Addy,
J.:—Both
the
plaintiff
(hereinafter
called
“Quemet”)
and
the
added
party
(hereinafter
called
“Magog”)
were
in
the
business
of
buying
and
selling
scrap
non-ferrous
metals
and
metal
alloys.
The
Minister
of
National
Revenue
had
disallowed
a
deduction
of
$17,471.83
for
expenses
for
the
1972
taxation
year
of
Quemet
on
the
grounds
that
the
amount
was
not
expended
for
the
purchase
of
metals
for
resale.
Quemet
appeals
that
disallowance.
Before
the
case
came
to
triai
and
following
investigation
of
the
books
of
Magog
by
departmental
investigators,
the
defendant
applied
for
and
obtained
an
order
pursuant
to
section
174
of
the
Income
Tax
Act
adding
that
party
to
the
action
and
requiring
that
two
common
questions
affecting
the
assessments
of
both
the
Quemet
and
Magog
for
the
1972,
1973,
1974,
1975
and
1976
taxation
years
be
determined.
The
order
was
granted
by
my
brother
Walsh,
J
on
August
28,
1979
and
all
pre-trial
proceedings
were
subsequently
taken
in
accordance
with
the
provisions
of
that
order.
It
provided
in
part
that
the
following
two
questions
be
determined
at
trial
of
the
action:
1.
Whether
for
the
fiscal
years
1972
to
1976
respective
Quemet
Corp’s
alleged
payments
to
Magog
Metal
Co
Inc
for
used
metal
were
bona
fide
payments
or
resulted
in
whole
or
in
part
from
the
creation
of
fictitious
invoices
and
hence
were
never
received
by
Magog
Metal
Co
Inc
or
if
received
retained
by
them
as
proceeds
of
bona
fide
sales.
2.
In
the
event
that
it
be
found
that
these
receipts
by
Magog
Metal
Co
Inc
resulted
from
bona
fide
sales
to
Quemet
Corp
whether
Magog
Metal
Co
Inc
then
created
by
fictitious
invoices
disbursements
which
were
not
bona
fide
made
by
it,
to
set
off
against
such
income
receipts
in
whole
or
In
part.
The
issues
raised
were
the
following:
according
to
Mr
Justice
Walsh’s
findings,
Quemet
deducted
from
its
gross
revenue
the
following
amounts
for
purchases
allegedly
made
from
Magog:
1972
-
$17,471.83
(the
amount
in
issue
in
the
main
action)
1973
-
$27,509.56
1974
-
$89,349.49
1975
-
$21,908.85
Total
$156,239.76
Magog
added
those
amounts
to
its
declared
income
but
claimed
expenses
corresponding
to
same,
less
what
it
alleged
to
be
commission
of
one
cent
per
pound
of
metal
involved
in
the
transactions.
To
substantiate
those
expenses,
Magog
prepared
invoices
from
fictitious
vendors
for
the
purchases.
It
alleges
that
though
the
invoices
were
in
fact
false
in
so
far
as
the
names
of
the
payees
are
concerned,
they
were
correct
in
so
far
as
amounts
remitted
were
concerned
and
were
in
fact
accommodation
invoices
made
to
represent
moneys
returned
in
cash
to
Quemet
and
prepared
solely
to
offset
the
income
produced
from
the
purchases
by
Quemet.
It
pleads,
in
other
words,
that
the
moneys
paid
by
cheque
to
it
by
Quemet
for
those
sales
were
in
fact
returned
to
Quemet
in
cash
less
one
cent
per
pound
kept
as
a
commission
as
above
mentioned.
Such
invoices
were
issued
by
Magog
in
the
following
amounts:
For
1972
-
$
2,698.80
For
1973
-$14,065.94
For
1974
-
$57,120.62
For
1975
-
$62,763.63
For
1976
-
$10,281.83
Total
$146,930.82
Although
all
scrap
metal
dealers
in
the
area
are
now
obliged
to
transact
business
with
their
suppliers
by
cheque,
it
appears
that,
until
a
few
years
ago
and,
in
any
event,
during
the
relevant
periods,
the
market
was
mostly
a
cash
one
and
the
great
majority
of
suppliers
which
included
peddlers,
other
scrap
dealers
and
some
persons
who
delivered
metals
obtained
from
certain
industrial
plants,
insisted
on
being
paid
in
cash
without
furnishing
receipts.
In
these
cash
transactions
the
price
would
invariably
be
considerably
lower
(between
thirty
and
fifty
per
cent)
than
the
price
which
otherwise
would
prevail
in
the
case
of
a
payment
being
made
by
cheque.
It
appears
that
many
of
the
suppliers
wanted
to
avoid
paying
income
tax
on
the
amount
received
and
in
other
cases
(these
appear
to
be
quite
numerous)
certain
peddlers
and
certain
persons
delivering
on
behalf
of
large
industrial
plants,
would
include
in
their
loads
of
scrap
metal,
extra
metal
or,
at
times,
bring
in
extra
loads
of
metal
which
they
had
appropriated
or
improperly
obtained
from
their
employers,
or
other
persons,
and
would
retain
for
their
own
use
the
proceeds
of
these
cash
sales.
