Addy,
J:—The
action
involves
income
tax
assessed
against
the
defendant
for
taxation
years
1967
to
1970
inclusively,
pursuant
to
reassessments
made
against
it
for
certain
gains
realized
from
share
and
option
transactions
as
well
as
interest
received
by
the
defendant
on
certain
bonds
which,
according
to
the
defendant,
qualified
as
income
bonds.
The
defendant
appealed
the
reasssessment
to
the
Tax
Review
Board.
The
appeal
was
allowed
in
part
in
that
the
Board
agreed
with
the
defendant
that
the
bonds
in
question
qualified
as
income
bonds
under
paragraph
139(1
)(t)
of
the
Income
Tax
Act,
RSC
1952,
c
148
(hereinafter
referred
as
“the
Act”).
The
plaintiff
in
the
present
action
appeals
against
this
finding.
The
defendant,
on
the
other
hand,
counterclaims
in
this
action
against
the
dismissal
of
its
appeal
by
the
Tax
Review
Board
with
respect
to
gains
realized
from
the
disposition
of
certain
shares,
options
and
mortgage
bonds
which
took
place
in
each
of
the
four
taxation
years.
There
exists
no
dispute
between
the
parties
as
to
the
actual
amounts
involved
in
this
action
but
merely
as
to
how
the
amounts
should
be
considered
for
taxation
purposes.
Dealing
first
with
the
plaintiff’s
claim
regarding
the
income
from
what
was
found
by
the
Tax
Review
Board
to
be
income
bonds,
the
dispute
as
to
whether
the
interest
received
is
to
be
considered
as
dividends
involves
the
interpretation
and
application
of
subsection
8(3)
and
paragraph
12(1
)(f)
of
the
Act.
They
read
as
follows:
8.
(3)
An
annual
or
other
periodic
amount
paid
by
a
corporation
to
a
taxpayer
in
respect
of
an
income
bond
or
income
debenture
shall
be
deemed
to
have
been
received
by
the
taxpayer
as
a
dividend
unless
the
corporation
is
entitled
to
deduct
the
amount
so
paid
in
computing
its
income.
12.
(1)
in
computing
income,
no
deduction
shall
be
made
in
respect
of:
(f)
an
amount
paid
by
a
corporation
other
than
a
personal
corporation
as
interest
or
otherwise
to
holders
of
its
income
bonds
or
income
debentures
.
.
.
“Income
bond”
or
“income
debenture”
is
defined
in
paragraph
139(1
)(t)
of
the
Act
as
follows:
“income
bond”
or
“income
debenture”
means,
a
bond
or
debenture
in
respect
of
which
interest
or
dividends
are
payable
only
when
the
debtor
company
has
made
a
profit
before
taking
into
account
the
interest
or
dividend
obligation;
The
key
characteristic
of
the
income
bond
is
that
interest
is
payable
by
the
debtor
only
if
a
profit
has
been
realized
by
the
debtor
in
that
year.
The
bonds
to
which
the
action
referred
were
issued
pursuant
to
six
different
trust
deeds,
all
executed
in
1966
in
favour
of
various
trust
companies
by
the
following
firms
as
borrowers:
1.
Crystal
Beverages
(1963)
Ltd;
2.
Agristeel
Ltd;
3.
Speedway
Express
Ltd;
4.
Springdale
Mills
(Ontario)
Limited;
5.
North
American
Plastics
Co
Ltd;
6.
Comeau’s
Sea
Food
Fishmeal
Ltd.
In
all
of
these
trust
deeds
the
bonds
were
described
as
income
bonds,
but,
in
addition
to
the
provision
normally
attached
to
this
type
of
security,
the
payment
of
the
interest
on
the
bonds,
as
well
as
the
payment
of
principal,
was
guaranteed
by
third
parties.
The
loans
were
made
in
all
cases
pursuant
to
an
offer
of
finance
made
by
the
defendant
whereby
the
intervention
of
third
parties
to
guarantee
full
payment
was
made
a
condition
for
the
granting
of
the
loans.
The
position
of
the
plaintiff
is
that
the
interest
payments
received
by
the
defendant
in
respect
of
the
bonds
should
be
treated
as
ordinary
interest,
because
the
bonds
do
not
qualify
as
income
bonds,
while
the
defendant
takes
the
contrary
view
and
alleges
that
it
should
be
deemed
to
have
been
received
only
as
dividends,
pursuant
to
subsection
8(3)
supra,
because
the
bonds
truly
qualified
as
income
bonds
under
paragraph
139(1
)(t)
notwithstanding
the
guarantees
from
third
parties
whereby
the
defendant
was
assured
full
reimbursement
of
the
loan
and
of
all
interest
payable
thereunder
as
well
as
all
interest
merely
stipulated
in
the
trust
deed
and
which
would
not
in
fact
be
payable
by
the
borrower
if
the
latter
did
not
make
a
profit.
In
the
case
of
the
first
above-mentioned
trust
deed,
ie,
Crystal
Beverages,
the
offer
to
finance
the
defendant
contains
the
following
clause:
The
Bonds
will
be
secured
by:
(a)
a
first
specific
charge
on
all
machinery
and
equipment
(including
motor
vehicles)
now
owned
and
hereafter
acquired
by
you,
and
more
particularly
on
all
machinery
used
in
the
canning
and
bottling
of
beverages
and
for
the
mixing
and
bottling
of
chocolate
milk;
(b)
a
second
charge
on
land
and
building
located
at
Lotus
Street
and
Henri
Durant
in
the
Moncton
Industrial
Park,
Moncton,
NB.
The
land
consists
of
approximately
100,000
square
feet
and
the
building
consists
of
approximately
52,000
square
feet.
Both
are
subject
to
a
first
charge
by
Eastern
Canada
Savings
&
Loan
Association,
not
exceeding
$367,500;
(c)
a
first
floating
charge
on
all
your
other
assets
(not
contained
in
the
above
specific
charges),
expressed
in
such
a
manner
as
not
to
hinder
you
from
dealing
with
these
assets
or
giving
security
to
your
bankers
in
the
ordinary
course
of
business;
(d)
the
joint
and
several
guarantee
for
$200,000
of
Hugh
John
Flemming,
Frederick
G
Flemming,
David
Owen,
Stanley
Shefler
and
Reno
Castonguay.
In
addition,
the
guarantors
shall
undertake
to
pay
interest
quarterly
on
the
debt
at
the
rate
of
8
A%
in
the
event
the
Company’s
earnings
are
not
sufficient
to
pay
the
interest
due
on
the
Income
Bond.
