Supreme Court of Canada
Minister of National Revenue v. Independence
Founders Ltd., [1953] 2 S.C.R. 389
Date: 1953-10-06
The Minister Of National Revenue Appellant;
and
Independence Founders Limited Respondent.
1953: May 19, 20; 1953: October 6.
Present: Rand, Kellock, Estey, Locke and Cartwright JJ.
ON APPEAL FROM THE EXCHEQUER COURT OF CANADA
Taxation—Income and excess profits tax—Investment trust
business by company—Whether profits on securities lying passive in its hands
taxable—Income War Tax Act, R.S.C. 1927, c. 97.
The respondent's business consisted of the sale of
certificates representing fractional interests in Trust Shares issued by the
Royal Trust Co. against "blocks" or "units" of American and
Canadian securities deposited with it by the respondent. These certificates
could be purchased outright or by periodic payments. The holder of these
certificates could exchange them for Trust Shares which in turn could be
disposed of on the market. Fees were charged by the respondent on these
transactions.
[Page 390]
During the taxation years in question, the respondent was
unable to buy the American securities required to create new "blocks"
or "units" against which further Trust Shares could be issued.
Consequently, in order to foe able to make further sales of certificates and to
meet the requirements of deferred sales already made, the respondent was forced
to re-purchase Trust Shares from holders desiring to dispose of them. The
profits realized when these re-purchased Trust Shares were sold at prices in
excess of their cost to the respondent were assessed by the Minister but held
to be not taxable by the Exchequer Court.
Held (reversing the judgment appealed from), that the
dealings in the Trust Shares were part of the respondent's business and the
profits, therefore, taxable.
APPEAL from the judgment of the Exchequer Court of Canada
, Sydney Smith, Deputy Judge,
holding that the amounts received by the respondent in the years 1943, 1944,
1945 and 1946 from the sale of Independence Founders Trust Shares were not
income.
W. R. Jackett Q.C. and F. J. Cross for the
appellant.
J. L. Lawrence for the respondent.
Rand J. :—The
business structure of the respondent consisted of transactions of the following
type. A block or unit of selected stocks was purchased and, along with certain
money for incidental purposes, deposited with a trust company which I shall
call trust company A. Against that unit 2,000 trust shares represented by
appropriate transferable certificates were issued to the respondent. These
trust shares, in turn, were placed by the respondent in the custody of a second
or trust company B, and against them investment certificates were issued,
representing fractional interests in one or more trust shares according to the
amount paid by an investor. The sale of the certificates was carried on by the
respondent and as can be seen, the business lent itself to a wide scale
diffusion of small investment. Provision for contract
purchases by periodic payments was contained in the certificates. The holder of
a sufficient number was entitled to require trust company B to redeem them in
cash by way of sale at the current price or to deliver to him their equivalent
in trust shares; the holders of trust shares could require their redemption in
cash or, in lots of not less than 400, the surrender of stock share
certificates of equivalent value. New units might
[Page 391]
from time to time be deposited with trust company A,
followed in turn by the issue of trust shares and investment certificates.
The obligations of the respondent were to manage the
original investment units which entailed a continuing rapport with market
conditions and such substitutions in the shares as might be necessary to
preserve the balance in the investments looking to soundness and stability of
value; and to maintain sufficient trust shares with trust company B to meet all
purchases, present or contracted. The respondent was entitled to a percentage
fee for supervising investments and various other fees payable on the sale of
trust shares and investment certificates. Fees were payable also to the trust
companies.
The shares specified for unit purchases included a number of
United States securities, but in the period from 1943 to 1946 dealings in them
became difficult by reason of the Foreign Exchange Control regulations. In
order, therefore, to meet unexecuted contract purchases of investment
certificates, the respondent was obliged to purchase trust shares on the
Canadian markets, and this it did on a substantial scale during the taxation
years 1943, 1944, 1945 and 1946.
The dispute is whether profits accruing to the respondent
from those dealings are taxable. The contention is that since the respondent
was under an obligation to maintain a certain capital with trust company B as
the subject matter of value represented by the investment certificates, it was
not in the position of an ordinary broker; that it was carrying out only an
obligation related to capital; and that any resulting increase in value
realized is an accretion to capital and not income.
