Bonner,
TCJ:—The
appellant
appeals
from
assessments
of
income
tax
for
the
1974,
1975
and
1976
taxation
years.
The
appeals
stem
from
the
refusal
of
the
Minister
to
allow
deductions
in
respect
of
certain
payments
made
by
the
appellant
on
behalf
of
companies
in
which
he
had
an
interest.
Broadly
speaking,
those
companies
carried
on
the
business
of
land
development.
During
the
period
from
1970
to
1979
the
appellant
owned
100
per
cent
of
the
issued
shares
of
C
J
Oliver
Industries
Ltd
(hereinafter
called
“Industries”).
Industries
in
turn
owned
100
per
cent
of
the
issued
shares
of
C
J
Oliver
Limited
(hereinafter
called
“Limited”).
Industries
also
owned,
during
the
period
between
1970
and
the
spring
of
1975,
100
per
cent
of
the
issued
shares
of
C
J
Oliver
Developments
Ltd
(hereinafter
called
“Developments”).
Further,
Industries
owned
50
per
cent
of
the
issued
shares
of
Compass
Management
Ltd
(hereinafter
called
“Compass”).
The
appellant
personally
owned
20
per
cent
of
the
Compass
shares
and
a
Mr
Bell
owned
the
remaining
30
per
cent.
It
is
unnecessary
to
name
other
companies
in
the
Oliver
group
which
held
projects
which
the
appellant
had
developed.
In
the
normal
case,
at
least,
each
of
the
companies
named
played
a
specialized
role
in
the
conduct
of
the
development
business.
Developments
sought
properties
that
offered
an
opportunity
for
profitable
development.
It
acquired
the
land
and
arranged
financing
for
the
proposed
projects.
Limited
carried
on
the
construction
operations.
Compass
did
the
leasing
work
and
managed
the
completed
project.
The
whole
process
from
acquisition
of
the
land
through
to
management
of
the
completed
project
was
carried
on
with
a
view
to
the
ultimate
sale
of
the
project
as
a
going
concern
although
such
sales
did
not
take
place
in
all
cases.
In
a
typical
case,
although
Developments
was
the
owner
of
the
land
and
was
the
company
which
was
in
fact
carrying
on
the
development
business
the
mortgage
lenders
and
other
creditors
looked
to
the
appellant
as
owner
of
the
corporations
and
called
upon
him
to
guarantee
financing.
In
1973
and
1974
a
number
of
business
misfortunes
befell
the
Oliver
group.
It
became
difficult
for
the
companies
to
meet
their
obligations.
In
1975
and
1976
the
appellant
proceeded
to
meet
obligations
of
various
of
the
companies
using
both
his
own
funds
and
borrowed
money.
He
did
so,
of
course,
so
that
the
companies
could
avoid
bankruptcy
and
continue
to
carry
on
business.
In
addition
the
appellant
felt
a
personal
obligation
to
some
of
the
creditors
of
the
companies,
particularly
in
cases
where
loans
had
been
made
to
the
companies
on
the
strength
of
the
trust
which
lenders
reposed
in
the
appellant.
Originally,
the
appellant
claimed
to
deduct
the
amounts
in
issue
as
if
the
outlays
were
made
by
him
in
payment
of
expenses
which
he
incurred
in
carrying
on
his
own
business.
In
effect,
the
corporate
veil
was
ignored.
Counsel
for
the
appellant
did
not,
on
appeal,
attempt
to
assert
deductibility
on
that
basis.
The
primary
argument
advanced
by
counsel
for
the
appellant
was
that
the
amounts
were
deductible
in
accordance
with
paragraph
18(l)(a)
of
the
Income
Tax
Act
because
they
were
laid
out
for
the
purpose
of
gaining
or
producing
income
from
property,
namely,
the
appellant’s
shares.
Two
alternative
arguments
were
advanced.
The
first
was
that
where
an
individual
makes
outlays
of
this
kind
for
purposes
of
commercial
expediency
the
amounts
are
deductible.
In
this
regard
counsel
relied
mainly
on
the
decision
of
the
Federal
Court
in
Margaret
Ann
Frappier
v
The
Queen,
[1976]
CTC
85;
76
DTC
6066.
The
second
alternative
was
that
the
appellant
was
running
a
business
operation
and
that
in
accordance
with
the
principles
laid
down
in
MNR
v
Henry
J
Freud,
[1968]
CTC
438;
68
DTC
5279,
the
losses
are
deductible
because
gains
would
have
been
taxable
had
they
been
realized.