The
guarantee
itself
contains
the
following
recital:
AND
WHEREAS
it
was
a
condition
precedent
to
the
financing
contained
In
and
secured
by
the
Trust
Deed
that
the
Guarantors
further
agree
as
hereinafter
provided;
and
the
following
undertaking:
NOW
THEREFORE
WITNESSETH,
that
in
consideration
of
the
sum
of
$1
and
in
consideration
of
the
premises,
the
Guarantors
hereby
agree
and
undertake
that
in
the
event
the
Company
does
not
have
income
available
(as
defined
in
the
Trust
Deed)
for
the
payment
of
interest
on
such
dates
as
called
for
on
the
repayment
Schedule
of
the
First
Mortgage
Income
Bond
then
the
Guarantors
shall
pay
interest
thereon
at
the
rate
of
8%%
per
annum.
The
offer
to
finance
and
the
guarantee
document
of
Agristeel
contain
substantially
the
same
provisions.
In
the
case
of
the
Speedway
loan
the
offer
to
finance
contains
the
following
provision:
4.
SECURITY
The
bonds
will
be
secured
by:
Guarantee
of
G
GM
MacFie
for
$100,000.
In
addition
Mr
G
GM
MacFie
will
pay
to
RoyNat
in
the
event
the
Company
fails
to
pay
interest
on
the
Bonds
on
the
interest
payment
dates
above
mentioned,
interest
at
the
rate
payable
thereunder
plus
additional
interest
of
2
/4%
per
annum
calculated
on
a
daily
basis
on
the
principal
amount
of
Bonds
outstanding
computed
from
the
last
interest
payment
date
on
which
interest
was
fully
paid
to
RoyNat
under
the
terms
of
the
Bonds
to
the
date
of
actual
payment
by
the
said
G
M
MacFie;
It
will
be
noted
here
that
additional
interest
over
and
above
what
the
borrower
would
have
to
pay
is
also
provided
for.
Instead
of
a
separate
guarantee
document
the
trust
deed
itself
contains
an
intervention
by
a
third
party
guarantor
who
undertakes,
among
other
things,
as
follows:
6.
Notwithstanding
the
foregoing
provisions
of
this
section,
and
in
the
event
that
the
Company
fails
to
pay
interest
on
the
Income
Bonds
on
the
interest
payment
dates
hereinabove
mentioned,
the
said
Guarantor
hereby
agrees
to
pay
to
the
Bondholders
interest
at
the
rate
payable
thereunder
plus
additional
interest
of
2
/4%
per
annum,
calculated
on
a
daily
basis
on
the
principal
amount
of
Income
Bonds
outstanding
computed
from
the
last
interest
payment
date
on
which
interest
was
fully
paid
to
the
Bondholders,
under
the
terms
of
the
Income
Bonds,
to
the
date
of
actual
payment
by
the
said
Guarantor.
The
next
two
loans,
that
is,
Springdale
Mills
and
North
American
Plastics
contain
substantially
similar
provisions.
As
in
the
case
of
the
Speedway
loan
they
do
not
specifically
mention
that
the
guarantee
will
take
effect
if
there
is
insufficient
income
but
no
other
reasonable
interpretation
can
be
put
on
the
text.
The
guarantee
is
absolute
and
the
guarantor
becomes
liable
“in
the
event
that
the
company
(debtor)
fails
to
pay
.
.
.
”
I
find
that
in
all
six
cases
the
respondent
is
guaranteed
payment
in
full
by
the
guarantor
of
all
interest
at
the
rate
stipulated
in
the
bonds
notwithstanding
that
the
principal
debtor
company
might
not
have
made
any
profit
and
would
not
itself
be
obliged
to
pay
interest.
I
do
not
accept
the
contention
of
counsel
for
the
defendant
that
Comeau
Sea
Food
and
the
North
American
Plastic
loans
can
be
distinguished
from
the
other
four
in
this
respect.
If
the
guarantors
were
merely
guaranteeing
payment
in
full
of
the
income
bonds
in
accordance
with
the
terms
of
same,
then,
it
seems
obvious
that
this
would
not
affect
the
nature
of
the
bonds
nor
prevent
any
interest
paid
thereon
by
the
principal
debtor
from
being
treated
as
a
dividend.
Counsel
for
the
plaintiff
in
fact
fully
agrees
that
this
would
be
the
case.
However,
the
guarantors,
assuming
that
under
the
circumstances
they
can
be
called
guarantors,
undertake
to
do
much
more
than
the
principal
debtors:
as
previously
stated,
the
former
in
effect
undertake
to
pay
interest
at
the
rate
stipulated
even
if
the
debtors
are
not
contractually
obliged
to
pay
it
and
in
some
cases
they
also
undertake
to
pay
additional
interest
as
a
bonus.
In
the
case
of
Comeau
Sea
Foods
the
offer
to
purchase
also
states
that
the
guarantee
is
a
condition
precedent
to
the
loan.
It
seems
obvious
from
the
above
that
the
additional
obligations
by
the
guarantors
in
each
of
the
six
cases
is
integral
to
the
whole
transaction
and
it
is
indeed
specifically
referred
to
as
such
in
the
Crystal
Beverages,
Agristeel
and
Comeau
Sea
Foods
loans.
The
provisions
regarding
the
special
way
in
which
interest
is
to
be
taxed
in
the
case
of
income
bonds
constitute
an
exception
to
the
general
manner
in
which
interest
is
normally
taxed.
Therefore,
those
provisions
must
be
strictly
interpreted
against
that
taxpayer,
the
latter
being
obliged
to
establish
that
the
case
falls
squarely
within
the
provisions
of
the
section.
“Interest”
is
not
defined
in
the
Act.
In
Riches
v
Westminister
Bank
Ltd,
[1944]
1
All
ER
469
Viscount
Simon,
at
472,
quoted
with
approval
the
following
statement
of
Evershed,
J
as
to
the
nature
of
interest:
.
it
is
a
payment
which
becomes
due
because
the
creditor
has
not
had
his
money
at
the
due
date.
It
may
be
regarded
either
as
representing
the
profit
he
might
have
made
if
he
had
had
the
use
of
the
money,
or,
conversely,
the
loss
he
suffered
because
he
had
not
that
use.
The
general
idea
is
that
he
is
entitled
to
compensation
for
the
deprivation.
From
that
point
of
view
it
would
seem
immaterial
whether
the
money
was
due
to
him
under
a
contract,
express
or
implied,
or
a
statute,
or
whether
the
money
was
due
for
any
other
reason
in
law.
