Cattanach,
J:—These
are
appeals
by
the
plaintiff
from
assessments
to
income
tax
by
the
Minister
of
National
Revenue
for
the
plaintiff’s
1972
and
1973
taxation
years
whereby
the
Minister
disallowed
the
plaintiff's
claim
for
a
deduction
of
Canadian
exploration
and
development
expenses
in
the
amount
of
$4,000,000
in
each
year
and,
consequent
upon
which
disallowance,
the
Minister
also
disallowed
the
plaintiff’s
claim
for
a
depletion
allowance
under
regulations
passed
pursuant
to
the
Income
Tax
Act,
as
well
as
a
claim
for
interest
on
borrowed
money
in
the
plaintiff’s
1972
taxation
year
but
not
for
a
like
claim
by
the
plaintiff
in
its
1973
taxation
year.
Counsel
for
the
Minister
indicated
that
the
failure
to
disallow
the
plaintiff's
similar
claim
for
interest
in
its
1973
taxation
year
was
an
oversight
by
the
Minister.
However,
assuming
that
I
should
conclude
that
the
plaintiff’s
claim
for
interest
in
that
year
was
improperly
made
and
should
have
been
disallowed
by
the
Minister,
which
issue
is
before
me
with
respect
to
the
1972
taxation
year,
this
particular
matter
is
not
in
issue
with
respect
to
the
plaintiff’s
1973
taxation
year.
In
Harris
v
MNR,
[1965]
2
Ex
CR
653;
[1964]
CTC
562;
64
DTC
5332,
my
brother
Thurlow
held
that
on
a
taxpayer’s
appeal
it
is
the
Minister’s
assessment
that
is
under
appeal.
There
is
no
appeal
given
to
the
Minister
from
the
assessment
and
accordingly
to
allow
the
Minister
to
disallow
the
plaintiff’s
claim
for
the
deduction
of
interest
for
the
1973
taxation
year
and
so
increase
the
plaintiff's
assessment
is
tantamount
to
an
appeal
by
the
Minister
from
his
own
assessment.
This
I
have
no
authority
to
entertain.
Counsel
for
the
Minister,
when
the
point
arose,
quite
properly
neither
suggested
nor
requested
anything
to
the
contrary.
The
amounts
involved
are
not
in
dispute
between
the
parties
nor
are
the
basic
facts
in
dispute.
What
is
in
dispute
between
the
parties
are
the
proper
inferences
to
be
drawn
from
the
undisputed
facts.
The
plaintiff
was
incorporated
as
a
joint
stock
company
pursuant
to
the
laws
of
the
Province
of
Alberta
on
March
25,
1957.
The
plaintiff
is
the
wholly-owned
subsidiary
of
Pacific
Gas
and
Electric
Co,
no
doubt
incorporated
under
the
laws
of
one
of
the
States
of
the
United
States
of
America,
and
that
company
is
a
major
distributor
of
natural
gas
and
electricity
in
Northern
and
Central
California.
Prior
to
the
incorporation
of
the
plaintiff
it
is
my
recollection
of
the
evidence
that
Pacific
Gas
and
Electric
Company
purchased
natural
gas
in
Alberta
to
supply
its
customers
in
California,
but
for
sundry
varied
reasons
it
found
it
expedient
to
incorporate
the
plaintiff
for
this
purpose.
Pacific
Gas
and
Electric
Company
was
also
instrumental
in
securing
the
incorporation
of
Pacific
Gas
Transmission
or
acquired
the
majority
interest
in
the
shares
of
that
company.
Therefore
Pacific
Gas
Transmission
is
also
a
subsidiary
of
Pacific
Gas
and
Electric
Company.
Pacific
Gas
Transmission
operates
a
pipeline
from
Kingsgate
on
the
United
States
and
British
Columbia
border
to
the
Oregon
and
California
border.
Alberta
Natural
Gas
Co,
in
which
Pacific
Gas
Transmission
owns
45%
of
the
shares,
operates
a
pipeline
from
a
point
in.
southwestern
Alberta
to
connect
with
the
pipeline
of
Pacific
Gas
Transmission
at
the
United
States
and
British
Columbia
border.
The
plaintiff
contracts
with
Alberta
Gas
Trunk
Lines
to
carry
the
natural
gas
which
the
plaintiff
purchases
from
producers
in
the
field
to
the
point
in
south-western
Alberta
as
well
as
to
intermediate
customers
along
the
route
and
the
plaintiff
contracts
with
Alberta
Natural
Gas
Company
to
transport
the
gas
purchased
by
it
and
remaining
from
the
point
in
south-western
Alberta
to
connect
with
the
pipeline
operated
by.
Pacific
Gas
Transmission
through
which
the
gas
is
transported
to
California
to
the
ultimate
consumers
in
that
State.
The
raison
d’être
for
the
plaintiff
is
to
buy
natural
gas
from
producers
‘in
Alberta
to
satisfy
the
requirements
of
its
parent
company
for
a
constant
supply
of
natural
gas
to
meet
the
needs
of
its
parent’s
customers
in
California.
The
plaintiff
does
not
sell
that
gas
directly
to
its
parent
but
rather
it
sells
the
gas
purchased
by
it
in
Alberta
to
its
sister
company,
Pacific
Gas
Transmission.
To
that
end
the
plaintiff
has
entered
into
some
300
to
350
gas
purchase
contracts
with
some
83
to
100
gas
producers.
These
numbers
are
approximate
and
vary
from
time
to
time
dependent
upon
the
vagaries
of
available
gas
and
obviously,
from
the
numbers,
the
plaintiff
enters
into
more
than
one
gas
purchase
contract
with
the
same
gas
producer.
The
plaintiff's
two
major
purchasers
of
its
gas
for
foreign
export
are
Pacific
Gas
Transmission
and
Canadian
Montana
Pipeline
Company.
The
plaintiff
also
sells
the
natural
gas
it
purchases
in
Alberta
to
Columbia
Natural
Gas
Limited
for
distribution
in
British
Columbia.
Because
of
the
policy
of
the
appropriate
governments
export
licences
are
not
forthcoming
unless
the
needs
of
domestic
consumers
are
first
satisfied.
Accordingly
the
plaintiff
sells
gas
to
two
major
distributors
in
Alberta,
Northwestern
Utilities
Limited
and
Canadian
Western
Natural
Gas
Limited,
and
to
other
domestic
customers
along
the
transporting
gas
pipelines
such
as
towns,
gas
co-operatives
and
farmers.
The
plaintiff
also
sells
gas
to
an
extracting
plant
in
Alberta.