In
connection
with
the
primary
argument
counsel
referred
to
a
number
of
cases
including
the
decision
of
the
Exchequer
Court
in
Trans-Prairie
Pipelines,
Ltd
v
MNR,
[1970]
CTC
537;
70
DTC
6351,
as
authority
for
the
proposition
that
an
expense
may
be
regarded
as
incurred
for
the
purpose
of
gaining
or
producing
income
from
a
business
or
property
even
though
it
is
not
possible
to
trace
the
expenditure
directly
to
a
precise
dollar
of
income
earned.
In
my
view
the
outcome
of
this
case
is
governed
by
the
decisions
of
the
Supreme
Court
of
Canada
in
Stewart
&
Morrison
Limited
v
MNR,
[1972]
CTC
73;
72
DTC
6049,
and
Donald
Preston
McLaws
v
MNR,
[1972]
CTC
165;
72
DTC
6149.
Those
cases
involve
situations
indistinguishable
in
principle
from
the
present
case.
The
companies
in
which
the
appellant
was
interested
were
neither
his
agents
nor
were
they
shams.
The
businesses
which
got
into
difficulties
and
required
the
appellant’s
assistance
were
the
businesses
of
the
companies
and
not
of
the
appellant.
There
is
no
basis
in
the
evidence
for
a
finding
that
the
acquisition
by
the
appellant
of
his
interests
in
the
various
companies
in
question
here
was
related
in
any
way
to
any
sort
of
adventure
in
the
nature
of
trade.
The
role
of
the
companies
in
the
Oliver
group
was
to
serve
the
appellant,
whether
directly
or
indirectly,
as
an
investment,
as
a
source
of
dividend
income.
Although
the
appellant
did
indicate
that
eventually,
in
his
thinking,
he
would
ultimately
sell
the
shares
in
his
corporations
his
plan
was
to
do
that,
he
said,
if
and
when
he
eventually
wanted
to
slow
down
or
retire.
The
decision
of
the
Supreme
Court
of
Canada
in
MNR
v
Freud
is,
therefore,
readily
distinguishable.
Counsel’s
primary
submission
with
respect
to
the
decision
in
Stewart
&
Morrison
v
MNR,
namely,
that
that
case
is
no
longer
good
law
rested
on
an
analysis
of
decisions
of
the
inferior
courts.
Such
decisions
cannot
be
relied
on
as
the
basis
for
an
argument
that
a
decision
of
the
Supreme
Court
of
Canada
is
no
longer
good
law.
The
payments
in
issue
are,
therefore,
payments
on
account
of
capital,
the
deduction
of
which
is
prohibited
by
paragraph
18(1)(b)
of
the
Income
Tax
Act.
The
appellant
pleaded
that:
In
the
alternative,
the
Appellant
says
that
if
any
or
all
of
such
amounts
are
not
deductible
expenses,
which
is
not
admitted,
then
the
payment
of
all
such
amounts
resulted
in
the
companies
becoming
indebted
to
the
Appellant
in
the
full
amount
thereof
and,
because
such
debts
were
bad
at
the
end
of
the
1975
and
1976
taxation
years,
respectively,
the
Appellant
incurred
a
capital
loss
of
$305,152.31
in
the
1975
taxation
year
and
$55,069.95
in
the
1976
taxation
year.
The
position
of
the
respondent
was
that
the
payments
have
not
been
shown
to
be
bad
debts
of
the
appellant
in
the
years
under
appeal.
The
relevant
provision
of
the
Income
Tax
Act
is
paragraph
50(1
)(a)
which
reads:
50(1)
For
the
purposes
of
this
subdivision,
where
(a)
a
debt
owing
to
a
taxpayer
at
the
end
of
a
taxation
year
(other
than
a
debt
owing
to
him
in
respect
of
the
disposition
of
personal-use
property)
is
established
by
him
to
have
become
a
bad
debt
in
the
year,
the
taxpayer
shall
be
deemed
to
have
disposed
of
the
debt
or
the
share,
as
the
case
may
be,
at
the
end
of
the
year
and
to
have
reacquired
it
immediately
thereafter
at
a
cost
equal
to
nil.
The
argument
of
the
appellant’s
counsel
rested
on
the
premise
that
the
debts
to
the
appellant
which
arose
as
a
result
of
the
payment
by
the
appellant
of
the
liabilities
of
his
companies
became
bad,
either
immediately
or
in
any
event
before
the
end
of
the
year
in
which
they
arose.
There
was,
however,
no
evidence
that
the
value
of
those
debts
decreased
at
any
time
after
they
arose.
Whether
the
obligations
of
the
companies
were
worth
one
cent
on
the
dollar
or
one
hundred
cents
on
the
dollar,
the
value
thereof
was
not
shown
to
have
diminished
at
any
time
following
the
moment
of
payment
by
the
appellant
of
the
original
corporate
obligations.
In
the
result
I
find
that
there
were
outlays
of
capital,
but
no
losses
of
capital.
The
appeals
will,
therefore,
be
dismissed.
Appeals
dismissed.