Taylor,
T.CJ.:—These
are
appeals
heard
on
common
evidence
in
Toronto,
Ontario
on
January
29,
30,
31
and
February
1,
1991
against
income
tax
assessments
covering
the
taxation
years
1979
through
1985
for
each
of
the
appellants.
Before,
during
and
after
the
years
in
question
Dick's
Garage
Ltd.
("Dick's
Garage")
carried
on
the
business
of
an
automobile
dealer
and
automobile
service
centre
in
Sault
St.
Marie,
Ontario
with
John
Dick
and
Beverly
Dick
as
active
shareholders
and
directors.
The
trial
proceeded
first
with
evidence
from
the
respondent
covering
the
1979
and
1980
"statute-barred"
taxation
years.
It
was
intended
that
the
trial
would
deal
subsequently
with
the
1981
through
1985
"non-statute-barred"
years
but
as
the
matter
progressed
the
witnesses
for
both
sides
dealt
with
all
the
years
involved—and
on
agreement
before
argument
the
Court
was
left
with
the
task
of
dealing
with
the
determination
of
the
question
arising
out
of
the
distinction
between
the
1979-1980
years
and
the
1981-1985
years
using
all
the
evidence
provided.
I
do
point
out
that
both
parties
made
every
effort
to
conform
as
closely
as
possible
to
the
procedural
comments
contained
in
The
Queen
v.
Taylor,
[1984]
C.T.C.
436;
84
D.T.C.
6459
and
other
relevant
jurisprudence,
but
a
certain
amount
of
overlapping
of
the
evidence
resulted
between
and
among
the
various
taxation
years.
In
view
of
the
conclusions
I
have
reached
and
which
are
detailed
in
these
reasons
for
judgment,
little
purpose
would
be
served
by
a
complete
review
of
all
the
testimony
and
evidence,
but
that
which
I
consider
relevant
and
critical
to
my
decision
will
be
noted.
I
do
wish
to
note
the
careful
and
detailed
analysis
and
summary
work
aided
by
his
complete
and
informative
testimony
which
was
provided
to
the
Court
by
the
main
witness
for
the
respondent,
Mr.
Robert
Kennedy,
an
auditor
with
Revenue
Canada.
Analysis
First,
I
shall
deal
with
the
question
of
the
"statute-barred"
years
1979
and
1980
for
all
three
appellants.The
responsibility
to
fulfil
the
conditions
required
under
subsection
152(4)
of
the
Income
Tax
Act
("the
Act")
in
order
to
assess
rested
with
the
respondent.
The
main
item
of
physical
evidence
made
available
to
the
Court
was
the
schedule
of
"unreported
income"
covering
all
the
years
from
1978
through
1985,
prepared
by
the
respondent's
officials
as
a
result
of
the
audit
of
the
records
of
the
appellants,
interviews
with
the
parties
and
examination
of
the
relevant
documents
which
could
be
marshalled.
The
conclusion
reached
by
the
respondent
resulted
in:
(Dick's
Garage
Ltd.)
.
.
.
adding
to
the
Appellant's
income
the
amount
of
$127,439
in
1979
and
$91,800
in
1980
as
unreported
cash
sales
arising
from
its
business
as
an
automobile
dealer
and
service
centre.
The
respondent
also
assessed
penalties
under
subsection
163(2)
of
the
Income
Tax
Act
on
these
amounts.
(John
Dick)
—to
include
in
the
Appellant’s
income
the
following
amounts
on
the
basis
that
the
Appellant
appropriated
these
amounts
from
Dick's
Garage
Ltd.:
|
1979
|
$63,719.69
|
|
1980
|
45,900.13
|
—and
to
assess
penalties
with
respect
to
the
alleged
appropriated
amounts
under
subsection
163(2)
of
the
Income
Tax
Act.
(Beverly
Dick)
—to
include
in
income
the
following
amounts
on
the
basis
that
Dick
Beverly
appropriated
these
amounts
from
Dick’s
Garage
Ltd.:
|
1979
|
$63,719.69
|
|
1980
|
45,900.13
|
—and
to
assess
penalties
with
respect
to
the
alleged
appropriated
amounts
under
subsection
163(2)
of
the
Income
Tax
Act.