However,
Pacific
Gas
Transmission
is
by
far
the
major
purchaser
of
the
gas
purchased
in
Alberta
by
the
plaintiff
and
is
destined
for
ultimate
consumption
by
customers
of
the
plaintiff's
parent,
Pacific
Gas
and
Electric
Company
in
California.
In
1972
approximately
86%
of
the
plaintiff’s
total
gas
sales
was
to
Pacific
Gas
Transmission
Company.
In
1973
the
plaintiff’s
sales
to
Pacific
Gas
Transmission
represented
83%
of
the
plaintiff’s
total
gas
Sales.
In
the
same
period
approximately
6.27%
of
the
plaintiff’s
total
gas
sales
was
to
Canadian
Montana
Pipeline
Company,
its
other
major
purchaser.
The
balance
of
the
plaintiff's
sales,
which
would
range
between
8%
and
11%,
were
to
domestic
consumers
as
mentioned
above.
It
is
patently
obvious
that
the
plaintiff’s
obligation
is
to
maintain
a
constant
source
of
supply
of
natural
gas,
ultimately
destined
for
its
parent
company,
and
to
maintain
that
supply
it
must
also
satisfy
the
needs
of
domestic
consumers,
which
by
reason
of
government
policy
constitutes
a
first
charge
on
the
plaintiff’s
supply.
In
all
likelihood
the
demands
of
the
domestic
market
will
increase
and
even
if
the
demand
of
the
plaintiff’s
parent
merely
remained
constant,
it
follows
that
the
plaintiff
must
exercise
vigilance
to
ensure
that
it
is
in
a
position
to
meet
both
of
these
mandatory
demands.
Accordingly
that
means
that
the
plaintiff
must
make
certain
that
the
current
gas
purchase
contracts
are
adequate
and
to
be
on
the
constant
alert
for
additional
sources
when
the
current
sources
become
inadequate,
depleted
or
exhausted.
To
do
this
the
plaintiff
makes
risk
exploration
advances
to
producers
in
the
hope
of
the
discovery
of
further
gas
and
participates
as
a
working
interest
partner.
Expenditures
of
this
type
made
by
the
plaintiff
have
been
allowed
by
the
Minister
as
a
deduction.
To
encourage
exploration
by
producers
the
plaintiff
thus
made
prepayments
for
gas
thereby
making
funds
available
to
the
producers
for
exploration
and
to
acquire
the
goodwill
of
those
producers
in
order
to
remain
competitive
as
a
purchaser
of
gas.
The
plaintiff
has
also
made
loans
to
producers
on
the
understanding
that
the
loan
would
be
repaid
by
the
dedication
of
gas
which
might
be
discovered
to
the
plaintiff.
These
are
the
three
normal
methods
adopted
by
the
plaintiff
in
furthering
exploration
for
gas,
(1)
prepayments
for
known
gas
in
the
ground,
(2)
loans
to
producers
to
assist
in
the
development
of
future
resources
to
be
dedicated
to
the
plaintiff
and
(3)
risk
exploration
activities.
Thus
this
is
a
legitimate
objective
of
the
plaintiff
incidental
to
its
principal
purpose
of
buying
and
selling
gas.
The
funds
for
these
purposes
are
generated
by
the
inclusion
of
3¢
in
the
price
of
the
gas
sold
by
the
plaintiff
to
its
parent
company
through
the
intermediary,
Pacific
Gas
Transmission.
The
price
to
the
parent
was
31¢
per
thousand
cubic
feet
for
specification
gas
or
the
cost
of
service
whichever
was
the
higher.
Arrangements
were
made
with
Canadian
Montana
Pipeline
Company
to
provide
the
plaintiff
with
a
fund
to
be
used
in
exploring
for
and
developing
gas
resources
in
Canada.
However
it
was
the
30
margin
built
into
the
plaintiff’s
sale
price
to
its
parent
that
was
the
greatest
source
of
funds
available
to
the
plaintiff
for
exploration
and
development
expenses.
That
was
specifically
agreed
in
arranging
the
sale
price
of
the
gas
and
it
was
also
agreed
that
the
funds
so
derived
would
be
dedicated
exclusively
to
that
end.
The
funds
that
the
plaintiff
derived
from
its
sale
of
gas
to
its
parent
company,
or
more
correctly
put
to
its
sister
subsidiary,
in
the
plaintiff’s
1972
and
1973
taxation
years
was
$4,000,000
in
each
year.
In
neither
year
did
the
plaintiff
expend
those
amounts
for
exploration
and
development
by
any
one
of
the
three
normal
methods
the
plaintiff
had
adopted
and
as
are
described
above.
Accordingly
these
two
amounts,
if
not
disbursed
as
exploration
and
development
expenses
before
the
end
of
the
respective
taxation
years,
would
be
clearly
income
in
each
year
and
taxable
as
such.
The
officers
of
the
plaintiff
are
well
aware
of
this
fact.
The
plaintiff
sought
the
means,
in
each
year,
to
circumvent
this
inexorable
result.
The
device
adopted,
as
was
aptly
put
by
the
witnesses,
to
“remove
these
amounts
from
the
grasping
reach
of
the
tax
collector
and
so
preserve
the
funds
for
the
purpose
to
which
they
were
dedicated”
{that
is
exploration
and
development
expenses),
was
to
enter
into
“carve-out’’
agreements
with
Amoco
Petroleum
Company
Ltd
(hereinafter
for
convenience
referred
to
as
“Amoco’’),
a
gas-producing
company
with
which
the
plaintiff
had
also
entered
into
gas
purchase
agreements.
This
fact
apparently
had
no
material
influence
on
Amoco’s
willingness
to
enter
into
these
agreements
with
the
plaintiff.
These
“carve-out”
agreements
were
well
known
to
the
oil
industry
and
Amoco
had
entered
into
several
such
agreements
with
parties
other
than
the
plaintiff.
The
first
such
agreement
between
the
plaintiff
and
Amoco
was
entered
into
on
December
27,
1972,
and
was
introduced
in
evidence
as
Exhibit
7-2,
applicable
to
the
plaintiff’s
1972
taxation
year,
and
the
second
such
agreement
was
entered
into
on
December
27,
1973,
applicable
to
the
plaintiff’s
1973
taxation
year,
and
was
introduced
in
evidence
as
Exhibit
12.
Subject
to
minor
variations
the
two
agreements
are
otherwise
identical
in
substance.
