Bonner
J.T.C.C.:—The
appellant
appeals
from
assessments
under
the
Income
Tax
Act,
R.S.C.
1952,
c.
148
(am.
S.C.
1970-71-72,
c.
63)
(the
"Act”)
for
the
1987,
1988
and
1989
taxation
years.
For
each
year
the
Minister
of
National
Revenue
(’’Minister”)
added
to
declared
income
amounts
which
he
arrived
at
on
the
basis
of
net
worth
calculations.
As
well
for
the
1987
and
1988
taxation
years
he
included
in
income
pursuant
to
subsection
15(2)
of
the
Act
amounts
in
respect
of
outstanding
shareholder
loans.
For
1989
an
adjustment
was
made
in
respect
of
a
loan
repayment.
The
figures
as
set
out
in
the
explanations
attached
to
the
notices
of
assess-
|
ment
are
as
follows:
|
1987
|
1988
|
1989
|
|
Declared
income
|
$34,093
|
$36,129
|
$78,590
|
|
Unreported
income
|
|
|
calculated
by
net
worth
method
|
$90,804
|
174,981
|
101,888
|
|
Subsection
15(2)
additions
|
$22,796
|
$20,791
|
($38)
|
|
Deletion
of
Taxable
capital
gain
|
|
($30,000)
|
|
Revised
Income
|
147,693
|
231,899
|
150,440
|
A
final
adjustment
for
1989
arises
from
the
deletion
of
a
taxable
capital
gain
reported
by
the
appellant.
According
to
the
appellant
the
gain
was
realized
on
a
sale
of
a
painting.
In
the
appellant’s
return
of
income
for
1989
the
gain
was
treated
as
exempt.
In
essence
the
assessor
did
not
accept
the
appellant’s
story
that
the
sale
of
a
painting
accounted
for
part
of
the
increase
in
the
appellant’s
net
worth.
A
net
worth
assessment
involves
an
indirect
measurement
of
income
over
a
period.
The
net
worth
of
an
individual,
that
is
to
say,
the
excess
of
his
assets
over
his
liabilities
is
calculated
at
the
end
of
a
period
and
at
the
beginning
of
the
period.
The
assessment
proceeds
on
the
assumption
that
the
total
of
any
increase
in
net
worth
over
the
period
(to
the
extent
that
such
increase
cannot
be
attributed
to
non-taxable
sources
such
as
gifts
and
inheritances)
plus
expenditures
made
during
the
period
for
personal
consumption
is
the
amount
of
the
individual’s
income
for
the
period.
It
is
evident
that
the
net
worth
method
can
never
measure
income
with
the
same
precision
as
the
simple
method
of
totalling
salaries
and
profits
from
various
sources
in
the
manner
contemplated
by
the
Act.
The
net
worth
method
should
therefore
be
adopted
only
in
cases
where
it
is
fairly
clear
that
direct
and
accurate
measurement
of
income
is
impossible.
The
position
of
the
appellant
at
the
hearing
of
the
appeals
was
that
his
returns
of
income
were
correct
and
complete.
He
asserted
the
apparent
increases
in
his
net
worth
were
attribuable
to
gifts
from
two
sources
and
to
the
realization
of
a
gain
on
the
sale
of
the
painting.
He
asserted
as
well
that
the
assessor
drew
erroneous
conclusions
with
regard
to
his
practice
of
acquiring
$1,000
bills
in
exchange
for
notes
of
smaller
denomination.
In
an
appeal
from
an
assessment
of
income
tax
the
onus
is
on
the
taxpayer
to
establish
on
the
balance
of
probabilities
that
the
assessment
is
too
high
having
regard
to
the
law
and
the
relevant
facts.
It
is
not
enough
for
the
taxpayer
to
show
that
the
assessment
might
conceivably
be
too
high.
He
must
adduce
credible
evidence
showing
that
on
a
proper
and
complete
net
worth
his
income
is
lower
than
the
Minister
found
it
to
be.