There
was
some
difference
of
opinion
regarding
the
precise
calculations
and
value
of
the
amounts
of
assets
and
liabilities
at
the
start
of
the
critical
period—
January
1,
1979;
business
and
personal
expenditures
of
the
appellants
during
the
period;
the
assets
and
liabilities
at
the
end—December
31,
1980;
and
the
valuation
basis
for
the
net
worth
assessments
at
issue.
But
it
is
not
my
intention
nor
do
I
believe
requirement
to
delve
into
these
differences.
It
would
have
been
highly
appropriate,
and
much
appreciated,
if
the
appellants,
through
their
accountant,
had
provided
to
the
Court
an
alternative
reconciliation
of
disputed
amounts
or
a
schedule
similar
to
that
prepared
by
Revenue
Canada
upon
which
the
case
could
have
been
joined.
Instead
of
doing
so,
it
appeared
to
me
that
the
appellants
in
a
somewhat
disjointed
fashion
merely
took
issue
with
the
respondent's
summaries
of
amounts,
including
the
allocation
of
various
amounts
to
certain
years.
In
this
way,
the
appellants
did
place
their
cause
at
considerable
risk,
a
factor
which
I
considered
seriously
in
the
review.
It
was
the
simple
contention
of
the
witnesses
for
the
appellants
that
all
income
for
all
years
from
Dick's
Garage
had
been
properly
reported
and
accounted
for
in
terms
of
income
tax
requirements.
The
appellants
rested
on
the
contention
that
the
excess
funds
which
showed
up
by
the
net
worth
assessments
came
from
gifts
to
them
from
the
parents
of
John
Dick
either
sent
from
Germany
or
brought
to
Canada
on
visits.
It
was
the
opposite
position
asserted
by
the
respondent
that
the
only
source
of
income
available
to
account
for
the
discrepancies
shown
by
the
"net
worth
assessments",
was
that
from
Dick's
Garage.
I
am
quite
satisfied
that
there
were
substantial
discrepancies
in
available
cash
demonstrated
by
the
"net
worth"
reconciliation
prepared
by
Revenue
Canada.
However,
there
is
nothing,
not
even
one
item
which
could
link
these
discrepancies
to
the
alleged
source
of
income—Dick's
Garage.
In
my
opinion,
and
as
I
understand
the
case
law,
it
was
incumbent
upon
the
respondent
to
demonstrate
at
least
one
clear
item
of
income
for
each
year
1979
and
1980
which
arose
out
of
the
operation
of
Dick's
Garage—then
it
would
have
rested
with
the
appellants
to
show
that
the
proposition
of
the
respondent—the
operation
of
Dick's
Garage
as
the
"source
of
additional
income"—should
be
rejected
by
the
Court.
I
would
refer
with
complete
approbation
to
the
case
of
Lucien
Venne
v.
The
Queen,
[1984]
C.T.C.
223;
84
D.T.C.
6247,
and
in
particular
to
earlier
case
law
referenced
in
that
decision.
No
“misrepresentation”
or
"fraud"
has
been
demonstrated
and
as
a
result
therefore,
the
appeals
for
all
three
parties
for
the
years
1979
and
1980
are
allowed
including
the
penalties
relative
to
the
assessments
for
those
years.
This
leaves
the
balance
of
the
years
under
appeal,
1981
through
1985,
for
review
and
with
the
exception
of
one
amount
which
I
shall
deal
with
later,
the
issue
is
the
same,
the
evidence
is
generally
the
same
and
the
point
addressed
by
the
Court
is
the
same
as
in
the
above,
other
than
that
the
taxation
years
involved
are
not
statute-barred.
At
this
point
I
would
note
that
the
pleadings
filed
by
the
parties
(including
the
amended
pleadings)
did
deal
with
items
which
were
no
longer
in
dispute
by
the
time
of
the
trial—agreement
had
previously
been
reached
between
the
parties.
Information
regarding
those
matters
was
not
provided
in
detail
at
the
trial,
although
I
am
sure
it
would
have
been
available.
This
is
important
in
the
context
of
the
balance
of
these
reasons
for
judgment
since
it
is
at
least
possible
that
some
of
the
missing
connection
between
the
areas
of
dispute
in
the
trial
(referenced
later)
might
have
shown
up
in
the
elements
of
these
agreements
between
the
parties.
Those
remaining
issues
revolved
almost
exclusively
around
the
source
of
the
disputed
income
amounts
in
the
assessments.