I am unable to attribute to that obligation the effect
claimed by Mr. Lawrence. The business of the respondent was one and entire and
the profits of a business may consist in what are in one sense capital gains as
well as what is strictly income. The business being an entirety, it embraced
all those relations, obligations and responsibilities with which its activities
were bound up. The duty to keep trust company B supplied with trust shares was
just one feature of it. The necessity for maintaining the security
[Page 392]
followed from the respondent's mode of disposing of
investment certificates; if it had not invited contract purchases, the
necessity would not have arisen ; and the fact that the Exchange Regulations
entered into the matter cannot affect the nature of its dealings.
Smith J. states
the essence of his judgment against the Crown in these words:—
What have been assessed in this case are the increases in
market value of securities that have been lying passive in the appellant's
(respondent's) hands. Appellant claims that these increases in value are
capital increments and not income at all; the Minister claims that they
constitute a profit in a commodity that it is the appellant's business to deal
in, and so are income within the relevant acts.
And he proceeds:—
As I have said, the appellant has neither profits nor loss
on securities while they are the subjects of deals with clients. Though it can
gain or lose on securities that are lying passive in its hands, it is as liable
to lose as to win, according to the general market … The effect of all this is
that, though buying and selling interests in securities are essential to the
appellant's business, these transactions are not its livelihood. In fact, with
regard to these transactions the appellant is in much the position of a broker
relying on commissions. It is only on fluctuations on the market for shares not
being bought or sold that appellant can make a profit. It does not seek the
profit, which is just as likely to be a loss. If profit, it is a fortunate
profit.
He likens these securities in the hands of the respondent to
timberlands held by a logging company, and rejects the view that in contrast to
that situation, here there is a case of dealing in securities and that they are
bought for resale. This he does not think "necessarily enough to attach
the tax."
No doubt increases in market value accrue while securities
are retained in the respondent's hands, but obviously as such they have not
been taxed : it is the profit made on selling them that is in question.
He uses the analogy also of maintaining a picture gallery
for exhibition purposes only, intended to be supported by admission charges. To
sustain the interest of patrons, the proprietor may be obliged to keep the
collection revolving and in that way keep buying and selling pictures even
though he has no desire to be a dealer and though he is "as likely to lose
as to gain by his dealings", and he adds:—
Simlarly the appellant keeps securites not
as a dealer but as an inducement to persuade clients to buy and to pay it
commissions. These
[Page 393]
securities are like the tools of a trade ; the user of tools
must keep replacing them and may be lucky enough to have them rise in value
after replacement; but I quite fail to see how the increase could be treated as
income.
But, apart altogether from the question of taxability of the
art dealer, is the analogy valid? From the initial purchase of stock shares
down to the special purchase of trust shares the respondent bought for the
specific purpose of reselling by means of investment certificates. The purchase
of the trust shares was to protect outstanding contracts but, in effect, by way
of resale as instalments were paid. But the exhibitor did not buy pictures for
the purpose of resale, even though the course of his business might from time
to time require a change of exhibits. The trial judge appears to disregard the
obligation to maintain trust share value to meet outstanding contracts; but, in
the circumstances, the respondent was bound to make the purchases as part of
the transactions under which the contract sales of interests were made: these
features cannot be separated.
Once all contracts or sales have been concluded, the
respondent can, in a sense, be said to stand by as manager or servicing agent
of a trust structure in which the legal and beneficial interests in the
property are vested in other persons. The possibility exists that the entire
beneficial interests might be converted into the original legal interests and
the total structure disappear, but that is not what is contemplated; and a
complete liquidation is provided for at the end of twenty years. But the duties
of management, the responsibilities associated with redeemed or exchanged
certificates or trust shares, the interest of an increasing body of distributed
investment: all these, as well as other incidental features, such as that which
actually developed in 1943, remain at the charge and for the benefit of the
respondent. What was in the minds of those who set this scheme on foot was a
business of expanding and recurring transactions of purchase and sale within
the period mentioned. The income from the transactions in question, forming
part of this totality, whether profits or fees, is taxable income.
I would, therefore, allow the appeal, restore the assessment
and dismiss the appeal to the Exchequer Court with costs in both courts.
[Page 394]
Kellock J.:—In
the course of its business the respondent company purchases securities which it
deposits in "units" or "blocks" with the Royal Trust
Company, receiving from that company "trust shares", all as provided
for in the agreement relating to this part of the business. These trust shares
are, in turn, under the terms of a further agreement, deposited with the
Prudential Trust Company and certificates representing an interest in the trust
shares are-sold as investments to clients of the respondent. Some of the
contracts represented' by these certificates cover immediate purchases while
others provide for deferred purchases. The holders of certificates are entitled
to present them to the Prudential Company at any time and to receive in
exchange their value in trust shares or in cash.