Where
a
taxpayer
has
placed
himself
in
a
position
in
which
a
direct
and
accurate
measurement
of
income
is
impossible
he
can
hardly
complain
in
the
course
of
an
appeal
from
a
net
worth
assessment
of
the
inaccuracies
inherent
in
that
method.
The
position
was
set
out
by
Christie
A.C.J.T.C.C.,
in
Kay
(J.)
v.
Canada,
[1995]
1
C.T.C.
2310,
as
follows:
It
may
be
appropriate
to
say
something
about
taxpayers
keeping
records
and
books
of
account.
Under
subsection
230(1)
of
the
Income
Tax
Act
every
person
carrying
on
business
and
every
person
who
is
required
to
pay
taxes
shall
keep
records
and
books
of
account
in
such
form
and
containing
such
information
as
will
enable
the
taxes
payable
under
the
Act
to
be
determined.
Failure
to
comply
with
the
subsection
will
not,
of
itself,
result
in
the
dismissal
of
an
appeal
against
a
reassessment
of
liability
to
income
tax.
But
it
could
interfere
with
an
appellant’s
ability
to
discharge
the
burden
of
proof
on
him
of
showing
that,
on
a
balance
of
probability,
the
reassessment
is
in
error.
This
was
recently
dealt
with
by
the
Federal
Court
of
Appeal
in
Sidhu
v.
M.N.R.,
[1993]
2
C.T.C.
278,
93
D.T.C.
5453
(F.C.A.).
Mahoney
J.A.
in
delivering
the
judgment
of
the
Court
said
at
page
281
(D.T.C.
5454-55):
The
requirement
of
subsection
230(1)
may
fairly
be
characterized
as
absolute
but
the
consequence
of
not
complying
is
liability
to
conviction
of
an
offence
under
subsection
238(2),
not
necessarily
a
conclusion
that
transactions
which
ought
to
have
been
recorded
did
not
occur.
The
failure
to
record
transactions
will
inevitably
handicap
a
taxpayer
seeking
to
discharge
the
burden
of
proving
that
they
took
place
but
the
responsibility
of
the
trial
judge
in
such
circumstances
is
to
decide,
on
a
balance
of
probabilities
having
regard
to
all
the
evidence
and
its
credibility,
whether
any,
all
or
none
took
place.
The
proper
approach
was
demonstrated
by
Strayer
J.
in
Schwartz
v.
The
Queen,
[1987]
2
C.T.C.
12,
87
D.T.C.
5274
(F.C.T.D.)
at
page
14
(D.T.C.
5275).
The
law
places
the
onus
on
the
taxpayer
in
such
cases
to
prove
wrong
the
Minister’s
reassessment
on
the
basis
that
the
taxpayer
is
in
a
better
position
to
prove
what
actually
happened,
if
he
chooses
and
is
able
to
do
so.
Unfortunately,
the
plaintiff
has
not
been
willing
or
able
to
particularize
in
any
way
the
purchases
made
by
him.
He
has
confirmed
on
many
occasions
that
the
figures
provided
by
his
accountant
as
to
his
total
purchases
were
correct.
If
he
had
made
any
effort
to
corroborate
this
and
his
oral
evidence
had
seemed
forthcoming
and
credible,
it
might
have
been
possible
to
find
in
his
favour
even
in
the
absence
of
any
vouchers,
receipts
or
other
written
records.
Unfortunately
neither
of
these
requirements
were
met.
To
the
foregoing
I
might
add
that
if
on
an
appeal
to
this
Court
the
circumstances
are
such
that
because
of
failure
to
keep
records
of
business
transactions
or
to
keep
reasonably
comprehensible
records
the
onus
on
the
appellant
cannot
be
discharged
then,
I
think,
the
appellant
can
only
be
regarded
as
the
author
of
his
own
misfortune.
The
appellant
was
born
in
1960.
He
left
school
in
1978
upon
completion
of
Grade
12.
While
in
high
school
the
appellant
worked
in
his
father’s
waste
disposal
business.
As
well
during
that
period
he
worked
from
time
to
time
for
local
farmers
and
carried
on
a
small
lawn
and
garden
maintenance
service.