In
these
circumstances,
a
detailed
accounting
of
the
various
years'
discrepancies
and
the
various
amounts
would
serve
little
purpose.
The
issue
brought
to
the
Court
as
I
see
it,
would
remain
essentially
the
same.
For
the
record
the
original
amounts
(including
penalties
and
interest)
recited
and
challenged
in
the
notices
of
appeal
were:
|
1981
|
1982
|
1983
|
1984
|
1985
|
|
Dick’s
Garage
|
$149,734
|
$
3,042
|
♦
|
$14,119
|
$-
|
|
John
Dick
|
75,998
|
2,590
|
♦
|
8,075
|
965
|
|
Beverly
Dick
|
75,992
|
2,590
|
|
8,075
|
965
|
*Due
to
adjustments,
all
the
years
covered
by
the
“net
worth"
analysis
did
not
result
in
reassessments.
The
position
of
the
respondent
was
stated
in
the
reply
to
notice
of
appeal
for
Dick's
Garage
Ltd.
(and
in
similar
terms
for
the
other
two
appellants
in
their
respective
replies
to
notices
of
appeal)
as:
.
.
.
the
Minister
of
National
Revenue
computed
the
Appellant’s
unreported
income
on
the
basis
of
a
net
worth
analysis
whereby
the
Minister
of
National
Revenue
calculated
the
increase
in
the
assets
of
the
Appellant's
shareholders,
John
Dick
and
Beverly
Dick,
during
the
relevant
period
and
assumed
that
any
increase
in
the
assets
of
John
Dick
and
Beverly
Dick
not
attributable
to
some
other
source
represented
unreported
income
of
the
appellant
that
was
appropriated
by
John
Dick
and
Beverly
Dick.
I
would
refer
again
to
the
noted
jurisprudence
in
Venne,
supra,
in
which
the
learned
justice
reviewed
the
law
so
carefully
and
completely
and
I
shall
merely
note
one
of
the
many
similar
phrases
outlined
in
Venne,
supra,
from
page
229
(D.T.C.
6252)
:
"For
the
taxation
year
1973
the
total
income
reported
by
the
taxpayer
was
$8,594.
He
now
admits
that
there
was
further
unreported
income
in
the
amount
of
$49,391
for
that
year."
[Emphasis
added.]
My
difficulty
in
this
matter
is
that
there
is
no
such
admission
of
"unreported
income"
by
the
appellants,
in
fact
there
is
consistent
rejection
by
them
that
the
disputed
amounts
came
from
the
source
identified
by
the
respondent—Dick's
Garage
or
from
any
other
source
as
income.
At
the
same
time,
there
is
no
direct
connection—and
only
rather
vague
indirect
assumptions
and
assertions
made
in
the
respondent's
evidence
which
would
provide
a
relationship
between
the
amounts
in
dispute
and
Dick's
Garage.
There
is
no
question
that
there
were
amounts
expended
for
assets—buildings,
equipment,
etc.
which
do
not
seem
to
have
had
their
origin
in
the
known
and
reported
funds
of
Dick's
Garage,
and
also
there
could
have
been
bank
deposits,
and
other
cash
expenditures
falling
into
the
same
category.
The
amounts
of
these
differences
are
generally
not
contested
by
the
appellants,
only
the
source
of
the
funds.
The
appellants
asserted
(according
to
their
testimony)
that
the
funds
came
from
a
strongbox
kept
underneath
a
stairway,
into
which
for
many
years
John
Dick
placed
the
money
sent
or
brought
by
his
parents—for
safekeeping.
He
contended
that
for
many
years—prior
to
1979—he
merely
accumulated,
but
did
not
spend
these
funds
because
he
wanted
to
prove
he
could
get
his
garage
business
going
without
using
financial
aid
from
his
parents.
He
was
satisfied
that
he
had
done
so
by
1979.
All
the
appropriate
questions
were
asked
of
John
Dick
by
counsel
for
the
respondent
in
a
detailed
and
professional
cross-examination,
and
I
readily
admit
that
John
Dick's
answers
were
less
than
complete
and
reassuring
to
me.
However,
it
is
a
moot
point
how
complete
these
answers
could
be
after
the
passage
of
many
many
years
in
the
circumstances
of
this
case.
