Collier,
J:—The
plaintiff
is
a
barrister
and
solicitor.
Until
July
1975
he
resided
and
worked
in
Ottawa.
He
was
employed
there
by
the
defendant.
In
July
1975
he
moved
to
British
Columbia.
He
took
up
new
employment
in
Vancouver.
He
sold
his
residence
in
Ottawa.
He
purchased
a
new
residence
in
Vancouver.
He
alleges
he
incurred,
as
moving
expenses,
an
amount
of
$32,283.08.
His
new
employer
contributed
$3,000.
He,
in
calculating
his
taxable
income
for
1975,
claimed
as
a
deduction
$29,283.08.
The
Minister
of
National
Revenue,
in
assessing
and
reassessing,
allowed
certain
of
the
deductions
claimed,
and
disallowed
others.
It
is
in
respect
of
the
latter
this
appeal
is
brought.
The
disputed
amounts
are
set
out
in
the
statement
of
claim
as
follows
(para
6):
(a)
$22,750
being
the
amount
paid
by
the
plaintiff,
in
excess
of
the
amount
received
by
him
as
proceeds
from
the
sale
of
his
old
residence,
to
acquire
his
new
residence,
(b)
$1,094.84
being
the
mortgage
interest
paid
in
1975
attributable
to
the
amount
of
$22,750
referred
to
above,
(c)
$135.20
being
the
amount
paid
in
1975
as
Land
Registry
Office
fees
on
the
purchase
of
the
plaintiff’s
new
residence.
(d)
$15
being
the
amount
paid
in
1975
as
an
installation
fee
for
telephone
service
at
the
plaintiff’s
new
residence,
(e)
$22.50
being
the
amount
paid
in
1975
as
an
installation
fee
for
cablevision
service
at
the
plaintiff’s
new
residence.
(f)
$107.49
being
the
amount
paid
in
1975
for
the
installation
of
the
dishwasher
at
the
plaintiff’s
new
residence,
and
(g)
$112
being
the
amount
paid
in
1975
to
install
new
locks
on
the
outside
doors
of
the
plaintiff’s
new
residence.
At
trial,
the
defendant
agreed
to
the
allowance
of
items
(d)
and
(e).
The
serious
difference
of
opinion
is,
of
course,
in
respect
of
items
(a)
and
(b).
The
parties
agreed
to
the
following
facts:
1.
The
plaintiff’s
old
residence
in
the
City
of
Ottawa
was
a
two-storey
brick,
four
bedroom
house
having
in
excess
of
2,000
square
feet
of
interior
space
constructed
in
or
about
1961
and
located
in
the
Alta
Vista
area;
2.
The
plaintiff’s
new
residence
acquired
in
Vancouver,
British
Columbia
is
a
two-storey,
stucco,
three
bedroom
house
having
total
interior
space
of
less
than
2,000
square
feet
constructed
in
or
about
1928
and
is
situated
in
the
Shaughnessy
district;
3.
The
plaintiff's
new
residence
is
smaller,
of
inferior
construction
and
older
than
his
old
residence
but
in
all
other
respects
the
two
houses
are
essentially
similar
in
character,
convenience,
condition,
lot
size
and
location
in
relation
to
amenities
and
to
the
plaintiff’s
place
of
employment.
4.
The
difference
between
the
amount
which
the
plaintiff
received
on
the
sale
of
his
old
residence
and
the
amount
which
he
was
required
to
pay
to
acquire
his
new
residence
arises
solely
from
the
difference
in
the
level
of
real
estate
prices
between
Ottawa
and
Vancouver
in
the
Spring
of
1975.
In
fact
by
all
indicia
other
than
market
criteria
the
plaintiff’s
old
residence
should
have
been
more
valuable
than
his
new
residence.
I
set
out,
next,
what
I
think
to
be
the
relevant
portions
of
the
relevant
provisions
of
the
Income
Tax
Act”,
as
they
stood
in
1975:
62.
