Supreme Court of Canada
N.R. Whittall v. Minister of National Revenue, [1968]
S.C.R. 413
Date: 1967-10-03
Norman R. Whittall Appellant;
and
The Minister of
National Revenue Respondent.
1967: May 1, 2; 1967: October 3.
Present: Cartwright, Martland, Ritchie, Hall
and Spence JJ.
ON APPEAL FROM THE EXCHEQUER COURT OF CANADA
Taxation—Income tax—Capital gain or
income—Stock‑broker‑Acquisition and sale of shares—Income Tax Act,
R.S.C. 1952, c. 148, ss. 3, 4, 139(1)(e).
The appellant was the president of a firm of
investment dealers and stock-brokers. He sought to deduct from his income for
the years 1952, 1953 and 1954, substantial profits he had realized from the
acquisition, exchange and disposition of shares of several companies of which
he was a director and for which his brokerage firm had acted as underwriters.
The appellant argued that the profits constituted the realization of an
investment, so as to constitute a capital gain. In the Minister’s view, the
profits were derived from a “business” within the meaning of ss. 3, 4 and
139(1)(e) of the Income Tax Act, R.S.C. 1952, c. 148.
The Exchequer Court held that the appellant
had assisted materially in the marketing of the securities and that the turning
of these investments into profit was not merely incidental but rather the
essential feature of his personal trading operations. The trial judge held
further that because of his fiduciary relationship to the companies to which he
was connected, the appellant was in a position to and did avail himself of the
opportunity to make these profits. The taxpayer appealed to this Court.
Held: The
appeal should be dismissed.
As to the second ground stated by the trial
judge, there was no suggestion that in any of the transactions the appellant
had obtained for himself a personal profit at the expense of any of the
companies of which he was a director, or that he had placed himself in a
position where he should account for the profits as a trustee. That issue was
not before the Court in this case.
As to the first ground stated by the trial
judge, there was sufficient evidence on which the trial judge could properly
find that the appellant was engaged in the business of buying and selling
securities, and that he was not in the position of an owner of an ordinary
investment choosing to realize it. Consequently, the
profits were income subject to tax.
Revenu—Impôt sur le revenu—Gain en capital
ou revenu imposable—Courtier—Achat et vente d’actions—Loi de l’impôt sur le
revenu, S.R.C. 1952, c. 148, arts. 3, 4, 139(1)(e).
[Page 414]
L’appelant était le président d’une société
de courtiers. Il a cherché à déduire de son revenu pour les années 1952, 1953
et 1954 les profits substantiels qu’il avait réalisés de l’achat, l’échange et
la cession d’actions de plusieurs compagnies dont il était un des directeurs et
pour lesquelles la société dont il faisait partie avait agi comme
soumissionnaire. L’appelant prétend que les profits constituaient la
réalisation d’un placement pour en devenir un gain en capital. Le Ministre a vu
ces profits comme provenant d’une «entreprise» dans le sens des arts. 3, 4 et
139(1) (e) de la Loi de l’impôt sur le revenu, S.R.C. 1952, c.
148.
La Cour de l’Échiquier a jugé que l’appelant
avait aidé matériellement à la mise sur le marché des valeurs mobilières en
question et que le fait d’avoir tiré profit de ces placements n’était pas
simplement accidentel mais était plutôt la caractéristique essentielle de ses
opérations commerciales. La Cour de l’Échiquier a jugé en plus que l’appelant
était, vu les rapports fiduciaires qui existaient entre lui et les compagnies
auxquelles il était affilié, dans une position pour se prévaloir de
l’opportunité de faire les profits en question et qu’en fait il s’en était
prévalu. Le contribuable en appela devant cette Cour.
Arrêt: L’appel
doit être rejeté.
Quant au second motif énoncé par le juge au
procès, il n’est pas suggéré que l’appelant avait obtenu pour lui-même, dans
ses opérations, un bénéfice personnel au profit d’une des compagnies dont il
était le directeur, ou qu’il s’était placé dans une position où il devait
rendre compte des profits comme fiduciaire. Cette question n’était pas devant
la Cour dans cette cause.
Quant au premier motif énoncé par le juge au
procès, il y avait une preuve suffisante sur laquelle le juge pouvait se baser
pour en venir, à bon droit, à la conclusion que l’entreprise de l’appelant
consistait dans l’achat et la vente de valeurs mobilières, et qu’il n’était pas
dans la position du détenteur d’un placement ordinaire choisissant de le
réaliser. En conséquence, les profits étaient un revenu sujet à la taxe.
APPEL d’un jugement du Juge Gibson de la Cour
de l’Échiquier du Canada, en
matière d’impôt sur le revenu. Appel rejeté.
APPEAL from a judgment of Gibson J. of the
Exchequer Court of Canada1, in an income tax matter. Appeal
dismissed.
Douglas Mc K. Brown, Q.C., for the
appellant.
