Guy
Tremblay
[Translation]:—These
cases
were
heard
in
Quebec
City,
Quebec
on
March
21,
1978,
November
27,
28,
29
and
30
and
December
1,
1978,
and
April
23,
24,
25,
26
and
27,
1979.
The
Board
took
this
case
under
advisement
on
February
4,
1980,
the
date
on
which
the
last
exhibit
relating
to
the
written
pleadings
was
received.
1.
Points
at
issue
1.1
In
general
In
all
these
cases
the
basic
problem
was
whether
the
profits
resulting
from
sales
(of
real
estate
or
shares)
are
capital
gains
or
business
profits.
1.2
In
particular
1.2.1
Coteau
Lévis,
Versant
Nord,
Place
Prévert
(a)
Tax-exempt?
First,
the
question
is
whether
these
three
companies
are
“limiteddividend
housing
companies”
and
so
tax-exempt
in
accordance
with
paragraph
149(1
)(n)
of
the
Income
Tax
Act.
(b)
If
these
companies
are
not
tax-exempt,
the
question
then
is
whether
the
disposal
of
appellant’s
real
estate
in
1972
resulted
in
capital
gains
or
in
business
profits?
(c)
Does
subsection
69(1)
apply?
If
this
is
business
profit,
the
question
then
is
whether
subsection
69(1)
(used
to
determine
the
presumed
cost
of
the
land,
that
is,
the
fair
market
value)
applies.
Appellants
argued
that,
since
the
purchases
of
land
were
made
before
the
new
Income
Tax
Act,
and
thus
the
said
section,
came
into
effect,
the
latter
cannot
apply.
(d)
If
the
said
subsection
69(1)
applies,
then
what
was
the
fair
market
value
of
the
land
at
the
time
of
purchase?
1.2.2
Couillard
Entreprises
(Division
Construction)
Inc
It
was
admitted
by
the
appellant
that
the
profit
realized
is
not
a
capital
gain.
Further,
the
parties
agreed
on
the
value
of
the
land
at
December
13,
1971,
the
date
of
purchase,
in
the
event
that
subsection
69(1)
applies.
The
problem
that
remains
is
as
to
whether
subsection
69(1)
of
the
Income
Tax
Act
applies.
1.2.3
Estate
Rolland
Couillard
The
question
is,
first,
whether
the
profits
resulting
from
each
of
the
following
sales,
made
in
1973
and
1974,
constitute
a
capital
gain
or
business
income
for
the
appellant:
in
1973
(1)
the
sale
of
the
Desjardins
property
located
at
Lévis;
(2)
the
sale
of
the
Manoir
Lévis
property
located
at
Lévis;
in
1974
(3)
the
sale
of
the
Le
Bourgogne
property
located
at
Ste-Foy;
(4)
the
sale
of
the
Le
Murray
property
located
at
Quebec
City;
(5)
the
sale
of
the
shares
of
Couillard
Entreprises
Inc.
The
question
is
also
whether
the
respondent
was
correct
in
imposing
a
penalty
of
$5,188.32
for
failing
to
report
interest
income
of
$56,565.11
in
1974.
The
respondent
contended
that
this
omission
was
made
knowingly
or
in
circumstances
amounting
to
gross
negligence,
in
accordance
with
the
terms
of
subsection
163(2)
of
the
new
Income
Tax
Act.
2.
Burden
of
proof
and
common
evidence
2.01
The
appellants
have
the
burden
of
proof
with
regard
to
profits
resulting
from
sales.
The
reassessments
issued
by
the
respondent,
like
the
presumed
facts
on
which
he
relied
in
issuing
the
reassessments,
are
presumed
to
be
true
unless
the
appellants
in
their
evidence
can
contradict
them
on
a
balance
of
probabilities.
These
principles
were
stated
by
the
Supreme
Court
of
Canada
in
Johnston
v
MNR,
[1948]
CTC
195;
3
DTC
1182.
With
regard
to
the
penalty
of
$5,188.32,
the
respondent
has
the
burden
of
proof
under
subsection
163(3)
of
the
new
Income
Tax
Act.
2.02
Common
evidence
Whereas
all
the
appellants
are
interrelated,
and
dominated
by
the
personality
of
Mr
Rolland
Couillard;
whereas
in
all
these
cases
the
basic
problem
is
as
to
whether
the
profits
resulting
from
sales
(real
estate
or
shares)
are
capital
gains
or
business
profits;
and
whereas
the
principal
witnesses
had
to
testify
in
nearly
all
the
cases,
it
was
agreed
between
the
parties
that
the
evidence
in
Immeubles
Versant
Nord
Inc,
Immeubles
du
Coteau
Lévis
Inc
and
Place
Prévert
Inc
would
be
filed
in
the
case
of
Estate
Rolland
Couillard.
The
Board
used
all
the
evidence.
2.03
Plan
3.
Coteau-Levis,
Versant
Nord,
Place
Prévert
3.01
Côteau-Lévis
3.01.1
Facts
presumed
by
the
respondent
3.01.2
Facts
adduced
in
evidence
—
Coteau
Lévis
3.02
Versant
Nord
3.02.1
Facts
presumed
by
the
respondent
3.02.2
Facts
adduced
in
evidence
—
Versant
Nord
3.03
Place
Prévert
Inc
3.03.1
Facts
presumed
by
the
respondent
3.03.2
Facts
adduced
in
evidence
—
Place
Prévert
3.04
Circumstances
of
the
sale
of
the
real
estate
and
intentions
of
the
appellants:
Coteau
Lévis,
Versant
Nord
and
Place
Prévert
4.
Couillard
Entreprises
(Division
Construction)
Inc
4.01
Facts
presumed
by
the
respondent
4.02
Agreement
and
admitted
facts:
Couillard
Entreprises
5.
Estate
Rolland
Couillard
5.01
Facts
presumed
by
the
respondent
5.02
Admissions,
agreement
and
proven
facts
6.
Act
and
case
law
6.01
Act
6.02
Case
law
7.
Analysis
7.01
Points
for
analysis
in
brief
7.02
Analysis
of
Immeubles
Versant
Nord,
Coteau
Lévis
and
Place
Prévert
7.02.1
Are
these
appellants
limited-dividend
housing
companies
and
thus
tax-exempt?
7.02.2
Capital
gain
or
business
income
7.03
Couillard
Entreprises
(Division
Construction)
Inc
7.03.1
Does
section
69(1)
apply?
7.04
Estate
Rolland
Couillard
7.04.1
Decisions
regarding
certain
objections
7.04.2
Capital
gain
or
business
income
7.04.3
Penalty
8.
Conclusion
2.04
Description
of
facts
The
facts
presumed
by
the
respondent
are
reiterated,
as
are
the
replies
of
the
respondent
to
the
notices
of
appeal
of
the
appellants.
The
facts
presented
by
the
testimony
and
exhibits
were
in
general
fully
described
by
the
parties
in
their
pleadings.
The
Board
will
borrow
extensively
from
their
pleadings
in
describing
the
facts,
with
verification
in
the
eighty-six
exhibits
and
1,572
pages
of
transcript.
3.
Coteau
Lévis,
Versant
Nord,
Place
Prévert
3.01
Immeubles
du
Coteau
Lévis
Inc
3.01.1
Facts
presumed
by
the
respondent
The
presumed
facts
on
which
the
respondent
relied
in
reassessing
Immeubles
du
Coteau
Lévis
Inc
on
June
4,
1975
for
1972
are
those
described
below
in
paragraphs
(a)
to
(cc)
of
paragraph
3
of
the
reply
to
the
notice
of
appeal:
3.
In
assessing
the
appellant
for
its
1972
taxation
year,
the
respondent
relied,
inter
alia,
on
the
following
presumptions
of
fact:
(a)
the
letters
patent
of
the
appellant
were
granted
to
it
on
May
20,
1969
for
the
following
purposes:
Do
business
as
a
real
estate
and
construction
company
under
the
name
of
“Immeubles
du
Coteau
Levis
Inc”;
(b)
the
appellant
is
managed
and
controlled
by
Messrs
Rolland
Couillard
and
Jean-Pierre
and
Claude
Ruel
(hereinafter
referred
to
as
the
Couillard-Ruel
group);
(c)
the
Couillard-Ruel
group
includes
fifteen
businesses
the
registration
dates
of
which
for
tax
purposes
and
the
sales
breakdown
is
described
in
list
A
attached
hereto,
to
have
effect
as
if
stated
in
this
reply;
(d)
all
these
companies,
except
for
Société
Beaufort
Inc
and
Société
Belmont
Inc,
are
interrelated;
(e)
on
July
9,
1969
Messrs
Couillard
and
J
P
and
Claude
Ruel
bought
lots
173-9
and
175-23-1
in
the
Village
of
Bienville,
having
an
area
of
125,490
square
feet,
for
the
sum
of
$75,000;
(f)
on
September
29,
1969
Messrs
Couillard
and
Ruel
resold
the
said
lots
to
the
appellant,
to
which
they
were
related,
for
the
sum
of
$140,000;
(g)
on
September
29,
1969
the
fair
market
value
of
the
said
lots
was
$75,000;
(h)
on
December
31,
1970
Messrs
Couillard
and
J
P
and
Claude
Ruel
bought
lots
195-1-1,
196-2-1-1,
198-3-1-1
and
199-3-11
in
the
Village
of
Bienville,
having
an
area
of
97,760
square
feet,
for
the
sum
of
$65,000;
(i)
on
April
19,
1971,
Messrs
Couillard
and
Ruel
resold
the
said
lots
to
the
appellant,
to
which
they
were
related,
for
the
sum
of
$125,000;
(j)
on
April
19,
1974
the
fair
market
value
of
the
said
lots
was
$65,000;
(k)
the
Couillard-Ruel
group
obtained
low-cost
mortgage
financing
to
build
six
blocks
of
eighteen
apartments
on
the
first
group
of
lots,
listed
in
paragraph
3(e);
(l)
the
Couillard-Ruel
group
obtained
low-cost
mortgage
financing
to
build
five
blocks
of
eighteen
apartments
on
the
second
group
of
lots
mentioned
in
paragraph
3(h);
(m)
another
company
associated
with
the
Couillard-Ruel
group,
namely
Couillard
Enterprises
(Division
Construction)
Inc,
built
the
eleven
blocks
of
eighteen
apartments
financed
by
the
CMHC;
(n)
the
appellant
admitted
the
following
operating
losses
for
the
said
building,
for
each
of
its
1970,
1971
and
1972
taxation
years:
$12,112;
$60,447;
$50,224;
(o)
the
Couillard-Ruel
group
knew
from
the
outset
that
the
appellant
could
not
generate
operating
income;
(p)
the
appellant
was
formed
by
the
Couillard-Ruel
group
for
the
purpose
of
obtaining
low-cost
financing;
(q)
on
August
28,
1972
the
appellant
disposed
of
two
groups
of
the
aforementioned
lots,
with
the
eleven
blocks
which
had
in
the
meantime
been
built
on
them,
for
net
proceeds
of
disposition
of
$2,253.384;
(r)
the
total
cost
of
the
property
sold
by
the
appellant
was
as
follows:
Land:
|
$
140,000
|
Buildings:
|
1,799,618
|
Furniture:
|
36,958
|
Total
|
$1,976,576
|
(s)
the
appellant
made
a
business
profit
on
this
resale
of
$276,808;
(t)
the
appellant’s
alter
ego,
namely
the
Couillard-Ruel
group,
saw
the
appellant
as
only
one
link
in
a
chain
intended
to
realize
a
profit
on
resale;
(u)
the
Couillard-Ruel
group
has
acquired
vast
experience
and
expertise
in
dealings
in
real
estate
as
the
result
of
a
large
number
of
commercial
deals
completed
since
1966;
(v)
as
an
example,
the
respondent
attaches
as
an
appendix
list
B,
to
have
effect
as
if
stated
at
length
in
this
reply,
giving
a
list
of
real
estate
sales
made
by
the
group
and
reported
by
it
as
having
generated
business
profit;
(w)
neither
the
purposes,
the
incorporating
documents,
nor
anything
else
classifies
the
appellant
as
a
limited-dividend
housing
company
within
the
meaning
of
the
National
Housing
Act;
(x)
during
its
1972
taxation
year,
the
appellant
erroneously
claimed
as
a
deductible
expense
an
amount
of
$500
paid
to
Mr
Jean-Pierre
Ruel
to
support
his
electoral
campaign
for
the
mayoralty
of
the
town
of
Lauzon;
(y)
for
its
1970
taxation
year,
the
appellant
erroneously
claimed
as
deductible
expenses
Class
6
capital
expenditures
in
the
amount
of
$15,600,
representing
interest
charges;
(z)
the
appellant
agreed
to
this
correction,
and
claimed
and
obtained
a
capital
cost
allowance
of
$674
for
its
1970
taxation
year,
as
appears
from
the
reassessment
dated
July
5,
1972;
(aa)
the
appellant
did
not
take
this
correction
into
account
in
its
financial
statements
for
its
1971
and
1972
taxation
years;
(bb)
the
appellant
claimed
no
capital
cost
allowance
for
its
1971
and
1972
taxation
years;
(cc)
the
result
is
recapture
income
of
$674
for
the
appellant’s
1972
taxation
year,
as
established
by
the
following
table:
Class
6
|
1980
|
1971
|
1972
|
Capital
Cost
|
$971,240
|
$1,799,618
$1,799,618
|
Cost
of
Additions
|
($955,640-
$15,600)
|
$828,378
|
|
Depreciation
allowed
|
$674
|
|
Depreciation
accumulated
|
|
$674
|
$674
|
Undepreciated
portion
(UCC)
|
$970,566
|
$1,798,944
$1,798,944
|
Proceeds
of
disposition
|
|
$2,253.384
|
Recapture
income
|
|
—
|
$674
|
3.01.2
Facts
adduced
in
evidence:
Coteau
Lévis
3.01.2.1
On
May
20,
1969
Immeubles
du
Coteau
Lévis
Inc
was
incorporated
by
letters
patent
(see
Exhibit
A-21);
supplementary
letters
patent
were
issued
for
the
said
company
on
February
24,
1970
(see
Exhibit
A-22).
Rue
Pelletier
land
3.01.2.2
On
July
9,
1969
Messrs
Rolland
Couillard,
Jean-Pierre
Ruel
and
Claude
Ruel
bought
a
piece
of
land
having
an
area
of
125,490
sq
ft,
located
along
rue
Pelletier
in
Lauzon,
for
$75,000
or
$0.60
a
square
foot.
On
September
29,
1969,
less
than
two
months
later,
they
sold
this
land
to
Immeubles
du
Coteau
Lévis
Inc
for
$140,000
or
$1.11
a
square
foot.
(The
profit
from
this
sale
was
reported
by
the
sellers
as
business
profit.)
In
the
assessment
issued
for
the
appellant’s
1972
taxation
year,
the
respondent
estimated
that
the
fair
market
value
of
this
land
on
September
29,
1969
was
$75,000,
or
$0.60
a
square
foot.
The
witness
Henri
Paquet,
the
appellant’s
appraiser,
maintained
that
the
fair
market
value
of
this
land
on
September
30,
1969
was
$158,600,
or
$1.26
a
square
foot.
Mr
Paquet
used
the
so-called
residual
method.
The
witness
Jacques
Giguére,
the
respondent’s
appraiser,
contended
that
the
fair
market
value
of
this
land
on
September
29,
1969
was
$75,300,
or
$0.60
a
square
foot.
Mr
Giguère
used
the
so-called
parity
method.
Rue
Thibault
land
3.01.2.3
On
December
31,
1970
Messrs
Couillard
and
Jean-Pierre
and
Claude
Ruel
bought
the
rue
Thibault
land
in
Lauzon,
with
an
area
of
97,760
sq
ft,
for
$65,000,
or
$0.66
a
square
foot.
On
April
19,
1971,
Less
than
four
months
later,
they
sold
this
land
to
Immeubles
du
Coteau
Lévis
Inc
for
$125,000,
or
$1.27
a
square
foot.
The
sellers
declared
the
profit
from
this
sale
as
business
profit.
In
the
assessment
issued
for
the
appellant’s
1972
taxatioon
year,
the
respondent
estimated
the
fair
market
value
of
the
land
at
$65,000,
or
$0.66
a
square
foot.
The
witness
Henri
Paquet,
the
appellant’s
appraiser,
maintained
that
the
fair
market
value
of
this
land
on
April
19,
1971
was
$123,500
or
$1.26
a
square
foot.
Mr
Paquet
used
the
residual
method.
The
witness
Jacques
Giguere,
the
respondent’s
appraiser,
maintained
that
the
fair
market
value
of
this
land
on
April
19,
1971
was
$65,000,
or
$0.66
a
square
foot.
Mr
Giguere
used
the
parity
method.
3.01.2.4
On
December
4,
1969
Immeubles
du
Coteau
Levis
Inc
borrowed
from
the
Corporation
$1,134,400,
with
interest
at
6
per
annum
repayable
over
a
50-year
period
(see
Exhibit
1-13).