Basically
what
the
agreements
provide
is
that
in
consideration
of
the
payment
by
the
plaintiff
to
Amoco
of
$4,000,000
Amoco
“grants,
sells,
conveys,
transfers
and
sets
over
unto’’
the
plaintiff
a
percentage
(in
1972
the
percentage
was
59%
and
in
1973
the
percentage
was
43.6%)
of
Amoco’s
“working
interest’’
which
is
defined
in
the
agreements
as
the
“right,
licence
or
privilege”
of
Amoco
to
“produce,
take
and
dispose
of
petroleum
substances”
from
the
lands
set
forth
in
a
schedule
to
each
agreement.
Those
lands
were
in
fact
the
lands
from
which
the
plaintiff
received
the
specification
gas
which
it
purchased
from
Amoco
under
existing
gas
purchase
contracts
between
them
and
accordingly
the
plaintiff
was
familiar
with
those
resources
and
exercised
care
and
influence
in
the
lands
selected
to
be
included
in
the
schedules.
By
virtue
of
the
agreements
the
plaintiff
is
entitled
to
have
and
hold
those
assigned
rights
forever
but
subject
to
the
provision
that
the
right
to
Amoco’s
share
shall
end
when
the
plaintiff
shall
have
received
petroleum.
substances
to
the
value
of
$4,000,000
or
the
amount
of
$4,000,000,
both
with
interest
at
3%
per
annum.
In
fact
in
each
year
the
amount
of
$4,000,000
was
repaid
in
cash
and
not
in
kind
within
the
year
following
the
execution
of
each
agreement.
Again
by
virtue
of
the
agreements,
the
plaintiff
was
given
ownership
of
the
petroleum
substances
and
given
the
right
to
take
those
substances
at
no
cost
to
it
and
to
dispose
of
those
substances.
The
plaintiff
did
not
elect
to
do
this
but,
as
contemplated
in
the
agreements,
permitted
Amoco
to
continue
to
extract
the
petroleum
substances
from
the
lands,
refine
those
substances
and
dispose
of
the
resultant
products
and
consequent
upon
payment
in
moneys
the
plaintiff
received
payment
of
the
full
amount
for
the
petroleum
substances
which
it
was
entitled
to
receive.
That
being
done
the
share
that
Amoco
conveyed
to
the
plaintiff
revested
in
Amoco.
The
agreements
specifically
provide
that
all
costs
and
expenses
of
the
production
of
petroleum
substances
shall
be
borne
by
Amoco
and
not
by
the
plaintiff.
In
the
event
that
Amoco
should
default
in
its
obligations
to
extract
the
petroleum
substances
and
apply
the
proceeds
of
the
disposition
thereof
to
the
discharge
of
its
indebtedness
to
the
plaintiff,
then
by
virtue
of
the
agreements
the
plaintiff
has
the
right
to
enter
upon
the
lands,
take
over
Amoco’s
rights
to
operate
the
extraction
process,
and
so
operate
the
fields,
dispose
of
the
petroleum
products
and
apply
the
proceeds
thereof
first
to
the
costs
incurred
by
it
in
taking
such
production
and
then
to
discharge
the
amounts
payable
by
Amoco
to
the
plaintiff
under
the
agreements.
In
the
lands
sets
forth
in
the
schedules
to
the
agreements
Amoco
did
not
hold
100%
of
the
working
interest
therein.
The
lands
were
subject
to
unitization
agreements
which
is
simply
that
a
number
of
leaseholders
pool
their
leases
and
one
of
the
leaseholders
becomes
the
operator
and
all
leaseholders
who
enter
the
pooling
arrangement
share
in
the
proceeds
in
proportion
to
their
respective
contributions.
A
review
of
the
lands
included
in
the
schedules
indicates
that
in
almost
all
instances
Amoco
was
the
largest
contributor
to
the
pool
and
that
Amoco
was
the
“operator”
of
the
fields
under
operation
agreements
entered
into
by
the
contributors.
Accordingly
when
Amoco
assigned
a
percentage
of
its
working
interest
in
these
lands
to
the
plaintiff
it
succeeded
to
the
partial
interest
assigned
to
it
by
Amoco
and
became
party
to
the
appropriate
unitization
agreements
with
the
concurrence
of
the
other
parties
thereto.
This
concurrence
was
obtained
in
a
most
informal
way
usually
by
telephone
conversations.
Mr
Goudie,
a
vice-president
of
the
plaintiff,
so
testified.
Against
the
background
of
these
facts
the
plaintiff
in
preparing
its
income
tax
returns
for
its
1972
and
1973
income
tax
years
claimed
as
a
deduction
in
each
year
the
respective
amounts
of
$4,000,000
as
being
laid
out
by
it
for
the
acquisition
of
a
‘Canadian
resource
property”
as
defined
by
subparagraphs
66(15)(c)(i)
and
(vi)
of
the
Income
Tax
Act,
that
by
virtue
of
subparagraph
66(15)(b)(iii)
the
cost
of
the
acquisition
of
any
Canadian
resource
property
is
a
Canadian
exploration
and
development
expense
and
as
such,
by
virtue
of
paragraph
66(1
)(a)
is
deductible
by
a
“principal-business
corporation”
in
computing
its
income
for
a
taxation
year.
In
order
to
so
qualify
the
plaintiff
must
first
fall
within
the
definition
of
a
“principal-business
corporation”
as
outlined
in
paragraph
66(15)(h).
At
this
point
it
is
expedient
to
reproduce
the
sections
of
the
Income
Tax
Act
mentioned
immediately
above.
Paragraph
66(1)(a)
reads:
66.
(1)
A
principal-business
corporation
may
deduct,
in
computing
its
income
for
a
taxation
year,
the
lesser
of
(a)
the
aggregate
of
such
of
its
Canadian
exploration
and
development
expenses
as
were
incurred
by
it
before
the
end
of
the
taxation
year,
to
the
extent
that
they
were
not
deductible
in
computing
income
for
a
previous
taxation
year,
and
Subparagraph
66(15)(b)(iii)
reads:
(b)
“Canadian
exploration
and
development
expenses”
incurred
by
a
taxpayer
means
(iii)
the
cost
to
him
of
any
Canadian
resource
property
acquired
by
him,
Subparagraphs
66(15)(c)(i)
and
(vi)
read:
(c)
“Canadian
resource
property”
of
a
taxpayer
means
any
property
acquired
by
him
after
1971
that
is,
i)
any
right,
licence
or
privilege
to
explore
for,
drill
for,
or
take
petroleum,
natural
gas
or
other
related
hydrocarbons
in
Canada,
(vi)
any
right
to
or
interest
in
any
property
described
in
any
of
subparagraphs
(i)
to
(vi).