During the years here in question the respondent, as a
result of a change in circumstances which need not be specified, was no longer
able to acquire satisfactory securities for the purpose of making deposits with
the Royal Trust Company. The respondent accordingly found it necessary to
purchase the trust shares which the Prudential Trust Company from time to time
were called upon by holders of certificates to realize upon, in order that the
respondent might thus be in a position to make further sales of certificates or
to meet the deposit requirements of deferred sales already made. From such
transactions the respondent realized profits which the Crown claims represent
taxable income but which the respondent claims represent capital gains.
The argument on behalf of the respondent is that its real
business is the making of the fees provided for under the agreements, namely,
for its services with respect to the management of the underlying securities
deposited with the Royal Trust Company as well as the various other fees
provided for by the agreements upon the issue and surrender of trust shares and
certificates. As to the transactions in question, the respondent contends it
did not enter into them with the intention of making profit and that this
factor is determinative of the character, for taxation purposes, of the profits
which are the subject of these proceedings.
[Page 395]
In my opinion this contention is insupportable. The dealings
in the trust shares were an essential part of the business in which the
respondent company was engaged. Without them, what the respondent calls its
main business would have been very much contracted if not brought completely to
an end. The principle stated by Lord Maugham in Punjab Co-operative Bank v.
Income Tax Commissioner ,
in words used in the California Copper case , is applicable, namely,
enhanced values obtained from realization or conversion of
securities may be so assessable, where what is done is not merely a realization
or change of investment, but an act done in what is truly the carrying on, or
carrying out, of a business.
I would allow the appeal with costs throughout.
Estey, J.:—This
is an appeal from a decision in the Exchequer Court holding that the amounts received
by the respondent in each of the years 1943, 1944, 1945 and 1946 from the sale
of Independence Founders Trust Shares (hereinafter referred to as Trust Shares)
were not income within the meaning of the Income War Tax Act (R.S.C.
1927, c. 97, and amendments thereto) and the Excess Profits Tax Act (S.
of C. 1940, c. 32). The appellant here contends that these amounts were income
as denned in these statutes and taxable under the provisions thereof.
The respondent, Independence Founders Limited, incorporated
under the laws of British Columbia in 1933, invested its capital in Canadian
and American securities which, under the terms of an agreement made between it
and the Royal Trust Company dated January 1, 1936, were deposited in units or
blocks with the Royal Trust Company as trustee. When so deposited these
securities were registered in the name of the Royal Trust Company as trustee,
which issued to the respondent Trust Shares, each Trust Share representing a
1/2000th undivided interest in the unit or block of securities.
The respondent, under the terms of an agreement made with
the Prudential Trust Company Limited dated March 23, 1933, as amended April 1,
1936, sold trustee investment certificates to persons desiring to invest in
Trust Shares, either on a cash or time basis, and deposited with the
[Page 396]
Prudential Trust Company Limited the
Trust Shares. These certificates, signed by the
respondent, certified that the investor was the registered holder of the
"Investment Certificate evidencing and embodying an agreement for
Investment in Trust Shares." Upon each certificate the Prudential Trust
Company Limited certified that the investor named therein was registered at the
office of the Prudential as holder of the certificate. When the investor had
paid one or more instalments he had a right, under the terms of the investment
certificate, to surrender that certificate and to be paid in cash the value
thereof. The investor who held his certificate until maturity might exercise
certain other options not material to the present issues.
Under the foregoing the respondent's income was derived only
from certain charges provided for in the agreement under which the investor
bought the Trust Shares.
In 1943 Foreign Exchange Control Board regulations first
restricted and then prohibited the purchase of United States securities.
Thereafter it was impossible for the respondent to purchase United States
securities and create further units or blocks of Canadian and United States securities
to be deposited with the Royal Trust Company upon which the latter would issue
further Trust Shares. The respondent's position then was as stated in its
factum:
To stay in business the Respondent abandoned its former
practice of selling securities whenever an Investor wished to cash in and
instead paid him in cash.
or, as stated by respondent's Managing Director, Mr.
Barker, in referring to the situation after the Foreign Exchange Control Board
regulations came into force :
Yes, it was different, in that the requirements now had to
be principally filled by the redemption of old accounts—accounts that were
surrendered. We provided the principal part of the trusteed property that was
allocated; whereas prior the principal part of which property as we were doing
business and opening new accounts came through acquiring an underlying unit
with the trust company, creating new trust shares.
