Bell
J.T.C.C.:-The
issue
in
this
appeal,
heard
under
the
informal
procedure
rules,
is
whether
the
appellant’s
share
of
profit
from
the
sale
of
four
properties
in
his
1986
taxation
year,
from
the
sale
of
one
property
in
his
1987
taxation
year
and
the
sale
of
two
properties
in
his
1988
taxation
year
was
capital
gain
or
ordinary
income.
The
first
witness
for
the
appellant
was
Mr.
Zenon
Koltalo
("Koltalo"),
a
self-employed
insurance
agent.
He
said
that
he
wanted
"to
build
a
nest
egg"
and
that
he
knew
that
the
appellant’s
father
had
lots
of
real
estate
and
that
he
asked
the
appellant
whether
he
was
interested
in
real
estate
accumulation.
Koltalo
stated
that
a
Dennis
Vytlingam
was
a
realtor
who
always
had
properties
available.
He
stated
that
they
had
asked
Mr.
Vytlingam
to
find
properties
that
would
"carry
the
mortgage".
Exhibit
A-2,
introduced
by
appellant’s
counsel
showing
the
chronology
of
acquisitions
and
dispositions
of
realty
is
reproduced
as
follows:
Chronology
100
Portland
March
4,
1986
(acquired):
$132,000
March
27,
1986
(sold):
$155,000
1069
Islington
April
4,
1986
(acquired):
$116,000
May
23,
1986
(sold):
$134,000
2901
Jane
June
3,
1986
(acquired):
$54,250
June
27,
1986
(sold):
$66,250
56
Seaforth
June
30,
1986
(acquired):
$103,000
August
22,
1986
(sold):
$135,000
1332-1334
Lakeshore
September
30,
1986
(acquired):
$100,000
May
1,
1987
(sold):
$152,000
1336-1338
Lake
shore
October
1,
1986
(acquired):
$100,500
June
10,
1987
(sold):
$153,000
Koltalo
stated
that
they
were
looking
at
1069
Islington
at
the
same
time
as
100
Portland
but
that
the
offer
was
made
first
on
the
Islington
property.
He
stated
that
there
was
good
subway
access,
that
it
was
across
the
street
from
McDonald’s,
close
to
a
school,
had
a
rented
basement
apartment
and
that
the
rental
income
would
carry
the
mortgage.
He
stated
that
the
appellant
and
a
Mr.
Kamla
Gopie
("Gopie")
were
associated
with
him
in
making
an
offer,
that
they
had
looked
at
the
property
and
that
the
agent
had
said
it
was
a
good
deal.
His
stated
reason
for
sale
of
same
was
that
the
house
had
a
very
strong
curry
odour
which
was
not
removed
by
cleaning
and
painting
the
house.
He
also
stated
that
a
neighbour
advised
him
that
the
basement
apartment
was
illegal
and
that
he
would
report
these
new
owners
to
the
city
if
they
continued
to
operate
it
as
a
rental
property.
The
witness
stated
that
the
gain
on
this
property,
after
costs,
was
$10,325
which
would
have
to
be
divided
three
ways.
This
was
the
first
sale
in
1986
after
being
owned
for
48
days.
Koltalo
stated
that
they
bought
100
Portland
which
had
self-
contained
units
and
was
apparently
legal.
He
then
described
a
’’tenant’s
rebellion”
with
demands
for
various
improvements
and
said
that
a
contractor’s
estimate
of
the
cost
of
same
was
so
high
that
the
property
was
sold
on
the
advice
of
their
realtor.
This
sale,
after
23
days
of
ownership,
was
the
second
sale
in
1986.
Koltalo
then
testified
that
they
bought
2901
Jane
because
it
looked
like
a
long
term
investment
but
that
the
owner
had
vacated,
there
were
no
tenants
at
the
time,
that
the
place
was
a
mess,
that
a
prospective
tenant
asked
if
they
would
like
to
sell
and
that
a
sale
was
effected.
This
was
the
third
sale
in
1986
after
being
owned
for
24
days.
He
testified
further
that
the
agent
found
56
Seaforth,
that
the
property
was
clean,
that
there
was
a
tenant
in
a
basement
suite
and
that
the
upper
portion
was
unoccupied.
He
stated
further
that
on
closing
day
they
were
advised
that
the
entrance
was
on
city
property
and
that
they
could
be
forced
to
remove
it.
He
then
described
problems
with
the
basement
tenant,
with
water
in
the
basement
and
with
the
tenant
threatening
to
sue.