G.W. Ainslie and P. Cumyn, for the
respondent.
[Page 415]
The judgment of the Court was delivered by
MARTLAND J.:—This is an appeal from judgments of
the Exchequer Court of Canada1, which dismissed the appellant’s appeals from
re-assessments, made for income tax purposes, of his income for the taxation
years 1952, 1953 and 1954. The issue for determination is as to whether
profits, in the total amount of $380,983.46, realized on the acquisition and
sale by the appellant of units of the St. John’s Trust and of shares of
Inland Natural Gas Co. Ltd., Yankee Princess Oils, Ltd. and Canadian Collieries
(Dunsmuir) Ltd. were income from a business, within ss. 3, 4 and para, (e)
of subs. (1) of s. 139 of the Income Tax Act, R.S.C. 1952, c.
148, or constituted the realization of an investment, so as to constitute a
capital gain.
The appellant was a shareholder, officer and
director of the investment dealer and stock brokerage firm of Ross Whittall
Ltd., at all material times, until its winding up in 1954. Norman R. Whittall
Ltd. succeeded to the business of Ross Whittall Ltd. The appellant was the
president of Norman R. Whittall Ltd.
In the years 1952, 1953 and 1954 the appellant
owned about 67½ per cent of the equity capital of Ross Whittall Ltd.
Ross Whittall Ltd. and Norman R. Whittall Ltd.
conducted a business, similar to that of any reputable investment house, of
filling orders, buying or selling for clients on a commission basis, and taking
portions of underwritings which they in turn distributed to their clients.
The transactions which are in issue can be dealt
with under three headings:
1. The acquisition and sale of units of the
St. John’s Trust and of shares of Inland Natural Gas Co. Ltd.
2. The acquisition and sale of shares of Yankee
Princess Oils Ltd.
3. The acquisition and sale of shares of
Canadian Collieries (Dunsmuir) Ltd.
[Page 416]
I THE
ACQUISITION AND SALE OF UNITS OF THE ST. JOHN’S TRUST AND OF SHARES OF INLAND
NATURAL GAS CO. LTD.
The re-assessments made in respect of these
transactions were as follows:
for 1952
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Share of proceeds re sale of St. John’s Trust units .......................................................................
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$ 116,500.00
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Less cost of interest in four Wilson Syndicate units .......................................................................
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7,500.00
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for 1953
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Proceeds of sale of shares of Inland Natural Gas Co. Ltd. which
had been received from St. John’s Trust Syndicate in 1952 ....................
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$ 77,285.05
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Less cost of same @ $1.00 per share...............
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37,500.00
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for 1954
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Proceeds from sale of shares of Inland Natural Gas Co. Ltd. which
had been received
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(a) from St. John’s Trust Syndicate in 1952
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(b) in exchange for shares of Canadian Northern Oil and Gas
Co. Ltd........................
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$ 55,721.50
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Less cost at $1.00 per share..........................................
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21,000.00
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|
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The appellant, who had been the owner of 27 out
of 164½ units created under an agreement known as the St. John’s Trust
Agreement, together with the other owners of the units sold them to Inland
Natural Gas Co. Ltd. on October 14, 1952, for the sum of $710,000. The appellant’s
share of the proceeds was $116,500.
The St. John’s Trust Agreement, which was
dated March 8, 1952, was an agreement which the appellant, his son, Richard
Whittall, W.K. McGee, who was secretary of Ross Whittall Ltd., and Frank and
George McMahon had entered into with the Eastern Trust Company as trustee in
order to pool the interests which they had in oil and natural gas exploration
rights in the lands covered by Permits 22 and 30 issued by the British Columbia
[Page 417]
Government. The 164½ units representing the
total interest in the assets of the St. John’s Trust were owned in the
following proportions:
The appellant................................................................................
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27 units
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Ross Whittall
Ltd. .........................................................................
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43 units
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H. Richard
Whittall .......................................................................
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4½ units
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W.K. McGee ................................................................................
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4½ units
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Frank and George
McMahon .....................................................
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85½ units
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The lands covered by Permits 22 and 30 were
located in the St. John area of the Peace River country of British
Columbia. The area covered by Permit 22 was 100,000 acres and the area covered
by Permit 30, which was nearby but not contiguous to Permit 22, was 200,000
acres.
The interests in Permits 22 and 30 which the
parties conveyed to the trustee were as follows:
(a) four units in the Wilson Syndicate
which were conveyed to the Trustee by the following persons:
The appellant ....................................................................
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1½ units
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George McMahon ............................................................
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1 unit
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Frank McMahon ...............................................................
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1 unit
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Richard Whittall ................................................................
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¼ unit
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W.K. McGee .....................................................................
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¼ unit
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(b) a 51% undivided beneficial interest
which Frank and George McMahon owned in the interests of Ross Whittall Ltd. in
Permits 22 and 30; and
(c) the remaining 49% of the interest
retained by Ross Whittall Ltd. in Permits 22 and 30 subject, however, to a
carried interest.