The company had the power to purchase and sell these Trust
Shares and did so by exercising its option to purchase Trust Shares from those
who desired to surrender same.
[Page 397]
Mr. Barker agreed that the dealing in these Trust Shares was
thereafter a necessary part of the business of the corn- : pany. It would,
therefore, seem that at least in part its business was the buying and selling
of Trust Shares. Each purchase and subsequent sale was carried out at the
market value of these shares on the day of the respective transactions. In each
of the years the company benefited by the fact that the sales totalled an amount
greater than the purchase price. In other words, while the Trust Shares were in
respondent's hands they appreciated in value in each of the years as follows:
1943 ………………………………………………… $
7,498.89
1944 ………………………………………………… 10,876.05
1945 ………………………………………………… 11,798.96
1946 ………………………………………………… 20,727.15
The relevant difference in the nature and character of
respondent's business after the Foreign Exchange Control Board regulations
prohibited purchase of American securities may be summarized as follows: Prior
thereto when an investor desired to surrender and realize the cash value of his
trust shares the respondent complied with his request-by selling underlying
securities. The respondent would then purchase additional underlying securities
upon which new Trust Shares would be issued. Under this procedure any
fluctuation of the value of the Trust Shares was entirely a loss or gain to the
investor. This procedure was abandoned after the Foreign Exchange Control Board
regulations came into force. The respondent would then, when the investor
desired to surrender and realize the cash value of his Trust Shares, exercise
its option to purchase these, which it did in its own right at the current
market value, for the purpose of selling or allocating them subsequently to
other investors at the then current market price. In the interval between the
purchase and sale the Trust Shares were the property of the respondent and it
profited or lost according as the Trust Shares fluctuated upwards or downwards.
The respondent, however, contends that the "Trust
Shares are only title to these securities which still remain capital" and
"What the Respondent did was to allocate an interest in the securities to
an investor and thereafter manage his interest for him. What was capital in its
hands
[Page 398]
became capital of the investor." The Trust Shares
represented a claim to an undivided interest in the underlying securities. (In
certain events not material hereto an investor might, at maturity of the
contract, surrender his shares and obtain a proportionate share of the
underlying securities.) The title to the underlying securities at all times
material hereto remained in the Royal Trust Company as trustee. The respondent,
in purchasing these shares, was in reality purchasing the investor's
contractual undivided interest in the underlying securities. In these
circumstances this is not a sale of a capital asset such as a timber limit
purchased by a logging company for the extraction of timber, nor of pictures of
an art collector who charges fees for admission to his gallery, nor the
instruments of a music teacher used in giving lessons, nor the automobiles of a
taxi company. It is rather the purchase of these Trust Shares for the purpose
of reselling them at such time as the investor's payments might require them.
The amounts here in question would seem to have been
realized in the ordinary course of the respondent's business and taxable as
income within the meaning of the oft-quoted statement of Lord Justice Clerk in Californian
Copper Syndicate v. Harris :
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.
The part of the foregoing statement material to this
discussion was quoted with approval by Duff J. (later C.J.) in the judgment of
this Court in Merritt Realty Company. Limited v. Brown , where the revenue realized by a
private company from the sale of real estate was held not to be accretions to
capital but rather profit realized by the company in carrying out a scheme for
profit-making. As Duff J. stated at p. 189:
When the facts proved are taken into consideration, there
seems to me no real ground for doubting that the properties in which the
company dealt were acquired for the purpose of turning them to account to the
profit of the company, by sale, if necessary.
[Page 399]
See also Atlantic Sugar Refineries Ltd. v. Minister
of National Revenue .
In Punjab Co-operative Bank Ltd. v. Commissioners
of Income Tax ,
where the bank sold its securities in order to provide funds to meet the
withdrawals of its depositors, it was stated:
It seems to their Lordships to be quite clear that this is a
normal step in carrying on the banking business; in other words, that it is an
act done in what is truly the carrying on of the banking business.
The respondent's counsel cites a passage of Lord Buck-master
in Ducker v. Rees Roturbo Development Syndicate . In that case the company was formed
for the purpose of purchasing and acquiring patents but without any intention
of manufacturing thereunder. The company disposed of patent rights to a United
States company which agreed to pay royalties with the option to purchase same.
The American company did purchase them and the sum in question of 26,500 pounds
represented royalty and purchase price. The company contended that their share
of this sum, less proper expenses, represented the sale of a capital asset and that
the proceeds arising therefrom should not be brought into account. In the
passage quoted Lord Buckmaster, following Californian Copper Syndicate v.