(1)
Where
a
taxpayer
(a)
has,
at
any
time,
(i)
ceased
to
carry
on
business
or
to
be
employed
at
the
location
or
locations,
as
the
case
may
be,
in
Canada
at
which
he
ordinarily
so
carried
on
business
or
was
so
employed,
and
commenced
to
carry
on
a
business
or
to
be
employed
at
another
location
in
Canada
(hereinafter
referred
to
as
his
“new
work
location’’),
and
by
reason
thereof
has
moved
from
the
residence
in
Canada
at
which,
before
the
move,
he
ordinarily
resided
on
ordinary
working
days
(hereinafter
referred
to
as
his
‘‘old
residence’’)
to
a
residence
in
Canada
at
which,
after
the
move,
he
ordinarily
so
resided
(hereinafter
referred
to
as
his
“new
residence’’),
so
that
the
distance
between
his
old
residence
and
his
new
work
location
is
not
less
than
25
miles
greater
than
the
distance
between
his
new
residence
and
his
new
work
location,
in
computing
his
income
for
the
taxation
year
in
which
he
moved
from
his
old
residence
to
his
new
residence
or
for
the
immediately
following
taxation
year,
there
may
be
deducted
amounts
paid
by
him
as
or
on
account
of
moving
expenses
incurred
in
the
course
of
moving
from
his
old
residence
to
his
new
residence,
to
the
extent
that
(3)
In
subsection
(1),
“moving
expenses’’
includes
any
expense
incurred
as
or
on
account
of
(a)
travelling
costs
(including
a
reasonable
amount
expended
for
meals
and
lodging),
in
the
course
of
moving
the
taxpayer
and
members
of
his
household
from
his
old
residence
to
his
new
residence,
(b)
the
cost
to
him
of
transporting
or
storing
household
effects
in
the
course
of
moving
from
his
old
residence
to
his
new
residence,
(c)
the
cost
to
him
of
meals
and
lodging
near
the
old
residence
or
the
new
residence
for
the
taxpayer
and
members
of
his
household
for
a
period
not
exceeding
15
days,
(d)
the
cost
to
him
of
cancelling
the
lease,
if
any,
by
virtue
of
which
he
was
the
lessee
of
his
old
residence,
and
(e)
his
selling
costs
in
respect
of
the
sale
of
his
old
residence.
“Moving
expenses’’
is
not,
in
the
statute,
otherwise
defined.
The
main
issue,
in
this
appeal,
is
whether
the
additional
monies
laid
out
by
the
taxpayer,
when
he
moved,
in
acquiring
a
new
residence
reasonably
comparable
to
his
old
residence,
were
amounts
paid
by
him
as
or
on
account
of
moving
expenses
incurred
in
the
course
of
moving
from
his
old
residence
to
his
new
residence.
I
agree
with
certain
initial
propositions
put
forward
by
counsel
for
the
plaintiff:
(a)
Where
a
definition
section
uses
the
words
“includes”,
as
it
does
in
ss
62(3),
then
the
expression
said
to
be
defined
includes
not
only
those
things
declared
to
be
included,
but
such
other
things
“.
.
.
as
the
word
signifies
according
to
its
natural
import.”
The
King
v
BC
Fir
and
Cedar
Lumber
Co
Ltd,
[1932]
AC
441
at
448
(JCPC).
(b)
The
words
“moving
expenses”
must
be
construed
in
their
ordinary
and
natural
sense
in
their
context
in
the
particular
statute*.
The
plaintiff
submits
that
a
moving
expense
is
an
expense
of
moving
from
one
dwelling
to
another;
it
includes
all
costs
directly
and
solely
related
to
the
move
from
the
time
of
the
decision
to
leave
to
the
time
of
resettlement.
The
additional
monies
laid
out
to
acquire
a
comparable
residence
in
Vancouver,
the
interest
on
that
amount,
and
the
costs
of
registration,
of
installing
the
dishwasher
and
new
locks
were
all
incurred,
it
is
said,
because
of
the
move
from
one
residence
to
another.
For
the
defendant,
it
is
contended
the
amounts
in
issue
are
not
really
expenses
at
all;
they
are
the
extra
costs
incurred,
in
this
case,
in
replacing
an
asset,
the
old
residence.
I
agree
generally
with
the
defendant’s
contention.
The
disputed
outlays
were
not,
to
my
mind,
moving
expenses
in
the
natural
and
ordinary
meaning
of
that
expression.
The
outlays
or.
costs
embraced
by
those
words
are,
in
my
view,
the
ordinary
out-of-pocket
expenses
incurred
by
a
taxpayer
in
the
course
of
physically
changing
his
residence.
The
expression
does
not
include
(except
as
may
be
specifically
delineated
in
subsection
62(3))
such
things
as
the
increase
in
cost
of
the
new
accommodation
over
the
old
(whether
it
be
by
virtue
of
sale,
lease,
or
otherwise),
the
cost
of
installing
household
items
taken
from
the
old
residence
to
the
new,
or
the
cost
of
replacing
or
re-fitting
household
items
from
the
old
residence
(such
as
drapes,
carpeting,
etc).
Moving
expenses,
as
permitted
by
subsection
62(3),
do
not,
as
I
see
it,
mean
outlays
or
costs
incurred
in
connection
with
the
acquisition
of
the
new
residence.
Only
outlays
incurred
to
effect
the
physical
transfer
of
the
taxpayer,
his
household,
and
their
belongings
to
the
new
residence
are
deductible.
The
disallowance
by
the
Minister
of
items
(a)
(b)
(c)
(f)
and
(g),
set
out
in
the
statement
of
claim
is
confirmed.
The
assessment
is
referred
back
to
the
Minister
for
reassessment
in
respect
of
the
allowance
of
items
(d)
and
(e).
The
defendant
is
entitled
to
costs.