On
May
31,
1971
Immeubles
du
Coteau
Lévis
Inc
borrowed
from
the
Corporation
$962,445,
with
interest
at
7
/2%
per
annum
repayable
over
a
50-year
period
(see
Exhibit
1-14).
The
CMHC
valued
the
rue
Thibault
land
at
$74,440.
3.01.2.5
The
said
loans
were
used
in
financing
the
construction
of
low-
income
housing
projects
of
108
and
90
units
respectively;
in
return
for
the
advantageous
terms
of
the
loans,
Immeubles
du
Coteau
Lévis
Inc
had
to
Sign
operating
contracts
with
the
Central
Mortgage
and
Housing
Corporation,
under
which
each
family
dwelling
unit
would
be
leased
in
accordance
with
certain
requirements
regarding
the
maximum
annual
rental
and
maximum
annual
income
of
the
tenants,
and
rentals
could
only
be
increased
with
approval
from
the
Corporation
(see
Exhibits
1-13,
clause
33,
1-14,
clause
37
and
1-15,
clause
1).
3.01.2.6
The
109
and
90
housing
units
were
built
by
Couillard
Entreprises
(Division
Construction)
Inc
(see
t
of
J
P
Ruel,
trans
p
429).
Immeubles
du
Coteau
Lévis
Inc
did
not
own
or
lease
any
construction
equipment,
had
no
employees
working
in
this
area,
did
not
act
as
a
general
contractor
and
did
no
construction
(/oc
cit).
3.01.2.7
Immeubles
du
Coteau
Lévis
Inc
incurred
operating
losses
on
the
operation
of
the
said
dwelling
units
for
the
1970,
1971,
and
1972
taxation
years
of
$12,112,
$60,447
and
$50,224
respectively,
a
total
of
$122,783
(see
Exhibit
A-9
and
reply
to
the
notice
of
appeal,
clause
(3)(n)
).
3.02
Immeubles
Versant
Nord
Inc
3.02.1
Facts
presumed
by
the
respondent
The
presumed
facts
on
which
the
respondent
relied
in
reassessing
Immeubles
Versant
Nord
Inc
on
June
4,
1975
for
1972
are
described
below:
5.
In
assessing
the
appellant
for
its
1972
taxation
year,
the
respondent
relied
inter
alia
on
the
following
presumptions
of
fact:
(a)
the
letters
patent
of
the
appellant
were
granted
to
it
on
November
5,
1970
for
the
following
purposes:
“Do
business
as
a
builder
and
general
building
contractor,
under
the
name
of
‘Immeubles
du
Versant
Nord
Inc’..
.”
(b)
the
appellant
is
managed
and
controlled
by
Messrs
Rolland
Couillard
and
Jean-Pierre
and
Claude
Ruel
(hereinafter
referred
to
as
the
Couillard-Ruel
group);
(c)
the
Couillard-Ruel
group
includes
fifteen
businesses
the
registration
dates
of
which
for
tax
purposes
and
the
sales
breakdown
is
described
in
list
A
attached
hereto,
to
have
effect
as
if
stated
in
this
reply;
(d)
all
these
companies,
except
for
Société
Beaufort
Inc
and
Société
Belmont
Inc,
are
interrelated;
(e)
on
February
9,
1967
a
company
related
to
the
appellant,
Couillard
Entreprises
(Division
Domiciliaire)
Inc,
purchased
a
group
of
lots
having
a
total
area
of
$1,410,957
sq
ft
for
a
total
cost
of
$634,935.65;
(f)
on
September
29,
1969
the
appellant
purchased
from
a
related
person,
namely
Couillard
Entreprises
(Division
Domiciliaire)
Inc,
an
area
of
$607,418
sq
ft
from
the
said
lots;
(g)
on
September
29,
1969
the
fair
market
value
of
the
lots
purchased
by
the
appellant
was
$635,195;
(h)
the
Couillard-Ruel
group
obtained
low-cost
mortgage
financing
from
the
CMHC,
to
build
396
low-income
apartments;
(i)
another
related
company
of
the
Couillard-Ruel
group,
namely
Couillard
Entreprises
(Division
Construction)
Inc,
built
the
twenty-wo
eighteen-apartment
blocks
financed
by
the
CMHC;
(j)
the
appellant
reported
the
following
operating
losses
for
the
said
building,
for
each
of
its
1970,
1971
and
1972
taxation
years:
$77,133;
$123,641;
and
$127,399;
(k)
the
CMHC
of
its
own
authority
set
the
rentals
payable
in
the
financing
contract
itself;
(l)
the
Couillard-Ruel
group
knew
from
the
outset
that
the
appellant
could
not
generate
operating
income;
(m)
the
appellant
was
formed
by
the
Couillard-Ruel
group
for
the
purpose
of
obtaining
low-cost
financing;
(n)
on
August
28,
1972,
thirty-five
months
after
purchasing
the
vacant
lot,
the
appellant
disposed
of
it
with
the
twenty-two
eighteen-apartment
blocks
which
had
been
built
on
it
in
the
meantime,
for
net
proceeds
of
disposition
of
$4,892,530;
(o)
the
total
cost
of
the
property
sold
by
the
appellant
was
as
follows:
Land:
|
$
635,195
|
Buildings:
|
3,568,536
|
Furniture:
|
53,003
|
Total:
|
$4,256,734
|
(p)
the
appellant
made
a
business
profit
on
this
resale
of
$635,796;
(q)
the
appellant’s
alter
ego,
namely
the
Couillard-Ruel
group,
saw
the
appellant
as
only
one
link
in
a
chain
intended
to
realize
a
profit
on
resale;
(r)
the
Couillard-Ruel
group
has
acquired
vast
experience
and
expertise
in
dealings
in
real
estate
as
a
result
of
a
large
number
of
commercial
deals
completed
since
1966;
(s)
neither
the
purposes,
the
incorporating
documents
nor
anything
else
classifies
the
appellant
as
a
limited-dividend
housing
company
within
the
meaning
of
the
National
Housing
Act',
3.02.2
Facts
adduced
in
evidence:
Versant
Nord
3.02.2.1
On
February
9,
1967
Couillard
Entreprises
(Division
Domiciliaire)
Inc
purchased
a
group
of
lots
having
a
total
area
of
1,410,957
square
feet
for
the
sum
of
$634,935.65,
or
$0.45
a
square
foot.
3.02.2.2
On
September
29,
1969
the
appellant
Immeubles
du
Versant
Nord
Inc
purchased
from
Couillard
Entreprises
(Division
Domiciliaire)
Inc
an
area
of
607,418
square
feet
from
the
said
group
of
lots.
The
price
agreed
on
was
$911,127,
or
$1.50
a
square
foot.
3.02.2.3
In
the
assessment
issued
for
the
appellant’s
1972
taxation
year,
the
respondent
estimated
that
the
fair
market
value
of
the
land
on
September
29,
1969
was
$635,195,
or
$1.0457
a
square
foot.
3.02.2.4
The
witness
Claude
Tremblay,
the
respondent’s
appraiser,
using
the
parity
method,
concluded
that
the
subject
land
had
a
fair
market
value
of
$652,000,
or
$1.19
a
sq
ft
on
September
26,
1969.
However,
according
to
the
expert
witness
this
value
applied
only
to
the
usable
value
of
547,582
square
feet.
an
area
of
59,836
sq
ft
was,
according
to
him,
unusable
because
it
was
a
slope
(Exhibit
I-2).
The
witness
Henri
Paquet,
the
appellant’s
appraiser,
also
using
the
parity
method,
concluded
that
the
said
lot
of
607,418
sq
ft
had
a
value
of
$911,127,
or
$1.50
a
sq
ft.
3.02.2.5
The
opinions
given
by
the
two
expert
witnesses
contradict
each
other
on
several
points
(Exhibit
A-16
and
testimony
of
Nov
27,
1978,
pp
21-55,
Henri
Paquet
Exhibit
1-2
and
testimony
of
Claude
Tremblay,
Nov
27,
1978,
pp
57-168).
3.02.2.6
On
December
3,
1969
Immeubles
Versant
Nord
Inc
borrowed
from
the
Corporation
$4,600,000,
with
interest
at
6
per
annum
repayable
over
a
50-year
period
(see
Exhibit
1-10).
The
purchase
price
of
the
land
mentioned
in
the
loan
application
(Exhibit
1-22)
is
$563,000.
3.02.2.7
The
said
loan
was
used
in
financing
the
building
of
a
low-income
housing
project
of
396
units;
in
return
for
the
favourable
terms
of
the
loan,
Immeubles
Versant
Nord
Inc
had
to
sign
an
operating
contract
with
the
Corporation
under
which
each
family
housing
unit
had
to
be
leased
in
accordance
with
certain
requirements,
regarding
the
maximum
annual
rental
and
the
maximum
annual
income
of
tenants,
and
rentals
could
only
be
increased
with
approval
from
the
Corporation
(see
Exhibit
1-10,
clause
33
and
Exhibit
1-12,
clause
2).
3.02.2.8
The
396
housing
units
were
built
by
Couillard
Entreprises
(Division
Construction)
Inc
(see
t
of
J
P
Ruel,
trans
pp
367-368).
Immeubles
Versant
Nord
Inc
neither
owned
nor
leased
any
construction
equipment,
had
no
employees
working
in
this
area,
did
not
act
as
a
general
contractor
and
did
no
construction
(/oc
cit).
3.02.2.9
Immeubles
Versant
Nord
Inc
incurred
operating
losses
on
the
operation
of
the
said
housing
units
for
the
1970,
1971
and
1972
taxation
years
of
$77,133,
$123,641
and
$127,399
respectively,
a
total
of
$328,173
(see
Exhibit
A-9
and
reply
to
the
notice
of
appeal,
clause
5(j)
).
3.03
Peace
Prévert
Inc
3.03.1
Facts
presumed
by
the
respondent
The
presumed
facts
on
which
the
respondent
relied
in
reassessing
Place
Prévert
Inc
on
June
4,
1975
for
1972
are
those
described
below:
4.
In
assessing
the
appellant
for
its
1972
taxation
year,
the
respondent
relied,
inter
alia,
on
the
following
presumptions
of
fact:
(a)
the
letters
patent
of
the
appellant
were
granted
to
it
on
November
5,
1970
for
the
following
purposes:
Do
business
as
a
builder
and
general
builder
adn
general
building
contractor,
under
the
name
of
“Place
Prévert
Inc”..
.
(b)
the
appellant
is
managed
and
controlled
by
Messrs
Rolland
Couillard
and
Jean-Pierre
and
Claude
Ruel
(hereinafter
referred
to
as
the
Couillard-Ruel
group);
(c)
the
Couillard-Ruel
group
includes
fifteen
businesses
the
registration
dates
of
which
for
tax
purposes
and
the
sales
breakdown
is
described
in
list
A
attached
hereto,
to
have
effect
as
if
included
in
this
reply;
(d)
all
these
companies,
except
for
Société
Beaufort
Inc
and
Société
Belmont
Inc,
are
interrelated;
(e)
on
November
30,
1970
a
company
related
to
the
appellant,
Les
Immeubles
Seigneurs
Inc,
purchased
two
parts
of
lot
3432
in
the
parish
of
St-Sauveur
in
the
registration
division
of
Quebec
City,
having
an
area
of
306,235
and
216,650
square
feet,
for
a
total
cost
of
$522,885;
(f)
on
December
17,
1970
the
appellant
purchased
from
a
related
person,
Immeubles
Seigneurs
Inc,
part
of
the
said
lot
2432
having
an
area
of
306,235
sq
ft,
at
a
cost
of
$570,000;
(g)
on
December
17,
1970
the
said
part
of
lot
2432
had
a
fair
market
value
of
$363,157;
(h)
in
accordance
with
an
application
submitted
on
October
1,
1970
by
the
Couillard-Ruel
group,
the
latter
obtained
low-cost
financing
from
the
CMHC
on
October
28,
1970
for
the
building
of
192
low-income
housing
units;
(i)
another
related
company
of
the
Couillard-Ruel
group,
Couillard
Entreprises
(Division
Construction)
Inc,
built
the
six
thirty-two-apartment
blocks
financed
by
the
CMHC;
(j)
the
appellant
reported
the
following
operating
losses
for
the
said
building
for
each
of
its
1970,
1971
and
1972
taxation
years:
$41;
$14,272;
$41,063;
[sic]
(k)
the
CMHC
of
its
own
authority
set
the
rentals
payable
in
the
financing
contract
itself;
(l)
the
Couillard-Ruel
group
knew
from
the
outset
that
the
appellant
could
not
generate
operating
income;
(m)
the
appellant
was
formed
by
the
Couillard-Ruel
group
for
the
purpose
of
obtaining
low-cost
financing;
(n)
twenty
months
after
purchasing
the
vacant
land,
the
appellant
disposed
of
it
(except
for
one-third
of
the
lots)
with
the
six
blocks
which
had
been
built
on
it
in
the
meantime
for
net
proceeds
of
disposition
of
$2,273,393;
(o)
the
total
cost
of
the
property
sold
by
the
appellant
was:
Land:
|
$
205,439
|
Buildings:
|
1,795,816
|
Furniture:
|
31,123
|
Total:
|
$2,032,378
|
(p)
the
appellant
realized
a
business
profit
on
this
resale
of
$241,015;
(q)
the
appellant’s
alter
ego,
namely
the
Couillard-Ruel
group,
saw
the
appellant
as
only
one
link
in
a
chain
intended
to
realize
a
profit
on
resale;
(r)
the
Couillard-Ruel
group
has
acquired
vast
experience
and
expertise
in
dealings
in
real
estate
as
the
result
of
a
large
number
of
commercial
deals
completed
since
1966;
(t)
neither
the
purposes,
the
incorporating
documents
nor
anything
else
classifies
the
appellant
as
a
limited-dividend
housing
company
within
the
meaning
of
the
National
Housing
Act:
3.03.2
Facts
adduced
in
evidence:
Place
Prévert
3.03.2.1
On
November
15,
1970
Place
Prévert
Inc
was
incorporated
by
letters
Patent
(see
Exhibit
A-23).
3.03.2.2
On
November
30,
1970
Immeubles
des
Seigneurs
Inc
purchased
a
piece
of
land
having
an
area
of
522,885
square
feet
in
Ville
Vanier
for
$522,885,
or
$1
a
square
foot.
On
December
17,
1970
Immeubles
des
Seigneurs
Inc
sold
to
Place
Prévert
a
portion
of
this
land
with
an
area
of
306,235
square
feet
for
$570,000,
or
$1.86
a
square
foot.
3.03.2.3
In
the
assessment
for
the
appellant’s
1972
taxation
year,
the
respondent
estimated
that
the
fair
market
value
of
this
land
on
December
17,
1970
was
$363,157,
or
$1.18
a
square
foot.
3.03.2.4.
The
witness
Henri
Paquet,
the
appellant’s
appraiser,
argued
that
the
fair
market
value
of
this
land
on
December
17,
1970
was
$582,000,
or
$1.90
a
square
foot
(Exhibit
A-8
and
testimony
of
Henri
Paquet,
March
21,
1978,
pp
28
to
99).
Mr
Paquet
used
the
parity
method.
3.03.2.5
The
witness
Jacques
Giguere,
the
respondent’s
appraiser,
considered
that
the
fair
market
value
of
this
land
on
December
17,
1970
was
$352,000,
or
$1.15
a
square
foot
(Exhibit
1-1
and
testimony
of
Jacques
Giguere
on
March
21,
1978,
pp
101
to
186).
Mr
Giguere
also
used
the
parity
method.
3.04
Circumstances
of
the
sale
of
the
real
estate
and
intentions
of
the
appellants:
Coteau
Lévis,
Versant
Nord
and
Place
Prévert
Sales
3.04.1
On
August
28,
1972
Immeubles
Versant
Nord
Inc,
Immeubles
Coteau
Lévis
Inc
and
Place
Prévert
Inc
disposed
of
the
aforementioned
housing
units
to
Headway
Corporation
Limited
(see
Exhibits
A-13,
A-14
and
A-15).
3.04.2
According
to
the
appellants’
evidence,
they
were
each
incorporated
specifically
for
the
purpose
of
purchasing
the
said
housing
units,
owning
them
and
deriving
investment
income
from
them
(see
t
of
J
P
Ruel,
trans
pp
369,
370,
376
and
379).
The
sole
intent
when
the
lands
were
purchased
by
the
appellants
and
the
housing
units
built
was
to
retain
these
housing
units
as
an
investment
(see
t
of
J
P
Ruel,
trans
p
402
and
testimony
of
Claude
Ruel,
trans
p
808).
This
declared
intent
is
corroborated
by
the
fact
that
these
projects
were
undertaken
at
the
instigation
of
the
Corporation
(see
t
of
J
P
Ruel,
trans
p
382,
and
in
cross-examination
pp
687-688).