The background to the formation of the Wilson
Syndicate which owned a one-tenth “carried” interest in the lands covered by
Permit 22 was as follows:
(a) Both William Innes and Peace River Natural
Gas Co. applied to the Province of British Columbia for a permit to prospect
for petroleum and natural gas in a certain area of northern British Columbia.
(b) By agreement dated September 20, 1949, Innes
agreed to withdraw his application for a permit in consideration for Peace
River Natural Gas Co.’s undertaking that when the permit was issued, it would
stand possessed in trust for Innes of an undivided one-tenth interest in the
permit, in any leases issued pursuant to it, and in any petroleum or natural
gas
[Page 418]
recovered therefrom, subject to the payment by
Innes of one-tenth of the costs incurred by Peace River Natural Gas in
exploring, developing and drilling on the land.
(c) It was further agreed that Innes’ interest
would be a “carried” interest, that is, that Innes would only be obligated to
reimburse Peace River Gas for his portion of the drilling, developing and
exploration costs out of his share of any proceeds of sale or production from
the well.
In February 1952, George McMahon had acquired
the opportunity of purchasing four units in the Wilson Syndicate, which units
had been purchased at a price of $5,000 per unit for the following persons:
George McMahon .............................................................................
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1 unit
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Frank McMahon .................................................................................
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1 unit
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The appellant .....................................................................................
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1½ units
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Richard Whittall ..................................................................................
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¼ unit
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W.K. McGee ......................................................................................
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¼ unit
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Total .........................................................................................
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The interests in Permits 22 and 30 which prior
to their assignment to the trustee of the St. John’s Trust were owned 51
per cent by the McMahon brothers and 49 per cent by Ross Whittall Ltd. subject
to a carried interest, comprised the following:
(a) a 4½% interest in a block of 10,000
acres of land carved out of Permit 22 and consolidated with the block of land
mentioned in paragraph (b) subject to the 10% carried interest in
favour of William Innes (which had been assigned to the Wilson Syndicate);
(b) a 6% interest in a block of 10,000
acres of land, covered by Permit 30, subject to a 10% carried interest in
favour of the following:
Canadian Atlantic Oil Co. ........................................
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7%
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Empire Petroleums Ltd.............................................
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1%
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Yankee Princess Oils Ltd. .......................................
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.8%
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Ross Whittall Ltd. ......................................................
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1.2%
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(c) the 1.2% carried interest referred to
in paragraph (b) above;
(d) a 20% interest in those lands covered
by Permit 30 other than the 10,000 acres referred to in paragraph (b) above,
and subject to a 25% carried interest which was reserved by Ross Whittall Ltd.
The registered owner of Permit 22 was the Peace
River Natural Gas Company, which company was controlled by Pacific Petroleums
Ltd. Apart from the 10 per cent carried
[Page 419]
interest which had been granted to Innes by
Peace River Natural Gas Co., the remaining 90 per cent interest in Permit 22
was owned by a group of companies of which Pacific Petroleums was a member.
Pacific Petroleum held 50 per cent of the total interest in Permit 22, and had
acquired the operating agreements. Peace River Natural Gas Co. also had an
interest.
The appellant “had a fair interest in Pacific
Petroleums at its inception” and both then and in February 1952, was an officer
and director of that company. In February 1952, George and Frank McMahon ran
Pacific Petroleums as operating executives. George McMahon was one of the
senior officials of Pacific Petroleums and it was through him that the
appellant became interested in purchasing the Wilson Syndicate units.
The appellant was likewise an officer and
director of Peace River Natural Gas Co. Ltd. at the time of the issuing of
Permit 22.
Permit 30 had been acquired by McGee, the
secretary of Ross Whittall Ltd. as trustee for certain persons (including Ross
Whittall Ltd. which had a 20 per cent beneficial interest). The operating
agreements in respect of Permit 30 had been acquired by Canadian Atlantic Oil
Company. The appellant was a director of that company and George McMahon was
both its president and a director.
Before the appellant acquired his interest in
the Wilson Syndicate, he was aware in his capacity as an officer and director
of Pacific Petroleums Ltd. that that company had drilled a first well, a
“teaser”, on the lands covered by Permit 22, and that other wells were soon to
be drilled.
In April 1952, Pacific Petroleums commenced
drilling well No. 7 and in May 1952, well No. 9 on Permit 22; these wells
revealed a large reservoir of natural gas, and “it was quite obvious that
profitable returns could be anticipated” from them.
The appellant paid his portion of the
St. John’s Trust’s drilling costs of each of these wells, which was
27/164.5 of 4½ per cent of $330,000.
After the discovery of this gas “there was a
tremendous amount of new drilling and more wells were brought in”. “The burning
problem with these people who had got gas was how were they going to sell it.”