Rand,
J
In
the
matter
of
a
reference
as
to
the
validity
of
section
6
of
the
Farm
Security
Act,
1944,
of
the
Province
of
Saskatchewan,
[1947]
SCR
394
had
this
to
say,
at
411
and
412,
regarding
the
nature
of
interest:
Interest
is,
in
general
terms,
the
return
or
consideration
or
compensation
for
the
use
or
retention
by
one
person
of
a
sum
of
money,
belonging
to,
in
a
colloquial
sense,
or
owed
to,
another.
There
may
be
other
essential
characteristics
but
they
are
not
material
here.
The
relation
of
the
obligation
to
pay
interest
to
that
of
the
principal
sum
has
been
dealt
with
in
a
number
of
cases
including:
Economic
Life
Assur
Society
v
Usborne
[1902]
AC
147
and
of
Duff
J
in
Union
Investment
Co
v
Wells
[1929]
39
Can
SCR
at
645;
from
which
it
is
clear
that
the
former,
depending
on
its
terms,
may
be
independent
of
the
latter,
or
that
both
may
be
integral
parts
of
a
single
obligation
or
that
interest
may
be
merely
accessory
to
principal.
But
the
definition,
as
well
as
the
obligation,
assumes
that
interest
is
referrable
to
a
principal
in
money
or
an
obligation
to
pay
money.
Without
that
relational
structure
in
fact
and
whatever
the
basis
of
calculating
or
determining
the
amount,
no
obligation
to
pay
money
or
property
can
be
deemed
an
obligation
to
pay
interest.
The
above
passage
was
quoted
with
approval
in
England
by
Megarry,
J
in
Re
Euro
Hotel
(Belgravia)
Ltd,
[1975]
3
All
ER
1075.
The
learned
judge
then
went
on
to
add
at
1084
of
the
report:
It
seems
to
me
that
running
through
the
cases
there
is
the
concept
that
as
a
general
rule
two
requirements
must
be
satisfied
for
a
payment
to
amount
to
interest,
and
a
fortiori
to
amount
to
“interest
of
money”.
First,
there
must
be
a
sum
of
money
by
reference
to
which
the
payment
which
is
said
to
be
interest
is
to
be
ascertained.
A
payment
cannot
be
“interest
of
money”
unless
there
is
the
requisite
“money”
for
the
payment
to
be
siad
to
be
“interest
of”.
Plainly,
there
are
sums
of
“money”
in
the
present
case.
Second,
those
sums
of
money
must
be
sums
that
are
due
to
the
person
entitled
to
the
alleged
interest;
and
it
is
this
latter
requirement
that
is
mainly
in
issue
before
me.
I
do
not,
of
course,
say
that
in
every
case
these
two
requirements
are
exhaustive,
or
that
they
are
inescapable.
Thus
I
do
not
see
why
payments
should
not
be
“interest
of
money”
if
A
lends
money
to
B
and
stipulates
that
the
interest
should
be
paid
not
to
him
but
to
X:
yet
for
the
ordinary
case
I
think
that
they
suffice.
Counsel
for
the
plaintiff
on
the
basis
of
those
definitions
of
interest
argued
that
the
guarantors,
in
undertaking
to
pay
money
calculated
as
interest
for
capital
sums
of
money
lent
the
debtor
companies,
were
in
fact
undertaking
to
pay
interest
even
though
it
was
not
the
guarantors
who
had
received
or
benefited
from
the
capital
sums
on
which
the
interest
is
calculated.
It
is
the
substance
of
the
transaction
which
matters
and
not
the
form
or
wording
of
the
documents
(see
La
Société
coopérative
agricole
du
Can-
ton
de
Granby
v
MNR,
[1961]
SCR
671;
[1961]
CTC
326;
61
DTC
1205.
It
would
follow,
if
that
argument
is
accepted,
that
the
bonds
would
not
be
income
bonds
as
they
contain
a
firm
undertaking
to
pay
interest.
The
defendant
on
the
other
hand
argued
that
what
was
payable
by
the
guarantor
was
neither
interest
nor
dividends
but
something
of
an
entirely
different
nature.
There
is
a
fundamental
difference
in
nature
between
the
obligations
of
a
principal
debtor
and
those
of
a
guarantor.
The
defendant
quoted
from
Hervé
Roch
in
his
Traité
de
Droit
civil
du
Québec,
Vol
13
at
591
and
592.
The
text
reads
as
follows:
(3)
Il
faut
dire
aussi,
que
la
caution
d’une
obligation
de
faire
ne
s’oblige
pas
à
exécuter
ce
que
le
débiteur
principal
a
promis,
mais
elle
garantit
les
dommages-
intérêts
que
pourra
devoir
le
débiteur
au
cas
d’inexécution;
d’où
il
suit
que
la
caution
d’une
obligation
de
ce
genre
ne
peut
repousser
l’action
en
dommages-intérêts
du
créancier
en
excipant
de
ce
qu’elle
n’a
pas
été
mise
en
demeure
de
suppléer
au
défaut
du
débiteur
principal.
(4)
Le
cautionnement
est,
enfin,
l’accessoire
de
l'obligation
principale
et
il
est
soumis
en
plus
des
règles
du
contrat
à
certaines
règles
spéciales
tant
à
l’égard
des
relations
de
la
caution
avec
le
créancier,
que
de
celles
avec
le
débiter
et
entre
les
cautions.
It
is
to
be
noted,
however,
that
the
learned
author,
at
least
in
the
first
part
of
the
citation,
is
referring
to
a
guarantor
of
“une
obligation
de
faire”
and
not
“une
obligation
de
payer.”
In
other
words,
he
is
stating
that
where
a
third
party
guarantees
an
undertaking
on
the
part
of
a
contracting
party
to
execute
certain
work
or
to
do
anything,
he
is
really
undertaking
to
save
the
obligee
harmless
from
any
damages
which
might
follow
from
nonperformance
of
the
contract
by
the
main
contracting
party
for
whom
he
is
acting
as
guarantor.
It
is
really
a
contract
of
indemnity.
The
following
statement
pertaining
to
the
nature
of
a
guarantee
is
to
be
found
in
Halsbury’s
Laws
of
England
3rd
ed,
Vol
18
at
411
and
412:
767.
Guarantee.
A
guarantee
is
an
accessory
contract,
whereby
the
promisor
undertakes
to
be
answerable
to
the
promisee
for
the
debt,
default
or
miscarriage
of
another
person,
whose
primary
liability
to
the
promisee
must
exist
or
be
contemplated.
It
is
often
termed,
in
cases
and
text
books
a
“collateral”
or
“conditional”
contract,
in
order
to
distinguish
it
from
one
that
is
“original”
and
“absolute”.