It
is
difficult
to
imagine
that
he
would
retain
in
a
secret
strongbox
the
substantial
amounts
of
money
at
issue,
knowing
there
was
no
interest
being
earned;
that
earlier
in
the
1970s
he
could
have
made
profitable
use
of
the
funds
to
expand
his
business;
and
that
the
funds
were
to
some
degree
at
risk
from
loss,
theft,
or
even
fire
"under
the
stairs”.
But
in
the
heady
banking
and
financing
days
of
the
1970s
and
1980s,
I
doubt
that
it
is
the
duty
of
this
Court
to
prescribe
for
a
taxpayer
the
manner
in
which
he
should
have
been
required
to
keep
funds
in
safekeeping.
I
leave
aside
for
the
moment
the
subsidiary
question
of
the
penalties
imposed,
and
the
respondent's
"burden
of
proof"
under
subsection
163(3)
of
the
Act.
Again
I
note
that
there
is
no
linkage
between
the
"net
worth"
analysis
provided
in
support
of
the
assessment
of
tax,
and
the
alleged
source
of
income—Dick's
Garage.
Neither
was
there
any
documented
challenge
made
to
the
general
statements
of
the
appellants'
accountant,
supra,
that
income
had
been
properly
reported
from
Dick's
Garage.
I
am
aware
that
certain
jurisprudence,
including
some
I
have
authored,
dealing
with
the
assessment
results
of
"net
worth"
analyses
would
indicate
that
it
is
within
the
prerogative
of
the
respondent
to
simply
prepare
just
such
analyses
and
summaries
of
the
alleged
discrepancies,
ana
then
leave
it
to
the
appellants
to
destroy
the
assumption
that
the
discrepancies
arose
out
of
a
certain
designated
"source
of
income".
Where
no
other
possible
source
of
income
can
be
documented
by
the
appellants
and
there
is
little
other
than
vague
“black
box”
source
to
account
for
the
discrepancies,
the
result
often
seems
to
be
a
foregone
conclusion
against
the
appellants.
In
these
instant
appeals
there
was
some
evidence
provided
by
the
appellants—limited,
old
and
possibly
open
to
several
interpretations,
but
evidence
nevertheless.
This
consisted
of
bank
records,
from
or
originating
in
Germany,
some
fund
transfer
records
of
the
same
nature,
some
indication
of
dates
of
visits
from
Germany
to
Canada
by
the
parents
of
John
Dick,
some
letters
and
other
correspondence
touching
on
the
subject
of
gifts
and
transfers
of
funds,
and
the
direct
testimony
in
Court
of
the
sister
of
John
Dick
who
did
indicate
she
had
received
some
funds
and
the
proceeds
from
the
sale
of
certain
real
property
from
her
parents
in
Germany.
It
would
be
a
difficult
task
to
reconstruct
from
that
testimony
and
evidence
that
amounts
of
money
equal
to
these
discrepancies
were
transferred
to
the
control
of
John
Dick—but
the
possibility
cannot
be
ignored
and
the
appellants'
evidence
treated
as
totally
unacceptable.
I
make
no
attempt
to
put
that
evidence
at
some
high
level
of
credibility
but
it
does
add
to
my
concerns
about
the
opposing
evidence
from
the
respondent,
as
simply
a
"net
worth"
analysis
with
no
direct
connection
whatsoever
to
the
alleged
"source
of
income"
asserted
by
the
respondent.
This
case
comes
down
to
one
in
which
the
respondent
has
rejected—and
with
understandable
reason
at
the
assessment
level—the
explanations
advanced
by
the
appellants
that
the
disputed
funds
came
from
gifts,
bequests,
etc.
from
Germany,
and
the
respondent
has
settled
on
what
would
appear
to
be
the
more
likely
source—the
business
operation
of
the
individuals
concerned—Dick's
Garage.
I
would
add
that
some
of
the
information,
evidence
and
testimony
on
behalf
of
the
appellants
which
was
made
available
at
the
trial,
did
not
appear
to
me
to
have
been
readily
accessible
to
the
respondent
before
the
trial.
I
have
been
provided
with
little
reason
to
reject
both
the
straightforward
statements
of
the
appellants
and
their
accountant
that
income
from
the
garage
and
dealership
operation—
Dick's
Garage—was
all
accounted
for
in
an
acceptable
way
(except
for
the
one
instance
of
a
$100,000
term
deposit
to
which
I
shall
return),
and
the
proof
that
some
funds
were
received
from
Germany,
evidence
which
challenges
a
basic
assumption
of
the
respondent,
that
the
disputed
amounts
should
be
attributed
to
the
garage
operation
as
the
source.