Consequently, it was contemplated that Westcoast Transmission Company
[Page 420]
Limited, a corporation incorporated by an act of
the Parliament of Canada, would construct a pipeline from Fort St. John to
a point near Sumas, B.C., on the national border, whence it would cross into
the United States. The appellant was a director of that company.
Before Westcoast could export gas to the United
States, it had to obtain the consent of the Canadian Board of Transport
Commissioners and the American Federal Power Commission to do so. The Board of
Transport Commissioners made it clear that there would be no export of gas
unless the various municipalities of British Columbia were first serviced. The
British Columbia Hydro Electric Company agreed to undertake the distribution of
gas in the lower part of British Columbia. In the upper part of British
Columbia there was no company capable of distributing gas. Westcoast requested
the appellant to incorporate a company to handle the distribution in the upper
country. This he did, and caused Inland Natural Gas Company to be incorporated.
The appellant became president of Inland Natural Gas. Westcoast then promised
the exclusive distribution of its gas to Inland Natural Gas for the Okanagan,
Cariboo and Prince George areas of British Columbia.
Inland Natural Gas after incorporation became
interested in acquiring reserves of gas and gas bearing properties. To that end
it caused to be incorporated a company known as St. John Gas and Oil Co.,
Ltd., which was a wholly-owned subsidiary and was formed for the purpose of
acquiring the gas reserves and properties.
On October 15, 1952, St. John Gas and Oil
Co., Ltd purchased the 164½ units of the St. John’s Trust for $710,000.
The appellant’s share of the proceeds was $116,500 and the gain realized by him
was $109,000.
The various holders of the unit certificates
under the St. John’s Trust Agreement had, by a collateral agreement,
agreed to purchase 710,000 treasury shares of Inland Natural Gas Company for a
price of $1 per share. On October 7, 1952, the appellant purchased 116,500
shares of Inland Natural Gas.
A few days later, Ross Whittall Ltd. conveyed to
St. John Gas and Oil Co., Ltd., for $40,000, the 25 per cent carried
interest which it still owned in the 20 per cent
[Page 421]
interest in Permit 30; Ross Whittall Ltd. used
the proceeds of the sale to acquire 40,000 shares of Inland Natural Gas.
On October 16, 1952, pursuant to an underwriting
agreement, Ross Whittall Ltd. and McMahon and Burns each agreed to purchase
250,000 treasury shares of Inland Natural Gas at 75¢ per share and to offer
them for sale to the public at $1 per share.
Between October 16, 1952, and September 4, 1953,
the appellant sold 113,500 shares in Inland Natural Gas at the following prices
per share:
1952
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Shares Sold
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Price Per Share
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16 October.....................................
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1952
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56,000
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$0.97
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22 October.....................................
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1952
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5,000
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1.00
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7 November ..................................
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1952
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10,000
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1.12
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30 December ...............................
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1952
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5,000
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1.30
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76,000
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1953
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6 January.......................................
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1953
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5,000
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1.45
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9 January.......................................
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1953
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5,000
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1.55
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22 January.....................................
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1953
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4,000
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1.70
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18 February...................................
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1953
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3,500
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1.95
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20 March........................................
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1953
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5,000
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2.45
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20 March........................................
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1953
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5,000
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2.43
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30 March........................................
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1953
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5,000
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2.79
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4 September.................................
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1953
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3,000
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1.99
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4 September.................................
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1953
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2,000
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2.10
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37,500
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On October 29, 1953, Ross Whittall Ltd.,
pursuant to an underwriting agreement, purchased a further 75,000 treasury
shares of Inland Natural Gas at $2 per share.
On November 24, 1953, the appellant received
from Inland Natural Gas a further 18,000 shares in exchange for 36,000 shares
of Canadian Northern Oil and Gas. The appellant had acquired the 36,000 shares
of Canadian Northern Oil and Gas in August 1953, and they represented the
appellant’s portion of the shares which had been allotted by that company for
the “initial money put up by the insiders of Canadian Northern Oil and Gas”.
The appellant in his examination in chief stated
that the reason that he sold 37,500 shares of Inland Natural Gas during 1953
was that:
it became evident… that there was going to
be a very serious delay in getting permits from the Board of Transport
Commissioners and the Federal Power Commission to enable Westcoast to make its
allowance to
[Page 422]
Inland of the distribution in the upper
country worthwhile, it was only very shortly after that the Federal Power
Commission turned down our Westcoast application and the stock did really go
down then.
Throughout 1954, the appellant purchased 18,000
shares of Inland Natural Gas and sold 34,000 shares. Particulars of the
purchases and sales are as follows:
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15 January 1954...............
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16,500
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2.48/2.70
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13 May...............................
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500
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3.19
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21 May...............................
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2,100
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2.30/2.50
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1 June................................
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2,000
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2.57/2.62
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6 July..................................