These
projects
were
undertaken
by
the
appellants
because
their
shareholders
firmly
believed
they
would
be
profitable
and
when
the
decision
was
taken
in
this
regard
there
was
a
reasonable
expectation
of
a
profitable
return,
in
view
of:
(a)
the
advantages
of
financing
the
projects
as
compared
with
terms
in
the
open
market
(closed
loan
for
50
years
compared
with
a
loan
open
after
five
years,
an
interest
rate
1.5
to
2%
lower
than
that
on
the
market:
see
t
of
J
P
Ruel,
trans
pp
351,
405,
406
and
415);
(b)
the
5%
return
on
capital
invested
by
the
appellants,
a
guaranteed
return
because
the
annual
operating
expenses
of
the
projects
on
which
the
rental
rates
had
been
approved
included
an
amount
for
“dividends”
of
5%
(see
Exhibits
A-25,
Appendix
B,
A-26,
appendix
A
and
A-27,
appendix
B);
(c)
the
additional
value
conferred
on
the
real
property
by
inflation
(t
of
J
P
Ruel,
trans
pp
420
to
423,
and
in
cross-examination,
pp
677,
679,
680
and
686);
(d)
the
income
that
would
be
derived
by
Société
Beaufort
Inc
for
administering
the
properties
(t
of
J
P
Ruel,
trans
pp
424-425);
the
income
from
administering
the
said
properties
enabled
Société
Beaufort
Inc
to
pay
the
premiums
on
insurance
policies
obtained
on
the
lives
of
the
three
shareholders,
so
that
in
the
event
of
the
death
of
any
one
of
them,
Société
Beaufort
Inc
would
have
sufficient
liquidity
from
the
proceeds
of
the
insurance
to
purchase
the
shares
of
the
deceased
individual;
Rolland
Couillard
was
not
a
shareholder
of
Société
Beaufort
Inc
(see
the
purchase-sale
agreement
of
August
19,
1969,
Exhibit
A-24);
(e)
the
income
obtained
by
Couillard
Entreprises
(Division
Domiciliaire)
Inc,
Rolland
Couillard,
Jean-Pierre
Ruel,
Claude
Ruel
and
Immeubles
des
Seigneurs
Inc
as
a
result
of
the
sale
of
the
land
to
the
appellants;
all
these
persons
included
this
profit
in
computing
their
income;
(f)
the
income
derived
by
Couillard
Entreprises
(Division
Construction)
Inc
from
construction
of
the
buildings
held
by
the
appellants
for
investment
purposes
(t
of
J
P
Ruel,
trans
pp
429-430,
and
in
cross-examination
P
677).
3.04.3
The
declared
intent
of
the
appellants
is
also
corroborated
by
the
fact
that
they
received
several
purchase
offers
for
the
housing
units
in
the
said
projects
from
professional
people
in
Quebec
City
and
gave
categorical
refusals
(t
of
J
P
Ruel,
trans
pp
357-358).
This
declared
intent
is
in
accordance
with
the
statement
that
the
companies,
in
which
Rolland
Couillard,
Jean-Pierre
Ruel
and
Claude
Ruel
had
interests,
held
two
types
of
real
estate:
that
intended
to
form
part
of
a
capital
investment
category,
held
to
generate
investment
income,
and
that
intended
for
resale
to
earn
business
income
used
in
financing
the
real
estate
which
was
part
of
the
capital
investment
category
(t
of
J
P
Ruel,
trans
pp
359-360;
in
cross-examination,
pp
563,
595-596,
605
and
635-636;
t
of
C
Ruel,
trans
p
807).
The
criteria
distinguishing
real
estate
in
the
first
category
from
that
in
the
second
category
was,
inter
alia,
the
type
of
financing,
the
location
and
the
size
of
the
projects
(t
of
J
P
Ruel,
in
cross-examination,
trans
p
565).
3.04.4
The
appellants’
shareholders
had
adopted
the
method
of
using
a
company
for
each
group
of
real
estate
so
as
to
minimize
the
financial
risks
and
facilitate
administration
of
the
projects
(t
of
J
P
Ruel,
trans
p
365,
and
in
cross-examination,
p
557).
3.04.5
The
circumstances
of
the
sale
of
the
real
estate
also
corroborate
the
declared
intent
of
the
appellants.
The
following
is
a
summary.
(a)
following
operating
losses
in
1970
and
1971,
Immeubles
Versant
Nord
Inc
sent
its
tenants
whose
lease
expired
on
or
after
May
1,
1972
a
notice
of
a
rental
increase.
This
notice
was
sent
to
them
from
January
1,
1972
onwards.
On
the
receipt
by
certain
tenants
of
this
notice,
the
tenants
of
Immeubles
Versant
Nord
Inc
founded
an
association
of
tenants
under
the
leadership
of
Marcel
Boily.
They
devised
a
stratagem
to
avoid
receiving
increase
notices,
and
distributed
documents
indicating
the
procedure
to
be
followed
in
objecting
to
rental
increases.
About
330
tenants
signed
a
petition
asking
the
Corporation
to
refuse
to
approve
this
rental
increase.
When
Marcel
Boily
asked
for
and
obtained
an
interlocutory
injunction,
prohibiting
Immeubles
Versant
Nord
Inc
from
renegotiating
the
terms
of
its
lease
before
obtaining
authorization
from
the
Corporation,
the
tenants’
committee
of
Immeubles
Versant
Nord
Inc
demanded
that
a
hearing
be
held
on
management
of
the
housing
complex.The
interlocutory
injunction
was
renewed
and
the
tenants’
objection
pursued
to
the
fullest,
accompanied
by
violent
denunciations
which
were
taken
up
by
the
local
press.
The
Corporation
authorized
Immeubles
Versant
Nord
Inc
to
increase
the
rental
required
of
its
tenants.
This
decision
provoked
the
wrath
of
the
tenants
and
the
campaign
of
denunciation
and
vilification
against
Immeubles
Versant
Nord
Inc
and
the
Corporation
resumed.
The
tenants
organized
public
demonstrations
and
occupied
the
premises
of
the
Corporation.
The
information
media
gave
extensive
coverage
to
these
events.
In
addition,
the
tenants
posted
notices
in
the
windows
of
their
apartments,
leaving
no
doubt
as
to
their
anger
at
the
rental
increases.
Finally,
they
even
obtained
the
support
of
the
Quebec
Labour
Council.
These
events,
which
took
place
between
January
and
April
1972,
led
several
non-activist
tenants
not
to
renew
their
leases
in
a
housing
complex
which
was
the
subject
of
such
conflict;
several
of
the
tenants
who
were
unhappy
with
the
rental
increase
also
failed
to
renew
their
leases.
Largely
as
a
result
of
these
facts,
the
vacancy
rate
in
apartments
rose
to
21.46%
in
the
summer
of
1972
(85
apartments
vacant
out
of
396).
These
various
facts
were
presented
in
evidence
through
testimony
by
Jean-Pierre
Ruel
(trans
pp
448-480),
Claude
Ruel
(trans
pp
809-811)
and
William
Boyd
(trans
pp
197-200),
and
through
the
filing
of
Exhibits
A-34
(press
clippings)
and
A-15
(contract
of
sale,
clause
5,
paragraph
4).
(b)
Similarly,
as
the
result
of
operating
losses
between
1970
and
1971,
Immeubles
du
Coteau
Lévis
Inc
also
sent
its
tenants
a
rental
increase
notice,
receipt
of
which
led
to
the
formation
of
the
Immeubles
du
Coteau
Lévis
Inc
tenants’
committee.
Despite
vigorous
opposition
by
the
tenants,
the
Corporation
authorized
a
rental
increase
in
April
1972.
These
events
led
to
the
same
consequences
as
in
the
case
of
Immeubles
Versant
Nord
Inc,
so
that
in
the
summer
of
1972
the
apartment
vacancy
rate
rose
to
11.5%
(23
apartments
out
of
198).
These
facts
were
presented
in
evidence
through
the
aforementioned
testimony
and
Exhibits
A-34
and
A-
13.
(c)
In
the
summer
of
1972,
the
vacancy
rate
of
apartments
owned
by
Place
Prévert
Inc
was
26.56%
(51
apartments
out
of
192:
see
Exhibit
A-14,
clause
5,
paragraph
4).
This
rate
was
high
though
it
appeared
less
alarming
than
in
the
other
two
cases,
in
view
of
the
shorter
period
since
the
end
of
the
construction.
(d)
The
losses
accumulated
by
the
three
appellants
and
their
lack
of
liquidity
forced
them
to
cease
their
payments
to
the
Corporation
for
sev-
eral
months
(t
of
J
P
Ruel,
trans
p
480,
t
of
C
Ruel,
trans
p
824,
t
of
William
Boyd,
trans
pp
201-202).
(e)
Their
bank
advised
them
to
divest
themselves
of
some
of
their
assets
so
that
they
would
continue
to
be
able
to
meet
their
obligations
(t
of
J
P
Ruel,
trans
pp
486-487
and
498-499).
(f)
Despite
this
advice,
the
appellants
and
their
shareholders
did
not
directly
or
indirectly
put
the
said
properties
up
for
sale,
undertake
any
solicitation
for
the
purpose
of
selling
them,
request
the
aid
of
a
broker,
or
do
any
advertising
with
a
view
to
an
eventual
sale
(t
of
J
P
Ruel,
trans
pp
487-488;
t
of
C
Ruel,
pp
808-809
and
812-813;
t
of
William
Boyd,
trans
pp
194-195).
(g)
In
the
summer
of
1972
William
Boyd
asked
one
Cassiani
whether
he
knew
anyone
who
owned
“limited-dividend
properties”:
Cassiani
told
him
of
Rolland
Couillard.
At
William
Boyd’s
request
Cassiani,
who
was
in
Montreal,
called
Rolland
Couillard
to
organize
a
meeting
with
William
Boyd.
As
a
result
of
this
telephone
call
William
Boyd
went
to
Quebec
City
and
visited
the
properties
owned
by
the
appellants
and
other
properties
with
Claude
Ruel;
he
then
went
on
to
Ontario.
Shortly
afterwards,
still
without
having
been
solicited
by
any
of
the
appellants’
shareholders,
he
contacted
Rolland
Couillard
and
made
him
an
offer
to
purchase
the
three
housing
complexes.
Rolland
Couillard
did
not
say
that
they
were
for
sale
and
showed
some
hesitation
about
selling
these
properties,
so
that
there
were
lengthy
negotiations
in
July
and
August
(t
of
William
Boyd,
trans
p
196).
(h)
The
appellants’
shareholders
realized
clearly
that
a
sale
was
necessary
in
order
to
avoid
a
disastrous
bankruptcy
(t
of
J
P
Ruel,
trans
pp
498
and
500,
and
in
cross-examination,
pp
761-762;
t
of
C
Ruel,
trans
p
821),
and
the
purchaser
was
also
aware
of
this
(t
of
William
Boyd,
trans
p
227),
hence
his
persistent
efforts
to
buy
the
three
housing
complexes
(t
of
William
Boyd,
trans
p
228).
(i)
In
short,
though
hesitant
to
sell
one
of
the
three
housing
complexes,
and
even
more
hesitant
to
sell
that
owned
by
Place
Prévert
Inc,
the
shareholders
of
the
appellants
had
to
resign
themselves
to
selling
in
order
to
avoid
bankruptcy;
they
would
have
liked
to
retain
at
least
the
housing
complex
owned
by
Place
Prévert
Inc,
but
the
offer
made
by
William
Boyd
was
conditional
on
the
sale
of
the
three
complexes
at
the
same
time.
This
sine
qua
non
condition
had
to
be
regretfully
accepted
by
the
appellants
(t
J
P
Ruel,
trans
p
498
and
t
of
C
Ruel,
trans
p
819).
4.
Couillard
Enterprises
(Division
Construction)
Inc
4.01
Facts
presumed
by
the
respondent
In
reply
to
the
appellant’s
notice
of
appeal,
the
respondent
stated
in
paragraph
7
the
presumed
facts
on
which
he
relied
in
issuing
the
notice
of
reassessment
for
1974.
Paragraph
7
reads
as
follows:
7.
In
assessing
the
appellant
for
its
1974
taxation
year,
the
respondent
relied,
inter
alia,
on
the
following
facts:
(a)
on
December
13,
1971
the
shareholders
of
the
appellant
were:
Rolland
Couillard
|
240
ordinary
shares
|
Jean-Pierre
Ruel
|
30
ordinary
shares
|
Claude
Ruel
|
30
ordinary
shares
|
and
the
shareholders
of
Immeubles
des
Seigneurs
Inc
were:
Rolland
Couillard
|
80
ordinary
shares
|
Jean-Pierre
Ruel
.
|
10
ordinary
shares
|
Claude
Ruel
|
10
ordinary
shares
|
(b)
on
December
13,
1971,
when
the
appellant
bought
the
land
in
question,
it
purchased
a
property
from
a
person
to
which
it
was
related,
namely
Immeubles
des
Seigneurs
Inc;
(c)
on
December
13,
1971
the
fair
market
value
of
the
land
in
question
was
$298,977,
or
$1.38
a
square
foot;
(d)
on
July
4,
1974
the
appellant
sold
201,780
square
feet
of
the
land
in
question
to
Entrepôt
Colbert
Inc
for
the
sum
of
$450,000,
that
is
$2.23
a
square
foot;
5.02
Agreement
and
admitted
facts:
Couillard
Entreprises
4.02.1
Agreement
Counsel
for
the
appellant
and
the
respondent
verbally
entered
into
an
agreement
before
the
Board
that:
1.
the
fair
market
value
of
lot
2432
of
St-Sauveur
parish
on
December
13,
1971
was
$368,305,
or
$1.70
a
square
foot
for
an
area
of
216,650
square
feet;
2.
the
only
point
still
at
issue
is
as
to
whether
paragraph
69(1
)(a)
of
the
Income
Tax
Act
should
apply
to
the
case
at
bar;
3.
if
the
Board
concludes
that
paragraph
69(1
)(a)
of
the
Income
Tax
Act
should
not
apply
in
the
case
at
bar,
the
appeal
must
be
allowed
and
the
assessment
for
the
1974
taxation
year
vacated;
4.
if
the
Board
concludes
that
paragraph
69(1
)(a)
of
the
Income
Tax
Act
should
apply
in
the
case
at
bar,
the
appeal
should
be
allowed
in
part
and
the
whole
referred
back
to
the
Minister
for
re-examination
and
reassessment
on
the
basis
of
the
judgment
rendered
and
the
agreement
concluded
between
the
parties.
4.02.2
Admitted
facts
With
regard
to
the
facts
in
evidence,
it
is
only
necessary
to
restate
the
facts
admitted
by
the
two
parties
and
still
relevant,
namely:
1.
on
December
13,
1971
Immeubles
des
Seigneurs
Inc
sold
to
the
appellant
lot
2432
of
St-Sauveur
parish,
having
an
area
of
216,650
square
feet,
for
the
sum
of
$425,000;
2.
Immeubles
des
Seigneurs
Inc
and
the
appellant
are
related
persons
for
the
purposes
of
the
Income
Tax
Act:
3.
on
July
4,
1974
the
appellant
sold
201,780
square
feet
of
the
land
in
question
to
Entrepôt
Colbert
Inc
for
the
sum
of
$450,000;
4.
the
fair
market
value
of
the
land
in
question
was
$368,305,
or
$1.70
a
square
foot
on
December
13,
1971.
4.02.3
It
is
admitted
by
implication
that
the
profit
from
the
transaction
must
be
regarded
as
business
profit,
and
not
a
capital
profit.
Thus
the
appellant,
admitting
that
the
only
point
at
issue
is
whether
paragraph
69(1
)(a)
of
the
Income
Tax
Act
applies,
admitted
that
the
profit
resulting
from
the
transaction
is
not
a
capital
gain
but
a
business
profit.
This
section
cannot
apply
in
the
case
at
bar
because
a
business
profit
is
involved.
5.
Estate
Rolland
Couillard
5.1
Facts
presumed
by
the
respondent
In
reply
to
the
appellant’s
notice
of
appeal,
the
respondent
stated
in
paragraph
2
the
presumed
facts
on
which
he
relied
in
issuing
the
notices
of
reassessment
for
1973
and
1974.
Paragraph
2
reads
as
follows:
2.
