Bonner,
T.C.J.:
—By
letter
dated
March
2,
1988,
the
appellant
appealed
to
a
tribunal
established
under
subsection
18(1)
of
the
Old
Age
Security
Act
(hereinafter
"the
Act")
from
a
decision
of
the
respondent
reducing
the
supplement
payable
under
subsection
10(1)
of
the
Act.
Subsection
18(1)
provides:
Where
a
person
is
dissatisfied
with
a
decision
or
determination
made
under
this
Act
that
no
pension
may
be
paid
to
him
or
that
no
supplement
may
be
paid
to
him,
or
as
to
the
amount
of
any
pension
or
supplement
that
may
be
paid
to
him,
he
may
appeal
against
such
decision
or
determination
to
a
tribunal
to
be
established
and
conducted
in
accordance
with
the
regulations,
and
the
decision
of
such
tribunal,
subject
only
to
variation
by
such
tribunal
upon
application
made
to
it
by
that
person
or
the
Minister
based
on
evidence
not
previously
considered
by
it,
is
final
and
binding
and
is
not
subject
to
appeal
or
review
by
any
court.
It
was
the
appellant's
position
that
the
respondent
erred
in
calculating
the
supplement
to
which
he
was
entitled
under
subsection
10(1).
Subsection
10(1)
provides
for
the
reduction
of
the
payment
which
would
otherwise
be
made
by
.
.
.
one
dollar
for
each
full
two
dollars
of
his
monthly
base
income
.
.
.
”.
So
far
as
is
relevant
for
present
purposes
subsection
10(2)
of
the
Act
defines
"monthly
base
income”
as
.
.
.
one
twelfth
of
the
income
of
that
person
for
the
base
calendar
year
.
.
.
”.
Provision
is
made
in
section
11
of
the
Act
for
the
calculation
of
the
income
of
a
person
for
a
calendar
year.
For
present
purposes
it
is
sufficient
to
note
that
section
11
requires
that
such
income
be
.
.
.
computed
in
accordance
with
the
Income
Tax
Act.
.
.
”.
The
respondent
in
a
letter
to
the
appellant
dated
February
9,
1988,
which
letter
constitutes
the
decision
under
appeal,
stated
in
part:
.
.
.
in
October
1987
we
received
a
report
from
the
Department
of
National
Revenue
that
your
actual
1986
income
was
$19,791.00
made
up
of
interest
of
$791.00
and
a
capital
gain
of
$19,000.00
We
understand
that
the
capital
gain
resulted
from
the
sale
of
land
to
a
relative
for
$1.00
but
National
Revenue
requires
that
fair
market
value
must
be
reported
thus
resulting
in
the
capital
gain
of
$19,000.00.
.
.
.
Since
the
Department
of
National
Revenue
has
included
the
capital
gain
as
income
for
income
tax
purposes,
it
must
be
considered
income
for
guaranteed
income
supplement
purposes
.
.
.
.
In
his
appeal
from
that
decision
the
appellant
took
the
position
that
the
respondent's
decision
as
to
his
income
was
incorrect.
Accordingly,
by
virtue
of
subsection
18(2)
of
the
Act
the
appeal
on
that
ground
was
referred
for
decision
to
this
Court.
Subsection
18(2)
reads:
Where,
on
an
appeal
under
this
Act
it
is
a
ground
of
the
appeal
that
a
decision
or
determination
made
by
the
Minister
as
to
the
income
or
income
from
a
particular
source
or
sources
of
an
applicant
or
beneficiary
or
of
the
spouse
of
such
applicant
or
beneficiary
was
incorrectly
made,
the
appeal
on
that
ground
shall,
in
accordance
with
the
regulations,
be
referred
for
decision
to
the
Tax
Court
of
Canada
constituted
by
the
Tax
Court
of
Canada
Act,
whose
decision
thereon,
subject
only
to
variation
by
the
Tax
Court
in
accordance
with
any
decision
on
an
appeal
under
that
Act
relevant
to
the
appeal
under
this
Act,
is
final
and
binding
for
all
purposes
of
the
appeal
under
this
Act.
In
his
notice
of
appeal
the
appellant
stated:
In
December
18,
1986
I
sold
a
piece
of
land
to
my
Godson,
John
Northcott,
for
the
total
sum
of
$1.00
(one
dollar).
This
was
simply
a
gift
from
me
to
him
with
no
economic
gain
to
myself.
National
Revenue
Canada
states
if
a
parcel
of
land
is
sold
the
actual
value
of
this
land
has
to
be
listed
on
your
tax
return,
not
the
actual
amount
of
money
which
exchanged
hands.
The
Minister
of
National
Health
and
Welfare
filed
a
reply
to
the
notice
of
appeal
in
which
he
denied
those
allegations.
A
hearing
was
held
at
St.