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2,900
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0.91/2.51½
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8 July..................................
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3,000
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1.31/1.36
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|
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19 July................................
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1,000
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1.16
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17 September...................
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2,000
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1.95
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27 September...................
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2,000
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2.02
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19 October........................
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2,500
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2.63
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12 November....................
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2,500
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2.01½
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23 November....................
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2,000
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2.75/2.85
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3 December......................
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1,000
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2.68½
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6 December......................
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8,000
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2.78½/2.83
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7 December......................
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4,000
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2.88½
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Total........................
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On March 31, 1955, the appellant purchased a
further 2,500 shares of Inland Natural Gas at $2.70 per share and on June 19,
1955, sold 2,500 shares of Inland Natural Gas at $3.40/3.50.
The gain realized by the appellant upon the
sales in 1953 and 1954 of the 58,500 shares of Inland Natural Gas was
$74,506.55.
II THE
ACQUISITION AND SALE OF SHARES IN YANKEE PRINCESS OILS LTD.
The second question for determination is whether
the following gains realized on the sale of shares of Yankee Princess Oils Ltd.
are part of the appellant’s income for 1952. The re-assessment is as follows:
Profit on sale of
shares of Yankee Princess Oils Ltd. from 29th January, 1952, to 21st April,
1952, as per schedule filed with respondent
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105,250
shares..............................................................
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$110,157.34
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[Page 423]
Less:
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Purchase of
31st January, 1952, shown as sale in error
|
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500 share..............................................
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109,774.28
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Add:
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Sale of 5th
March, 1952, not included in schedule filed
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2,000 shares........................................
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111,909.28
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Less:
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Cost of
shares sold
|
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92,800..................................................
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$6,750.00
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13,950 @ 7½¢ ...................................
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$104,113.03
|
The 106,750 shares in Yankee Princess Oils
material to this appeal were acquired by the appellant upon three occasions:
(a) 20,250 shares were acquired upon the
incorporation of Yankee Princess Oils on September 24, 1948;
(b) 65,000 shares were acquired in August 1951;
(c) 40,000 shares were acquired on December 21,
1951.
In 1944, one MacDonald, the owner of C.P.R. Oil
Permit 257 (which covered 10,000 acres) approached McQueen, a friend of the
appellant, to say that he was in arrears on the rentals due under Permit 257
and asked McQueen if he was interested in investing moneys in that Permit.
McQueen approached the appellant and his then partner, Ross, and the three
acquired a half interest in Permit 257 in the following portions:
The appellant ..................................................................................
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37½%
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McQueen .........................................................................................
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37½%
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Ross .................................................................................................
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25 %
|
Between 1944 and September 24, 1948, the
appellant, McQueen and Ross sold their interest in 838 acres of land covered by
Permit 257.
The rent payable under the Permit was 10¢ per
acre, or $416.20 per annum, for the interest acquired and retained by the
appellant, McQueen and Ross.
[Page 424]
In 1948, one Henry Tudor approached the
appellant, McQueen and Ross with a proposal that they assign their interest in
Permit 257 to a company which he was incorporating, Yankee Princess Oils Ltd.,
for cash and stock. Yankee Princess Oils Ltd. was incorporated on September 24,
1948, with an authorized capital of 150,000 shares.
The appellant, McQueen and Ross transferred
their interest to Yankee Princess Oils Ltd. for:
$20,700 cash
18,000 in
promissory notes
54,000 shares in
the stock of Yankee Princess Oils
The appellant’s share of the proceeds of sale
was:
$7,652.50 cash
6,750.00 in
promissory notes
20,250 shares in
the stock of Yankee Princess Oils
In 1950 the appellant and Ross assigned the
promissory notes which had been received from Yankee Princess Oils to Ross
Whittall Ltd. for 80 per cent of their face value.
In 1951 Tudor felt that there had been
sufficient development in the area of the lease to justify Yankee Princess Oils
in acquiring further property. As a first step to this end, the authorized
capital of Yankee Princess Oils was increased to 3,000,000 shares.
Subsequently, the various holders of the
promissory notes became entitled to surrender their notes to Yankee Princess
Oils in return for shares of that company at the rate of 7½¢ per share.
The shares were purchased by Ross Whittall Ltd. which, in turn, sold to the
appellant 65,000 shares at 8¢ per share.
On December 21, 1951, Yankee Princess Oils
acquired from the North West Syndicate (a syndicate of which the appellant
was a member) 25 Crown Petroleum and Natural Gas Leases for the sum of $38,000.
The North West Syndicate, on the sale of the leases to Yankee Princess Oils,
gave an undertaking that $30,000 of the $38,000 purchase price would be used to
purchase treasury shares of Yankee Princess Oils at 7¢ per share. The result
was that the appellant received $3,800 of which $3,000 was used to purchase
40,000 shares of Yankee Princess Oils.