After
leaving
school
the
appellant
continued
to
carry
on
the
lawn
and
garden
business.
The
appellant’s
father,
Orvis
Fletcher,
turned
part
of
his
waste
disposal
business
over
to
the
appellant
and
his
brother,
Murray
and
permitted
them
to
use
his
garbage
trucks
without
charge
save
for
fuel
and
maintenance.
In
1983
or
1984
the
appellant
started
to
work
as
a
manager
of
a
moving
picture
theatre.
The
appellant
was
married
in
1984.
Before
that
time
he
lived
at
home
and
paid
nothing
for
room
and
board.
Following
his
marriage
the
appellant
and
his
wife
continued
to
live
with
the
appellant’s
parents.
They
paid
no
rent
and
contributed
only
occasionally
to
the
cost
of
food.
The
appellant
and
his
wife
bought
and
moved
in
to
their
first
home
in
1989.
The
appellant’s
wife
worked
following
the
marriage.
Both
were
inclined
to
save
their
money.
The
evidence
thus
tends
to
indicate
that
up
to
December
31,
1986
the
appellant
worked
hard
and
saved
a
substantial
portion
of
his
earnings.
During
the
three
years
in
issue
the
appellant
had
three
main
business
interests.
He
had
a
50
per
cent
interest
in
a
company,
Woodstock
Amusements
Ltd.
which
in
early
1987
bought
a
drive-in
movie
theatre
and
The
Vogue,
a
700-seat
indoor
theatre.
The
appellant
was
responsible
for
the
day-to-day
operation
of
The
Vogue.
The
drive-in
and
The
Vogue
were
sold
a
few
years
later
and
a
new
theatre
was
constructed.
The
appellant
was
also
responsible
for
the
day-to-day
operation
of
the
new
theatre.
The
theatre
companies
paid
the
appellant
a
monthly
wage
for
his
services
in
managing
the
operation
and
for
his
services
in
removing
garbage
generated
by
the
theatres.
The
appellant’s
second
area
of
business
activity
was
the
waste
disposal
business.
From
1979
to
1989
the
appellant
carried
on
that
business
in
partnership
with
his
brother
in
a
territory
which
had
been
turned
over
to
them
by
their
father.
In
1989
the
appellant’s
father
handed
over
the
rest
of
his
business
to
his
four
boys.
Later
that
business
was
sold
outright.
Finally
the
appellant
during
the
years
in
question
continued
to
carry
on
the
landscaping
or
lawn
maintenance
business
which
he
had
started
when
in
high
school.
The
appellant
made
a
practice
of
keeping
large
sums
of
money
in
cash
in
a
safe
in
his
father’s
home.
It
was
argued
that
the
Minister’s
figure
for
cash
on
hand
on
December
31,
1986,
$22,000,
was
too
low.
The
appellant
made
a
practice
of
exchanging
smaller
bills
for
$1,000
bills.
When
a
bank
or
trust
company
had
$1,000
bills
on
hand
no
record
was
kept
of
the
exchange.
However
when
such
bills
were
specially
ordered
for
the
appellant
a
record
was
kept
by
the
financial
institution.
The
$22,000
figure
represents
the
total
of
orders
made
in
1986
for
$1,000
bills.
It
does
not
include
a
six-
bill
order
of
August
7,
1986.
The
records
relating
to
that
order
were
lost.
Counsel
for
the
appellant
argued
that
the
$22,000
figure
must
be
too
low
not
only
because
of
the
$6,000
but
also
the
appellant
was
able
to
produce
$70,000
in
cash
early
in
1987
for
the
purchase
of
his
shares
in
Woodstock
Amusements
Ltd.
Counsel
pointed
as
well
to
the
appellant’s
assertion
that
he
could
have
paid
the
entire
$140,000
cost
of
the
Woodstock
shares
in
cash
and
that
he
borrowed
$70,000
for
that
purpose
only
because
he
wanted
to
establish
a
credit
rating
with
the
bank.
A
conclusion
that
the
Minister’s
figure
for
opening
net
worth
is
too
low
must
rest
on
acceptance
of
the
appellant’s
explanations
as
to
various
sources
of
cash
which
he
says
he
had
on
hand
on
December
31,
1986.