Subparagraph
66(15)(h)(i)
reads:
(h)
“principal-business
corporation’’
means
a
corporation
whose
principal
business
is,
(i)
production,
refining
or
marketing
of
petroleum,
petroleum
products
or
natural
gas,
or
exploring
or
drilling
for
petroleum
or
natural
gas,
The
general
intention
of
the
Income
Tax
Act
is
to
the
effect
that
in
computing
income
no
deduction
shall
be
made
in
respect
of
a
payment
on
account
of
capital.
Under
normal
circumstances
the
payment
made
by
the
plaintiff
herein
to
acquire
an
interest
in
a
gas-producing
or
potential
gas-producing
property
is
an
outlay
for
the
acquisition
of
a
capital
asset
and
hence
a
capital
outlay
not
subject
to
deduction.
The
sections
of
the
Income
Tax
Act
reproduced
express
a
particular
intention
incompatible
with
the
general
intention
and
as
such
must
be
considered
in
the
nature
of
an
exception.
In
order
to
qualify
for
an
exception
a
taxpayer
must
fall
precisely
within
the
words
of
the
exempting
provisions.
in
her
statement
of
defence,
Her
Majesty
expressly
first
denies
an
allegation
in
the
plaintiff’s
statement
of
claim
that
the
plaintiff
was
duly
qualified
as
a
“principal-business
corporation”
as
those
words
are
defined
in
the
statute.
Secondly,
the
defendant
also
specifically
denies
in
its
statement
of
defence
that
the
plaintiff
acquired
under
its
agreements
with
Amoco
a
“Canadian
resource
property”.
The
onus
is
on
the
plaintiff
to
establish
both
such
conditions
precedent
in
order
to
succeed
in
claiming
the
deductions
it
seeks
for
the
cost
expended
by
it
for
the
rights
it
acquired
from
Amoco
and
the
other
consequential
deductions
claimed
by
it
but
disallowed
as
has
been
mentioned
at
the
outset.
If
the
plaintiff
fails,
that
is
the
end
of
the
matter
and
both
appeals
must
be
dismissed
in
their
entirety.
Accordingly
consideration
must
first
be
given
to
whether
the
plaintiff
falls
within
the
definition
of
a
“principal-business
corporation”
as
set
forth
in
subparagraph
66(15)(h)(i)
as
quoted
above.
Mr
Goudie
has
described
the
business
of
the
plaintiff
as
the
buying
and
selling
of
natural
gas.
The
question
then
arises
whether
that
activity
constitutes
“marketing”
as
that
word
is
used
in
subparagraph
66(15)(h)(i).
The
word
“marketing”
as
used
in
subparagraph
66(15)(h)(i)
does
not
relate
nor
does
it
profess
to
relate
to
the
subject
of
a
particular
art
or
science.
In
my
view
the
word
is
not
used
in
a
technical
sense
and
has
no
technical
meaning.
Therefore
the
word
used
in
the
Act
must
be
understood
as
it
is
understood
in
the
common
language.
I
am
quite
aware
that
dictionaries
are
not
to
be
taken
as
authoritative
exponents
of
the
meaning
of
words
used
in
statutes
but
it
is
a
well
known
rule
of
courts
of
law
that
when
a
word
is
used
in
its
ordinary
sense,
as
I
have
concluded
that
the
word
“marketing”
is
so
used,
then
I
am
sent
and
may
resort
to
dictionaries
for
instruction.
The
word
“market”
is
defined
in
the
Shorter
Oxford
English
Dictionary,
3rd
edition,
as
“the
action
or
business
of
buying
and
selling’
and
“marketing”,
which
is
the
verbal
substantive
of
the
verb
“market”,
is
defined
therein
as
“the
action
of
market”.
Mr
Goudie
described
the
business
of
the
plaintiff
as
buying
and
selling
of
natural
gas
and
he
also
described
how
these
activities
were
conducted.
The
plaintiff
had
to
buy
natural
gas
in
sufficient
quantity
to
meet
the
demands
of
its
customers.
Current
in
each
financial
year
there
were
some
350
gas
purchase
contracts
entered
into
by
the
plaintiff
with
some
100
producers
of
natural
gas.
That,
to
my
mind,
represents
substantial
buying.
The
plaintiff
sells
the
gas
it
purchases
to
a
major
purchaser,
its
parent
company.
The
parent
company
buys
about
83%
of
the
gas
that
the
plaintiff
buys.
Another
major
purchaser
buys
some
6%,
leaving
about
11%,
which
is
sold
to
a
variety
of
purchasers.
There
is
no
doubt
that
the
number
of
purchasers
is
large
and
the
parent
company
is
not
the
plaintiff’s
exclusive
purchaser.
It
cannot
be
because
of
the
governmental
policy
that
the
requirements
of
domestic
consumers
must
be
met
before
an
export
licence
is
granted
to
the
plaintiff.
Therefore,
the
plaintiff
must
buy
sufficient
gas
to
meet
the
needs
of
its
parent
company
but
it
must
first
buy
sufficient
gas
to
meet
the
domestic
market
which
it
must
serve.
Counsel
for
the
defendant
contends
that
the
plaintiff
has
failed
to
discharge
the
onus
of
establishing
that
its
activities
constitute
“marketing”
because
it
did
not
conduct
an
active
campaign
to
search
out
purchasers.
The
plaintiff
did
not
have
to
do
so.
It
had
three
major
purchasers
paramount
among
which
was.
its
parent
company
which
purchased
the
greatest
volume
of
the
plaintiff’s
purchases.
It
was
obliged
to
purchase
the
gas
to
meet
the
needs
of
its
parent
and
those
other
customers
it
was
obliged
to
serve
either
by
contract
or
to
become
eligible
for
an
export
licence.
Certainly
the
plaintiff’s
parent
was
its
dominant
purchaser
but
there
were
others,
some
of
whom
were
imposed
on
the
plaintiff
but
whom
the
plaintiff
must
supply.
Therefore
the
plaintiff
bought
gas
from
numerous
purchasers
and
sold
it
to
numerous
consumers,
even
though
it
sold
the
bulk
of
its
purchases
to
one
customer.
That
is
buying
and
seiling
and
that,
in
my
view,
constitutes
“marketing”.
It
was
also
contended
by
counsel
for
the
defendant
that
the
purchaser
was
merely
the
purchasing
agent
for
its
parent
company.