In
assessing
the
appellant
for
its
1973
and
1974
taxation
years,
the
respondent
relied,
inter
alia,
on
the
following
presumptions
of
fact:
(a)
the
late
Rolland
Couillard
was
a
shareholder
of
several
companies
specializing
in
the
purchase,
construction
and
sale
of
real
estate,
including
the
following
companies:
Couillard
Entreprises
(Division
Domiciliaire)
Inc;
Couillard
Entreprises
(Division
Construction)
Inc;
Couillard
Entreprises
(Division
Maritime)
Inc;
Le
Domaine
du
Versant
Nord
Inc;
Les
Immeubles
des
Seigneurs
Inc;
Place
Prévert
Inc;
Les
Immeubles
du
Coteau
Lévis
Inc,
and
so
on;
(b)
in
addition
to
the
companies
cited
above,
the
late
Rolland
Couillard
bought
and
sold
real
estate
personally,
and
sometimes
considered
his
profits
as
business
income,
while
at
other
times
he
regarded
the
profit
as
a
capital
gain;
(c)
during
the
1973
taxation
year,
the
late
Mr
Couillard
disposed
of
the
following
properties:
|
Selling
price
|
Cost
Cost
|
Profit
Profit
|
Manoir
Lévis
|
$667,176
|
$593,757
|
$73,419
|
Desjardins
|
$633,287
|
$583,551
|
$49,766
|
and
an
amount
of
$123,185
was
added
by
the
respondent
to
the
appellant’s
reported
income
as
business
profit
for
the
1973
taxation
year;
(d)
during
the
1974
taxation
year,
the
late
Mr
Couillard
disposed
of
the
following
properties:
|
Selling
price
|
Cost
Cost
|
Profit
Profit
|
Bourgogne
|
$450,000
|
$350,317
|
$99,683
|
Murray
|
$
72,000
|
$
63,000
|
$
9,000
|
and
an
amount
of
$108,683
was
added
by
the
respondent
to
the
appellant’s
reported
income
as
business
profit
for
the
1974
taxation
year;
(e)
during
the
1972
taxation
year,
the
following
companies
were
merged:
Couillard
Entreprises
Inc;
Couillard
Entreprises
(Division
Domiciliaire)
Inc;
Les
Immeubles
Des
Seigneurs
Inc;
Le
Domaine
du
Verant
Nord
Inc;
(f)
as
a
result
of
this
merger
the
new
company
became
owner
of
all
the
real
estate
owned
by
the
former
companies;
(g)
the
issued
and
paid
up
shares
of
the
new
company
were
divided
as
follows:
Rolland
Couillard
|
80%
|
Claude
Ruel
|
10%
|
Jean-Pierre
Ruel
|
10%
|
(h)
the
new
company
disposed
of
real
estate
which
had
been
owned
by
Domaine
du
Versant
Nord
Inc,
made
a
profit
of
$656,000
and
treated
this
amount
as
a
business
profit;
(i)
during
the
1974
taxation
year,
the
late
Rolland
Couillard
disposed
of
all
the
shares
which
he
held
in
the
new
company;
(j)
the
shares
were
sold
for
the
sum
of
$3,000,000:
the
difference
between
the
selling
price
and
the
cost
of
the
shares
($32,080)
was
added
to
the
appellant’s
reported
income
as
business
profit
resulting
from
the
disposition
of
the
shares;
(k)
following
the
sale
of
the
shares
in
1974,
the
late
Rolland
Couillard
disposed
of
two
other
pieces
of
property:
|
Selling
price
|
Cost
|
Profit
|
Maricourt
|
$185,250
|
$175,000
|
$
10,250
|
Pasteur
|
$985,000
|
$744,066
|
$240,934
|
(l)
the
profit
resulting
from
the
sale
of
the
Maricourt
property
was
added
to
the
appellant’s
reported
income
for
the
1975
taxation
year;
(m)
in
computing
his
income
for
the
1974
taxation
year,
the
appellant
omitted
to
report
the
amount
of
$56,565.11
paid
to
him
by
Couillard
Entreprises
Inc
as
a
refund
of
interest
owed
to
the
appellant.
5.02
Admissions,
agreements
and
proven
facts
5.02.1
The
parties
filed
at
the
hearing
a
written
agreement
relating
to
the
fair
market
value
of
the
property
at
issue
(real
estate
and
shares)
on
December
31,
1971.
This
agreement
reads
as
follows:
AGREEMENT
The
parties
through
their
undersigned
counsel
agree
as
follows:
(1)
if
the
Tax
Review
Board
comes
to
the
conclusion
that
the
profit
resulting
from
the
disposition
of
the
shares
held
by
the
late
Rolland
Couillard
in
Couillard
Entreprises
Inc
(80%
of
the
issued
and
paid-up
capital)
constitutes
a
capital
gain
as
defined
by
the
Income
Tax
Act
(SC
1970-71-72,
c
63,
as
amended),
then
judgment
to
be
given
allowing
the
appeal
in
part
for
the
1974
taxation
year,
setting
the
fair
market
value
of
the
shares
held
by
the
late
Rolland
Couillard
on
December
31,
1971
at
$2,000,000
(80%
x
$2,500,000);
(2)
if
the
Tax
Review
Board
comes
to
the
conclusion
that
the
profit
resulting
from
the
disposition
of
the
real
estate
listed
below
constitutes
a
capital
gain
as
defined
in
the
Income
Tax
Act
(SC
1970-71-72,
c
63,
as
amended),
then
judgment
to
be
given
allowing
the
appeal
in
part
for
the
1973
and
1974
taxation
years,
setting
the
fair
market
value
of
the
real
estate
on
December
31,
1971
as
follows:
Bourgogne
|
$352,000
|
Desjardins
|
$591,000
|
Lévis
|
$630,000
|
Murray
|
$
59,110
|
and
that
the
matter
be
referred
back
to
the
Minister
of
National
Revenue
for
reassessment
and
reconsideration.
5.02.2
Admissions:
selling
prices
Adittionally,
in
their
written
pleadings
the
parties
admitted
the
following
amounts
regarding
selling
prices.
They
are
broken
down
as
follows:
Manoir
des
Seigneurs,
Lévis
|
$
667,176
|
Place
Versailles,
Desjardins
—
Lévis
|
$
633,287
|
Le
Bourgogne
|
$
450,000
|
Le
Murray
|
$
|
72,000
|
Mr
Couillard’s
shares
|
$2,400,000
(80%
=
$3,000,000)
|
5.02.3
Admissions:
costs
of
property
The
appellant
in
his
notice
of
appeal,
and
the
respondent
in
his
form
T7W
and
appendices
attached
to
the
reassessments,
set
the
following
amounts
as
the
cost
of
the
property
which
is
the
subject
of
the
case
at
bar:
Manoir
des
Seigneurs,
Lévis
|
$593,757
|
Place
Versailles,
Desjardins
—
Lévis
|
$583,521
|
Le
Bourgogne
|
$350,317
|
Le
Murray
|
$
63,000
|
Mr
Couillar’s
shares
|
$
32,080
|
5.02.4
The
amount
to
be
included
in
computing
the
appellant’s
income
will
thus
be
determined,
using
a
simple
computation
with
the
data
contained
in
paragraphs
5.02.1,
5.02.2
and
5.02.3,
in
accordance
with
whether
the
Board
concludes
that
this
was
a
capital
gain
or
business
profit.
5.02.5
With
regard
to
the
penalty
of
$5,188.32
imposed
by
the
respondent
and
challenged
by
the
appellant,
the
latter
did
not
question
the
fact
that
the
amount
of
$56,565.11
in
interest
was
omitted
in
computing
the
income
of
Mr
Rolland
Couillard
in
1974.
It
simply
argued
that
this
was
an
oversight,
as
will
be
indicated
below.
5.02.6
Proven
facts
The
parties
in
general
gave
clear
descriptions
in
their
pleadings
of
the
facts
proven
by
testimony
and
by
exhibits.
The
Board
will
borrow
at
length
from
these
pleadings
in
explaining
the
facts.
5.02.7
Rolland
Couillard
started
out
in
construction
and
real
estate
at
the
age
of
twenty-seven
in
about
1952-1953.
Together
with
Fernand
Couillard,
his
brother,
he
founded
the
firm
Fernand
&
Rolland
Couillard
(hereinafter
referred
to
as
the
“F
&
R
company”).
His
early
efforts
involved
the
construction
of
single-family
homes.
Around
1959,
Fernand
Couillard
left
the
company
and
Rolland
Couillard
then
hired
his
nephew,
Jean-Pierre
Ruel.
5.02.8
In
1959
Rolland
Couillard
founded
his
first
company,
Couillard
Entreprises
Inc
(Exhibit
A-47).
Rolland
Couillard
transferred
the
company’s
assets
to
it
and
handed
over
10%
of
the
capital
stock
to
Jean-Pierre
Ruel,
retaining
80%.
Around
1962-1963,
Claude
Ruel,
Jean-Pierre’s
brother
and
Rolland
Couillard’s
nephew,
joined
Couillard
Entreprises
Inc
and
received
10%
of
the
capital
stock
(issued
and
paid-up).
According
to
Exhibit
I-6,
income
in
1964
to
1972
was
as
follows:
1964
income:
(Construction,
rental,
sale
of
land)
|
$643,059.76
|
1965
income:
|
|
Sale
of
land
|
723,080.93
|
Rental
income
|
290,820.50
|
Other
income
|
164,404.45
|
1966
income:
|
|
Sale
of
land
|
186,307.80
|
Rental
|
359,848.10
|
Other
|
20,693.47
|
1967
income:
|
|
Sale
of
land
|
254,036.00
|
Rental
|
370,969.00
|
Other
|
138,444.00
|
1968
income:
|
|
Sale
of
apartment
blocks
|
580,000.00
|
Rental
|
384,740.00
|
Sale
of
land
|
10,000.00
|
Interest
earned
|
2,853.00
|
Miscellaneous
|
1,566.00
|
1969
income:
|
|
Rental
|
394,868.00
|
Sale
of
land
|
16,000.00
|
Miscellaneous
|
2,281.00
|
1970
income:
|
413,195.00
|
1971
rental
income:
|
428,759.00
|
1972
rental
income:
|
216,694.00
|
5.02.9
In
1963
construction
began
on
the
housing
complex
known
as
“Jardins
des
Seigneurs”,
240
apartments
located
behind
the
Auberge
des
Gouverneurs
at
Ste-Foy.
According
to
the
financial
statements
this
building
was
completed
during
the
1965
taxation
year,
the
date
at
which
the
building
costs
ceased
being
capitalized
(Exhibit
I-6).
The
financial
statements
indicated
building
costs
of
$2,140,226.
5.02.10
On
July
20,
1964
Rolland
Couillard
incorporated
Couillard
Entreprises
(Division
Maritimes)
Inc
(hereinafter
referred
to
from
time
to
time
as
“Couillard
Maritimes”).
Following
the
sale
of
real
estate,
this
company
reported
the
following
gross
income
in
1967,
1968
and
1969:
1967
|
Sale
of
real
estate
|
$620,000
|
1968
|
Sale
of
real
estate
|
$
93,000
|
1969
|
Sale
of
real
estate
|
$540,000
|
The
profits
from
these
sales
were
reported
as
business
profits.
The
financial
statements
of
this
company
were
not
submitted
in
evidence
(trans
p
861
—
the
respondent’s
witness
Blouin).
5.02.11
On
September
28,
1964
Couillard
Division
Domiciliaire
Inc
(hereinafter
referred
to
from
time
to
time
as
“Domiciliaire”)
was
incorporated
(Exhibit
A-47).
According
to
Exhibit
I-7,
this
company
declared
the
following
income:
March
31,
1966:
Rental
income
|
$
36,166.50
|
Income
—
sale
of
land
|
|
(selling
price
-
cost
price)
|
22,320.00
|
March
31,
1967:
|
|
Rental
|
214,257.00
|
Sale
of
land
|
141,226.00
|
Sale
of
buildings
|
990,000.00
|
Other
|
37,138.04
|
March
31,
1967:
|
|
Rental
|
290,535.00
|
Sale
of
land
|
247,784.00
|
Sale
of
buildings
|
3,499,142.00
|
Other
|
44,750.00
|
December
31,
1968:
|
|
Rental
|
435,085.00
|
Sale
of
land
|
17,600.00
|
Sale
of
buildings
|
2,611,200.00
|
Other
income
|
30,897.00
|
December
31,
1969:
|
|
Rental
|
462,610.00
|
Sale
of
building
|
7,249,987.00
|
December
31,
1970:
|
|
Income
|
5,747,664.00
|
December
31,
1971:
|
|
Income
|
1,956,832.00
|
June
30,
1972:
|
|
Rental
income
|
237,453.00
|
5.02.12
Couillard
(Division
Construction)
Inc
(hereinafter
referred
to
from
time
to
time
as
“Construction”)
was
incorporated
on
November
26,
1965.
Construction
was
incorporated
to
handle
the
construction
of
various
buildings.
It
also
sold
land
and
buildings.
Year
|
Income
|
Amount
|
1971
|
Sale
of
land
and
buildings
|
$
178,560
|
1972
|
Sale
of
land
and
buildings
|
852,669
|
1973
|
Sale
of
land
and
buildings
|
808,287
|
1974
|
Sale
of
land
|
3,815,396
|
|
Options
|
455,000
|
5.02.13
Immeubles
des
Seigneurs
Inc
was
incorporated
on
November
10,
1965
(Exhibit
A-47).
This
company
also
sold
real
estate.
5.02.14
The
shareholders
of
these
companies
Couillard
Entreprises
Inc,
Couillard
Entreprises
(Division
Domiciliaire)
Inc
and
Immeubles
des
Seigneurs
Inc,
until
they
were
merged,
were
Rolland
(80%
of
the
shares),
Jean-
Pierre
Ruel
(10%
of
the
shares)
and
Claude
Ruel
(10%
of
the
shares)
(see
testimony
of
J
P
Ruel,
trans
pp
1316
and
1321).
5.02.15
The
eventual
aim
of
incorporating
these
three
companies,
according
to
Mr
Jean-Pierre
Ruel,
was
to
make
possible
the
establishment
of
a
bank
of
real
estate
that
would
be
held
as
an
investment
(see
testimony
of
J
P
Ruel,
trans
p
1316).
To
do
this,
each
company
in
effect
owed
two
types
of
real
estate:
that
intended
to
form
part
of
a
capital
investment
category,
held
to
generate
investment
income,
and
that
intended
for
resale
to
earn
business
income
used
in
financing
the
real
estate
which
was
part
of
the
capital
investment
category
(t
of
J
P
Ruel,
trans
pp
359—360
and
1317-1318,
and
in
cross-
examination,
pp
563,
595-596,
605
and
635-636;
t
of
C
Ruel,
trans
p
807).
5.02.16
Additionally,
Rolland
Couillard
while
he
was
alive
explained
this
method
of
financing
his
real
estate
investments
to
Paul
Laberge
(t
of
P
Laberge,
trans
pp
938-939
and
988).
The
criteria
distinguishing
real
estate
in
the
first
category,
namely
that
intended
for
investment,
from
the
second
category
were
among
other
things
the
method
of
financing,
the
location
and
the
size
of
projects,
as
well
as
the
type
of
construction
(t
of
J
P
Ruel,
in
cross-examination
trans
p
565).
5.02.17
In
1965
Mr
Rolland
Couillard
bought
one
share
in
the
Malta
partnership.
This
business
consisted
of
ten
partners,
who
had
built
buildings
at
2
or
3
million
(t
Paul
Laberge,
trans
p
956).
The
aim
was
to
resell
them
after
construction.
After
one
year
the
project
was
sold
through
a
real
estate
broker,
Mr
Turgeon,
at
a
profit
(t
Paul
Laberge,
trans
p
957-961).
5.02.18
The
company
Entrepôt
Colbert
Inc
(hereinafter
referred
to
from
time
to
time
as
“Colbert”)
was
also
created.
This
company
owned
two
warehouses
on
rue
Colbert,
which
were
to
be
kept
for
investment
purposes.
However,
they
were
sold
in
1971
and
the
profit
reported
as
a
capital
gain.
The
respondent
taxed
them
as
business
income.
There
was
no
objection
(Exhibit
I-9).
According
to
Mr
Jean-Pierre
Ruel,
there
was
no
objection
because
the
amount
involved
was
not
substantial.
5.02.19
To
sum
up,
in
1963,
1964
and
1965
Couillard
Entreprises
Inc
built
the
housing
complex
known
as
“Jardins
des
Seigneurs”,
consisting
of
240
units,
loacated
behind
the
Auberge
des
Gouverneurs
at
Ste-Foy
(see
t
of
J
P
Ruel,
trans
pp
1321
and
1426).
Between
1965
and
1967
Couillard
Entreprises
(Division
Domiciliaire)
Inc
built
the
housing
complex
known
as
“Place
des
Seigneurs”,
consisting
of
280
Units,
located
at
Charlesbourg
(see
t
of
J
P
Ruel,
trans
pp
1321
and
1426).
Between
1967
and
1969
Immeubles
des
Seigneurs
Inc
built
the
housing
complex
known
as
“Immeubles
des
Seigneurs”,
an
apartment
block
consisting
of
320
units,
located
beside
the
Jardins
des
Seigneurs
and
the
Auberge
des
Gouverneurs
in
Ste-Foy
(see
T
of
J
P
Ruel,
trans
pp
1321
and
1426).
5.02.20
According
to
Mr
Ruel,
these
three
housing
complexes
represented
capital
investments
intended
to
be
held
to
generate
investment
income,
in
accordance
with
the
criteria
mentioned
in
para
5.02.16
hereof.