[Page 425]
The circumstances surrounding the formation of
the North West Syndicate and the appellant’s interest in it are as follows:
(a) In March 1951, the appellant had acquired at
a cost of $800.00, 4.0 per cent of a 25 per cent interest in 25 Crown Petroleum
and Natural Gas Leases.
(b) His son, Richard Whittall, had acquired 40
per cent of the 25 per cent interest in the leases and McGee had acquired 20
per cent of the 25 per cent interest in the leases.
(c) On December 21, 1951, the registered owners
of the leases formed a syndicate known as the North West Syndicate wherein
(i) all of the leases were declared to be held
in trust for the members of the syndicate;
(ii) Richard Whittall, the appellant’s son, was
appointed as manager for a period of one year;
(iii) Richard Whittall was authorized to sell
the leases to Yankee Princess Oils for $38,000; and
(iv) the proceeds from any sales were to be paid
to Ross Whittall Ltd. as trustee and after the payment of expenses were to be
disbursed to the members of the syndicate.
On January 2, 1952, Yankee Princess Oils
acquired from Atlantic Oil Company (which company later changed its name to
Canadian Atlantic Oil Company) a farm out agreement wherein Yankee Princess
Oils agreed to drill on lands owned by Atlantic Oil Company at no cost to that
company in consideration for acquiring a 50 per cent interest in an oil lease
held by Atlantic Oil Company. The appellant was an officer of both Atlantic Oil
Company and Yankee Princess Oils. This farm out agreement had been negotiated
by Richard Whittall who at that time was a director of Yankee Princess Oils
Ltd.
On January 8, 1952, at an extraordinary general
meeting of the shareholders of Yankee Princess Oils, a resolution was passed
converting it to a public company.
In the early part of January 1952, drilling rigs
moved on to the farm out and commenced drilling. The stock of
[Page 426]
Yankee Princess Oils appreciated very
substantially on the strength of the rumour that drilling was going to take
place.
On January 29, 1952, shares of Yankee Princess
Oils were being traded on the unlisted market at 58¢ per share notwithstanding
that no results had been obtained from the drilling on the Canadian Atlantic
farm out. One of the reasons for the high price was that on nearby property a
well had been brought into production, and there was “a very wild oil market.”
The appellant, on January 29, 1952, sold 5,000 shares of Yankee Princess Oils
at 58¢ per share.
The appellant on January 31, 1952, purchased a
further 500 shares of Yankee Princess Oils at 75¢ per share.
By an agreement dated January 31, 1952, and
executed in early February, Ross Whittall Ltd. agreed to underwrite the issue
of certain shares of Yankee Princess Oils. Under the underwriting agreement:
(a) Yankee Princess Oils agreed to file a
prospectus with the appropriate Government authorities before February 9, 1952;
(b) Yankee Princess Oils granted to Ross
Whittall Ltd. an option to purchase prior to February 9, 1952, 350,000 shares
at 48¢ per share, which were to be offered to the public at 60¢ per share;
(c) in the event that Ross Whittall Ltd.
exercised the option referred to in subparagraph (b), Yankee Princess Oils
granted a further option to Ross Whittall Ltd. to purchase within sixty days
from the filing of the prospectus a further 650,000 shares at the price of 48¢
All of this stock was spoken for before Ross
Whittall Ltd. offered it to the public.
The appellant, on February 1, 1952, sold 40,000
shares of Yankee Princess Oils at 85¢ per share.
By February 5, 1952, Ross Whittall Ltd. had sold
to the public the 1,000,000 shares which it had agreed to underwrite at 60¢ per
share and immediately thereafter the price went to 85¢ per share.
The appellant, on February 5, 1952, sold 250
shares of Yankee Princess Oils for 60¢ per share.
[Page 427]
On February 7, 1952, the appellant was advised
that the well which Yankee Princess Oils was drilling under the farm out
agreement was a successful well, and he sold 20,000 shares of Yankee Princess
Oils at 95¢ per share.
During the months of March and April, the
appellant sold 41,500 shares of Yankee Princess Oils at the following prices
per share:
|
Number
|
Price Per Share
|
5 March ..............................................................
|
2,000
|
1.07
|
10 March ...........................................................
|
3,000
|
1.16/1.20
|
19 March ...........................................................
|
1,500
|
1.12
|
1 April ................................................................
|
5,000
|
1.29/1.30
|
7 April ................................................................
|
15,000
|
1.20/1.21/1.40
|
21 April ..............................................................
|
15,000
|
1.48/1.55
|
|
|
|
The appellant, on May 9, 1952, purchased a
further 2,500 shares of Yankee Princess Oils at $1.42 per share.
Ross Whittall Ltd., on May 12, 1952, underwrote
a further 100,000 shares of Yankee Princess Oils which were issued for $1 per
share and offered for sale to the public at $1.40 per share.
By May of 1952 three more wells had been brought
into production on the land subject to the farm out agreement with Atlantic
Oil.