A
guarantee
is
always
a
contract
of
an
accessory
nature,
ancillary
and
subsidiary
to
some
other
contract
or
liability
on
which
it
is
founded.
(See
Mountstephen
v
Lakeman
(1871),
LR
7
QB
196,
affirmed
sub
nom.
Lakeman
v
Mounstephen
(1874),
LRHL
17
at
24,
25
per
Lord
Selborne.)
But
it
does
not
follow
necessarily
that
no
part
of
any
payment
made
under
such
contract
could
ever
be
considered
as
interest
in
the
hands
of
the
recipient.
Counsel
for
the
defendant
argued
in
addition
that
the
payment
by
a
guarantor
on
income
bonds
cannot,
under
subsection
8(3),
above
quoted,
be
deemed
to
be
a
dividend
because
a
guarantor
can
be
a
natural
person
as
well
as
a
corporation
and
subsection
8(3)
refers
exclusively
to
an
“amount
paid
by
a
corporation,”
otherwise,
the
words
“taxpayer”
or
“person”
would
have
been
used.
He
also
maintained
that,
because
of
the
expression
“holders
of
its
income
bonds”
in
paragraph
12(1
)(f)
previously
quoted,
that
the
provisions
therein
contained
could
not
contemplate
third
parties.
It
does
not
deal
with
the
question
of
whether
an
amount
paid
by
a
third
party
is
or
is
not
deductible
and
nowhere
else
in
the
Act
is
the
question
dealt
with
in
respect
of
income
bonds.
He
argued
that,
because
of
this,
the
definition
of
income
bonds
only
contemplated
a
debtor
and
a
creditor
and
that,
since
no
payment
by
a
third
party
can
be
considered
a
deemed
dividend
under
subsection
8(3),
then
any
payment
by
a
third
party
cannot
be
considered
as
interest.
I
consider
the
last
conclusion
to
be
a
non
sequitur.
There
exists
jurisprudence
to
support
the
proposition
that
what
a
guarantor
pays
is
not
interest.
A
leasing
case
on
the
matter
is
Holder
and
Another
v
CIR,
[1932]
AC
624.
We
find
therein
the
following
statements
as
to
the
nature
of
a
payment
made
by
a
guarantor
to
indemnify
a
principal
debtor
against
non-payment
of
interest
by
a
principal
debtor.
Per
Viscount
Dunedin
at
627
and
628:
I
think
that
interest
payable
on
an
advance
from
a
bank
means
interest
on
an
advance
made
to
the
person
paying.
The
guarantor
does
not
pay
on
an
advance
made
to
him,
but
pays
under
his
guarantee.
It
is
true
that
he
pays
a
sum
which
pays
all
interest
due
by
the
person
to
whom
the
advance
is
made,
but
his
debt
is
his
debt
under
the
guarantee
not
a
debt
in
respect
of
the
advance
made
to
him.
Per
Lord
Thankerton
at
631:
Interest
is
the
return
given
for
the
use
of
the
advances,
and
is
due
by
the
person
who
obtains
the
advances;
the
liability
of
the
guarantor
is
direct
to
the
creditor,
and
is
an
undertaking
to
indemnify
him
against
loss.
The
creditor
computes
his
loss
by
the
amount
of
the
failure
of
the
principal
debtor
to
pay
him
principal
and
interest.
In
paying
the
amount
of
the
indemnity,
whether
limited
or
otherwise,
I
am
of
opinion
that
the
guarantor
cannot
be
said
to
be
paying
interest
to
the
creditor,
though
he
is
making
good
the
loss
of
interest.
Per
Lord
Macmillan
at
634:
The
short
answer,
in
my
opinion,
is
that
the
appellants
received
no
advance
from
the
bank
and
owed
no
interest
to
the
bank.
Their
relationship
to
the
bank
was
not
that
of
borrower
and
lender,
and
their
liability
to
the
bank
was
solely
that
of
guarantors
of
a
third
party
indebtedness
to
the
bank.
When
they
paid
the
sum
of
£64,482
16s.
8d.
to
the
bank
they
did
so
in
discharge
of
their
liability
to
pay
whatever
sum,
whether
of
principal
or
interest,
Blumfield,
Ltd,
owed
to
the
bank.
It
cannot,
therefore,
with
legal
accuracy
be
said
that
the
appellants
made
payment
to
the
bank
of
interest
on
an
advance
from
the
bank
within
the
meaning
of
the
section.
In
the
case
of
Donald
Preston
McLaws
v
MNR,
[1970]
CTC
420;
70
DTC
6289,
Kerr,
J
quoted
and
followed
the
Ho/der
case,
concluding
with
the
following
finding:
I
think
that
the
same
reasoning
may
be
applied
to
the
payments
made
by
the
appellant
to
the
bank
in
this
case.
He
made
them
pursuant
to
his
guarantee,
which
included
interest
due
to
the
bank
by
the
company
to
which
it
had
advanced
the
amounts
of
the
loans,
but
what
the
appellant
paid
the
bank
was
his
debt
under
the
guarantee,
not
a
debt
in
respect
of
money
borrowed
by
him.
Consequently,
the
appellant
is
not
entitled
to
deduct
any
part
of
the
payments
as
“interest”
pursuant
to
paragraph
11
(1
)(c),
whatever
right,
if
any,
to
deduction
he
may
have
under
other
sections.
It
is
of
some
interest
to
note
that
these
cases
dealt
with
the
nature
of
the
payment
made
by
the
guarantor
in
so
far
as
its
deductibility
as
interest
in
the
hands
of
the
person
disbursing
the
money
is
concerned
and
not
as
to
the
nature
of
the
payment
for
taxation
purposes
qua
the
payee
or
recipient
of
the
monies.
The
same
payment
may
frequently
be
considered
as
income
for
taxation
purposes
in
the
hands
of
the
payee
and
capital
in
the
hands
of
the
payor
and
vice
versa.
Also
two
sums
identical
in
nature
paid
for
identical
purposes
may
also
be
treated
quite
differently
for
taxation
purposes,
depending
on
other
circumstances
such
as
the
occupation
of
the
taxpayer.
As
to
sections
regarding
income
bonds
not
contemplating
third
parties
because
of
the
use
of
the
word
“corporation”
this
seems
to
be,
to
some
extent,
begging
the
question
which
in
essence
resolves
itself
into
determining
whether
or
not
the
bonds
qualify
as
income
bonds.
If
they
do
not
then,
of
course,
there
can
be
no
exemption
in
any
event.