He
testified
that
the
agent
said
he
had
another
property
and
Seaforth
was
sold.
This
was
the
fourth
sale
in
1986
after
being
held
for
53
days.
He
then
described
the
purchase
of
two
units
at
Lakeshore
and
said
that
there
were
troubles
with
same,
that
the
appellant
decided
to
get
out
of
the
transaction,
that
the
other
owner
never
appeared
and
that
the
units
were
sold.
He
stated
that
the
gain
on
such
property
was,
after
a
notice
of
objection
was
filed,
allowed
as
a
capital
gain.
He
then
purchased
property
with
another
investor.
On
cross-examination,
Koltalo
reviewed
the
evidence
he
had
given
and
was
unable
to
add
any
details
respecting
the
purchase
and
proposed
retention
of
property.
The
appellant
gave
evidence
to
the
effect
that
he
had
been
in
the
auto
industry
for
12
years,
that
his
father
had
accumulated
substantial
real
estate
holdings,
that
he
was
young,
planning
a
family
and
wanted
something
for
his
children,
that
he
had
been
in
the
airline
limo
business
and
then
a
restaurant
business
and
went
bankrupt
in
the
latter.
He
obtained
a
real
estate
license
but
never
used
it
and
finally
"let
it
go”
in
1992.
He
then
stated
that
he
had
known
Koltalo
for
some
time
and
that
they
had
decided
to
purchase
some
rental
properties
together.
Through
him,
Exhibit
A-5
was
introduced
showing
the
chronology
of
acquisitions
and
disposals.
It
is
reproduced
herein
as
follows:
Chronology
100
Portland
March
4,
1986
(acquired):
$132,000
March
27,
1986
(sold):
$155,000
1069
Islington
April
4,
1986
(acquired):
$116,000
May
23,
1986
(sold):
$134,000
2901
Jane
June
3,
1986
(acquired):
$54,250
June
27,
1986
(sold):
$66,250
56
Seaforth
June
30,
1986
(acquired):
$103,000
August
22,
1986
(sold):
$135,000
September
30,
1986
-
1332-1334
Lakeshore
(acquired):
$100,000
October
1,
1986-
1336-1338
Lakeshore
(acquired):
$100,500
April
6,
1987
—
1646
Dupont
(acquired):
$120,000
May
1,
1987
-
200
Lotherton
#1012
(acquired):
$65,000
May
4,
1987
—
200
Lotherton
#1212
(acquired):
$65,000
May
1,
1987
—
1332
Lakeshore
(sold):
$152,000
June
10,
1987
—
1336-1338
Lakeshore
(sold):
$153,000
June
12,
1987
—
1646
Dupont
(sold):
$151,500
May
31,
1988
—
200
Lotherton
#1012
(sold):
$75,000
August
2,
1988
—
200
Lotherton
#1212
(sold):
$77,000
He
testified
that
he
and
Koltalo
could
not
finance
these
properties
alone
and
that
Gopie
was
introduced
by
their
agent.
His
evidence,
not
unlike
that
of
Koltalo,
described
the
various
problems
they
had
with
respect
to
the
Portland
property,
the
Islington
property,
the
Jane
property
and
the
Seaforth
property.
He
then
described
property
on
Lakeshore,
and
how
they
planned
to
change
it
to
commercial
property,
there
being
land
adjacent
to
the
building
which
seemed
to
have
development
potential.
He
also
described
the
decrepit
state
of
the
building,
learned
through
consultation
with
a
friend
that
commercial
zoning
would
never
be
allowed
and
described
other
difficulties
resulting
in
a
decision
to
sell.
He
described
the
Dupont
property
and
the
fact
that
it
was
purchased
by
him
and
a
co-worker,
Mr.
Frank
Dicecca
("Dicecca")
and
Gopie.
He
stated
that
it
was
purchased
for
$120,000
on
April
6,
1987
and
sold
for
$151,500
on
June
12,
1987.
He
described
a
number
of
problems
with
respect
to
that
property
and
said
he
had
concluded
that
he
did
not
want
to
be
in
the
rooming
house
business.
He
then
stated
that
he,
Dicecca
and
Gopie
purchased
two
units
at
200
Lotherton.
He
described
the
problems
that
they
had
with
respect
to
maintenance
fees,
foundation
cracking,
repairs
and
needed,
rental
collection
difficulties,
and
undesirable
location,
resulting
in
the
sale
of
this
property.
The
appellant
ultimately
stated
that
with
his
accumulated
funds
he
bought
a
house
in
a
nice
community
south
of
Barrie,
Ontario
and
that
this
was
a
good
investment.