Magog,
whose
plant
was
in
Magog,
Quebec,
some
seventy
miles
away
from
that
of
Quemet
in
Montreal,
would
always
deal
in
cash
with
its
ordinary
suppliers.
Quemet,
however,
for
reasons
which
it
claimed
to
be
financial
control
of
its
own
business
and
security,
always
dealt
by
cheque.
In
order
to
remain
competitive,
however,
in
what
appears
to
me
to
have
been
to
a
very
large
extent
a
cash
under
the
table
market,
Quemet
arrived
at
a
special
arrangement
with
Magog.
Quemet
claims
the
arrangement
to
have
been
to
the
effect
that,
whenever
the
suppliers
for
cash
showed
up
at
its
plant,
where
Quemet
decided
there
was
a
requirement
for
that
particular
load
of
metal
and
where
a
price,
satisfactory
to
Quemet
could
be
negotiated,
Magog
would
be
contacted,
advised
of
the
details
of
the
sale
and
a
cheque
would
be
made
out
to
Magog
for
the
negotiated
price
plus
one
cent
per
pound
of
metal
in
the
delivery.
It,
in
return,
would
send
back
to
Quemet
cash
to
cover
the
amount
of
the
sale
which
cash
would
then
be
turned
over
to
the
person
who
had
delivered
the
metal.
It
goes
without
saying
that
no
receipt
was
signed
for
the
cash
so
turned
over.
Quemet
claimed
that
the
loads
were
not
being
sold
to
it
by
the
suppliers
but
rather
to
Magog
and
resold
by
the
latter
to
Quemet
at
one
cent
per
pound
of
metal
over
Magog’s
purchase
price.
None
of
these
loads
were
ever
delivered
to
Magog
but
always
left
at
the
Quemet
plant.
I
completely
reject
evidence
led
on
behalf
of
Quemet
to
the
effect
that
this
scheme
of
sale
to
Magog
and
resale
to
it
at
cost
plus
one
cent
per
pound
was
devised
because
Quemet
had
been
advised
by
its
auditors
to
always
deal
by
cheque
and
also
because
of
the
danger
of
theft
if
it
were
known
that
Quemet
was
dealing
in
cash.
From
an
accounting
standpoint,
it
would
have
been
just
as
easy
or
indeed
much
easier
for
Quemet
to
have
written
cheques
for
cash
at
its
bank,
received
the
money,
paid
it
to
the
suppliers
on
the
spot
and
then
entered
the
suppliers’
names
in
its
own
books
to
account
for
the
disbursements
without
ever
having
to
pay
any
commission
to
Magog.
In
so
far
as
security
is
concerned,
the
evidence
indicates
that
the
trade
undoubtedly
knew
that
deliveries
for
cash
could
be
made
at
the
Quemet’s
plant
and
that
cash
would
be
paid
at
that
place
for
goods
delivered.
There
was
even
greater
danger
of
theft
in
transporting
cash
some
seventy
miles
from
Magog,
Quebec,
to
Montreal
in
order
to
pay
the
suppliers
than
to
obtain
at
Quemet’s
bank
in
Montreal
and
pay
on
the
spot.
On
all
of
the
evidence,
including
that
of
one
of
the
owners
of
Quemet,
I
find
that
the
real
reason
for
this
system
being
devised
was
that
Quemet
knew
that
a
considerable
proportion
of
that
trade
consisted
of
loads
of
metal
which
were
not
the
legal
property
of
the
suppliers
and
desired,
in
so
far
as
possible,
to
avoid
being
directly
involved
in
the
receiving
of
stolen
property.
In
so
far
as
the
sales
are
concerned,
they
were
in
fact
and
in
law
sales
from
the
suppliers
to
Quemet
and
not
sales
to
Magog.
Magog
never
saw
the
goods,
never
had
any
say
as
to
what
was
to
be
purchased
or
what
price
was
to
be
paid,
never
had
anything
to
do
with
the
negotiations
and,
before
the
bargain
was
concluded,
never
even
knew
the
identity
of
the
vendor.
Even
after
the
bargains
were
concluded,
on
many
occasions,
Magog
was
never
told
who
the
vendors
were.
Finally,
Magog
received
the
price
of
one
cent
per
pound
of
metal
as
a
commission
or
gratuity
regardless
of
the
type
of
metal
sold.
This,
of
course,
is
completely
inconsistent
with
what
a
bona
fide
seller
would
normally
require
since
there
is
a
considerable
difference
in
price
between
various
qualities
and
kinds
of
metal.