Harris, supra, held the sum to be taxable and, concluding his judgment,
His Lordship stated at p. 141 :
It is one of the foreign patents with which this appeal has
to do, and the agreements, which are set out, showing the way in which the
foreign patents in the case of France and of Canada have also been dealt with,
show that that statement was not a statement of a mere accidental dealing with
a particular class of property, but that it was part of their business which,
though not of necessity the line on which they desired their business most
extensively to develop, was one which they were prepared to undertake.
The fact that under this plan for the selling of Trust
Shares, prior to Foreign Exchange Control Board regulations becoming effective,
respondent's income was derived from the deductions provided for under the
terms of the contract upon which the investor purchased Trust Shares does not
militate against the fact that revenue earned when the method of providing
Trust Shares to the investor is varied may be held to be income within the
meaning of the aforementioned statutes. The buying and selling by the
[Page 400]
respondent of the Trust Shares here in question was a
necessary part of respondent's business as developed after the aforementioned
regulations became effective and the revenue derived therefrom was income
within the meaning of the above-mentioned statutes.
The appeal should be allowed with costs.
Locke, J.:—The
business of the respondent company during the four yearly taxation periods in
question was the sale of what were designated as Investment Certificates, by
which the purchasers acquired either outright or upon the completion of a
series of payments a defined undivided interest in shares of stock held by the
Royal Trust Company, pursuant to the terms of an agreement entered into between
that company and the respondent dated January 1, 1936. In respect of the shares
so deposited the Royal Trust Company issued what were called Independence
Founders Trust Shares representing, in the terms of the agreement, "an
undivided interest in such deposited stocks and other property."
The Investment Certificates acquired by the purchasers
(referred to therein as investors) were issued by the respondent and each was
endorsed with a statement signed by Prudential Trust Company Limited, declaring
that the named person was registered at the office of the trustee as the holder
of the certificate.
The Investment Certificates were of two kinds: one, a fully
paid certificate which acknowledged the payment to the Prudential Trust Company
Limited, 'as trustee, of a lump sum : the other which recited that the
purchaser had made an initial payment and would pay further payments of an
amount specified thereafter at stated intervals and that, upon making these
payments, the purchaser should become the beneficial owner of what was
designated the "Trusteed Property", to the extent that the payment,
less certain deductions, would purchase such property at the price prevailing
at the close of business on the day the funds were received. The "Trusteed
Property" was, by the terms of the agreement, to consist of Trust Shares
issued by the Royal Trust Company pursuant to the terms of the agreement first
above mentioned.
[Page 401]
It was one of the terms of the Investment Certificates that
the purchasers might surrender their certificates and obtain the value of the
trust property held for the investor by the Prudential Trust Company Limited,
less certain deductions. This value was to be ascertained by determining the
then market value of the shares of stock held by the Royal Trust Company and
referred to in the Trust Shares which had been purchased with the investors'
money, a value which, of necessity, would fluctuate.
By the terms of an agreement made between the respondent and
the Prudential Trust Company Limited, dated March 23, 1933, as amended by a
further agreement dated April 1, 1936, the respondent had agreed at the outset
to deposit with that trust company an initial amount of fifty of the Trust
Shares, a number which represented a one-fortieth undivided interest in one
group of the shares held by the Royal Trust Company. Such groups of shares were
referred to in the agreement under which the deposit was made by the respondent
with the Royal Trust Company as a stock unit. As payments were made by
purchasers under Investment Certificates, the Prudential Trust Company Limited
agreed to purchase Trust Shares from the respondent at their current value
determined as aforesaid. In the event of the respondent not having Trust Shares
available for that purpose when so required, it was provided that the
Prudential Trust Company Limited might purchase them from the Royal Trust
Company. The agreement further provided that, if and when any of the holders of
either class of the Investment Certificates exercised the option to surrender
his certificate and take the value of the Trust Shares held on his behalf, the
Trust Company would sell such interest and, after making certain defined
deductions, pay the amount realized to the owner of the surrendered
certificate.