On
cross-examination,
the
appellant
insisted
that
he
had
always
wanted
an
investment
and
restated
the
above
reasons
for
the
sale
of
the
properties.
The
next
witness
was
Mr.
Dennis
Vytlingam
who
had
been
a
realtor
for
several
years.
He
spoke
of
the
appellant
and
his
associate
wanting
property
that
"carried
itself",
that
they
were
office
types
and
not
too
handy,
etc.
Instead
of
commencing
with
argument,
as
arranged
on
the
second
day
of
the
hearing.
appellant’s
counsel,
stated
that
he
had
agreement
with
respondent’s
counsel
to
produce
Dicecca
as
a
witness.
His
purpose
appeared
to
be
to
adduce
evidence
about
Exhibit
R-2
respecting
the
alleged
sale
of
the
Dupont
property.
With
respect
to
that
property
Dicecca
said
that
he
and
the
appellant
did
not
have
a
large
mortgage,
that
he
didn’t
inspect
the
property
as
he
should
have
done,
that
he
had
a
list
of
tenants
and
of
rent
paid
but
that
he
never
met
the
tenants
until
after
closing.
He
stated
that
they
had
difficulty
collecting
rents
and
had
problems
with
tenants,
garbage
build-up,
neighbours’
complaints
about
noise
and
house
traffic
and
an
allegation
that
it
was
an
illegal
rooming
house.
He
further
stated
that
they
could
not
obtain
the
desired
mortgage
because
the
property
was
not
zoned
as
a
rooming
house,
that
they
had
trouble
finding
tenants,
that
it
was
much
more
work
than
they
felt
necessary,
that
improvements
would
have
been
expensive
and
that
the
property
was
sold.
Appellant’s
counsel
then
presented
Exhibit
R-2,
Agreement
of
Purchase
and
Sale
respecting
1646
Dupont
Street.
This
document
shows
Olga
Singh
and
Lilowtie
Norman
as
purchasers
and
Dicecca
as
vendor.
It
appears
that
appellant’s
counsel,
by
producing
this
document,
sought
to
refute
the
inference
that
the
property
had
been
sold
by
Dicecca
in
March,
1987,
it
having
been
shown
in
Exhibit
A
as
not
having
been
purchased
until
April
6,
1987.
Dicecca
stated
that
the
signature
above
his
name
typed
on
the
second
page
of
Exhibit
R-2
was
not
his
signature.
It
appears
from
examining
the
signature
of
the
witness
to
the
signatures
of
both
the
purchasers
and
whoever
signed
Dicecca’s
name,
that
the
same
person
witnessed
all
three
signatures.
If
the
witness
to
a
signature
purporting
to
be
that
of
Dicecca,
was
a
member
of
the
law
firm
described
on
that
page
as
purchaser’s
solicitor
(as
seems
to
be
the
case),
and
if
that
person
knew
Dicecca,
it
appears
that
two
serious
acts
have
been
committed.
In
response
to
my
question
as
to
whether
he
had
ever
given
authority
to
someone
to
sign
these
documents,
Dicecca
said
that
he
may
have
done
so
and
then
said
it
would
probably
have
been
done
verbally.
When
I
put
the
same
question
to
him
again
he
said
that
he
may
have
given
authority
and
in
response
to
a
later
similar
question
said
that
he
could
not
recall
having
given
such
authority.
Finally,
in
answer
to
a
question
by
me
as
to
whether
he
had
ever
given
anyone
authority
to
sign
his
name
on
a
document,
he
said
"No".
Another
document,
relating
to
a
mortgage
of
land
and
appearing
to
bear
a
certificate
of
receipt
dated
March
4,
1988
ostensibly
signed
by
the
Assistant
Deputy
Land
Registrar
L.T.
Metro
Toronto
No.
66
purports
to
be
signed
by
Dicecca.
However,
Dicecca
testified
that
it
was
not
his
signature.
Dicecca
was
very
offhand
about
the
fact
that
someone
had
written
his
name
on
these
documents
and
especially
so
in
the
face
of
his
evidence
that
he
had
not
authorized
anyone
so
to
do.
The
evidence
presented
by
Dicecca
was
of
no
assistance
whatever
to
the
Court
in
resolving
the
issue
in
this
case.
One
wonders,
having
regard
to
the
seriousness
of
what
seems
to
have
taken
place,
why
he
was
called
to
testify.