If
they
do,
then
it
matters
not
whether
there
are
third
parties,
at
least
where
the
payment
is
not
actually
made
by
the
third
party.
The
Holder
case
dealt
with
a
true
guarantee
or
contract
of
suretyship.
However,
where
a
third
party
undertakes,
as
in
the
case
at
bar,
to
pay
more
than
the
principal
debtor,
it
is
not,
strictly
speaking,
a
guarantee
or
a
true
contract
of
suretyship
but
rather
a
contract
of
indemnity,
although
it
does
ipso
facto
protect
the
lender
against
the
default
of
the
borrower.
As
to
the
essence
of
a
guarantee
at
civil
law,
see
article
1929
of
the
Civil
Code,
Title
15th
of
Suretyship,
c1:
Art.
1929.
Suretyship
is
the
act
by
which
a
person
engages
to
fulfil
the
obligation
of
another
in
case
of
its
non-fulfilment
by
the
latter.
The
person
who
contracts
this
engagement
is
called
surety.
and
see
the
Report
on
the
Quebec
Civil
Code,
Title
7th,
14th
C,
Suretyship
Vol
1
(Civil
Code
Revision
Office,
1978):
Chapter
XIV
—
Suretyship:
842.
Suretyship
is
a
contract
by
which
one
person,
called
a
surety,
undertakes
towards
a
creditor
to
execute
the
obligation
of
the
debtor
if
he
fails
to
execute
it.
A
person
who
promises
that
a
debtor
will
execute
his
obligation
is
deemed
a
surety.
Halsbury’s
Laws
of
England,
4th
ed,
Vol
20,
Chapter
on
Guarantee
and
Indemnity,
p
49,
para
101
defines
a
guarantee
according
to
common
law
as
follows:
101.
Guarantee.
A
guarantee
is
an
accessory
contract
by
which
the
promisor
undertakes
to
be
answerable
to
the
promisee
for
the
debt,
default
or
miscarriage
of
another
person
whose
primary
liability
to
the
promisee
must
exist
or
be
contemplated.
As
in
the
case
of
another
contract
its
validity
depends
upon
the
mutual
assent
of
the
parties
to
it,
their
capacity
to
contract;
and
consideration,
actual
or
implied.
It
is
also
important
to
note
the
distinction
drawn
in
Halsbury’s
between
a
contract
of
indemnity
and
guarantee
at
54,
paragraph
108
of
the
same
volume:
108.
Guarantee
and
indemnity.
Although
a
contract
of
guarantee
may
be
described
as
a
contract
of
indemnity
in
the
widest
sense
of
the
term,
yet
contracts
of
guarantee
are
distinguished
from
contracts
of
indemnity
ordinarily
so
called
by
the
fact
that
a
guarantee
is
a
collateral
contract
to
answer
for
the
default
of
another
person,
and
thus
is
a
contract
that
is
ancillary
or
subsidiary
to
another
contract,
whereas
an
indemnity
is
a
contract
by
which
the
promisor
undertakes
an
original
and
independent
obligation.
The
difference
between
these
two
types
of
contract
was
also
dealt
with
by
the
Court
of
Appeal
in
England
in
Western
Credit
Ltd
v
Alberry,
[1964]
2
All
ER
938.
The
Holder
case
and
the
McLaws
case
can
therefore
be
distin-
guished
from
the
case
at
bar
on
two
grounds:
the
fact
that
they
dealt
with
true
guarantees
as
opposed
to
what
is
essentially
a
contract
of
additional
indemnity
but
mainly,
and
above
all,
on
the
grounds
that
they
dealt
with
the
payments
made
as
compensation
for
the
capital
sums
lent,
from
the
standpoint
of
the
payor
as
opposed
to
the
payee.
In
the
McLaws
case
for
instance,
the
decision
turned
on
whether
the
payment
made
by
the
taxpayer
should
be
charged
to
income
account
or
capital
account.
I
could
find
nothing
in
the
ordinary
definitions
of
interest
which
would
make
it
essential
that
the
compensation
for
money
lent
where
it
otherwise
meets
the
criteria
of
interest,
be
paid
by
the
borrower
in
order
for
the
payment
to
qualify
as
interest.
On
the
contrary,
an
ordinary
person,
offering
to
act
as
a
guarantor
would
simply
say
to
the
proposed
lender:
“If
*X‘
(the
borrower)
does
not
pay
the
interest,
I
will
pay
it”.
He
would
think
of
using
no
other
expression.
In
the
case
at
bar,
should
any
of
the
debtors
at
any
time
have
paid
no
interest
because
no
profits
had
been
realized
and
should
the
third
party
then
have
paid
pursuant
to
his
contract
of
indemnity,
then
I
would
have
had
no
hesitation
in
finding
that
such
a
receipt
would
be
considered
as
income
in
the
hands
of
the
defendant
and
that,
since
the
amount
was
calculated
on
a
percentage
of
a
capital
sum
loaned
and
also
proportionately
to
the
length
of
time
that
the
capital
sum
remained
outstanding,
it
could
only
be
defined
as
interest
in
the
hands
of
the
defendant.
As
previously
found
by
me,
the
contracts
of
indemnity
or
guarantee
formed
in
each
case
an
integral
or
essential
part
of
and
a
condition
sine
qua
non
of
the
loan.
As
the
bonds
were
issued
pursuant
thereto,
the
latter
cannot
be
considered
independently
of
the
undertaking
of
the
third
party.
One
must
consider
the
true
substance
of
the
transaction
as
opposed
to
its
mere
form.
The
fact
that
the
guarantees
in
certain
cases
were
contained
in
seprate
documents
does
not
in
any
way
affect
the
result.
I
find
that,
as
part
and
parcel
of
the
whole
scheme,
the
receipt
of
interest
for
the
money
lent
is
absolutely
guaranteed
to
the
lender,
the
bonds
do
not
qualify
as
income
bonds.
In
the
circumstances
of
the
present
case,
interest
provided
for
in
the
collateral
agreement
is,
as
between
the
parties
to
the
whole
transaction,
to
be
considered
as
interest
payable
under
the
whole
transaction
with
the
guarantor
being
considered
as
included
in
the
transaction.
The
payment
of
interest
even
when
provided
for
only
in
the
collateral
agreement,
is,
in
so
far
as
the
payee
is
concerned,
to
be
considered
as
interest
provided
for
in
the
bond
or
in
the
trust
agreement,
since
the
execution
of
the
agreement
is
a
condition
sina
qua
non
of
the
existence
of
the
whole
transaction.