The
central
problem
with
this
appeal
is
credibility.
The
appellant’s
stories
and
explanations
as
to
cash
on
hand
on
December
31,
1986
and
as
to
variations
in
cash
on
hand
during
the
net
worth
period
might
conceivably
be
true
but
I
am
far
from
persuaded
that
they
are
true.
Much
of
the
appellant’s
testimony
is
improbable
and
is
inconsistent
with
evidence
given
by
him
under
oath
at
the
examination
for
discovery.
Moreover
the
evidence
offers
no
clear
basis
for
any
conclusion
as
to
the
amount
of
the
appellant’s
cash
supply
at
any
time
relevant
to
the
net
worth
assessment.
The
appellant
denied
having
counted
the
total
cash
on
hand
in
the
safe
at
any
time.
There
was
evidence
that
cash
was
advanced
or
given
to
the
appellant
prior
to
and
during
the
net
worth
period
by
Lyle
Murray
Gowing.
Mr.
Gowing,
whose
sister
is
married
to
the
appellant’s
father
and
who
himself
is
married
to
the
appellant’s
grandmother,
testified
that
he
advanced
approximately
$130,000
in
cash
to
the
appellant
over
the
years
from
1986
to
1989.
He
said
that
he
had
more
than
$200,000
in
cash
in
a
safe
at
home
and
had
from
time
to
time
advanced
cash
totalling
$130,000
to
the
appellant
at
the
appellant’s
request.
No
written
record
of
the
transaction
was
kept.
Mr.
Gowing
said
that
he
kept
track
of
the
figures
in
his
mind.
He
said
further
that
he
told
the
appellant
that
he
would
not
be
asked
to
repay
the
funds
unless
he
found
himself
in
need
of
money.
Mr.
Gowing
was
not
an
impressive
witness.
Answers
given
by
him
on
cross-examination
raised
considerable
doubt
as
to
his
ability
to
advance
money
in
the
amounts
alleged.
Mr.
Gowing
operated
a
taxi
business
from
1961
to
1978
and
he
then
retired.
He
could
not
say
how
much
he
earned
from
the
taxi
business.
He
reported
little
or
no
income
for
a
number
of
years
prior
to
1987.
When
questioned
about
his
reasons
for
not
filing
tax
returns
for
some
of
the
years
he
suggested
that
like
a
lot
of
other
people
he
did
not
want
to
pay
tax.
He
could
not
remember
the
amounts
of
individual
advances
to
the
appellant,
when
the
advances
were
made
or
even
when
the
total
reached
$130,000.
I
cannot
believe
his
testimony.
The
appellant
did
not
give
any
accurate
account
of
the
amounts
and
dates
of
individual
advances
said
to
have
been
made
by
Mr.
Gowing.
He
stated
that
at
times
he
borrowed
money
even
though
he
had
no
reason
at
all
for
doing
so.
He
stated
that
he
simply
kept
the
borrowed
money
in
cash
in
his
father’s
safe.
He
admitted
on
cross-
examination
that
he
said
the
figure
was
$130,000
because
that
was
what
his
Mr.
Gowing
told
him.
In
summary
the
evidence
as
to
alleged
advances
by
Mr.
Gowing
is
insufficient
to
point
to
error
in
any
of
the
net
worth
calculations
made
on
assessment.
The
next
improbable
story
related
to
alleged
gifts
to
the
appellant
by
Mrs.
Evelyn
Kirk.
Mrs.
Kirk
was
an
elderly
widow.
She
was
a
client
of
the
appellant’s
landscaping
business.
The
appellant
asserted
that
gifts
of
cash
made
to
him
by
Mrs.
Kirk
to
assist
with
the
education
of
his
daughter
Nadine
accounted
for
part
of
his
opening
cash
on
hand.
He
said
that
in
June
or
July
1985
he
and
his
wife
and
Nadine,
who
was
then
approximately
1
month
old,
visited
Mrs.
Kirk.
On
that
occasion
Mrs.