Indeed,
his
evasive
manner
of
responding
to
questions
characterizes
him,
in
my
assessment,
as
a
witness
whose
evidence
is
not
credible.
His
cavalier
manner
of
responding
to
questions
about
two
documents,
ostensibly
signed,
but
stated
by
him
not
to
be
signed,
by
him,
when
such
documents
were
to
be
relied
upon
by
other
parties,
is
astonishing.
Appellant’s
counsel
commenced
his
argument
by
stating
that
the
issue
was
whether
there
was,
at
the
time
of
acquisition,
a
secondary
intention
on
the
part
of
the
appellant
to
sell
the
properties
in
question.
In
referring
to
Racine,
Demers
and
Nolin
v.
M.N.R.,
[1965]
C.T.C.
150,
65
D.T.C.
5098
(Exch.)
at
page
159
(D.T.C.
5103)
he
quoted
Mr.
Justice
Noel
as
saying
that
the
taxpayer
must,
have
in
his
mind,
at
the
moment
of
purchase,
the
possibility
of
reselling
as
an
operating
motivation
for
the
acquisition...
He
stated
that
the
appellant’s
family
had
a
history
of
long-term
rental
income,
that
the
appellant’s
intention
was
feasible
in
that
he
proceeded
on
a
step
by
step
basis
with
partners,
that
all
the
properties
were
for
a
rental
use,
that
no
raw
land
was
involved,
that
the
appellant
was
a
novice
in
the
real
estate
business,
that
the
market
was
changing
rapidly
and
that
the
first
three
or
four
properties
were
"a
nightmare",
that
the
investors
used
their
own
funds,
that
in
most
cases
they
were
trying
to
improve
the
property,
that
they
continued
to
reinvest
the
funds
arising
out
of
profits,
that
the
profits
were
fortuitous
and
that
the
appellant’s
intention
was
eventually
realized,
appellant’s
counsel
also
sought
to
shore
up
his
case
by
referring
to
the
fact
that
the
Minister
of
National
Revenue
had
agreed
that
the
profits
on
Lakeshore
properties
were
capital
gains.
Respondent’s
counsel
referred
to
a
summary
in
Happy
Valley
Farms
Ltd.
v.
The
Queen,
[1986]
2
C.T.C.
259,
86
D.T.C.
6421
(F.C.T.D.)
of
the
indicia
of
trading
transactions
set
out
in
M.N.R.
v.
Taylor,
[1956]
C.T.C.
189,
56
D.T.C.
1125
(Exch.).
He
stated
that
the
nature
of
the
property
sold,
realty,
in
a
volatile
real
estate
market,
the
short
period
of
ownership,
the
number
of
transactions
and
the
general
circumstances
including
lack
of
inspection
of
property
etc.
indicated
that
the
appellant
had
conducted
a
business
as
defined
in
section
248
of
the
Income
Tax
Act,
R.S.C.
1952,
c.
148
(am.
S.C.
1970-71-72,
c.
63)
(the
"Act").
Respecting
the
appellant’s
argument
that
the
issue
was
whether
the
appellant
had
a
secondary
intention
(as
described
above)
and
his
effort
to
establish
that
the
absence
of
same
should
result
in
success
for
the
appellant,
it
is
my
view
that
such
position
presupposes
the
inability
of
this
Court
to
find
against
the
appellant
without
considering
the
secondary
intention
doctrine.
I
do
not
feel
so
limited.
I
accept
the
respondent’s
position.
In
spite
of
repeated
statements
by
witnesses
that
the
properties
giving
rise
to
the
profits
assessed
as
income
were
acquired
for
investment
purposes,
I
find
little
evidence
to
enable
me
to
come
to
that
conclusion.
The
properties
in
question
were
held
for
a
very
short
time,
were
purchased
without
normal
and
prudent
inspection
practice
and
were
generally
treated
as
commodities
of
trade.
I
seems
basic
that
someone
who
sought
to
acquire
properties
to
hold
as
investment
would
perform
more
extensive
examination
thereof
than
was
done
for
the
properties
in
question.
I
am
not
persuaded
that
the
allowance
by
the
Minister
of
National
Revenue
of
gain
in
respect
of
the
Lakeshore
properties
as
a
capital
gain
is
of
any
assistance
to
the
appellant.
I
find,
based
on
my
examination
and
understanding
of
all
the
evidence,
that
the
appellant
was
carrying
on
business
within
the
meaning
of
the
term
"business”
as
defined
in
section
248
of
the
Act.
Accordingly,
the
appeals
are
dismissed.
Appeals
dismissed.