I
can
see
no
difference
in
the
case
at
bar
from
a
situation
where
the
bond
itself
would
contain
the
text
of
the
absolute
guarantee
of
payment
and
name
the
third
party
undertaking
to
pay.
Such
a
bond
would
not,
in
my
view,
qualify
as
an
income
bond
as
defined
in
paragraph
139(1
)(t).
It
is
true
that
where
the
guarantee
Is
entirely
contained
in
the
collateral
agreement,
which
is
not
referred
to
in
any
way
in
the
bonds
or
in
the
trust
deed,
and
where
the
bonds
are
subsequently
sold
to
a
third
party,
without
the
absolute
guarantee
being
assigned,
then,
in
the
hands
of
that
third
party
the
same
bonds
would,
in
all
probability,
qualify
as
income
bonds
since
that
particular
holder
or
payee
could
no
longer
be
assured
of
receiving
interest
in
the
event
of
the
principal
debtor
not
realizing
sufficient
profits.
Similarly,
if
the
text
of
the
bonds
and
of
the
trust
agreement
were
to
conform
strictly
to
the
provisions
of
the
Act
regarding
income
bonds
and
if
there
were
no
guarantor
but,
by
separate
collateral
agreement
the
principal
debtor
were
to
undertake
directly
with
the
bond
holder
and
not
through
the
trustee,
to
pay
interest
in
any
event,
then
surely
the
bonds
could
not
be
considered
as
income
bonds
as
long
as
that
collateral
agreement
remained
enforceable,
notwithstanding
the
fact
that
the
bonds
themselves
are
expressed
to
be
payable
only
when
the
debtor
has
made
a
profit.
On
this
issue
the
finding
of
the
Tax
Review
Board
will
therefore
be
set
aside
and
the
original
assessment
confirmed.
I
turn
next
to
the
issues
raised
by
the
defendant
in
its
counterclaim
as
to
gains
realized
from
the
disposition
of
certain
shares,
options
and
mortgage
bonds
which
were
declared
to
be
taxable
as
ordinary
income
by
both
the
Minister
and
the
Tax
Review
Board.
The
transactions
involved
were
the
following:
1.
|
1967
—
profit
realized
on
sale
of
mortgage
bonds
|
|
|
re
Tri
Town
Realties
|
$
|
4,000.00
|
2.
|
1968
—
profit
realized
on
sale
of
shares
and
|
|
|
release
of
purchase
option
re
|
|
|
CHUM-1050
Limited
|
|
98,000.00
|
3.
|
1959
—
profit
realized
on
sales
of
shares:
|
|
|
London
Bottling
Co
Ltd
|
|
2,850.00
|
|
Tubafour
Stud
Mills
Ltd
|
100,000.00
|
|
Lloyd
Bros
Lumber
Co
Ltd
|
|
30,000.00
|
4.
|
1979
—
profit
realized
on
sales
of
shares
|
|
|
Canadian
Fibreform
Ltd
|
|
13,050.00
|
|
Sodium
Sulphate
(Sask)
Ltd
|
|
1,500.00
|
|
profit
realized
on
sale
or
release
|
|
|
of
option,
The
Aylmer
Dairy
Ltd
|
|
7,443.66
|
The
evidence
established
that
RoyNat
provided
term
financing,
that
is
3
to
10
years,
for
small
and
medium
sized
businesses.
The
loans
averaged
approximately
$250,000.
It
was
also
engaged
in
the
financing
of
equipment
through
leasing
or
rent-purchase
agreements.
As
part
and
parcel
of
its
various
lending
transactions
in
certain
cases
it
acquired
bonus
shares
and
options
to
purchase
shares.
In
one
case,
that
is,
Canadian
Fiberform
Ltd,
it
claims
to
have
paid
fair
value
for
the
shares
obtained.
Counsel
for
the
defendant
readily
admits
that
it
has
been
firmly
established
by
jurisprudence
that,
where
assets
other
than
shares
have
been
acquired
as
a
bonus
when
loans
are
made,
those
assets
are
treated
as
ordinary
income
from
every
standpoint,
since
they
are
considered
as
gains
made
in
the
course
of
the
taxpayer’s
business.
But
he
also
argues
that
in
none
of
the
cases
where
the
assets
shares
or
other
forms
of
investments
and
that
these
should
be
treated
differently
because
where
shares
are
concerned,
taxpayers
are
fully
taxable
on
the
profits
made
on
resale
only
if
trading
in
shares
or
if
the
transaction
is
found
to
be
an
adventure
in
the
nature
of
trade.
His
argument
is
also
founded
on
the
allegations
that
in
the
case
at
bar,
there
was
no
element
of
speculation
in
the
enterprise
and
also
that
the
distinction
betwen
shares
and
other
assets
lies
not
only
in
the
nature
of
the
assets
but
also
on
the
fact
that,
while
RoyNat
acquired
the
shares
in
question
in
relation
with
its
financing
business,
the
disposition
of
same
had
nothing
to
do
with
the
financing
business.
The
facts
are
really
uncontested,
the
plaintiff
having
called
no
witnesses
at
trial
and
both
parties
having
agreed
to
rely
on
certain
documentary
evidence
produced
as
exhibits
at
trial
and
the
oral
testimony
of
the
Vice-
President
of
Investments
of
the
defendant
given
before
the
Tax
Review
Board
as
well
as
the
exhibits
filed
at
the
hearing.
I
arrived
at
the
following
findings
of
fact
from
the
evidence
adduced:
1.
The
subject
loans
in
issue
were
made
in
the
regular
course
of
the
taxpayer’s
business
as
a
money
lender
but
represented
only
a
small
part
of
its
overall
activities.
Selective
equity
investments
amount
to
approximately
1%
of
its
total
business.
2.
The
great
majority
of
companies
involved
were
private
companies
owned
and
controlled
by
not
more
than
three
individuals.
3.
RoyNat
did
not
participate
in
the
actual
management
of
the
companies
in
which
it
made
investments
nor
did
it
have
representatives
on
their
boards
of
directors.
It
also
appears
that
the
shares
or
options
were
eventually
disposed
of
at
the
request
of
the
borrowers
and
not
at
the
insistence
of
RoyNat.
4.
At
first
the
bonuses
consisted
entirely
of
shares.
Later,
options
to
buy
shares
were
taken
and,
finally,
combinations
of
both
shares
and
options
to
purchase
shares
were
requested
as
bonuses.
5.
Bonus
shares
or
options
were
obtained
in
addition
to
interest
where
the
risk
was
considered
as
above
average.
If
the
bonus
had
not
been
granted
the
interest
required
on
the
loans
would
have
been
one-quarter
percent
and
one-half
percent
higher.