Kirk
was
said
to
have
handed
to
appellant
an
envelope
containing
a
card
and
a
substantial
amount
of
cash.
The
appellant
said
that
he
did
not
count
it.
Further
cash
gifts
were
said
to
have
been
made
in
December
1985
and
early
in
1986.
All
of
this
was
in
support
of
an
assertion
that
the
appellant
had
approximately
$175,000
in
cash
on
hand
at
the
end
of
1986.
Although
the
appellant’s
wife
testified
that
she
was
present
with
her
daughter
on
two
occasions
when
gifts
were
made
her
evidence
did
little
to
support
her
husband’s
story.
She
did
not
count
the
money.
The
envelopes
were
not
opened
in
her
presence.
She
did
not
see
the
appellant
put
the
gifts
in
the
safe.
It
is
possible
that
Mrs.
Kirk
did
give
money
to
the
appellant
for
his
daughter.
It
is
even
possible
that
she
did
so
more
than
once.
However
if
any
gifts
were
made
the
amount
of
them
and
the
extent
of
their
impact
on
opening
net
worth
has
not
been
established
by
reliable
evidence.
The
appellant’s
evidence
at
the
hearing
of
the
appeal
was,
once
again,
in
conflict
with
the
evidence
given
by
him
on
discovery.
Furthermore
the
appellant
stated
that
the
amount
of
the
first
of
the
gifts
was
$15,000
but
asserted
as
well
that
he
did
not
count
either
it
or
any
of
the
other
gifts.
It
should
be
noted
that
savings
from
the
appellant’s
frugal
lifestyle
and
from
the
proceeds
of
gifts,
if
any,
made
to
the
appellant
by
Mrs.
Kirk
and
Mr.
Gowing
could
well
be
reflected
in
the
Minister’s
calculations
of
assets
on
hand
on
December
31,
1986.
The
net
worth
working
papers,
Exhibit
A-3,
disclosed
that
the
appellant
had
substantial
holdings
of
guaranteed
investment
certificates
and
mutual
funds
on
that
date.
I
turn
next
to
the
appellant’s
story
as
to
the
sale
of
a
painting
in
1989
for
$92,000
in
cash.
An
outline
of
that
story
now
follows.
The
painting
is
said
to
have
been
found
in
the
attic
of
a
house
which
had
been
left
to
the
appellant’s
father
by
his
father.
The
house
was
subsequently
sold
to
the
appellant.
In
1984
when
the
appellant
and
his
wife
were
cleaning
the
house
they
discovered
a
number
of
paintings
in
the
attic.
Some
time
later
the
appellant
took
the
paintings
to
a
number
of
art
dealers
in
Toronto
and
learned
that
they
might
be
valuable.
Later
he
received
a
phone
call
from
a
man
who
a
short
time
later
purchased
one
of
the
paintings.
It
was
said
to
be
a
work
of
Tom
Thomson.
The
purchase
price
was
said
to
be
$92,000
and
to
have
been
paid
in
cash
at
the
appellant’s
insistence
because
a
certified
cheque
might
be
forged.
The
price
is
said
to
have
been
negotiated
by
the
appellant
without
the
benefit
of
any
independent
assistance
in
arriving
at
the
value
of
the
work.
The
cash
is
said
to
have
been
put
in
the
safe.
Neither
the
appellant’s
wife
nor
anyone
else
can
corroborate
the
appellant’s
story
as
to
the
amount
paid.
The
purchaser
cannot
now
be
traced.
The
appellant
produced
a
document
described
by
the
appellant
as
a
’’receipt
for
$92,000"
prepared
at
his
request
for
income
tax
purposes
by
the
purchaser
at
the
time
the
sale
took
place
in
February
1989.
The
document
is
quite
unusual.
Normally
a
buyer
will
not
give
a
receipt
for
the
purchase
price
of
the
article
bought
by
him.
Normally
a
bill
of
sale
is
not
furnished
by
purchaser
to
vendor.
The
document
itself
appears
on
its
face
to
have
been
altered
both
as
to
date
and
to
what
now
appears
to
be
a
$92,000
figure.