During the months of May, September and October,
the appellant purchased a further 19,500 shares of Yankee Princess Oils at
prices ranging from a high of $1.42 to a low of 80¢ per share.
During the months of February and March 1953,
the appellant sold a further 17,000 shares of Yankee Princess Oils.
During 1953, it became obvious that the four
wells which Yankee Princess Oils had drilled were not going to produce as much
oil as was anticipated and the market for the shares of Yankee Princess Oils
declined.
On October 9, 1953, the appellant bought a
further 5,000 shares at 40¢ a share, and on October 13, 1953, he sold these
shares at from 51¢ to 53¢ per share.
The gain realized by the appellant in 1952 upon
the disposition by him of 106,750 shares of Yankee Princess Oils was
$104,113.03.
[Page 428]
III THE ACQUISITION AND SALE OF SHARES IN
CANADIAN COLLIERIES (DUNSMUIR) LTD.
The third question for determination is whether
there is to be included in the appellant’s income the following gains. The
re-assessment is as follows:
for 1953
|
|
|
Proceeds of sale of shares of Canadian Collieries (Dunsmuir) Ltd.
purchased from Sunray Oils
|
|
|
14,650 shares.................................................
|
$93,203.75
|
|
Less cost @ $3.50 per share........................
|
|
|
|
41,928.75
|
|
Less reduction agreed on by respondent in the notification ................................................
|
1,786.75
|
|
|
|
|
for 1954
|
|
|
Proceeds of sale of shares of Canadian Collieries (Dunsmuir) Ltd.
purchased from Sunray Oils 10,350 shares............................
|
$89,446.85
|
|
Less cost @ $3.50 per share........................
|
|
|
|
|
$53,221.88
|
The 25,000 shares in Canadian Collieries
(Dunsmuir) Ltd. material to this appeal were acquired by the appellant on
November 26, 1953, in the following circumstances:
Canadian Collieries (Dunsmuir) Ltd. had
originally been in the business of mining and selling coal; the appellant had
been the president and a shareholder of the company since 1945.
In 1952, Canadian Collieries having found the
coal business to be declining and unprofitable, decided to acquire an interest
in oil; to this end, in midsummer of 1952, it acquired the greater portion of
the interests which Sunray Oil Corporation had in certain oil and natural gas
leases in the Province of Alberta in exchange for issuing to Sunray Oil
Corporation 243,000 of its treasury shares.
In August 1952, Ross Whittall Ltd. underwrote a
sale to the public of 88,828 shares in Canadian Collieries, acquired at $3.60
per share.
In November 1953, a first well had been drilled
on land covered by the company’s permits, though it proved to be a
disappointment.
[Page 429]
On November 20, 1953, Sunray Oil Corporation
offered to sell to the appellant a block of 100,000 shares of Canadian
Collieries at $3.50 per share. The appellant was unable to purchase the whole
block, but by November 26 the appellant contacted the following persons who
agreed to acquire the following shares:
Ross Whittall
Ltd.................................................................................
|
20,000 shares
|
Richard Whittall...................................................................................
|
2,500 shares
|
W.K. McGee.......................................................................................
|
2,500 shares
|
Frank and George
McMahon............................................................
|
50,000 shares
|
The appellant personally acquired 25,000 shares.
During the months of December 1953, and January
1954, the price of the shares of Canadian Collieries “appreciated quickly”.
This was because a second well had come in and had proved to be a commercial well.
During 1953, the appellant acquired 28,000
shares and sold 24,000 shares of Canadian Collieries (Dunsmuir) Ltd. During
1954, he acquired 19,200 shares and sold 36,200 shares of Canadian Collieries
(Dunsmuir) Ltd. During 1955 he bought 5,000 shares and sold 26,600 shares of
Canadian Collieries (Dunsmuir) Ltd.
The gain realized by the appellant upon the
disposition, in 1953 and 1954, of 25,000 shares of Canadian Collieries
(Dunsmuir) Ltd. was $93,363.88.
The learned trial judge stated the issue before
him in the following terms:
The issue to be decided on these facts is
whether or not all or any of these securities (the profit on the realization of
which was taxed by the Minister as income of the appellant in the relevant
years) were ordinary investments within the meaning of the jurisprudence in
respect to the same, or whether the transactions entered into by the appellant
in the acquisition, exchanging and realization of them were entered into as a
scheme for profit making so that the profit gained, received, or derived
therefrom by the appellant was profit gained, received or derived from a trade
or business of the appellant constituting income within the meaning of
sections 3, 4 and 139(1) (e) of the Income Tax Act.
The paragraph in the statute to which he last
refers provides:
(e) “business” includes a
profession, calling, trade, manufacture or undertaking of any kind whatsoever
and includes an adventure or concern in the nature of trade but does not
include an office or employment.