The
fallacies
in
that
contention
are
that
it
overlooks
the
doctrine
of
separate
corporate
existence
and
the
fact
that
the
parent
company
was
not
plaintiff's
sole
purchaser.
While
a
company
may
conduct
the
business
of
a
purchasing
agent
for
more
than
one
principal,
the
plaintiff
is
not
the
purchasing
agent
of
its
other
customers
(assuming
that
it
is
the
purchasing
agent
of
its
parent
which
assumption
!
do
not
accept
because
of
the
separate
entity
concept),
and
accordingly
its
business
is
not
that
of
a
purchasing
agent
but
that
of
purchasing
and
selling
natural
gas
and
in
my
view
for
the
reasons
previously
expressed
that
still
constitutes
“marketing”.
I
therefore
conclude
that
the
plaintiff
has
discharged
the
onus
cast
upon
it
in
this
respect.
It
was
also
contended
that
what
the
plaintiff
acquired
under
its
agreements
with
Amoco
was
not
a
“Canadian
resource
property”
in
that
the
plaintiff
under
those
agreements
did
not
acquire
“any
right,
licence
or
privilege
to
.
.
.
take
petroleum,
natural
gas
or
other
hydrocarbons”,
but
what
the
plaintiff
did
acquire
under
the
agreements
was
ownership
of
Amoco’s
share
in
the
petroleum
substances
under
the
lands
specified
in
the
schedules
to
the
agreements
and
because
what
the
transactions
really
embodied
in
the
plaintiff’s
agreements
with
Amoco
were
temporary
loans
with
provision
for
the
security
thereof.
In
my
view
the
transactions
are
not
temporary
loans
by
the
plaintiff
to
Amoco
for
the
reason
that
an
essential
element
of
a
loan
is
lacking.
The
essence
of
a
loan
is
that
the
advance
shall
be
repaid.
The
agreements
provide
that
nothing
there
shall
be
construed
as
creating
a
personal
liability
on
Amoco
to
repay
the
principal
sum
advanced
and
interest
thereon
but
that
the
plaintiff
for
its
reimbursement
shall
look
exclusively
to
the
petroleum
substances
to
the
extent
of
Amoco’s
share
therein
which
was
assigned
to
the
plaintiff.
In
the
event
that
the
petroleum
substances
should
become
exhausted,
or
otherwise
unavailable,
which
is
a
distinct
possibility
which
remains
even
though
the
plaintiff
exercised
extreme
care
in
selecting
fields
for
inclusion
in
the
schedules
to
the
agreements
in
which
it
was
aware
of
the
potential
and
estimated
deposits
underground,
then
in
that
event
the
plaintiff
has
no
recourse
against
Amoco.
I
have
not
overlooked
a
provision
that
Amoco
shall
be
liable
for
damages
for
breach
of
covenant
but
in
view
of
the
provision
to
the
contrary
that
provision
cannot
include
a
covenant
to
repay.
It
is
for
these
reasons
that
I
am
of
the
opinion
that
the
transactions
cannot
be
construed
as
being
a
loan
in
substance.
The
consideration
which
the
plaintiff
received
under
the
agreements
for
its
payments
of
the
two
amounts
of
$4,000,000
each
was
the
conveyance
from
Amoco
of
its
percentage
of
its
interest
in
what
is
clearly
a
Canadian
resource
property
in
the
hands
of
Amoco,
the
cost
of
which
to
the
plaintiff
is
a
Canadian
exploration
and
development
expense.
Clearly
Amoco
had
the
right
to
take
its
proportionate
share
of
the
petroleum,
natural
gas
and
other
related
hydrocarbons
and
what
the
plaintiff
acquires
was
a
percentage
of
Amoco’s
right
or
interest
in
a
Canadian
resource
property.
The
plaintiff
acquired
that
property
and
was
entitled
to
retain
it
until
it
was
repaid
by
Amoco
from
the
production
of
petroleum
substances
at
which
time
the
interest
reverted
to
Amoco.
Amoco
transferred
to
the
plaintiff
a
share
of
its
ownership
of
petroleum
substances
and
it
also
conferred
upon
the
plaintiff
the
right
to
take
those
petroleum
substances
in
kind.
A
paramount
right
to
“take”
is
predicated
upon
ownership.
While
the
plaintiff
did
not
exercise
its
right
to
take
the
petroleum
by
entering
upon
the
lands
and
itself
extracting
these
substances
it
elected
instead
to
permit
Amoco
to
continue
its
extracting
of
petroleum
substances
from
the
ground
which
Amoco
had
been
doing
as
operator
under
a
unitization
agreement
among
the
owners
of
pooled
resources
as
was
the
plaintiff’s
right
under
the
agreement
with
Amoco.
In
my
view
the
plaintiff
in
so
doing
has
constituted
Amoco
its
agent
to
take
the
petroleum
substances
on
its
behalf.
On
the
ordinary
principle
of
agency
what
one
does
by
an
agent
one
does
for
oneself.
That
being
so,
in
addition
to
having
the
right
to
take
petroleum
substances,
the
plaintiff
in
fact
took
petroleum
substances
which
it
also
permitted
Amoco
to
retain
and
dispose
of
the
plaintiff’s
share
on
its
behalf,
the
proceeds
of
which
were
applied
in
discharge
of
Amoco’s
obligation
to
the
plaintiff.
To
me
there
is
no
inconsistency
in
transferring
ownership
in
the
petroleum
substances
simultaneously
with
the
transfer
of
a
right
to
take
these
petroleum
substances.
It
seems
to
me
that
ownership
is
a
condition
precedent
to
the
right
to
take.
I
therefore
conclude
that
the
plaintiff
acquired
from
Amoco
a
Canadian
resource
property
within
the
meaning
of
those
words
as
defined
in
paragraph
65(15)(c)
and
not
merely
ownership
of
the
petroleum
substances
as
contended
on
behalf
of
the
defendant.
The
conclusions
I
have
reached
to
this
point
do
not
resolve
the
matter.
In
addition
to
contending
that
the
plaintiff
was
not
a
principalbusiness
corporation
and
that
the
plaintiff
did
not
acquire
a
Canadian
resource
property
counsel
for
the
Minister
contended
that
in
substance
the
agreements
between
the
plaintiff
and
Amoco
(which
are
colloquially
and
aptly
called
“carve-out”
agreements)
were
a
sham
and
subterfuge
and
that
no
matter
what
gloss
is
put
upon
the
language
the
true
purpose,
which
was
to
avoid
tax,
shines
through
that
artificial
covering
and
further
that
the
agreements
were
entered
into
by
the
plaintiff
for
no
business
purpose
but
rather
for
the
purpose
of
claiming
a
deduction
for
Canadian
exploration
and
development
expenses
and
depreciation
allowance,
thereby
unduly
or
artificially
reducing
the
plaintiff's
income
which
is
prohibited
by
subsection
245(1)
of
the
Income
Tax
Act
as
amended
by
Statutes
of
Canada,
1970-71-72,
chapter
63,
formerly
subsection
137(1)
of
the
Income
Tax
Act,
RSC
1952,
chapter
148.