Like
much
of
the
rest
of
the
appellant’s
evidence
the
painting
story
could
conceivably
have
some
basis
in
fact.
It
was
partially
corroborated
by
the
evidence
of
the
appellant’s
wife.
However
she
had
no
independent
knowledge
of
the
amount
paid.
Having
regard
to
my
assessment
of
the
appellant’s
overall
credibility
I
cannot
accept
the
story
as
an
explanation
for
the
receipt
in
1989
of
$92,000.
I
turn
next
to
the
argument
based
on
use
of
the
$1,000
bills.
The
assessor
determined
by
reference
to
bank
records
the
number
of
such
bills
acquired
by
the
appellant
in
each
year.
He
made
his
net
worth
calculations
on
the
premise
that
all
such
bills
were
held
by
the
appellant
at
the
end
of
the
year
save
for
bills
used
in
documented
expenditures
such
as
the
purchase
of
the
car.
The
appellant
testified
that
he
used
the
bills
to
pay
for
small
change
required
to
operate
the
moving
picture
theatre.
That
evidence
was
corroborated
to
some
extent
by
the
testimony
of
Mary
Ann
Merkel
who
formerly
worked
in
ticket
sales
and
at
the
candy
bar
of
the
appellant’s
theatre.
She
stated
that
from
time
to
time
the
appellant
gave
her
a
$1,000
bill
to
enable
her
to
purchase
$2
notes
and
25
cent
and
$1
coins.
Some
corroboration
was
also
provided
by
the
appellant’s
wife
who
testified
that
the
appellant
sometimes
gave
her
$1,000
bills
with
instructions
to
go
to
the
bank
and
exchange
for
smaller
denomination
notes
and
coins.
The
evidence
of
Mrs.
Merkel
and
of
Mrs.
Fletcher
does
not
demonstrate
that
the
assessor’s
figures
for
$1,000
bills
on
hand
at
the
end
of
the
years
1986
to
1989
were
wrong.
Not
all
of
the
appellant’s
acquisitions
of
$1,000
bills
were
recorded.
The
evidence
of
the
assessor,
which
I
accept,
was
that
the
financial
institutions
made
records
only
when
bills
had
to
be
specially
ordered
to
satisfy
the
appellant’s
request.
Thus
there
is
uncertainty
as
to
the
extent
to
which
the
appellant
used
$1,000
bills
to
purchase
small
change
and
as
to
the
exact
number
acquired
by
him
in
unrecorded
transactions.
Any
adjustment
to
the
net
worth
in
respect
of
the
use
of
$1,000
bills
to
purchase
change
would
involve
simple
guess
work
and
would
therefore
be
totally
unwarranted.
I
turn
next
to
the
inclusions
in
income
based
on
subsection
15(2)
of
the
Act.
The
balance
sheets
of
the
appellant’s
company,
693957
Ontario
Inc.,
recorded
substantial
amounts
of
cash
as
corporate
assets.
The
company
had
no
bank
account
and
it
was
admitted
that
all
corporate
cash
was
kept
by
the
appellant
mingled
with
his
own
money
in
the
safe
in
his
father’s
home.
In
argument
counsel
for
the
appellant
pointed
to
acquisitions
made
by
the
company
which
he
asserted
must
have
involved
the
use
of
the
cash.
He
took
the
position
that
such
use
was
inconsistent
with
any
loan
by
the
corporation
to
the
appellant
and
he
asserted
that
the
law
does
not
require
that
a
corporation
keep
its
cash
in
a
bank
account.
I
accept
only
the
second
part
of
the
argument.
The
corporation
may
have
used
its
cash
to
some
extent
but
as
time
passed
it
generated
more.
All
of
the
cash
was
effectively
treated
by
the
appellant
as
his
own.
The
evidence
upon
which
counsel
relies
does
not
in
my
view
support
a
conclusion
that
the
cash
loaned
was
repaid
within
the
period
laid
down
in
paragraph
15(2)(b)
of
the
Act.
The
appeal
will
therefore
be
dismissed
with
costs.
Appeal
dismissed.