on the
facts, from those in Scott v. Minister of National Revenue. We are also of the
opinion that Argue v. Minister of National Revenue is in no way relevant to
the issues raised in the present appeal. The problem in Argue was
whether what was admittedly interest earned on long-term real estate mortgages
and agreements could be regarded as income derived from the carrying on of a
money-lending business for the purposes of the Excess Profits Tax Act, 1940
(Can.), c. 32. There was no evidence in Argue that the mortgages
acquired were risky securities and there was no issue raised concerning either
discounts or bonuses. The Court was concerned exclusively with money paid to
Argue as interest. The Court simply held that there was no evidence which would
justify the finding that Argue was carrying on business as a money-lender—no
evidence which would serve to convert what was admittedly interest received
from securities into profits from a business.
The appeal should be allowed and the judgment of the
Exchequer Court reversed with costs and the re-assessments referred back to the
Minister in order to adjust the amount of the discounts realized and included
in the respondent's income in accordance with the table of discounts set out
above and totalling $38,731.98, counsel having agreed upon these amounts.
Appeal allowed with costs.
Solicitor for the appellant: E. S. MacLatchy,
Ottawa.
Solicitors for the respondent: Gowling, MacTavish,
Osborne & Henderson, Ottawa.