The
defendant
never
financed
by
means
of
equity
alone.
6.
The
bonuses
were
always
requested
by
the
defendant
and
not
offered
by
the
borrowers,
and
were
made
a
condition
sine
qua
non
of
the
financing.
7.
Neither
the
shares
nor
the
options
could
have
been
obtained
by
the
defendant
were
it
not
for
the
financing.
8.
RoyNat
obviously
intended
to
make
a
profit
from
the
eventual
disposition
of
shares,
generally
after
a
careful
analysis
of
the
financial
stituation
of
the
company
and
did
not
expect
any
dividends
to
be
paid
on
the
shares
nor,
in
fact,
were
any
dividends
received.
9.
RoyNat
had
the
required
expertise
to
determine
whether
there
would
be
a
likelihood
of
a
profit
before
requesting
the
bonus
in
shares
or
options.
It
also
considered
the
return
on
the
shares
as
part
of
the
profits.
(Refer
to
internal
memo
filed
as
Exhibit
P
I,
Tab
F).
10.
The
evidence
as
to
when
the
shares
or
options
were
eventually
disposed
of
does
not
appear
to
support
the
argument
advanced
by
the
defendant
to
the
effect
that
RoyNat
was
looking
to
the
investments
over
a
long
term
period
of
5
to
8
years,
after
which
dividends
would
be
obtained.
The
shares
or
options
were
disposed
of
without
any
dividends
having
been
paid
after
the
following
periods:
CHUM
Radio
|
7
|
months
|
London
Bottling
Co
|
4
|
years
|
Tubafour
Stud
Mills
|
3
/2
years
|
Lloyd
Brothers
Lumber
|
4
|
years
|
Canadian
Fiberform
|
6
|
months
|
Sodium
Sulphate
(Sask)
|
|
1st
financing
|
2
|
years
|
2nd
financing
|
4
|
years
|
Aylmer
Dairy
|
11
|
months
|
West
Craft
|
4
/2
years
|
On
the
question
of
when
a
particular
transaction
is
an
adventure
in
the
nature
of
trade,
counsel
for
the
defendant
quoted
from
the
Supreme
Court
of
Canada
case
of
Irrigation
Industries
Limited
v
MNR,
[1962]
SCR
346;
[1962]
CTC
215;
62
DTC
1131,
where
Martland,
J,
after
citing
cases
where
it
was
held
that
the
nature
and
quantity
of
property
purchased
and
sold
qualified
the
transaction
as
an
adventure
in
the
nature
of
trade,
distinguished
corporate
shares
from
ordinary
property
in
the
following
terms:
Corporate
shares
are
in
a
different
position
because
they
constitute
something
the
purchase
of
which
is,
in
itself,
an
investment.
They
are
not
in
themselves,
articles
of
commerce,
but
represent
an
interest
in
a
corporation
which
is
itself
created
for
the
purpose
of
doing
business.
Their
acquisition
is
a
well-recognized
method
of
investing
capital
in
a
business
enterprise.
It
is
perhaps
worthy
to
note
here
that
this
case
involved
one
isolated
transaction.
Counsel
also
referred
to
the
statement
of
Noel,
J,
as
he
then
was,
in
Foreign
Power
Securities
Corporation
Ltd
v
MNR,
[1966]
Ex
CR
358;
[1966]
CTC
23;
66
DTC
5012,
after
quoting
the
above
passage
from
the
Irrigation
Industries
case,
supra,
stated:
The
short
period
during
which
these
securities
were
held
by
the
appellant
can
be
of
little
assistance
to
the
respondent
as
their
fast
disposal
was
properly
explained
by
Mr
Wert
in
that
the
directors
of
the
appellant
would
have
been
remiss
in
their
duties
had
they
not
taken
advantage
of
the
surprisingly
high
rise
of
the
market
at
the
time
the
securities
were
sold.
The
fact
that
the
appellant
entered
into
these
transactions
for
the
purpose
of
making
a
profit
as
soon
as
it
could
and
took
advantage
of
this
rise
as
soon
as
it
occurred,
should
not
either
change
the
nature
of
its
investments
if
this
is
what
they
were
and
render
them
taxable
as
trading
receipts
and
this
also
would
appear
from
the
remarks
of
Martland
J
at
p
355
of
the
same
decision:
The
only
test
which
was
applied
in
the
present
case
was
whether
the
appellant
entered
into
the
transaction
with
the
intention
of
disposing
of
the
shares
at
a
profit
so
soon
as
there
was
a
reasonable
opportunity
of
so
doing.
Is
that
a
sufficient
test
for
determining
whether
or
not
this
transaction
constitutes
an
adventure
in
the
nature
of
trade?
I
do
not
think
that,
standing
alone,
it
is
sufficient.
The
decision
of
Noel
J
was
upheld
on
appeal
before
the
Supreme
Court
of
Canada
in
MNR
v
Foreign
Power
Securities
Corporation
Limited,
[1967]
_
SCR
295;
[1967]
CTC
116;
67
DTC
5084.
Counsel
also
cited
from
Thorson,
P’s
judgment
in
the
well-known
case
of
MNP
v
James
A
Taylor,
[1956]
CTC
189;
56
DTC
1125,
regarding
some
of
the
criteria
to
be
taken
into
consideration
when
deciding
whether
a
particular
transaction
constitutes
an
adventure
in
the
nature
of
trade.
He
also
pointed
out,
as
a
reason
for
distinguishing
it,
that
the
case
concerned
the
purchase
of
lead,
that
is,
a
commodity,
as
opposed
to
the
purchase
of
shares.
The
defendant
also
relied
on
the
statement
of
the
Master
of
the
Rolls
in
Lomas
(H
M
Inspector
of
Taxes)
v
Peter
Dixon
&
Son
Ltd,
25
TC
353,
where
the
latter
stated
at
363
of
the
report:
The
position
is
more
complicated
when
A
lends
£100
to
B
at
a
reasonable
commercial
rate
of
interest
and
stipulated
for
payment
of
£120
at
the
maturity
of
the
loan.
In
such
a
case
it
may
well
be
that
A
requires
payment
of
the
£20
as
compensation
for
the
capital
risk;
or
it
may
merely
be
deferred
interest.
If
it
be
proved
that
the
former
was
the
case
by
evidence
of
what
took
place
during
the
negotiations,
it
is
difficult
to
see
on
what
principle
the
£20
ought
to
be
treated
as
income.
In
the
absence
of
such
proof,
what
inference
ought
to
be
drawn?