The
respondent
is
treating
the
amounts
arising
out
of
the
“net
worth"
analysis
in
this
case
as
"income
from
a
source"
presumably
as
required
and
described
in
sections
3
and
4
of
the
Act.
Current
case
law
does
not
impose
on
the
respondent
the
responsibility
to
demonstrate
a
direct
connection
between
the
discrepancies
shown
by
a
net
worth
analysis
and
the
source
of
the
funds
alleged
by
virtue
of
the
assessment
or
the
pleadings,
much
as
it
would
be
useful
here.
In
the
absence
of
such
a
requirement
I
am
prepared
to
accept
as
determinative
the
testimony
and
documentation
of
the
appellants
regarding
the
source
of
funds
as
an
adequate
answer
to
the
question
of
the
origin
of
the
funds
raised
by
the
net
worth
analysis.
The
appeals
for
the
years
1981
through
1985
will
be
allowed.
A
"net
worth”
assessment
is
at
best
only
an
approximation,
it
may
also
be
a
frustration
for
all
concerned.
It
is
virtually
a
“last
resort"
method
available
in
dealing
with
complex,
poorly
documented
or
highly
contested
financial
situations.
The
task
facing
a
taxpayer
in
dealing
with
any
assessment
of
the
respondent
is
challenging
enough—the
onus
of
proof
is
on
that
taxpayer.
But
in
a
“net
worth"
assessment
where
there
is
a
clear
conflict
between
the
parties
regarding
the
source
of
discrepancies,
then
a
major
factor
in
the
determination
of
the
issue
might
be
any
substantiation
provided
by
the
respective
parties
in
support
of
each
of
the
alternative
"sources".
I
should
like
to
note
two
recent
cases
from
this
Court,
which
appear
to
cast
some
light
on
the
question—Sara
Shlien
v.
M.N.R.,
[1988]
1
C.T.C.
2244;
88
D.T.C.
1152
and
Hayat
Seifeddine
v.
M.N.R.,
[1988]
1
C.T.C.
2405;
88
D.T.C.
1269.
I
shall
restrict
the
quotations
to
only
two
from
pages
2248
and
2249
(D.T.C.
1155)
of
Shlien,
supra,
which
represent
my
concern
and
reservations
properly:
As
I
said
before
whether
or
not
I
accept
the
appellant's
evidence
as
to
her
source
of
capital,
and
I
am
not
prepared
to
reject
it,
I
am
satisfied
that
she
has
met
the
challenge
that
was
incumbent
upon
her
regarding
the
validity
of
the
assessment
under
appeal.
.
.
.
Admittedly
the
respondent
is
vested
with
wide
powers
under
the
Act
but
none
that
allows
him
to
convert
capital
into
income.
His
right
to
determine
a
taxpayer's
income
for
a
taxation
year
on
the
basis
of
a
net
worth
analysis
cannot
be
denied,
but
the
exercise
of
such
a
determination
must
he
in
compliance
with
the
provisions
of
the
Act
and
in
accordance
with
the
principles
laid
out
in
the
jurisprudence.
To
issue
an
assessment
knowingly
which
does
not
meet
this
test
amounts
to
abusing
the
application
of
the
pronouncement
of
the
Supreme
Court
of
Canada
referred
to
above
that
the
onus
of
challenging
the
validity
of
an
assessment
rests
with
the
appellant.
I
would
also
adopt
the
reasoning
provided
in
Markakis,
D.
v.
M.N.R.,
[1986]
1
C.T.C.
2318;
86
D.T.C.
1237,
recognizing
that
the
circumstances
under
which
the
learned
judge
therein
allowed
the
appeal,
seriously
questioned
the
respondent's
position
noted
on
page
2323
(D.T.C.
1241)
thereof:
"The
Minister
refused
to
acknowledge
the
existence
of
the
loans
between
Mr.
Markakis
and
his
brothers,
his
uncle
and
his
brother-in-law
because
in
his
view
there
was
no
evidence
of
the
loans.”
I
now
return
to
the
one
major
exception
in
which
the
situation
from
1981
through
1985
is
not
covered
by
that
conclusion.