In
fact,
the
financing
for
these
three
housing
complexes
was
more
favourable
than
for
those
intended
for
resale,
especially
in
that:
(a)
they
were
financed
by
insurance
companies
guaranteed
by
the
Central
Mortgage
and
Housing
Corporation
under
the
1954
National
Housing
Act
(SC
1954
c
23),
and
thus
received
a
preferential
interest
rate
(t
of
J
P
Ruel,
trans
pp
349-350
and
1323-1324);
(b)
the
loans
were
closed
for
a
period
of
twenty-five
years,
whereas
conventional
loans
were
renegotiable
every
five
years
(t
of
J
P
Ruel,
trans
pp
351
and
1324);
(c)
the
loans
were
guaranteed
up
to
90%
of
the
value
of
the
project,
whereas
conventional
loans
ordinarily
covered
70
to
75%
of
the
value
of
the
project
(t
of
J
P
Ruel,
trans
p
350).
5.02.21
In
addition,
these
three
housing
complexes
were
in
locations
that
were
“more
strategic,
better
from
a
rental
standpoint
and
better
from
the
point
of
view
of
surrounding
traffic”
than
the
project
intended
for
resale
(t
of
J
P
Ruel,
trans
pp
1324-1325,
t
of
P
Laberge,
trans
pp
972-973,
t
of
G
Paradis,
trans
p
1274).
Finally,
the
construction
quality
of
these
three
housing
complexes
was
clearly
superior
to
that
of
the
projects
intended
for
resale
(t
of
J
P
Ruel,
trans
p
1325).
Couillard
Entreprises
Inc,
Couillard
Entreprises
(Division
Domiciliaire)
Inc
and
Immeubles
des
Seigneurs
Inc
kept
these
three
housing
complexes,
regarding
them
as
investments
and,
over
the
years,
taking
the
capital
cost
allowance
for
the
buildings
when
appropriate.
Thus,
on
June
30,
1972
Couillard
Entreprises
Inc
had
already
taken
$504,688
in
capital
cost
allowances
for
the
buildings
alone
(see
Exhibit
I-6,
financial
report
to
June
30,
1972
of
Couillard
Entreprises
Inc,
explanatory
notes
with
financial
statements
of
June
30,
1972,
note
1,
fixed
assets).
Similarly,
on
June
30,
1972
Couillard
Entreprises
(Division
Domiciliaire)
Inc
had
already
taken
$642,377
in
capital
cost
allowances
for
the
buildings
alone
(see
Exhibit
I-7,
financial
report
to
June
30,
1972
of
Couillard
Entreprises
(Division
Domiciliaire)
Inc,
explanatory
notes
with
financial
statements
of
June
30,
1972,
note
1,
fixed
assets).
Immeubles
des
Seigneurs
Inc
had
on
June
30,
1972
already
taken
$490,321
as
capital
cost
allowances
on
the
buildings
alone
(see
Exhibit
A-
44,
financial
report
to
June
30,
1972
of
Immeubles
des
Seignerus
Inc,
explanatory
notes
with
financial
statements
of
June
30,
1972,
note
1,
fixed
assets).
5.02.22
To
finance
the
construction
of
these
three
housing
complexes,
and
also
in
order
to
cover
the
deficits
of
the
first
years
of
operation,
the
three
companies
purchased
land
and
resold
it
at
a
profit,
or
purchased
land,
built
buildings
on
it
and
resold
them
at
a
profit,
deliberately
reporting
the
profit
from
these
operations
as
business
income
for
tax
purposes
(as
examples
see,
in
Exhibit
I-6,
the
financial
report
of
Couillard
Entreprises
Inc
to
December
31,
1968,
income
and
expenditure
statement
from
January
1,
1968
to
December
31,
1968,
indicating
income
of
$580,000
from
the
sale
of
apartment
blocks
financed
by
conventional
means,
and
comments
in
this
connection
by
J
P
Ruel,
in
cross-examination,
trans
pp
595-596-597,
599-600
and
605;
see
in
Exhibit
1-7
the
financial
report
of
Couillard
Entreprises
(Division
Domiciliaire)
Inc
at
December
1,
1967,
statement
of
income
and
expenditure
from
April
1,
1966
to
March
31,
1967,
income:
sale
of
lands,
$141,226;
sale
of
buildings,
$990,000;
and
comments
in
this
connection
by
J
P
Ruel,
trans
pp
392-393,
and
in
cross-examination,
trans
pp
628
and
635-636;
and
for
Immeubles
des
Seigneurs
Inc
see
comments
in
this
connection
by
J
P
Ruel,
in
cross-examination,
trans
pp
649-650).
Several
repeated
offers
from
serious
buyers
capable
of
making
such
purchases,
were
made
for
one
or
other
of
the
three
housing
complexes,
and
were
immediately
refused
by
the
shareholders
of
the
three
companies,
who
wished
to
retain
these
projects
as
investments;
of
these
offers,
the
following
may
be
noted:
(a)
Paul
Morin
offered
on
several
occasions
to
buy
the
buildings
on
one
or
other
of
the
three
housing
complexes
but
his
offers
were
categorically
refused,
Rolland
Couillard
even
adding
“I’m
keeping
it
for
my
old
age”
(t
of
Paul
Morin,
trans
pp
746-747,
749-750
and
752,
and
in
cross-
examination,
pp
756-757;
t
of
J
P
Ruel,
trans
pp
1326-1327);
(b)
Paul
Laberge
offered
to
buy
the
Immeubles
des
Seigneurs
complex
but
his
offer
was
rejected
by
Rolland
Couillard
(t
of
Paul
Laberge,
trans
pp
939-940,
and
in
cross-examination,
p
967;
t
of
J
P
Ruel,
trans
p
1327);
(c)
Gaston
Paradis
made
an
offer
to
purchase
the
Jardins
des
Seigneurs
complex,
and
this
offer
was
also
peremptorily
refused
(t
of
Gaston
Paradis,
trans
pp
1274-1275,
and
in
cross-examination,
pp
1280
and
1282-
1283;
t
of
J
P
Ruel,
trans
pp
1327-1328);
(d)
when
he
visited
Quebec
City
in
1972,
William
Boyd
indicated
that
he
was
interested
in
purchasing
one
or
other
of
the
three
housing
complexes
for
Headway
Corporation
Ltd
and
his
verbal
offers
were
refused
on
the
spot
(t
of
William
Boyd,
trans
p
1120-1121,
and
in
cross-
examination,
trans
pp
1147
and
1158;
t
of
J
P
Ruel,
trans
pp
1328-1329);
(e)
groups
of
professionals
also
made
purchase
offers
which
were
refused
(t
of
J
P
Ruel,
trans
pp
357-358);
(f)
finally,
Henri
Paquet
made
an
offer
for
Jardins
des
Seigneurs
which
was
refused
(t
of
Henri
Paquet,
trans
pp
900-909).
5.02.23
The
three
housing
complexes
were
administered
by
Société
Beaufort
Inc
(t
of
J
P
Ruel,
in
cross-examination,
p
656).
The
income
for
administering
the
said
housing
complexes
enabled
Société
Beaufort
Inc
to
pay
the
premiums
on
insurance
policies
obtained
on
the
lives
of
the
three
shareholders,
so
that
in
the
event
of
the
death
of
any
one
of
them
Société
Beaufort
Inc
would
have
sufficient
liquidity
from
the
proceeds
of
the
insurnace
to
purchase
the
shares
of
the
deceased
individual.
Additionally,
the
three
shareholders
had
signed
an
agreement
to
this
effect
(see
the
purchase-sale
agreement
of
August
19,
1969,
Exhibit
A-24).
Rolland
Couillard
was
not
a
shareholder
of
Société
Beaufort
Inc
(t
of
J
P
Ruel,
trans
p
397).
5.02.24
On
May
13,
1969,
Immeubles
Versant
Nord
Inc
was
incorporated
(Exhibit
A-19),
on
May
20,
1969,
Immeubles
Côteau-Lévis
Inc
(Exhibit
A-21),
and
finally
on
November
5,
1970,
Place
Prévet
Inc
(Exhibit
A-24)
.
.
.
Jardins
de
Merici
Inc
was
incorporated
in
1972
(or
rather
in1971
;
t
of
J
P
Ruel,
trans
p
614).
Between
1972
and
1975
Rolland
Couillard
and
his
sons
held
50%
of
the
capital
stock,
Jean
Pierre
Ruel
25%
and
Claude
Ruel
25%.
This
company
built
a
housing
complex
known
as
“Les
Jardins
Merici”.
In
June
1975,
Mr
Rolland
Couillard
and
his
sons
sold
their
shares
to
Mr
Rolland
Couillard’s
nephews
(see
t
of
J
P
Ruel,
trans
p
1335).
as
will
be
explained
below.
5.02.25
In
1971
Rolland
Couillard
and
the
Ruel
brothers
were
desirous
of
buying,
through
a
company,
a
vacant
piece
of
land
owned
by
the
Frères
des
Ecoles
Chrétiennes.
However,
the
property
of
the
Frères
des
Ecoles
Chrétiennes
also
included
a
juvenate
and
the
land
underlying
this
juvenate
(hereinafter
referred
to
as
“the
juvenate”).
Rolland
Couillard
and
the
Ruel
brothers
would
have
preferred
to
purchase
only
the
vacant
land
without
the
juvenate,
but
the
Frères
des
Ecoles
Chrétiennes
would
not
have
sold
the
vacant
land
without
that
of
the
juvenate.
This
is
why,
after
negotiations
lasting
from
six
to
eight
months,
a
company
incorporated
on
July
9,
1971,
Domaine
du
Versant
Inc,
bought
the
juvenate,
while
another
company
Gouil-
lard
Entreprises
(Division
Construction)
Inc,
bought
the
vacant
land.
These
two
purchases
were
made
on
the
same
day,
namely
January
14,
1972,
the
deed
of
sale
of
the
juvenate
being
signed
first
(see
t
of
J
P
Ruel,
trans
pp
567-571,
622-625
and
1318-1320;
t
of
Br
Desjardins,
trans
pp
995-1002).
The
purchase
of
the
juvenate
by
Domaine
du
Versant
Inc
was
made
with
the
intent
of
reselling
it
as
quickly
as
possible,
or
failing
that,
of
converting
it
into
buildings
subsidized
by
the
federal
government
(t
of
J
P
Ruel,
trans
p
1320).
5.02.26
In
the
spring
of
1972,
Domaine
du
Versant
Inc
had
found
a
purchaser
for
its
only
asset,
the
juvenate,
and
expected
to
make
a
significant
profit.
After
consulting
with
their
tax
adviser,
the
shareholders
decided
for
tax
planning
purposes
to
merge
Domaine
du
Versant
Inc
as
well,
so
that
they
could
apply
the
capital
cost
allowance
taken
on
the
three
housing
complexes
against
the
taxable
profit
resulting
from
the
sale
of
the
juvenate
(t
of
J
P
Ruel,
trans
pp
1341-1342).
5.02.27
In
the
spring
of
1972,
following
repeated
requests
from
their
bank,
and
to
faciliate
their
administration,
Rolland
Couillard
and
the
Ruel
brothers
decided
to
merge
the
companies
whose
projects
had
begun
to
be
profitable
(t
of
J
P
Ruel,
trans
pp
608-609,
611
and
1339-1340,
and
in
cross-
examination,
pp
1483-1484).
On
this
basis,
it
was
agreed
to
merge
Couillard
Entreprises
Inc,
Couillard
Entreprises
(Division
Domiciliaire)
Inc
and
Immeubles
des
Seigneurs
Inc,
the
sole
assets
of
which
at
this
time
were
the
three
housing
projects.
On
June
29,
1972
Couillard
Entreprises
Inc,
Couillard
Entreprises
(Division
Domiciliaire)
Inc,
Immeubles
des
Seigneurs
Inc
and
Domaine
du
Versant
Inc
were
merged
into
a
single
company
known
as
Couillard
Entreprises
Inc
(see
Exhibit
A-47,
and
the
division
of
shares
between
the
shareholders
remained
the
same,
namely
Rolland
Couillard
80%
and
the
Ruel
brothers
20%.
In
fact,
until
1974
Rolland
Couillard
held
80%
of
the
issued
shares
in
all
the
companies
mentioned
below,
Jean-Pierre
Ruel
10%
and
Claude
Ruel
10%:
(a)
Couillard
Entreprises
Inc;
(b)
Domiciliaire;
(c)
Immeubles
des
Seigneurs
Inc;
(d)
Domaine;
(e)
Construction;
(f)
Versant-Nord;
(g)
Coteau-Levis;
(h)
Prévert;
(i)
Entrepôt
Colbert
Inc.
Mr
Roland
Couillard
controlled
Maritime.
The
reason
given
for
this
multiplicity
of
companies
was
twofold:
first,
to
minimize
the
risks,
and
second,
to
simplify
administration.
The
purposes
of
Couillard
Entreprises
Inc
were
primarily:
(a)
the
construction,
purchase,
improvement,
administration
and
rental
of
real
and
personal
property
for
investment
purposes,
and
(b)
the
construction,
repair,
improvement,
purchase,
sale
and
development
of
real
and
personal
property
(see
Exhibit
A-47,
para
5.0).
The
purposes
mentioned
in
paragraph
(a)
covered
the
holding
for
investment
of
the
housing
complexes
Jardins
des
Seigneurs,
Place
des
Seigneurs
and
Immeubles
des
Seigneurs,
while
the
purposes
mentioned
in
paragraph
(b)
applied
to
the
sale
of
the
juvenate
(t
of
J
P
Ruel,
trans
pp
1344-1345).
5.02.28
Couillard
Entreprises
Inc
in
fact
subsequently
sold
the
juvenate
and
realized
a
profit
of
$432,267.00.
This
profit
was
deliberately
reported
as
business
profit
(t
of
J
P
Ruel,
trans
pp
570-571,
623-624,
1342
and
1345).
5.02.29
Jardins
de
Merici
Inc
was
incorporated
in
1971.
The
shareholders
in
this
company
at
that
time
were
Rolland
Couillard
and
his
sons
(50%)
and
Jean-Pierre
and
Claude
Ruel
(50%).
Jardins
de
Merici
Inc
began
the
construction
of
a
housing
complex
known
as
“Jardins
de
Merici”
in
the
spring
of
1972.
The
first
units
were
ready
for
occupancy
in
May
1973.
The
initial
cost
of
the
project
was
$7,500,000.
Work
was
completed
late
in
1975
and
the
actual
cost
of
the
project
was
$13,000,000
(t
of
J
P
Ruel,
trans
pp
1329-
1330).
5.02.30
Still
in
1972,
the
Société
en
Commandite
Couillard
et
Ruel
No
2,
owned
by
Rolland
Couillard
and
his
sons
(50%)
and
Jean-Pierre
and
Claude
Ruel
(50%),
began
construction
of
a
building
which,
according
to
the
original
design,
was
to
be
used
as
both
a
shopping
centre
and
an
office
building.
The
first
shops
were
ready
for
occupancy
in
May
1974.
The
initial
cost
of
the
project
was
$4,000,000,
and
the
actual
cost
of
the
project
was
$5,300,000
(t
of
J
P
Ruel,
trans
pp
1331-1338).
It
should
be
noted
that
part
of
the
vacant
land
purchased
by
Couillard
Entreprises
(Division
Construction)
Inc
from
the
Frères
des
Ecoles
Chrétiennes
was
sold
to
the
Société
en
Commandite
Couillard
et
Ruel
No
2
for
the
purposes
of
building
the
Centre
Innovation
on
it
(t
of
J
P
Ruel,
trans
p
625).
5.02.31
All
the
companies
in
which
Messrs
Ruel
and
Couillard
were
shareholders
had
a
single
bank
account
(t
of
J
P
Ruel,
trans
pp
365,
486,
557
and
561)
.
All
the
administrative
staff
except
for
Rolland
Couillard
were
part
of
the
Société
Beaufort
Inc
(t
of
J
P
Ruel,
trans
p
558).
The
head
office
of
all
these
businesses
was
at
1198
rue
Colbert
in
Ste-Foy
(t
of
J
P
Ruel,
trans
p
562)
.
All
these
companies
filed
consolidated
financial
statements
(t
of
J
P
Ruel,
trans
p
609).
The
shareholders
had
given
their
personal
guarantees
for
each
of
the
loans
contracted
by
one
or
other
of
the
companies
(t
of
J
P
Ruel,
trans
p
610).
In
all
these
companies,
Mr
Jean-Pierre
Ruel
occupied
the
position
of
secretary-treasurer,
Mr
Claude
Ruel
the
position
of
vice-president
and
Mr
Rolland
Couillard
the
position
of
president
(t
of
J
P
Ruel,
trans
p
556).
It
is
clear
that
Rolland
Couillard
was
the
brains
and
the
prime
mover
in
all
these
companies
(t
of
J
P
Ruel,
trans
pp
494,
502,
556
and
562).
5.02.32
In
January
1973
Rolland
Couillard,
utterly
disgusted
by
the
municipal
and
school
tax
increases
in
the
Quebec
City
region,
and
anticipating
harmful
consequences
for
building
owners
and
tenants
as
a
result,
publicly
attacked
this
state
of
affairs,
which
he
regarded
as
dangerous
(t
of
J
P
Ruel,
trans
pp
506
and
508).