Subsection
245(1)
of
the
Income
Tax
Act
reads:
245.
(1)
In
computing
income
for
the
purposes
of
this
Act,
no
deduction
may
be
made
in
respect
of
a
disbursement
or
expense
made
or
incurred
in
respect
of
a
transaction
or
operation
that,
if
allowed,
would
unduly
or
artificially
reduce
the
income.
From
the
nature
of
these
contentions
there
is
considerable
overlapping
of
the
argument
in
support
of
each
which
cannot
be
segregated.
Both
Mr
Goudie
and
Mr
Clark,
who
are
officers
of
the
plaintiff,
were
called
as
witnesses
and
candidly
admitted
that
the
motive
of
the
plaintiff
for
entering
into
these
“carve-out”
agreements
with
Amoco
was
to
remove
the
two
amounts
of
$4,000,000
which
would
have
been
taxable
as
income
in
the
1972
and
1973
taxation
years
from
the
grasp
of
the
tax
collector
to
preserve
these
amounts
which
were
dedicated
for
exploration
and
development
expenses
and
to
use
these
moneys
at
some
future
time
in
a
much
more
direct,
active
and
realistic
way
for
that
purpose
than
by
resort
to
carve-out
agreements.
It
appears
to
me,
in
the
circumstances
of
these
particular
appeals,
so
long
as
the
transactions
were
not
shams,
that
if
the
plaintiff
by
resort
to
express
provisions
in
the
Income
Tax
Act
has
succeeded
in
bringing
itself
precisely
within
the
terms
of
those
provisions
regardless
of
the
motivation
which
inspired
the
taxpayer
to
resort
thereto,
that
motive
admittedly
being
the
reduction
of
tax,
and
in
these
appeals
the
reduction
was
to
nil,
or
complete
avoidance,
that
concludes
the
matter
and
the
motivation
is
irrelevant.
The
classical
exposition
as
to
what
constitutes
a
sham
was
given
by
Diplock,
LJ
(as
he
then
was)
when
he
said
in
Snook
v
London
&
West
Riding
Investments,
Ltd,
[1967]
1
All
ER
518
at
page
528:
As
regards
the
contention
of
the
plaintiff
that
the
transactions
between
himself,
Auto-Finance,
Ltd
and
the
defendants
were
a
“sham”,
it
is,
I
think,
necessary
to
consider
what,
if
any,
legal
concept
is
involved
in
the
use
of
this
popular
and
pejorative
word.
I
apprehend
that,
if
it
has
any
meaning
in
law,
it
means
acts
done
or
documents
executed
by
the
parties
to
the
“sham”
which
are
intended
by
them
to
give
to
third
parties
or
to
the
court
the
appearance
of
creating
between
the
parties
legal
rights
and
obligations
different
from
the
actual
legal
rights
and
obligations
(if
any)
which
the
parties
intend
to
create.
One
thing
I
think,
however,
is
clear
in
legal
principle,
morality
and
the
authorities
(see
Yorkshire
Railway
Wagon
Co
v
Maclure
((1882),
21
Ch
D
309);
Stoneleigh
Finance,
Ltd
v
Phillips
([1965]
1
All
ER
513;
[1965]
2
QB
537),
that
for
acts
or
documents
to
be
a
“sham”,
with
whatever
legal
consequences
follow
from
this,
all
the
parties
thereto
must
have
a
common
intention
that
the
acts
or
documents
are
not
to
create
the
legal
rights
and
obligations
which
they
give
the
appearance
of
creating.
The
agreements
between
the
plaintiff
and
Amoco
created
between
the
parties
the
exact
legal
rights
consequent
thereon
that
the
parties
intended
to
create
and
which
both
parties
complied
with
in
accordance
with
the
terms
of
the
agreements
between
them.
That
being
so
the
parties
had
no
intention
whatsoever
that
the
agreements
did
not
create
the
legal
rights
and
obligations
other
than
those
which
the
agreements
did
in
fact
create.
Amoco
got
$4,000,000
in
the
years
1972
and
1973
which
it
could
use
as
working
capital
at
a
rate
of
interest
one-half
the
current
bank
rate.
That
is
what
Amoco
wanted
and
was
of
benefit
to
it.
At
the
same
time
the
plaintiff
got
from
Amoco
the
right
to
a
share
of
Amoco’s
share
in
petroleum
substances.
The
plaintiff
had
gas
purchase
contracts
with
Amoco
during
the
currency
of
the
“carve-out”
agreements.
While
it
is
true
that
the
gas
purchase
contracts
were
for
specification
gas
derived
from
identical
fields
from
which
the
plaintiff
also
derived
petroleum
substances
under
the
carve-out
agreements,
nevertheless
those
derivatives
are
different.
It
may
be
that
while
the
bulk
of
the
petroleum
substances
that
came
from
the
underground
deposit
became
specification
gas,
there
remained
petroleum
products
other
than
specification
gas
which
had
value
and
that
is
what
the
plaintiff
received.
It
received
the
specification
gas
under
the
gas
purchase
agreements
and
it
received
the
residue
under
the
carve-out
agreements,
or
the
proceeds
of
the
disposition
thereof,
assuming
that
the
residue
of
the
petroleum
substances
was
sold
to
purchasers
other
than
the
plaintiff,
which
my
recollection
of
the
evidence
indicates
to
have
been
the
case.
In
my
opinion
the
“carve-out”
agreements
were
not
intended
to
give
to
strangers
thereto,
including
the
Minister
of
National
Revenue,
the
appearance
of
creating
rights
and
obligations
other
than
those
created
by
the
agreements
as
were
intended
by
the
parties.
To
do
otherwise
would
defeat
the
very
motive
which
influenced
the
plaintiff
to
seek
out
these
agreements.
There
was
no
dissemblance.
Put
another
way
and
in
more
succinct
and
colloquial
language
if
the
parties
to
a
contract
do
precisely
what
they
contract
to
do
there
is
no
sham.
As
a
corollary
of
that
if
the
parties
do
as
they
contract
to
do
then
that
is
the
substance
of
the
contract.