Something
may,
perhaps,
depend
on
the
length
of
time
for
which
the
money
is
lent.
If
the
period
is
short
it
is
perhaps
easier
to
treat
the
£20
as
deferred
interest.
I
refer
to
these
problems,
not
for
the
purpose
of
attempting
to
solve
them,
but
in
order
to
show
that
there
can
be
no
general
rule
that
any
sum
which
a
lender
receives
over
and
above
the
amount
which
he
lends
ought
to
be
treated
as
income.
Each
case
must,
in
my
opinion,
depend
on
its
own
facts
and
evidence
dehors
the
contract
must
always
be
admissible
in
order
to
explain
what
the
contract
itself
usually
disregards,
namely,
the
quality
which
ought
to
be
attributed
to
the
sum
in
question.
I
cannot
say
that
I
agree
with
the
statement
if
unqualified,
as
it
is
much
too
broad:
a
bonus
is
always
taxable
when
it
is
obtained
as
part
and
parcel
of
the
operation
of
the
taxpayer’s
regular
business
or
as
part
of
an
adventure
in
the
nature
of
trade.
The
judgment
of
Heald,
J,
in
this
Court,
in
Canada
Permanent
Mortgage
Corporation
v
MNR,
[1971]
CTC
694;
71
DTC
5409
was
also
relied
upon
by
the
defendant.
In
that
case,
however,
as
opposed
to
the
case
at
bar,
there
was
a
clear
finding
of
fact
on
the
part
of
Heald,
J
to
the
effect
that
the
taxpayer
was
interested
in
the
returns
on
the
stocks
rather
than
gains
on
their
re-sale
and
that
the
stocks
were
purchased
and
held
for
their
dividend
income.
Jackett,
P,
as
he
then
was,
in
the
Exchequer
case
of
Associated
Investors
of
Canada
Limited
v
MNR,
[1967]
CTC
138;
67
DTC
5096,
had
this
observation
to
make
as
to
when
an
operation
is
to
be
included
in
the
profits
of
a
business:
It
was
not
argued
that
a
loss
could
not
be
taken
into
account
in
computing
profit
unless
it
arose
from
an
operation
or
transaction
calculated
or
intended
to
produce
a
profit.
It
is
clear
that
such
a
contention
could
not
succeed.
A
profit
arising
from
an
operation
or
transaction
that
is
an
integral
part
of
the
current
profit-making
activities
must
be
included
in
the
profits
from
the
business.
See
MNR
v
Independence
Founders
Limited
[1953]
SCR
389
[53
DTC
1171]
and
the
foreign
exchange
cases
such
as
Tip
Top
Tailors
Limited
v
MNR,
[1957]
SCR
703;
[57
DTC
1232].
The
case
did
not
relate
to
shares
and
the
observation
is
obiter
dictum,
but
it
remains
nevertheless
valid
as
a
general
statement
of
the
law.
Similarly,
Thurlow,
J,
as
he
then
was,
in
Stuyvesant-North
Limited
v
MNP,
[1958]
CTC
154;
58
DTC
1092,
had
this
to
say
regarding
share
options
acquired
by
the
taxpayer
as
a
bonus:
For,
even
assuming
that
the
rights
were
bonuses
or
premiums
and
were
given
and
received
to
compensate
for
the
capital
risks
involved
in
making
the
two
loans
and
could,
on
that
account,
be
regarded
as
capital
if
the
loans
were
mere
investments,
such
bonuses
or
premiums
could
not
be
so
regarded
if
they
were
obtained
in
the
course
of
the
operation
of
the
appellant’s
business.
This
distinction
is
clearly
expressed
in
Californian
Copper
Syndicate
v
Harris,
5
TC
159,
where
the
Lord
Justice
Clerk
said
at
p
165:
It
is
quite
a
well
settled
principle
in
dealing
with
questions
of
assessment
of
Income
Tax
that
where
the
owner
of
an
ordinary
investment
chooses
to
realise
it,
and
obtains
a
greater
price
for
it
than
he
originally
acquired
it
at
the
enhanced
price
is
not
profit
in
the
sense
of
Schedule
D
of
the
Income
Tax
Act
of
1842
assessable
to
Income
Tax.
But
it
is
equally
well
established
that
enhanced
values
obtained
from
realisation
or
conversion
of
securities
may
be
so
assessable,
where
what
is
done
is
not
merely
a
realisation
or
change
of
investment,
but
an
act
done
in
what
is
truly
the
carrying
on,
or
carrying
out,
of
a
business.
In
West
Coast
Parts
Co
Ltd
v
MNP,
[1964]
CTC
519;
64
DTC
5316,
my
brother
Cattanach,
J
after
quoting
that
approval
from
the
Taylor
case,
supra
had
this
comment
to
make:
There
can
be
no
dobut
that
a
money
lender
who
advances
money
in
the
course
of
an
established
business
on
terms
whereby
he
charges
interest
as
such
plus
a
fixed
amount
determined
by
reference
to
the
special
risk
involved,
would
count
as
profits
from
his
“trade”
not
only
the
interest
collected
as
such,
but
the
additional
amounts
charged
by
reason
of
special
risks.
If
it
be
true
that
such
an
amount
is
a
profit
from
a
money
lender’s
trade,
it
follows,
in
my
view,
that,
when
a
person
who
is
not
a
money
lender
enters
into
such
a
contract
and
thus
embarks
on
an
adventure
in
the
nature
of
the
money
lender’s
trade
and
earns
a
similar
profit,
he
acquired
a
profit
from
an
adventure
in
the
nature
of
trade.
In
the
case
at
bar
it
seems
obvious
that
the
profits
arose
from
operations
or
dealings
which
constituted
an
integral
part
of
the
profit-making
activities
of
the
defendant.
The
bonus
shares
or
options
were,
in
the
course
of
the
operation
of
its
business
of
lending
money,
required
by
the
defendant
as
extra
compensation
for
the
additional
risks
involved
in
these
cases;
it
intended
to
make
a
profit
from
the
eventual
disposition
of
the
shares
and
did
not
expect
dividends
nor
did
it
indeed
receive
any.
The
defendant
has,
in
addition,
failed
to
satisfy
me
that
fair
value
was
paid
for
the
shares
or
options
in
any
of
the
transactions
in
issue.
Under
those
circumstances
and
applying
the
principles
outlined
in
the
cases
on
which
I
have
commented,
it
seems
obvious
that
the
counterclaim
must
fail
and
the
finding
of
the
Tax
Review
Board
and
of
the
Minister
must
be
confirmed
on
this
issue.
The
plaintiff
will
be
entitled
to
costs
throughout.