The
respondent
alleged
that
an
amount
of
$100,000
for
which
a
term
deposit
was
held
in
the
bank
in
the
names
of
John
Dick
and
Beverly
Dick
came
from
the
sale
of
automobiles
to
a
dealer
in
Winnipeg,
Manitoba,
and
was
not
properly
recorded
as
income
to
Dick's
Garage.
As
well
as
I
can
understand
the
totality
of
the
evidence
adduced,
this
amount
arose
out
of
these
sales,
and
that
the
portion
which
applied
to
the
1980
fiscal
year
was
properly
recorded
and
reported
in
Dick's
Garage,
even
though
the
funds
received
by
Dick's
Garage
were
used
directly
as
part
of
the
payment
for
the
$100,000
term
deposit
at
issue.
Counsel
for
the
appellants
contended
that
only
the
amount
of
$73,956.62
for
1981
was
not
properly
recorded
in
the
accounts,
and
that
the
taxpayers
agreed
to
this
amount
being
added
to
the
income
of
Dick's
Garage—albeit
with
the
provision
that
it
was
just
an
error-
determinable
by
a
review
of
the
banking
records
of
all
three
appellants.
In
fact,
the
"error"
seems
to
have
come
to
the
attention
of
the
appellants'
accountant
in
a
routine
bank
confirmation
procedure,
which
the
accountant
believes
he
adjusted
and
corrected
in
a
year
subsequent
to
1981—as
income
to
Dick's
Garage—both
as
to
the
principal
itself
and
the
interest
thereon.
The
situation
is
further
complicated
by
the
investment
practice
of
the
three
appellants—to
generally
keep
their
deposits
in
the
names
of
John
Dick
and
Beverly
Dick
even
though
certain
funds
might
have
belonged
to
Dick's
Garage—to
which
company
it
would
appear
interest
earned
was
often
credited.
Further,
at
some
periods
of
time
John
Dick
was
required
by
his
bank
to
keep
as
security
for
financing,
substantial
amounts
of
term
deposits—whether
in
the
personal
names
or
that
of
Dick's
Garage.
All
in
all,
neither
a
very
clear
nor
a
very
satisfying
explanation
was
provided
for
the
errant
bank
term
deposit,
either
as
to
source,
routine,
accounting
or
ultimate
resting
place.
In
the
end
analysis,
I
am
prepared
to
find
that
Dick's
Garage's
failure
to
report
and
account
for
the
amount
of
$73,956.62,
as
acknowledged
by
the
appellants,
was
not
merely
the
result
of
some
small
oversight,
or
carelessness—it
was
the
outcome
of
at
least
gross
negligence
on
the
part
of
the
corporation,
acting
through
its
officers.
Not
only
should
that
amount
be
assessed
to
income
of
the
corporation
for
the
year
1981,
penalties
and
interest
as
appropriate
should
be
imposed.
If
indeed,
the
amount
was
brought
into
income
in
years
subsequent
to
1981,
as
asserted
by
the
appellants’
accountant,
that
is
a
point
to
be
addressed
by
Revenue
Canada
in
the
reassessments
which
will
result
from
this
decision.
However,
I
am
not
prepared
to
agree
that
there
was
any
appropriation
of
this
amount
by
the
appellants,
nor
on
the
part
of
the
appellants
personally
in
taking
out
the
term
deposit
in
their
own
names.
They
should
be
given
the
benefit
of
the
doubt
in
view
of
the
fact
that
this
practice
seems
to
have
been
a
usual
business
one.
The
appeals
of
John
Dick
and
Beverly
Dick
together
with
all
penalties
and
interest
for
all
the
years
1979
through
1985
are
allowed.
The
appeals
of
Dick's
Garage
Ltd.
together
with
all
penalties
and
interest
for
the
years
1979,
1980,
1982,
1983,
1984
and
1985
are
allowed.
The
appeal
of
Dick's
Garage
Ltd.
for
the
year
1981
together
with
penalties
and
interest
is
allowed
with
the
exception
of
an
amount
of
$73,956.62
which
is
to
be
dismissed
and
remain
as
an
addition
to
reported
income
of
that
corporation
including
relevant
penalties
and
interest.
The
appellants
are
entitled
to
a
total
of
one
set
of
party-and-party
costs.
Appeal
in
the
main
allowed.