The
agreements
were
realities
and
not
fictitious
and
they
were
within
the
competence
of
the
plaintiff
as
incidental
to
its
business
of
marketing
natural
gas.
Lord
Tomlin
in
Commissioners
of
Inland
Revenue
v
His
Grace
the
Duke
of
Westminster,
[1936]
AC
1,
said
at
page
20:
This
so-called
doctrine
of
‘‘the
substance”
seems
to
me
to
be
nothing:
more
than
an
attempt
to
make
a
man
pay
notwithstanding
that
he
has
so
ordered
his
affairs
that
the
amount
of
tax
sought
from
him
is
not
legally
claimable.
For
these
reasons
I
conclude
that
the
arrangements
between
the
plaintiff
and
Amoco
were
not
shams
or
subterfuges.
With
respect
to
the
applicability
of
section
245
to
the
results
of
these
agreements
between
the
plaintiff
and
Amoco
I
do
not
think
that
section
245
is
properly
applicable
in
the
circumstances
of
these
appeals.
As
I
have
previously
stated,
it
has
been
laid
down
as
a
rule
for
the
construction
of
statutes
that
where
there
is
a
special
section
and
a
general
section
in
the
statute
a
case
falling
within
the
special
section
must
be
governed
thereby
and
not
by
the
general
section.
Section
66
and
the
sections
immediately
following
dealing
with
exploration
and
development
expenses
of
principal-business
corporations
quoted
above
are
special
sections
and
clearly
express
a
particular
intention
of
Parliament.
On
the
other
hand,
section
245
is
a
general
section
and
expresses
a
general
intention.
In
the
present
appeals
the
plaintiff
has
brought
itself
precisely
within
the
particular
legislative
intent
expressed
in
the
particular
section
66.
The
general
intention
expressed
in
section
245
is
incompatible
with
the
particular
intention
expressed
in
section
66
from
which
it
follows
that
section
66
must
govern
and
not
section
245.
The
Minister
also
disallowed
the
plaintiff’s
claim
for
the
deduction
of
interest
paid
on
borrowed
money.
Paragraph
20(1
)(c)
reads:
20.
(1)
Notwithstanding
paragraphs
18(1)(a),
(b)
and
(h),
in
computing
a
taxpayer’s
income
for
a
taxation
year
from
a
business
or
property,
there
may
be
deducted
such
of
the
following
amounts
as
are
wholly
applicable
to
that
source
or
such
part
of
the
following
amounts
as
may
reasonably
be
regarded
as
applicable
thereto:
(c)
an
amount
paid
in
the
year
or
payable
in
respect
of
the
year
(depending
upon
the
method
regularly
followed
by
the
taxpayer
in
computing
his
income),
pursuant
to
a
legal
obligation
to
pay
interest
on
(i)
borrowed
money
used
for
the
purpose
of
earning
income
from
a
business
or
property
(other
than
borrowed
money
used
to:
acquire
property
the
income
from
which
would
be
exempt
or
to
acquire
a
life
insurance
policy),
While
the
plaintiff
had
liabilities
payable
to
it
in
its
1972
taxation
year
in
the
amount
of
some
$4,000,000
from
Pacific
Gas
Transmission,
those
moneys
were
not
in
the
plaintiff’s
hands
and
therefore
it
borrowed
funds
from
its
banker
to
pay
the
$4,000,000
consideration
to
Amoco
under
its
1972
agreement.
The
plaintiff
did
receive
income
from
the
transactions
and
accordingly
the
interest
was
paid
on
borrowed
money
used
for
the
purpose
of
earning
income
from
property.
Income
arose
from
the
3%
interest
rate
negotiated
by
the
plaintiff
and
Amoco
on
the
consideration
paid
by
the
plaintiff
to
Amoco.
It
is
true
that
the
interest
rate
on
the
money
borrowed
from
its
bank
by
the
plaintiff
exceeded
the
rate
that
the
plaintiff
received
from
Amoco
but
that
does
not
detract
from
the
fact
that
the
interest
the
plaintiff
received
from
Amoco
was
income.
As
I
recall
the
bank
loan
was
paid
by
the
plaintiff
with
expedition
and
the
indebtedness
of
Amoco
ran
for
a
year
which
may
have
resulted
in
a
profit
to
the
plaintiff.
Profit
is
different
from
income.
Profit
is
the
income
less
the
cost
laid
out
to
earn
the
income.
Therefore
the
interest
paid
to
the
plaintiff
remains
income
even
if
no
profit
resulted.
in
the
plaintiff's
1972
income
tax
return
there
was
disclosed
royalty
income
received
from
Amoco
in
the
amount
of
$12,842.43
and
in
the
1973
return
royalty
income
from
Amoco
in
the
amount
of
$4,074,050.93
on
which
respective
amounts
and
in
the
respective
years
depletion
allowances
were
claimed
in
the
respective
amounts
of
$3,210.61
and
$1,018,512.73,
being
25%
of
the
royalty
income
in
accordance
with
Regulation
1202(1).
As
previously
stated
there
is
no
dispute
as
to
the
accuracy
of
these
figures.
It
follows
that
the
interest
so
claimed
by
the
plaintiff
in
its
1972
taxation
year
is
a
proper
deduction.
The
plaintiff,
as
indicated,
also
claimed
depletion
allowances
as
a
deduction
in
its
1972
and
1973
taxation
years
in
the
respective
amounts
of
$3,210.61
in
1972
and
$1,018,512.73
in
1973,
being
25%
of
royalty
income
pursuant
to
Regulation
1202(1),
both
of
which
claims
for
deductions
were
disallowed
by
the
Minister.
The
amounts
are
not
in
dispute
only
the
deductibility
thereof.
The
depletion
allowances
claimed
by
the
plaintiff
in
its
1972
and
1973
taxation
years
in
respect
of
production
income
from
a
Canadian
resource
property
are
predicated
upon
Income
Tax
Regulation
1202(1)
which
reads:
1202.
(1)
Where
a
person
other
than
an
operator
.
.
(a)
has
an
interest
in
a
resource
and
in
the
proceeds
from
the
sale
of
the
products
therefrom,
or
(b)
receives
a
rental
or
royalty
computed
by
reference
to
the
amount
or
value
of
production
from
a
resource,
the
deduction
allowed
is
25%
of
the
amount
included
in
computing
his
income
for
the
year
in
respect
of
the
interest
in
the
proceeds
or
in
respect
of
the
rental
or
royalty,
as
the
case
may
be.