He
caused
to
be
published
a
manifesto
with
the
heading:
“We
are
forming
a
fifth
government
to
stop
the
madness
of
the
parasites
who
are
plundering
our
property
and
driving
up
taxes”
(see
Exhibit
A-34).
On
about
January
13,
1973
he
officially
launched
his
movement,
which
he
called
the
Association
des
Payeurs
de
Taxes
du
Québec
[Quebec
taxpayers’
association].
On
February
2,
1973
the
Association
des
Payeurs
de
Taxes
du
Québec
was
incorporated
under
Part
III
of
the
Companies
Act
(see
Exhibit
A-35).
Between
January
1973
and
June
19,
1973
Rolland
Couillard
was
involved
in
various
activities
designed
to
promote
the
cause
supported
by
the
Association
des
Payeurs
de
Taxes
du
Québec
(see
the
list
of
these
activities
in
Exhibit
A-56).
During
this
period,
he
was
concerned
only
with
promoting
the
Association
(t
of
Rosaire
Tremblay,
trans
p
198),
and
completely
gave
up
all
other
activities,
including
those
concerning
building
projects
under
construction
at
the
Jardins
de
Merici
and
Centre
Innovation
(t
of
J
P
Ruel,
trans
pp
509,
1348
and
1428-1429).
He
stated
publicly
that
he
would
build
no
more
buildings
(t
of
Remi
Blais,
trans
p
1259;
t
of
Rosaiare
Tremblay,
trans
p
1107;
t
of
J
P
Ruel,
trans
p
1350).
Additionally,
on
March
13,
1973
he
told
a
seminar
at
the
Auberge
des
Gouverneurs:
Five
days
before
the
launching
of
this
non-profit
body,
the
Association
des
Payeurs
de
Taxes
du
Québec,
that
is,
from
January
1
of
this
year,
I
gave
up
this
attractive
career
.
.
.
I
repeat,
and
I
wish
to
state
once
and
for
all,
that
I
ceased
to
be
a
building
contractor
on
January
1,
1973.
At
this
time
my
assistants
are
concluding
the
projects
in
which
I
was
involved
prior
to
this
year;
but
the
building
contractor
career
of
your
speaker
is
over,
finished,
a
thing
of
the
past.
.
.
(See
Exhibit
A-57,
pp
1-2).
He
was
pessimistic
and
predicted
that
building
owners
would
be
going
into
bankruptcy
(t
of
Carol
Coulombe,
trans
p
1010;
t
of
Paul
Laberge,
trans
p
945).
The
aims
pursued
by
the
Association
were
so
important
to
him
that
he
could
not
be
persuaded
not
to
pursue
them
within
the
Association,
and
reacted
in
a
manner
that
was
to
say
the
least
“categorical”
(t
of
Paul
Laberge,
trans
pp
944-945);
t
of
Rémi
Blais,
trans
pp
1262-1263).
The
Association
hired
four
employees:
Gaston
Roussel,
Pauline
Lagacé,
Lisette
d’Amours
and
Rosaire
Tremblay.
Rouland
Couillard’s
attitude
was
against
his
own
financial
interests
at
this
time,
provoked
criticism
from
financial
institutions
and
municipalities
(t
of
J
P
Ruel,
trans
pp
1352-1353,
and
in
cross-examination,
trans
p
1448),
and
contributed
to
creating
a
difficult
working
atmosphere
in
the
office,
as
the
Association
had
installed
its
offices
there
(t
of
J
P
Ruel,
trans
p
1354).
These
facts
led
to
arguments
between
Rolland
Couillard
and
the
Ruel
brothers.
In
June
1973
it
seemed
apparent
that
the
Association
had
not
received
the
support
Rolland
Couillard
had
expected.
The
movement
died
away
and
Rolland
Couillard
reluctantly
decided
to
terminate
the
activities
of
the
Association
on
June
19,
1973.
He
undertook
to
personally
absorb
the
difference
between
the
Association’s
income
and
its
expenditure,
an
amount
of
$28,790.02
(see
Exhibit
A-58),
statement
of
income
and
expenditure
to
June
30,
1973,
trustee’s
report).
5.02.33
Rolland
Couillard
was
an
“extremely
disappointed”
man
(t
of
Rosaire
Tremblay,
trans
P
113),
“disheartened”
(t
of
Remis
Blais,
trans
p
1265),
“very
discouraged
and
aggressive”
(t
of
Lisette
d’Amours,
trans
p
1290—),
“greatly
upset”
(t
of
J
P
Ruel,
trans
p
1369,
and
in
cross-examination,
trans
p
1444).
He
even
subsequently
took
up
drinking
(t
of
J
P
Ruel,
in
cross-
examination,
trans
pp
1443-1444).
5.02.34
After
the
construction
break
in
August
1973,
Rolland
Couillard
and
the
Ruel
brothers
had
a
meeting
which
developed
into
a
furious
argument
and
during
which,
in
the
heat
of
the
discussion
each
offered
to
sell
the
other
his
share.
These
purchase
offers
were
refused
all
around
(t
of
J
P
Ruel,
trans
pp
511
and
1354-1356).
The
day
after
this
discussion,
Jean-Pierre
Ruel
met
with
the
Mercantile
Bank
manager
and
told
him
that
the
Ruel
brothers
were
breaking
up
with
Rolland
Couillard.
The
latter
organized
a
meeting
with
Rolland
Couillard
and
the
Ruel
brothers
for
the
following
day.
At
that
meeting,
he
told
Rolland
Couillard
he
was
calling
in
a
demand
loan
of
$1,800,000
if
the
Ruel
brothers
broke
with
him.
Rolland
Couillard
assured
him
that
the
atmosphere
would
improve
(t
of
J
P
Ruel,
trans
pp
1357-1358).
5.02.35
The
atmosphere
subsequently
became
highly
charged.
Rolland
Couillard
and
the
Ruel
Brothers
agreed
in
September
1973
to
part
company
by
any
means
possible
(t
of
J
P
Ruel,
trans
pp
1358-1359).
However,
at
the
time
neither
Rolland
Couillard
nor
the
Ruel
brothers
had
the
liquidity
needed
to
buy
back
the
other’s
shares
(t
of
J
P
Ruel,
trans
pp
1359
and
1363,
and
in
cross-examination,
pp
1458-1459
and
1469-1470).
5.02.36
At
the
end
of
1973
William
Boyd
investigated
the
possibility
of
purchasing
other
properties
for
Headway
Corporation
Ltd.
Rolland
Couillard
appeared
to
him
to
be
a
despondent
man
who
wished
to
liquidate
everything
and
retire
(t
of
William
Boyd,
trans
pp
1122-1123,
and
in
cross-examination,
trans
pp
1159-1161;
t
of
J
P
Ruel,
trans
pp
1368-1369).
William
Boyd
made
an
offer
for
the
three
housing
complexes,
negotiations
lasted
about
ten
days,
and
Rolland
Couillard
and
the
Ruel
brothers
finally
agreed
to
sell
him
the
shares
of
Couillard
Entreprises
Inc
for
$3,080,000
(t
of
William
Boyd,
trans
pp
1123-1124,
and
in
cross-examination,
trans
pp
1163,
1166
and
1168).
5.02.37
The
sellers
preferred
to
sell
the
shares
of
Couillard
Entreprises
Inc
rather
than
the
three
housing
complexes,
so
as
to
facilitate
the
ending
of
their
relationship,
as
each
would
then
receive
his
share
of
the
proceeds
of
the
sale
directly
(t
of
J
P
Ruel,
trans
pp
1372-1373
and
in
cross-examination,
trans
p
1489).
5.02.38
According
to
Mr
J
P
Ruel,
without
the
earlier
quarrel
and
the
resulting
intention
to
go
their
separate
ways,
the
sellers
would
not
have
sold
and
would
have
retained
ownership
of
these
three
housing
complexes
(t
of
J
P
Ruel,
trans
pp
800-802
and
1492;
t
of
C
Ruel,
trans
pp
825-826).
The
sale
indeed
surprised
people
who
knew
of
Rolland
Couillard’s
attachment
to
his
three
“pilot
projects”
(t
of
Paul
Laberge,
trans
pp
937,
978
and
989).
5.02.39
Moreover,
the
sellers
accepted
a
price
some
$500,000
below
what
they
felt
was
the
fair
value
of
these
three
housing
complexes
(t
of
J
P
Ruel,
trans
pp
1374
and
1480).
The
resale
by
Headway
Corporation
Ltd
to
a
subsidiary
of
Fidinam
Inc
indeed
confirmed
this
valuation,
since
Headway
Corporation
made
a
profit
of
$750,000
from
the
deal
(t
of
William
Boyd,
trans
pp
1135-1139).
5.02.40
For
the
purposes
of
this
resale,
Rolland
Couillard
had
to
provide
the
affidavit
filed
as
Exhibit
A-55.
The
respondent
objected
to
the
filing
of
this
affidavit
as
Exhibit
A-55
on
the
ground
that
it
was
a
domestic
paper.
The
Board
allowed
the
document
to
be
filed
and
reserved
judgment
on
the
matter.
This
decision
dismissing
the
objection
is
explained
below
(see
para
7.04.1.B).
A
careful
reading
of
this
affidavit
indicated
that
Rolland
Couillard
regarded
the
three
housing
complexes
as
investments.
5.02.41
Rolland
Couillard
personally
obtained
$2,400,000
for
the
sale
of
Couillard
Entreprises
Inc
shares.
He
invested
the
proceeds
of
the
sale
as
follows:
$1,370,000
|
in
Entrepôts
Colbert
Inc
|
300,000
|
in
X
Béton
Inc
|
300,000
|
in
Jardins
de
Merici
Inc
|
530,000
|
for
other
purposes
|
(t
of
Gilles
Béland,
trans
p
1199;
t
of
J
P
Ruel,
trans
p
1467).
5.02.42
The
debt
held
by
Rolland
Couillard
against
X
Béton
Inc
was
subsequently
assigned
and
the
resulting
loss
was
reported
and
treated
as
a
capital
loss.
Similarly,
following
his
death
Rolland
Couillard
realized
a
capital
loss
on
the
debt
owed
by
Entrepôts
Colbert
Inc
(t
of
Gilles
Béland,
trans
pp
1197-1198
and
1218-1219).
The
shares
held
by
Rolland
Couillard
in
the
capital
stock
of
Couillard
Entreprises
Inc,
Couillard
Entreprises
(Division
Domiciliaire)
Inc,
Immeubles
des
Seigneurs
Inc
and
the
company
resulting
from
their
merger,
Couillard
Entreprises
Inc,
were
shown
on
his
personal
financial
statements
as
investments,
so
as
to
indicate
clearly
that
these
were
investments
for
Rolland
Couillard
(see
Exhibit
I-26;
t
of
Léopold
Marotte,
trans
pp
1069-1071).
5.02.43
Except
in
the
process
of
dissolving
his
ties
with
the
Ruel
brothers,
Rolland
Couillard
did
not
make
a
profit
on
selling
the
shares
of
his
private
corporations
(t
of
Léopold
Marotte,
trans
p
1080).
5.02.44
After
the
sale
of
the
shares
of
Couillard
Entreprises
Inc,
Rolland
Couillard
and
the
Ruel
brothers
continued
the
separation
process
which
they
had
begun:
in
February
1974
the
Ruel
brothers
installed
their
office
in
the
Centre
Innovation
(t
of
J
P
Ruel,
trans
pp
1361
and
1367);
the
Ruel
brothers
purchased
the
shares
of
Rolland
Couillard
and
his
sons
in
the
Centre
Innovation
in
December
1974
and
their
shares
in
Jardins
de
Merici
Inc
on
June
4,
1975
(t
of
J
P
Ruel,
trans
pp
1337
and
1376).
This
purchase
was
made
with
the
aid
of
a
bank
loan
(t
of
J
P
Ruel,
trans
p
1453).
The
Ruel
brothers
returned
to
Rolland
Couillard
the
shares
they
held
in
the
other
companies
in
the
group
for
$1
(t
of
J
P
Ruel,
trans
pp
346-347);
on
June
5,
1975
Rolland
Couillard
and
the
Ruel
brothers
finally
broke
all
ties
and
never
saw
each
other
again.
5.02.45
On
April
30,
1959
Rolland
Couillard
purchased
a
property
known
as
Le
Murray
(t
of
Gilles
Beland,
trans
p
1203;
Exhibit
A-59).
Rolland
Couillard
retained
ownership
of
his
property,
which
he
regarded
as
an
investment,
for
fifteen
years,
and
during
these
years,
when
appropriate,
he
took
the
capital
cost
allowances
for
the
building.
On
December
31,
1970
Rolland
Couillard
had
taken
$32,824
in
capital
cost
allowances
for
Le
Murray
(Exhibit
1-26),
note
prepared
by
the
appraiser
A
S
Blouin
on
June
20,
1974).
5.02.46
In
1969
Rolland
Couillard
purchased
two
properties
known
as
Le
Bourgogne
and
Manoir
Lévis
(t
of
Gilles
Béland,
trans
p
1206).
Rolland
Couillard
retained
ownership
of
Le
Bourgogne
and
Manoir
Lévis
for
six
and
five
years
respectively,
and
during
those
years,
when
appropriate,
he
took
the
capital
cost
allowances
for
the
buildings.
On
December
31,
1970
Rolland
Couillard
had
taken
$82,578
and
$149,526
as
capital
cost
allowances
for
Le
Bourgogne
and
Manoir
Lévis
respectively
(Exhibit
1-26,
note
prepared
by
the
appraiser
A
S
Blouin
on
June
20,
1974).
5.02.47
In
1969
Rolland
Couillard
purchased
a
property
referred
to
as
Desjardins
(that
is,
Place
Versailles
located
on
rue
Desjardins
in
Lévis,
next
to
the
Manoir
Levis
—
t
of
Gilles
Beland,
trans
p
1206).
Rolland
Couillard
retained
ownership
of
Desjardins
for
four
years,
and
during
these
years,
when
appropriate,
he
took
the
capital
cost
allowance
on
the
building.
On
December
31,
1970
Rolland
Couillard
had
taken
$103,294
in
capital
cost
allowances
for
Desjardins
(Exhibit
I-26,
note
prepared
by
the
appraiser
A
S
Blouin
on
June
20,
1974).
5.02.48
On
September
18,
1973
Rolland
Couillard
disposed
of
the
Desjardins
and
Manoir
Lévis
properties
to
Laurentide
Motels
Ltd
(see
Exhibit
A-
48).
On
March
27,
1974
Rolland
Couillard
disposed
of
the
Le
Murray
property
to
Messrs
Gaston,
Marcel,
Pierre
and
Bertrand
Florent
(see
Exhibit
A-60).
On
June
13,
1974
Rolland
Couillard
disposed
of
the
Le
Bourgogne
property
to
Headway
Builders
(Sault)
Limited
(see
Exhibit
A-49).
5.02.49
These
sales
occurred
during
a
period
when
Rolland
Couillard
was
pessimistic
and
expected
that,
because
of
increases
in
costs,
and
in
particu-
lar
in
municipal
and
school
taxes,
building
owners
were
going
to
lose
everything.
They
were
therefore
the
acts
of
a
property
owner
who
preferred
to
realize
on
his
investments
rather
than
being
subject
to
serious
financial
problems
(t
of
Paul
Laberge,
trans
pp
945-946;
t
of
Léopold
Marotte,
trans
pp
1081-1082).
Rolland
Couillard
clearly
told
William
Boyd
in
1974:
“I
am
going
to
sell
everything
I
own
and
go
to
my
summer
camp
in
the
bush”
(
t
of
William
Boyd,
trans
p
1122).
This
wish
to
withdraw
from
the
real
estate
business
also
resulted
from
the
crushing
failure
of
the
Association
des
Payeurs
de
Taxes
de
Québec
(t
of
Paul
Laberge
in
cross-examination,
trans
pp
978-979),
a
failure
which
had
a
considerable
effect
on
Rolland
Couillard
(see
paras
5.02.33
and
5.02.36
hereof).
It
should
also
be
noted
that
the
violent
quarrel
between
Rolland
Couillard
and
the
Ruel
brothers
was
at
its
height
at
this
time.
5.02.50
The
sale
of
the
Le
Bourgogne
property
resulted
from
an
offer
made
through
William
Boyd
to
Rolland
Couillard.
Rolland
Couillard
undertook
no
canvassing
to
sell
this
property
and
did
not
seek
the
assistance
of
a
broker
(t
of
William
Boyd,
trans
pp
1141-1142).
The
Le
Murray,
Le
Bourgogne,
Desjardins
and
Manoir
Lévis
properties
were
entered
in
the
financial
statements
of
Rolland
Couillard
as
fixed
assets
(see
Exhibit
1-26).
5.02.51
On
November
12,
1977
Mr
Rolland
Couillard
died.
In
his
will,
dated
October
8,
1969,
he
bequeathed
all
his
apartment
properties
to
his
children.
Clauses
7.0
and
7.1
read
as
follows:
7.0
I
bequeath
to
my
children
in
equal
shares
in
universal
title
all
the
apartment
properties
I
shall
own
at
the
time
of
my
death,
subject
to
the
mortgages,
liens
and
other
rights
that
may
encumber
the
said
properties.