John’s,
Newfoundland,
on
August
8,
1988.
Evidence
was
given
by
Cheryl
Northcott,
wife
of
John
Northcott.
She
testi-
fied
that
for
many
years
the
appellant
had
been
a
friend
of
her
husband's
family.
The
appellant
is
however
unrelated
to
Mr.
Northcott.
Eventually
the
appellant
went
to
live
with
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Northcott.
Time
passed
and
Mr.
Kelly
recognized
that
he
had
reached
an
advanced
age.
He
decided
to
make
a
gift
of
his
land
to
Mr.
Northcott.
The
land
was
described
as
“agricultural
ground”.
The
area
of
the
parcel
was
16
'/2
acres.
The
consideration
recited
in
the
transfer
was
natural
love
and
affection
and
the
sum
of
one
dollar.
Mrs.
Northcott
stated
that
she
was
not
certain
exactly
when
the
appellant
had
acquired
the
land
but
she
believed
that
the
acquisition
took
place
before
1972.
The
sale
was
reported
by
the
appellant
in
his
return
of
income
for
the
1986
taxation
year.
He
reported
a
taxable
capital
gain
of
$19,000
on
the
theory
that
the
fair
market
value
of
the
land
at
the
time
of
the
transfer
was
$38,000.
Subparagraph
69(1)(b)(ii)
of
the
Income
Tax
Act
provides:
(1)
Except
as
expressly
otherwise
provided
in
this
Act,
.
.
.
(b)
where
a
taxpayer
has
disposed
of
anything
(ii)
to
any
person
by
way
of
gift
inter
vivos,
he
shall
be
deemed
to
have
received
proceeds
of
disposition
therefor
equal
to
that
fair
market
value;
and
.
.
.
Thus
fair
market
value
is
deemed
to
have
been
received.
However
an
error
appears
to
have
been
made.
There
was
no
attempt
to
follow
the
rule
laid
down
by
section
40
of
the
Income
Tax
Act
which
provides
that
the
gain
from
the
disposition
of
property
is
the
amount
by
which
proceeds
of
disposition
exceed
the
aggregate
of
the
adjusted
cost
base
of
the
property
and
expenses
incurred
for
the
purpose
of
making
the
disposition.
Mrs.
Northcott
was
unable
to
explain
the
reasoning
which
led
to
the
reporting
of
the
transaction
in
the
manner
which
I
have
described.
She
indicated
that
Mr.
Kelly
was
a
man
of
modest
means
and
that
he
possessed
no
property
of
any
consequence
apart
from
the
land
transferred
to
Mr.
Northcott.
It
is
possible
therefore
that
the
appellant
considered
or
was
told
that
any
conceivable
taxable
capital
gain
realized
on
the
disposition
of
the
land
would
be
exempt
from
tax
by
virtue
of
section
110.6
of
the
Income
Tax
Act,
and
that
there
was
nothing
to
gain
by
attempting
to
ascertain
the
adjusted
cost
base
of
the
property
and
to
deduct
it.
In
any
event,
the
uncontradicted
evidence
of
Mrs.
Northcott
suggests
that
the
appellant
acquired
the
land
some
time
before
1972
at
a
cost
which
was
not
known
to
her.
There
was
no
evidence
to
suggest
either
that
the
actual
cost
to
Mr.
Kelly
of
acquisition
of
the
land
or
the
fair
market
value
thereof
on
Valuation
Day
was
nil.
Counsel
for
the
respondent
did
not
suggest
any
basis
for
proceeding
on
the
unlikely
assumption
that
in
the
computation
of
the
capital
gain
or
loss
realized
by
the
appellant
the
adjusted
cost
base
should
be
taken
to
be
nil.
Accordingly
I
have
concluded
that
the
capital
gain,
if
any,
realized
by
the
appellant
on
the
disposition
of
the
land
was
less
than
$38,000.
The
resultant
$19,000
taxable
capital
gain
figure
was
reported
by
the
Minister
of
National
Revenue
to
the
Respondent
as
forming
part
of
the
appellant's
income.
That
report,
according
to
the
material
transmitted
to
this
Court,
formed
the
basis
for
the
decision
now
under
appeal.
It
is
in
error.
Because
there
is
no
evidence
on
which
I
am
able
to
reach
a
conclusion
as
to
the
amount
of
the
adjusted
cost
base
of
the
land
it
is
impossible
to
vary
the
decision
under
appeal
by
giving
a
precise
direction
as
to
the
correct
income
figure.
Judgment
will
therefore
go
allowing
the
appeal
and
varying
the
respondent's
decision
by
directing
that
in
the
computation
of
the
appellant's
income
the
capital
gain,
if
any,
realized
on
the
disposition
of
the
land
is
to
be
made
in
accordance
with
the
rules
laid
down
in
section
40
of
the
Income
Tax
Act.
Appeal
allowed.