In
my
opinion
the
plaintiff
is
not
an
operator
and
falls
under
Regulation
1202
rather
than
an
operator
to
which
Regulation
1201
would
apply
and
different
methods
of
computing
the
deduction
and
percentage
rate
thereon
apply
under
each
of
the
two
regulations
mentioned.
Under
Regulation
1201
a
person
who
operates
a
resource
is
defined
as
a
person
who
has
an
interest
in
the
proceeds
of
a
resource
“under
an
agreement
providing
that
he
shall
share
in
the
profits
remaining
after
deducting
the
costs
of
operating
the
resource”.
Under
the
plaintiff’s
agreements
with
Amoco
it
is
specifically
provided
that
all
costs
relating
to
the
operation
of
the
resource
shall
be
borne
by
Amoco..
It
is
for
this
reason
that
I
have
concluded
that
the
plaintiff
is
not
an
operator
and
accordingly
falls
under
Regulation
1202
which
is
applicable
to
persons
other
than
an
operator.
I
have
also
concluded
for
the
reasons
expressed
above
‘that’
the
plaintiff
“has
an
interest
in
a
resource
and
in
the
proceeds
from
the
sale
of
the
products
therefrom”
and
is
therefore
entitled
to
claim
the
deduction
to
the
extent
provided
in
Regulation
1202(1).
I
mention
the
submission
by
counsel
for
the
Minister
that
the
plaintiff
did
not
record
the
results
of
these
transactions
in
clear
and
unequivocal
terms
in
its
financial
statements
as
giving
credence
to
his
submission
that
the
agreements
between
the
plaintiff
and
Amoco
do
not
mean
what
they
say
only
to
indicate
that
I
have
not
overlooked
that
contention.
An
explanation
was
proffered
and
a
note
to
the
balance
sheet
was
made
to
the
effect
that
the
exploration
expenses
were
written
off
even
where
creating
an
asset.
The
financial
statements
are
designed
by
the
plaintiff’s
auditors
to
reflect
for
the
benefit
of
the
shareholder
the
financial
position
of
the
plaintiff
at
its
financial
year
end.
I
do
not
think
that
I
am
obliged
to
delve
further
into
the
vagaries
or
the
intricacies
of
accounting
practices
because
I
do
not
think
that
such
entries,
though
not
specific,
or
the
lack
of
specific
entries,
can
be
accepted
as
contradictory
to
the
provisions
of
a
written
agreement
and
the
acts
taken
to
implement
those
agreements
when
there
is
adequate
other
evidence
of
that
implementation.
During
the
course
of
his
submission,
counsel
for
the
Minister
characterized
these
transactions
into
which
the
plaintiff
had
entered
as
a
“gimmick”
with
the
avowed
object
of
avoiding
tax.
That
description
is
both
apt
and
accurate.
These
“carve-out”
agreements
are
an
importation
and
are
well
known
in
the
industry.
While
they
may
well
serve
as
the
means
for
persons
with
funds
anxious
to
participate
in
the
production
of
petroleum
and
natural
gas
with
a
producer
in
a
potential
or
proven
field
who
has
the
right
to
exploit
that
field
and
is
willing.
to
sell
a
share
of
that
right,
the
planning
and
execution
of
these
transactions
was
designed
by
the
plaintiff
as
a
tax
avoidance
device.
With
funds
available
which,
if
not
expended
for
exploration
and
development,
would
be
taxable
as
income,
with
a
willing
vendor
of
a
percentage
of
its
shares
in
a
Canadian
resource
property
and
with
a
detailed
knowledge
and
familiarity
of
section
66
of
the
Income
Tax
Act
particularly
and
Regulations
1201
and
1202,
it
required
no
great
ingenuity
on
the
part
of
the
plaintiff
to
envision
this
scheme
and
its
possible
results.
In
exculpation
of
the
plaintiff
it
can
be
said
that
the
funds
it
possessed
were
generated
by
an
addition
to
the
price
it
sold
natural
gas
to
its
parent
company
and
were
to
be
devoted
to
exploration
and
development.
The
funds
were
not
so
expended
by
the
plaintiff
by
the
means
it
normally
employed
and
accordingly
the
plaintiff
was
anxious
to
keep
those
funds
from
the
tax
collector
and
use
them
directly
for
the
purpose
for
which
they
were
dedicated
at
a
future
time.
It
is
not
my
function
to
make
any
moral
judgment.
My
function
is
limited
to
determining
if
the
plaintiff
by
those
transactions
has
brought
itself
within
the
four
corners
of
section
66.
For
the
reasons
given
I
think
that
the
plaintiff
has
been
successful
in
doing
so.
In
my
view
the
three
decisions
of
the
House
of
Lords,
Griffiths
(Inspector
of
Taxes)
v
J
P
Harrison
(Watford)
Ltd,
[1962]
1
Ail
ER
909.
Finsbury
Securities
Ltd
v
Bishop
(Inspector
of
Taxes),
[1965]
1
All
ER
530,
and
FA
&
AB
Ltd
v
Lupton
(Inspector
of
Taxes),
[1971]
3
At
ER
948,
are
not
helpful
in
resolving
the
problem
before
me.
Each
of
these
cases
involved
dividend
stripping
through
the
device
of
the
purchase
and
sale
of
shares.
In
each
instance
the
question
was
whether
the
purchase
and
sale
of
shares
was
trading
in
shares
or
not.
In
the
first
case
it
was
held
to
be
and
in
the
other
two
cases
it
was
held
when
the
transactions
were
viewed
in
their
totality
that
the
purchase
of
shares
was
outside
the
scope
of
trading
in
shares
but
were
in
fact
planned
and
carried
out
for
the
purpose
of
establishing
a
Claim
on
the
Treasury.
In
my
appreciation,
the
question
before
me
is
not
to
determine
if
a
transaction
is
one
thing
or
another
but
to
determine
if
the
plaintiff
has
brought
itself
within
the
express
provisions
of
section
66
and
I
have
concluded
that
it
has
and
I
have
also
concluded
that
since
the
plaintiff
has
so
brought
itself
within
an
express
and
specific
provision
of
the
Income
Tax
Act
which
permits
of
the
plaintiff
claiming
deductions
as
it
did,
then
section
245
is
not
applicable
to
the
transactions.
Because
of
these
conclusions
which
I
have
reached
for
the
reasons
I
have
heretofore
expressed,
it
follows
that
the
plaintiff’s
appeals
from
its
assessments
for
its
1972
and
1973
taxation
years
must
be
allowed
with
costs.