[Page 430]
He reached the following conclusions:
On the facts of this case, however, and
irrespective of the fiduciary relationships to which I will refer, I am
compelled to hold that this appellant in respect to the acquisition of all
these securities was endeavouring to make a profit by a trade or business, and
was actually engaged in this business at all material times and the profitable
sales and exchanges of securities were not in law a substitution of one form of
investment for another. During all the material times the appellant assisted
materially in the marketing of these securities, which brought substantial gain
to himself. The turning of these investments into profit was not merely
incidental but instead was the essential feature of his personal trading
operations or business speculations.
These investments, the realization of which
produced the profit, in my opinion, were not “ordinary” investments within the
meaning of the Irrigation Industries case, (1962) S.C.R. 346, and
the Californian Copper Syndicate case, (1904) 5 T.C. 159.
In addition, I am also of opinion that one
of the outstanding facts which distinguishes this case from all the cases cited
in support of the appellant’s submission is the fact that the appellant was in
a fiduciary relationship as a director, and in some cases also as an officer,
of various companies at the material times as, e.g., Pacific Petroleums Ltd.,
Atlantic Oil Co. Ltd., Peace River Natural Gas Co. Ltd., Westcoast Transmission
Co. Ltd., St. John Oil & Gas Co. Ltd., Yankee Princess Oils, Ltd.,
Inland Natural Gas Co. Ltd., Canadian Northern Oil & Gas Co. Ltd., Canadian
Collieries (Dunsmuir) Ltd., and Ross Whittall Ltd.; and because of this
fiduciary relationship was in a position to and did avail himself of the
opportunity to make these trading profits.
It is basic equity law that directors are
creatures of statute and occupy a position similar in varying respects to those
of agents, trustees and managing partners, and their position is clearly of a
fiduciary character. They are trustees of the powers which they possess as
directors, as for example, the power of issuing and allotting shares. In
accepting office as such, directors place themselves in a fiduciary position
towards the company and its shareholders. And a director of two companies which
deal with each other owes a fiduciary duty to each of them and to their
respective shareholders. As directors they may not exercise their powers as
directors in such a way as to benefit themselves at the expense of the
remaining shareholders. They are precluded from dealing legally on behalf of
the company with themselves when there is a personal conflicting interest.
Directors may only take up shares in a company of which they are directors on
the same terms as the general public.
These are only a few of the consequences in
equity which flow from occupying the position of director of a company when
various transactions are being completed; and they are all relevant in the
various circumstances which obtained in the transactions under review in this
appeal.
In this case, because of the various
fiduciary relationships in which the appellant was at the material times, and
the conflicts of interest which resulted, on this ground alone I am of opinion
that none of these investments of the appellant (the acquisition and
realization of which resulted in a profit) were “ordinary” investments within
the meaning of the Irrigation Industries case (supra).
Dealing first with the second, or additional
ground stated, there is no evidence that, in any of the transactions in
[Page 431]
which he engaged, the appellant was in breach of
the duty which he owed to the various companies of which he was a director.
There is no suggestion that in any of the transactions under consideration he
obtained for himself a personal profit at the expense of any of such companies,
or that he had placed himself in a position where he should account for such
profits as a trustee. That issue is not before the Court in this case.
The sole issue here is whether he, personally,
was engaged in the business of trading in oil and gas rights and in corporate
shares. The information which was available to him, qua director, and the
actions which he took in the light of that information are relevant to that
issue to the extent that they are of assistance in determining the intentions
of the appellant in relation to the various rights and shares which he acquired
and sold.
I am of the opinion that there was ample
evidence to support the conclusion reached by the learned trial judge in the
first paragraph of the passage from his reasons quoted above. Counsel for the
appellant took issue with the statement that “the appellant assisted materially
in the marketing of these securities”, contending that it was the investment
company which had done the marketing and not the appellant. But the learned
trial judge uses the word “assisted”, and the appellant was, at the material
times, the majority shareholder, a director and officer of Ross Whittall Ltd.
and the president of its successor. Undoubtedly he assisted in the marketing
operations mentioned.
In my opinion, the appellant’s personal
transactions under review come within the latter part of the frequently cited
statement of Lord Justice Clerk in Californian Copper Syndicate v. Harris, which case is cited by the learned
trial judge:
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 simplest
case
[Page 432]
is that of a person or association of
persons buying and selling lands or securities speculatively, in order to make
gain, dealing in such investments as a business, and thereby seeking to make
profits.
In respect of the transactions involved in this
case, there was sufficient evidence on which the learned trial judge could
properly find that the appellant was engaged in the business of buying and
selling rights to land and securities, and that he was not in the position of
an owner of an “ordinary” investment choosing to realize it.
In my opinion the appeal should be dismissed with
costs.
Appeal dismissed with costs.
Solicitors for the appellant: Russell
& Dumoulin, Vancouver.
Solicitor for the respondent: D.S.
Maxwell, Ottawa.