7.1
No
division
of
the
apartment
properties
shall
take
place
before
the
oldest
of
my
children
has
attained
the
age
of
twenty-five.
Following
the
assessment
on
the
properties
Mr
Couillard,
having
occasion
to
consult
his
will
and
having
reread
paragraph
7.0,
wrote
in
the
margin:
“Proof
that
these
were
to
bekept:
RC”.
6.
Act
—
case
law
6.01
Act
The
provisions
of
the
Income
Tax
Act
involved
in
the
case
at
bar
are
sections
3,
9,
248
(“business”),
subsection
69(1)
and
paragraph
149(1)(n).
These
sections
will
be
cited
where
necessary
in
the
course
of
the
comments.
6.02
Case
Law
1.
Place
des
Soeurs
Inc
v
MNR,
[1978]
CTC
3188;
78
DTC
1862;
2.
Roy
M
Power
v
HMQ,
[1975]
CTC
580;
77
DTC
5388;
3.
HMQ
v
Harold
Borinsky,
[1977]
CTC
570;
77
DTC
5389;
4.
R
RWS
S
Johnston
v
MNR,
[1948]
CTC
195;
3
DTC
1182;
5.
MNR
v
Pillsbury
Holdings
Limited,
[1964]
CTC
294;
64
DTC
5184;
6
.
Nathaniel
C
Brewster
v
HMQ,
[1976]
CTC
107;
76
DTC
6046;
7.
David
Tobias
v
HMQ,
[1978]
CTC
113;
78
DTC
6028;
8.
Hiwako
Investments
Limited
v
HMQ,
[1978]
CTC
378;
78
DTC
6281;
9.
Joseph
Friedman
v
MNR,
[1977]
CTC
2611;
78
DTC
1020;
10.
S
&
S
Properties
Ltd
v
HMQ,
[
1978]
CTC
412;
78
DTC
6294;
11.
Clemow
Realty
Limited
v
HMQ,
[1976]
CTC
129;76
DTC
6094;
12.
Foreign
Power
Securities
Corporation
Limited
v
MNR,
[1966]
CTC
23;
66
DTC
5012,
[1967]
CTC
116;
67
DTC
5084;
13.
Bead
Realties
Limited
v
MNR,
[1971]
CTC
774;
71
DTC
5453;
14.
HMQ
v
Stanfold
Investment
Corporation,
[1974]
CTC
19;
74
DTC
6035;
15.
Harvey
Kagna
v
MNR,
[1974]
CTC
275;
74
DTC
6221;
16.
Branlyn
Management
Ltd
v
HMQ,
[1974]
CTC
579;
74
DTC
6471;
17.
Parkview
Manor
Ltd
v
MNR,
[1974]
CTC
402;
74
DTC
6311;
18.
Irrigation
Industries
Ltd
v
MNR,
[1962]
CTC
215;
62
DTC
1131;
19.
MNR
v
Valclair
Investment
Company
Limited,
[1964]
CTC
22;
64
DTC
5014;
20.
Ronald
Francis
Theres
Maclsaac
v
MNR,
[1974]
CTC
576;
74
DTC
6380,
21.
Hans
Reicher
v
HMQ,
[1975]
CTC
659;
76
DTC
6001;
22.
Elgin
Cooper
Realties
Ltd
v
MNR,
[1969]
CTC
598;
69
DTC
5276;
23.
T
K
Sales
Ltd
v
MNR,
[1973]
CTC
340;
73
DTC
5284;
24.
Tara
Exploration
and
Development
Company
Limited
v
MNR,
[1970]
CTC
557;
70
DTC
6370;
25.
Allfine
Bowlerama
Limited
v
MNR,
[1972]
CTC
2603;
72
DTC
1502;
26.
Royal
Victoria
Hospital
et
al
v
Mary
Morrow,
[1974]
SCR
501;
27.
Lloyd
v
Powell
Duffryn
Steam
Coal
Company
Limited,
[1914]
AC
733;
28.
Libero
Pella
v
MNR,
35
Tax
ABC
100;
64
DTC
240;
29.
Les
Meubles
de
Maskinongé
Inc
et
al
v
MNR,
79
DTC
66;
30.
Ronald
K
Fraser
v
MNR,
[1964]
CTC
372;
64
DTC
5224;
31.
Gordon
S
Shipp
et
al
v
MNR,
[1967]
CTC
330;
67
DTC
5222;
32.
MNR
v
Joichi
G
Kato
et
al,
[1969]
CTC
492;
69
DTC
5308;
33.
Guy
Dumas
v
MNR,
[1978]
CTC
2961;
78
DTC
1704;
34.
Hazeldean
Farm
Company
Limited
v
MNR,
[1966]
CTC
607;
66
DTC
5397;
35.
Stefan
Jachimowicz
v
MNR,
[1976]
CTC
2309;
76
DTC
1241
[1977]
CTC
162;
77
DTC
5148;
36.
Atwater
Western
Corporation
v
MNR,
[1970]
CTC
472;
70
DTC
6312;
37.
Investors
Leaseholds
Limited
v
MNR,
[1976]
CTC
2211;
76
DTC
1163;
38.
Victor
Ross
v
MNR,
[1973]
CTC
22;
73
DTC
5060;
39.
J
I
C
Developments
Limited
v
MNR,
[1978]
CTC
2992;
78
DTC
1708;
40.
Yves
Cloutier
v
HMQ,
[1978]
CTC
702;
78
DTC
6485;
41.
Cyrus
C
Udell
v
MNR,
[1969]
CTC
704;
70
DTC
6019;
42.
MNR
v
Donald
M
Weeks,
[1972]
CTC
60;
72
DTC
6001;
43.
Kensington
Land
Developments
Ltd
v
HMQ,
[1976]
CTC
783;
77
DTC
5011;
44.
Nicholas
De
Toro
v
MNR,
[1965]
CTC
321;
65
DTC
5194;
45.
Fredericton
Housing
Limited
v
HMQ,
[1975]
CTC
537;
75
DTC
5367;
46.
Joël
Inv
Corp
v
Le
Sous-Ministre
du
Revenu
de
la
Province
du
Québec,
[1977]
RDFQ
23;
47.
Gairdner
Securities
Ltd
v
MNR,
[1952]
CTC
371;
52
DTC
1171;
[1954]
CTC
24;
54
DTC
1015;
48.
Bel-Conn
Limited
v
MNR,
[1969]
CTC
1;
69
DTC
5026;
49.
Be-Vi
Investment
Corporation
v
HMQ,
[1975]
CTC
636;
75
DTC
5444;
50.
G
W
Golden
Construction
Limited
v
HMQ,
[1967]
CTC
111;
67
DTC
5080;
[1967]
TCS
302;
51.
Hersch
Fogel
v
MNR,
[1959]
CTC
227;
59
DTC
1182;
52.
Punjab
Co-Operative
Bank
v
In
Re
Amritsar
v
Income
Tax
Commissioner
Lahore,
[1940]
AC
1055;
53.
J
C
Oliver
v
Farnsworth,
37
TC
51;
94.
Granville
Building
Co
Ltd
v
Oxby,
35
TC
245;
55.
Hobson
&
Sons
Ltd
v
Newall,
37
TC
609;
56.
Anderson
Logging
Co
Ltd
v
Le
Roi,
[1925]
TCS
45;
57.
Miron
et
Frères
v
MNR,
[1955]
TCS
679;
58.
Johnston
v
MNR,
[1948]
SCR
486;
59.
Admiral
Investments
Ltd
v
MNR,
[1967]
CTC
165;
67
DTC
5114;
60.
First
Torland
Investments
Ltd
et
al
v
MNR,
[1969]
CTC
134;
69
DTC
5109;
61.
Sutton
Lumber
&
Trading
Company
Limited
v
MNR,
[1953]
SCR
77;
[1953]
CTC
237;
53
DTC
1158;
62.
Ben
Rosenblatt
v
MNR,
[1955]
CTC
323;
55
DTC
1205;
63.
Osler,
Hammond
&
Nanton
Limited
v
MNR,
[1960]
CTC
384;
60
DTC
1270;
64.
Regal
Heights
Limited
v
MNR,
[1960]
CTC
384;
60
DTC
1270;
65.
De
Salaberry
Realties
Limited
v
HMQ,
[1976]
CTC
656;
76
DTC
6408;
66.
Grand
Marais
Development
Company
v
MNR,
[1965]
CTC
486;
65
DTC
5286;
67.
HMQ
v
Alex
H
Dobroskay
et
al,
[1974]
CTC
260;
74
DTC
6158;
68.
Avram
Goldstein
v
MNR,
[1973]
CTC
51;
73
DTC
5088;
69.
Pierce
Investment
Corp
v
MNR,
[1974]
CTC
825;
74
DTC
6608;
70.
Pickford
&
Quickie,
(1927),
78
TC
257;
71.
Noak
v
MNR,
[1953]
2
SCR
136;
[1954]
CTC
6;
53
DTC
1212;
72.
Collins
&
The
Firth-Brearley
Stainless
Steel
Syndicate,
case
reversed
by
Court
of
Appeal),
(1925),
9
TC
520;
73.
California
Copper
Syndicate
v
Harris,
(1904)
5
TC
159.
7.
Analysis
7.01
Points
for
analysis
in
brief
Based
on
the
appeal
pleadings,
their
replies
and
the
evidence
presented,
the
Board
makes
the
following
analysis
and
draws
conclusions
on
the
following
points:
A.
Versant
Nord,
Coteau
Lévis
and
Place
Prévert
properties
(para
7.02)
1.
Are
the
three
companies
Coteau
Lévis,
Versant
Nord
and
Place
Prévert
limited-dividend
housing
companies
and
so
tax-exempt
(paragraph
7.02.1)?
2.
If
the
answer
to
this
question
is
in
the
negative,
it
becomes
necessary
to
establish
whether
the
profits
resulting
from
the
sales
are
capital
gains
or
business
profits
(para
7.02.2.1).
3.
If
business
income
is
involved,
it
becomes
necessary
to
decide
whether
paragraph
69(1
)(a)
applies,
and
if
it
does
what
the
fair
market
value
of
the
land
was
at
the
time
of
purchase.
B.
Couillard
Entreprises
(Division
Construction)
Inc
(para
7.03)
4.
It
will
be
necessary
to
decide
whether
paragraph
69(1
)(a)
applies
if
this
point
has
not
been
earlier
decided.
C.
Estate
Holland
Couillard
(para
7.04)
5.
Reply
to
three
objections
which
were
raised
at
the
hearing
(para
7.04.1).
6.
It
will
be
necessary
to
decide
whether
the
profits
resulting
from
the
sales
of
four
properties,
Desjardins,
Manoir
Levis
in
1973,
Le
Bourgogne
and
Le
Murray,
and
shares
in
Couillard
Entreprises
in
1974,
represent
capital
gains
or
business
income
(para
7.04.2).
7.
Additionally,
it
will
be
necessary
to
establish
whether
the
penalty
of
$5,188.32
should
be
upheld
(para
7.04.3).
7.02
Analysis
of
Versant
Nord,
Coteau
Levis
and
Place
Prévert
7.02.1
Are
these
appellants
limited-dividend
housing
companies
and
so
tax-
exempt?
The
appellants
Prévert,
Coteau
Lévis
and
Versant
Nord
contend,
alternatively,
that
they
were
at
all
times
limited-dividend
companies,
and
that
consequently
their
income
was
tax-exempt
under
the
provisions
of
paragraph
149(1
)(n)
of
the
Act,
which
states:
(1)
No
tax
is
payable
under
this
Part
upon
the
taxable
income
of
a
person
when
that
person
was
(n)
a
limited-dividend
housing
company
(within
the
meaning
of
that
expression
as
defined
in
the
National
Housing
Act);
Section
2
of
the
National
Housing
Act,
RSC
1970,
c
N-10,
SC
1953-1954,
c
1,
defines
a
limited-dividend
housing
company
as
follows:
means
a
company
incorporated
to
construct,
hold
and
manage
a
low-rental
housing
project,
the
dividends
payable
by
which
are
limited
by
the
terms
of
its
charter
or
instrument
of
incorporation
to
five
per
cent
per
annum
or
less;
(Emphasis
by
the
Board)
Counsel
for
the
three
appellant
companies
argued
in
essence
that
they
are
actually
limited-dividend
housing
companies,
since
the
Central
Mortgage
and
Housing
Corporation
made
loans
to
these
companies
under
a
loan
contract
(Exhibit
1-12).
In
the
conditional
clauses
of
the
said
contract,
it
is
clearly
indicated
that
the
Governor
in
Council
by
order
approved
a
loan
which
could
only
be
issued
to
a
limited-dividend
housing
company.
In
order
to
decide
whether
the
exemption
applies,
the
Board
must
consider
only
the
conditions
specified
by
the
Act.
The
first
condition
is
satisfied,
namely
that
this
is
a
low-rental
housing
company.
However,
the
letters
patent
do
not
contain
the
clause
specified
in
the
definition,
namely
that
“the
dividends
payable
.
.
.
are
limited
by
the
terms
of
its
charter
or
instrument
of
incorporation
to
five
per
cent
per
annum
or
less”.
These
are
the
legal
conditions
which
the
Board
must
consider,
not
whether
the
CMHC
loaned
them
money,
even
if
the
latter
condition
is
not
met.
The
principles
on
which
the
CMHC
is
administered
are
not
necessarily
the
principles
of
strict
interpretation
applicable
to
a
tribunal
responsible
for
interpreting
the
Act.
There
is
an
abundance
of
case
law
on
this
matter:
the
Board
refers
to
W
A
Sheaffer
Pen
Company
of
Canada
Limited
v
MNR,
[1953]
CTC
345;
53
DTC
1223.
In
that
case
Thorson,
J
of
the
Exchequer
Court
reviewed
the
earlier
decisions.
He
cited,
inter
alia,
W
J
Ritchie,
J
of
the
Supreme
Court
of
Canada
in
Wylie
v
City
of
Montreal,
[1885]
12
SCR
384,
at
386,
regarding
exempting
sections
as
in
the
case
at
bar:
I
am
quite
willing
to
admit
that
the
intention
to
exempt
must
be
expressed
in
clear
unambiguous
language;
that
taxation
is
the
rule
and
exemption
the
exemption,
and
therefore
to
be
strictly
construed.
In
the
case
at
bar,
the
definition
of
“limited-dividend
housing
company”
contained
in
the
exempting
paragraph
149(1
)(n)
is
very
clear.
The
evidence
is
equally
clear
that
the
appellants
do
not
meet
the
requirements
of
the
definition.
Indeed,
the
evidence
showed
that
not
only
do
the
appellants’
letters
patent
not
contain
the
clause
required
by
the
definition,
but
in
addition
Versant
Nord
even
caused
its
charter
to
be
amended
to
remove
this
five
per
cent
clause,
which
was
included
in
the
original
letters
patent.
The
Board
can
come
to
no
other
conclusion
than
that
the
three
appellants
Coteau
Lévis,
Versant
Nord
and
Place
Prévert
are
not
strictly
limited-dividend
housing
companies,
and
accordingly
that
their
income
is
not
exempt
under
the
Income
Tax
Act.
The
question
then
becomes
whether
the
profits
resulting
from
the
transactions
at
issue
are
capital
gains
or
business
profits.
7.02.2
Capital
gain
or
business
profit
7.02.2.1
Points
to
be
considered
The
chief
points
to
be
considered
in
determining
whether
the
profits
resulting
from
a
transaction
constitute
capital
gains
or
business
income
have
long
been
established
by
precedent:
the
nature
of
the
property;
the
intent
at
the
time
of
purchase;
the
number
and
frequency
of
similar
transactions;
the
taxpayer’s
activities;
the
circumstances
of
the
sale;
the
presumption
that
a
company
is
engaged
in
commerce.
7.02.3
The
nature
of
the
property
and
the
presumption
that
a
company
is
engaged
in
commerce
Certain
property,
such
as
comestibles
(fruits,
vegetables
and
so
on),
building
materials
(iron,
cement
and
so
on)
or
items
for
personal
or
industrial
use
(tools,
cleaner
and
so
on)
are
by
nature
commercial.
With
regard
to
these
items,
there
is
a
presumption
of
fact
that
they
are
purchased
for
resale
unless,
because
of
the
quantity
purchased
and
other
circumstances,
it
appears
that
they
were
purchased
for
consumption
and
personal
use
and
not
for
resale.
The
profit
resulting
from
the
resale
of
such
items
in
general
constitutes
business
income,
particularly
in
view
of
the
fact
that
under
the
Act,
the
word
“business”
includes
an
adventure
or
concern
in
the
nature
of
trade:
section
248.
Other
property,
such
as
real
estate,
collections
and
company
shares
are
more
in
the
nature
of
investments.
There
is
a
presumption
of
fact
that
they
are
purchased
for
the
long
term.
The
profit
resulting
from
the
resale
of
such
property
in
general
constitutes
a
capital
gain,
unless
the
circumstances
indicate
that
they
were
purchased
for
the
purpose
of
resale.