The units of shares deposited with the Royal Trust Company
included shares in American companies and, owing to foreign exchange
regulations during the time in question, the respondent could not obtain the
necessary American exchange to buy shares in such companies in order to
constitute new stock units with the Royal Trust Company. The result of this was
that, in order to continue its business of the sale of Investment Certificates,
the respondent
[Page 402]
acquired Trust Shares by purchases from the holders of
Investment Certificates wishing to surrender them and take the value of the
securities held. The taxation period which ended on April 30, 1943, is typical
of the four annual periods in question. When the respondent was notified of the
assessment made upon it in respect of that period, it filed with the Minister a
notice of dissatisfaction and an accompanying statement of facts. This
statement, after referring to the arrangements made with the Royal Trust
Company for the issuing of the Trust Shares and the manner in which the
taxpayer issued the Investment Certificates to purchasers providing that if the
purchasers of these certificates wished to sell their Independence Founders
Trust Shares the taxpayer was required to take them over at the price thereof
as of that day, said in part:—
As stated above each portfolio comprises a list of selected
Canadian and American securities. Upon the coming into force of the Foreign
Exchange Control Act the Appellant was prevented by the Regulations from
acquiring American Securities to form further portfolios or units. It therefore
became necessary for the Appellant to find some means of acquiring Trusteed
Property to complete outstanding contracts and this was accomplished by
permitting the Prudential Trust Company to hold and apply shares acquired from
clients who exercised their right to liquidate. During the taxation period the
Appellant thus acquired approximately 24,987 Trust Shares and of the said
shares so acquired 22,930 were allocated by the Trustee to satisfy the terms of
existing contracts. The difference between the price of the shares so acquired
and the price at which the same were so allocated (being the sum of $7,912.90)
is claimed by the Minister as income, on the ground that it is a profit on
Trading in Securities.
It would have been more accurate had the statement said that
the Prudential Trust Company Limited acted on behalf of the present respondent
in acquiring Trust Shares from investors who elected to surrender their
Investment Certificates and that the shares so acquired enabled the respondent
to sell further Investment Certificates and remain in business. That a profit
was made during this period is admitted. The manner in which it was made was
that the Trust Shares so acquired from investors were sold to the purchasers of
Investment Certificates at amounts greater than their cost to the respondent,
due, no doubt, to the increase in the value of the underlying shares.
Had the respondent sold Independence Founders Trust Shares
directly to the public for amounts in excess of their cost to it, its liability
to taxation upon the resulting income
[Page 403]
would, in my opinion, have been undoubted. I do not think
the fact that, instead of doing so, the plan of selling these shares through
the medium of the Investment Certificates upon terms requiring the respondent
to repurchase the shares at the owners' election was adopted alters the
situation. The respondent in this matter during the taxation periods in
question was, in my opinion, in the same position as the seller of any other
commodity. What it offered for sale was simply an undivided interest in the
shares deposited with the Royal Trust Company, the title to which was evidenced
by the Trust Share Certificates. The method of selling these interests in the
form of Investment Certificates enabled the respondent to earn certain fees for
services, which were deducted from the purchase moneys paid by the investors to
the Trust Company. In addition, the Trust Shares purchased by the respondent in
the year 1943 were resold at prices in excess of their cost to the respondent
and their acquisition and sale and the resulting profit were, in my opinion,
part of the business and the income from it, just as were the rendering of
services and the fees earned for such services. The fact that the respondent
obligated itself to the investors to repurchase their Trust Shares if they
wished to liquidate their holdings does not appear to me to affect the matter.
The shares were sold at a price calculated in the manner above stated and, if
at the time the investor elected to sell his Trust Shares, the then value of
such shares was in excess of the amount which the respondent had received from
their sale, the resulting loss would properly be taken into account in
determining the respondent's income for that year.
In the years following 1943 the respondent had on hand at
the end of its fiscal years Trust Shares acquired through the Prudential Trust
Company Limited in the manner above described which had not yet been sold and
the appellant complains of the value placed upon these shares by the Department
of National Revenue. The audited accounts of the respondent for the taxation
periods in question showed that they were kept upon an accrual basis and the
evidence satisfies me that the valuations placed upon them by the Department
were determined in accordance with recognized accounting practice.
[Page 404]
I would allow this appeal with costs throughout and restore
the assessments made by the Minister of National Revenue.
Cartwright J.:—I
agree that, in the particular circumstances of this case, the gains which
accrued to the respondent from the purchase and sale of the trust shares
described in the reasons of other members of the Court were properly assessable
as profits received by it from the carrying on of its business.
I would allow the appeal with costs throughout and restore
the assessments made by the appellant.
Appeal allowed with costs.
Solicitor for the appellant: F. J. Cross.
Solicitors for the respondent: Lawrence, Shaw
& McFarlane.