I
find
that
the
sales
were
made
by
the
suppliers
to
Quemet
and
that
Magog
was
paid
one
cent
per
pound
of
metal
solely
for
the
privilege
of
lending
its
name
to
the
transactions
so
that
the
names
of
the
vendors
would
never
appear
in
the
books
of
Quemet
and
that
the
only
vendor
appearing
in
the
latter’s
books
for
those
sales
would
be
that
of
Magog.
Magog
on
the
other
hand
was
expected
by
Quemet
to
enter
the
names
of
the
suppliers
in
its
books.
This
it
did
not
do
for
the
obvious
reason
that
it
wished
to
protect
the
suppliers
from
prosecution
and
itself
from
being
associated
with
the
actual
transactions.
I
find
that
the
amounts,
that
were
entered
in
the
invoices
prepared
by
Magog,
were
correct
in
so
far
as
the
cash
being
returned
by
Magog
to
Quemet
was
concerned
although
they
were
fictitious
in
so
far
as
the
names
of
the
payees
or
the
true
nature
of
the
transactions
were
concerned.
The
evidence,
however,
establishes
to
my
full
satisfaction
that
Quemet
actually
received
and
paid
for
deliveries
of
metal
totalling
the
amounts
received
in
cash
from
Magog
and
that
those
purchases
were
made
for
the
purposes
of
resale
in
the
normal
course
of
trade.
I
am
equally
satisfied
that
Magog
only
received
and
retained
the
amount
of
one
cent
per
pound
of
metal
bought
by
Quemet,
the
total
sum
of
which
is
represented
by
the
difference
between
the
above-mentioned
invoices
and
the
amounts
of
the
purchases
reported
by
Quemet
as
being
made
from
Magog
and
paid
to
it
by
cheque.
The
appeal
of
the
plaintiff
Quemet
is
therefore
allowed.
Its
assessment
for
the
1972
taxation
year
will
be
returned
to
the
Minister
for
assessment
accordingly.
The
two
questions
put
to
the
court
pursuant
to
the
order
of
The
Honourable
Mr
Justice
Walsh
are
answered
as
follows:
1.
For
the
fiscal
years
1972
to
1976,
all
of
Quemet’s
alleged
payments
to
Magog
were
in
fact
bona
fide
payments
in
the
sense
that
they
were
made
for
metals
actually
purchased
by
Quemet
but
were
not
bona
fide
in
that
they
were
not
made
to
Magog
as
vendor
of
the
metals
but
were,
after
deducting
Magog’s
commission
of
one
cent
per
pound
of
metal,
intended
to
be
made
and
were
in
fact
made
to
third
party
vendors
from
whom
Quemet
and
not
Magog
was
purchasing.
Magog
retained
one
cent
per
pound
of
metal
from
the
proceeds
of
those
sales
which
were
bona
fide
only
in
the
limited
sense
which
I
have
just
mentioned.
2.
Magog
did
create
invoices
covering
the
sales
and
these
invoices
were
fictitious
in
the
sense
that
they
did
not
cover
purchases
from
the
vendors
mentioned
therein
nor
purchases
by
Magog.
They
did,
however,
represent
actual
business
disbursements
made
in
cash
by
Magog
which
disbursements
were
set
off
against
the
amounts
received
by
cheque
from
Quemet
with
respect
to
those
transactions.
Notwithstanding
the
fact
that
the
plaintiff,
Quemet,
and
the
added
party,
Magog,
were
successful
as
to
the
substance
of
their
claims,
this
is
certainly
not
a
case
where
costs
should
follow
the
event:
both
these
parties
falsified
their
books
for
illegal
purposes.
They
knowingly
assisted
others
to
either
defraud
the
Department
of
National
Revenue
or
dispose
of
stolen
property
or
both.
Had
proper
books
of
account
been
kept,
showing
the
true
nature
of
each
transaction
and
the
names
of
the
vendors,
this
litigation
would
never
have
arisen.
The
defendant
was
perfectly
justified
in
the
circumstances
in
insisting
that
the
matter
be
examined
in
Court,
for,
even
up
to
and
including
the
actual
trial,
Quemet
attempted
to
maintain
the
charade
of
bona
fide
purchases
by
it
from
Magog
and
bona
fide
sales
by
the
latter
to
it.
Witnesses
for
Magog
and
Quemet
at
trial,
who
should
have
been
able
to
testify
on
the
matter,
maintained
that
they
were
unable
to
recall
the
identity
of
the
third
parties
involved
in
any
of
the
specific
transactions.
I
remain
totally
unconvinced
as
to
this
portion
of
the
evidence.
No
records
whatsoever
of
the
names
of
the
persons
involved
were
kept
by
either
party.
For
these
reasons,
the
plaintiff
shall
pay
the
defendant’s
costs
up
to
the
time
of
the
application
to
add
Magog
and,
both
the
plaintiff
and
Magog
shall
be
jointly
and
severally
liable
for
the
costs
of
the
defendant
for
all
proceedings
thereafter.
All
costs
payable
to
the
defendant
shall
be
taxed
on
a
solicitor-and-client
basis.
There
shall
be
judgment
accordingly.