This
property,
if
owned
by
a
company,
constitutes
a
presumption
of
purchase
for
commercial
purposes,
especially
when
the
purposes
stated
in
the
letters
patent
of
the
company
include
transactions
in
the
nature
of
purchase
and
sale
of
the
items
concerned:
HMQ
v
MRT
Investments
Ltd,
[1976]
CTC
294;
76
DTC
6158;
this
presumption
may
however
be
rebutted
(Sutton
Lumber
&
Trading
Company
Limited
v
MNR,
[1953]
CTC
237;
53
DTC
1158).
In
Collins
&
The
Firth-Brearley
Stainless
Steel
Syndicate,
9
TC,
Rowlatt,
J
stated:
Now,
the
principle
I
think
is
very
clear
and
has
been
established
by
many
cases.
The
appreciation
of
an
article,
the
subject
of
property,
whether
it
is
the
property
of
an
individual
or
whether
it
is
the
property
of
a
company,
is
not
taxed
as
such;
but
it
is
taxed
if
the
realisation
of
that
appreciation
forms
part
of
a
trade,
because
then
the
trade
is
taxed,
and
this
is
an
item
in
the
trade.
That
is
all
there
is
in
the
principle.
In
the
case
at
bar,
real
property
is
certainly
involved
(and
hence
the
presumption
of
investment),
purchased
by
companies
the
principal
purpose
of
which
(see
Exhibits
A-21,
A-22
and
A-23)
is
the
purchase
and
sale
of
real
property
(presumption
of
commercial
operations).
However,
the
nature
of
an
asset
is
only
one
factor,
as
the
real
activities
of
the
taxpayer
and
the
quantity
purchased
are
also
significant
factors.
7.02.4
Activities
of
the
taxpayer
and
number
and
frequency
of
transactions
In
the
case
at
bar,
the
taxpayers
are
three
companies.
In
realty,
the
evidence
indicated
(testimony
of
Mr
Jean-Pierre
Ruel,
whose
credibility
was
not
impugned
by
the
respondent
and
whose
testimony
was
confirmed
by
the
financial
statements)
that
the
appellants
owned
two
classes
of
real
estate:
one
was
bought
(or
bought
and
built
upon)
for
the
purpose
of
resale,
and
formed
part
of
inventory;
profits
from
such
resale
were
reported
as
business
income;
the
other
was
purchased
for
investment
purposes.
The
profits
from
the
sale
of
the
first
class
were
used
to
finance
the
second
(trans
pp
359,
360,
563,
595-596,
605
and
635-636).
The
activities
of
the
shareholders
of
the
appellants,
Mr
Rolland
Couillard
and
the
Ruel
brothers,
also
cannot
be
ignored.
The
evidence
as
a
whole
shows
the
extent
to
which
they
have
been
involved
for
several
years
in
various
real
estate
transactions,
personally
as
well
as
in
the
capacity
of
shareholders
of
various
companies.
The
number
and
frequency
of
real
estate
transactions
in
this
regard
are
considerable,
especially
bearing
in
mind
that
most
of
the
companies
in
reality
bought
real
estate
for
resale
purposes,
and
reported
the
profits
on
sales
as
business
income.
The
same
is
true
of
the
transactions
carried
out
by
individual
shareholders
(para
5.02.27,
part
2).
These
similar
activities
and
numerous
transactions
cast
some
doubt
on
the
appellant’s
argument.
However,
it
should
not
be
forgotten
that
the
appellants
are
legal
persons
independent
of
the
shareholders,
nor
that
the
intentions
of
the
appellants
are
those
of
the
shareholders
and
officers:
C/R
v
Fisher’s
Executors,
[1926]
AC
395:
..
.
desires
and
intentions
are
things
of
which
a
company
is
incapable.
These
are
the
mental
operations
of
its
shareholders
and
officers.
The
intent
at
the
time
of
the
purchase
taken
together
with
the
circumstances
of
the
sale
are
undoubtedly
key
factors
in
determining
whether
a
capital
gain
or
a
business
profit
was
concerned.
7.02.5
Intent
of
the
appellants
—
Circumstances
of
the
sales
The
facts
relating
to
the
appellants’
intent
and
the
circumstances
of
the
sale
are
set
forth
at
length
in
para
3.04.
The
facts
described
in
that
paragraph
are
in
accordance
with
the
testimony
of
Messrs
William
Boyd,
Jean-
Pierre
Ruel
and
Paul
Morin.
The
Board
does
not
question
their
testimony:
—
William
Boyd
William
Boyd
was
senior
vice-president
of
Headway
Corporation
Limited,
a
public
corporation,
in
1972.
The
negotiations
to
purchase
the
real
estate
on
behalf
of
the
purchaser,
Headway
Corporation
Limited,
were
conducted
by
William
Boyd.
William
Boyd
is
not
directly
or
indirectly
interested
in
the
outcome
of
the
case
at
bar.
—
Jean-Pierre
Ruel
The
respondent
himself
stated
that
the
credibility
of
this
witness
is
not
open
to
question
(trans
p
413).
—
Paul
Morin
Paul
Morin
is
an
insurance
broker
who
also
has
no
interest
in
the
outcome
of
the
case
at
bar.
As
the
principal
shareholder
is
dead,
the
testimony
of
Messrs
Boyd,
Ruel
and
Morin
is
very
important
in
determining
the
intent
that
prevailed
in
purchasing
and
building
the
properties
sold.
It
is
worth
noting
the
comments
made
by
Noël,
J
in
Paul
Racine,
Amédée
Demers
and
François
Nolin
v
MNR,
[1965]
CTC
150;
65
DTC
5098:
To
give
to
a
transaction
which
involves
the
acquisition
of
capital
the
double
character
of
also
being
at
the
same
time
an
adventure
in
the
nature
of
trade,
the
purchaser
must
have
in
his
mind,
at
the
moment
of
the
purchase,
the
possibility
of
reselling
as
an
operating
motivation
for
the
acquisition:
that
is
to
say
that
he
must
have
had
in
mind
that
upon
a
certain
set
of
circumstances
arising
he
had
hopes
of
being
able
to
resell
it
at
a
profit
instead
of
using
the
thing
purchased
for
purposes
of
capital.
Generally
speaking,
a
decision
that
such
a
motivation
exists
will
have
to
be
based
on
inferences
flowing
from
circumstances
surrounding
the
transaction
rather
than
on
direct
evidence
of
what
the
purchaser
had
in
mind.
Addy,
J,
after
citing
the
foregoing,
in
Roy
M
Power
v
HMQ,
[1975]
CTC
580;
75
DTC
5388,
at
584
also
comments
on
the
evidence
relating
to
intent:
The
only
direct
evidence
of
what
a
person
has
in
mind
at
any
given
time
must
necessarily
come
from
a
statement
by
that
person
either
at
the
trial
or
orally
or
in
writing
to
another
person
and
any
such
expression
of
intention
is
most
relevant
and
important,
especially
when
given
under
oath
at
the
trial
by
the
person
whose
intention
is
at
issue
and
after
the
statement
of
such
intention
has
been
thoroughly
tested
by
cross-examination
in
the
light
of
his
actions
both
before
and
after
the
event
in
question.
Conversely,
it
would
be
most
difficult
for
me
to
find
in
favour
of
a
taxpayer,
whatever
the
surrounding
circumstances
might
be,
who,
without
any
justifiable
excuse,
failed
to
testify
personally
at
the
trial
as
to
what
his
intention
actually
was.
It
is
such
important
and
vital
evidence
that
its
absence
would,
in
my
view,
almost
invariably
destroy
the
taxpayer’s
case
unless
there
was
some
good
explanation
offered
as
to
its
absence.Furthermore,
it
is
evidence
which
has
the
added
characteristic
of
being
solely
within
the
knowledge
and
control
of
the
taxpayer
himself.
If
a
judge
were
to
charge
the
jury
to
the
effect
that
the
law
requires
that
circumstantial
evidence
of
intention
be
given
preference
over
direct
evidence
then
I
have
no
doubt
that
any
such
direction
would
constitute
a
mistrial.
A
judge
should
therefore
refrain
from
charging
himself
in
that
manner.
All
issues
must
be
determined
by
a
careful
consideration
of
all
the
relevant
evidence
both
direct
and
circumstantial.
In
any
particular
case,
a
specific
piece
of
evidence
might,
by
reason
of
the
surrounding
circumstances
of
that
case,
necessarily
possess
great
probative
value
while,
in
another
case,
evidence
to
the
same
effect
might
carry
little
or
no
weight.
The
Court
must
also
bear
in
mind
that
facts
often
speak
louder
than
words
and
that
free
acts
are
very
good
indication
of
what
a
person
really
intends
and
overt
acts
and
their
results
constitute
an
excellent
means
of
deciding
what
the
intention
actually
was.
In
the
same
manner,
other
circumstances,
which
are
not
the
result
of
any
particular
action
of
the
person
at
the
time
and
place
in
question,
might
also
be
of
considerable
help
in
deciding
the
issue
of
intention.
I
have
in
mind
for
instance,
the
circumstance
of
a
taxpayer,
whose
intention
is
being
scrutinized,
being
by
profession
a
land
developer
(see
Bel-Conn
Limited
v
MNR,
73
DTC
17).
This
is
undoubtedly
a
very
important
circumstance.
Yet
one
cannot
say
that,
as
a
matter
of
law,
every
land
developer
is
precluded
from
establishing
that
in
a
particular
case
there
was
no
primary
or
secondary
intention
to
speculate,
any
more
than
in
a
case
such
as
the
one
at
bar
where
a
mature
man
has
never
previously
resold
a
piece
of
real
estate
as
a
profit,
is
one
precluded
from
finding
that,
on
his
very
first
venture
in
this
sphere,
he
did
in
fact
have
the
intention
of
reselling
at
a
profit
when
he
originally
purchased
the
lands.
The
issue
of
intention
must
therefore
be
resolved
by
a
careful
weighing
of
all
of
the
admissible
evidence
which
is
in
any
way
relevant
to
that
issue
and
the
person
or
body
charged
with
finding
the
facts
must
refrain
from
considering
each
piece
of
evidence
independently
but
must
examine
it
in
the
light
of
all
the
other
evidence
both
direct
and
circumstantial.
Unless
there
is
a
specific
statutory
provision
to
the
contrary,
this
general
rule
of
evidence
must
be
applied
in
all
cases
including
taxation
cases.
it
follows
that
little
help
can
be
obtained
from
former
decisions
regarding
what
weight
should
be
attributed
to
any
particular
circumstance
in
so
far
as
it
may
prove
or
disprove
an
intention
to
engage
in
an
adventure
in
the
nature
of
trade,
except
in
so
far
as
any
such
decision
might
make
one
aware
of
a
particular
area
or
cirvumstance
which
should
be
considered
or
taken
into
account.
The
foregoing
remarks
were
followed
by
Collier,
J
of
the
Federal
Court
in
HMQ
v
Harold
Borinsky,
[1977]
CTC
570;
77
DTC
5389.
In
the
case
at
bar,
there
is
no
doubt
that
the
weight
of
the
evidence
is
that
the
original
intent
in
purchasing
the
land
and
constructing
the
buildings
on
it
through
the
CMHC
was
to
make
an
investment
(see
para
3.04.02).
The
twofold
classification
of
the
appellants’
activities
clearly
suggests
a
significant
role
for
long-term
investments
(para
3.04.3)
and
rebuts
any
presumption
(para
3.04.4)
of
commercial
operation
as
the
result
of
ownership
by
a
company
and
the
experience
of
the
shareholders
in
the
real
estate
sector.
Additionally,
the
refusal
to
sell
when
business
was
prospering
clearly
confirms
the
intent
to
invest
(para
3.04.3).
The
circumstances
in
which
the
three
housing
complexes
were
sold
(financial
difficulties,
suggestion
by
the
bank
that
certain
buildings
should
be
sold,
unsolicited
offers
to
buy
with
a
sine
qua
non
condition
that
the
three
projects
be
sold
together
—
para
3.04.5)
do
not
in
any
way
rebut
the
evidence
as
to
the
original
intent
to
invest.
On
the
contrary,
these
circumstances
show
that,
through
their
shareholders
and
officers,
the
appellants
were
obliged
to
resign
themselves
to
selling.
7.02.6
The
original
intent
at
the
time
of
purchase
is
the
key
factor
in
determining
whether
the
profit
resulting
from
the
transaction
is
a
capital
gain.
The
other
factors
are
only
useful
in
arriving
at
this
original
intent.
In
the
case
at
bar,
as
the
original
intent
for
it
to
be
an
investment
is
clear,
the
Board
concludes
that
the
profits
resulting
from
the
sale
of
the
housing
complex
of
the
three
appellants,
Versant
Nord,
Coteau
Lévis
and
Place
Prévert,
are
capital
gains.
No
evidence
was
presented
and
no
agreement
made
regarding
the
value
of
the
lands
concerned
at
December
31,
1971.
7.03
Couillard
Entreprises
(Division
Construction)
Inc
—
Does
subsection
69(1)
apply?
7.03.1
In
assessing
the
appellant
Couillard
Entreprises,
the
respondent
established
the
purchase
price
of
the
property,
and
consequently
the
profit
on
the
transaction,
by
applying
paragraph
69(1)(a).
This
section
reads
as
follows:
(1)
Except
as
expressly
otherwise
provided
in
this
Act,
(a)
where
a
taxpayer
has
acquired
anything
from
a
person
with
whom
he
was
not
dealing
at
arm’s
length
at
an
amount
in
excess
of
the
fair
market
value
thereof
at
the
time
he
so
acquired
it,
he
shall
be
deemed
to
have
acquired
it
at
the
fair
market
value;
Paragraph
69(1)(a)
came
into
effect
on
January
1,
1972
and
the
purchase
of
the
property
in
question
was
made
on
December
13,
1971,
so
that
the
appellant
argued
that
the
said
section
does
not
apply
in
the
case
at
bar.
Subsection
32(1)
of
the
Income
Tax
Application
Rules
(ITAR)
reads
as
follows:
(1)
Paragraph
69(1
)(a)
of
the
amended
Act
does
not
apply
to
deem
a
taxpayer
by
whom
anything
has
been
acquired
at
any
time
before
1972
to
have
acquired
it
at
its
fair
market
value
at
that
time,
unless,
if
subsection
17(1)
of
the
former
Act
had
continued
to
apply,
that
fair
market
value
would
have
been
deemed
to
have
been
paid
or
to
be
payable
therefor
for
the
purpose
of
computing
the
taxpayer’s
income
from
a
business.
The
French
and
English
versions
of
subsection
17(1)
of
the
old
Act
are
as
follows:
17.
(1)
Lorsqu’un
contribuable
exerçant
des
affaires
au
Canada
a
acheté
quelque
chose
d’une
personne
avec
laquelle
il
ne
traitait
pas
à
distance,
a
un
prix
excédant
la
juste
valeur
marchande,
cette
juste
valeur
marchande
est
censée,
aux
fins
de
calculer
le
revenu
du
contribuable
provenant
de
l’entreprise,
avoir
été
payée
ou
être
payable
à
cet
égard.
17.
(1)
Where
a
taxpayer
carrying
on
a
business
in
Canada
has
purchased
anything
from
a
person
with
whom
he
was
not
dealing
at
arm’s
length
at
a
price
in
excess
of
the
fair
market
value,
the
fair
market
value
thereof
shall,
for
the
purpose
of
computing
the
taxpayer’s
income
from
the
business,
be
deemed
to
have
been
paid
or
to
be
payable
therefor.
7.03.2
Subsection
17(1)
cannot
apply
to
the
case
at
bar,
in
the
submission
of
the
appellant,
as
the
said
subsection
only
applies
where
a
taxpayer
is
“carrying
on
business”,
and
not
where,
as
here,
there
is
an
“adventure
in
the
nature
of
trade”.
The
phrase
“carrying
on
business”
or
“exerçant
des
affaires”
the
appellant
submitted
cannot
be
applied
to
an
adventure
in
the
nature
of
trade.
The
appellant
derives
this
conclusion
from
the
comments
made
by
Jack-
eft,
C
J
in
Tara
Exploration
and
Development
Company
Limited
v
MNR,
[1970]
CTC
557;
70
DTC
6370,
at
567,
[6376]:
With
considerable
hesitation,
I
have
concluded
that
the
better
view
is
that
the
words
“carried”
are
not
words
that
can
aptly
be
used
with
the
word
“adventure”.
To
carry
on
something
involves
continuity
of
time
or
operations
such
as
is
involved
in
the
ordinary
sense
of
a
“business”.
An
adventure
is
an
isolated
happening.
One
has
an
adventure
as
opposed
to
carrying
on
a
business.
As
the
respondent
noted
in
his
own
pleading,
this
passage
must
be
taken
together
with
the
preceding
sentence
in
this
paragraph
and
all
the
facts
which
were
the
basis
of
the
judgment.
The
paragraph
begins
as
follows:
With
great
doubt
as
to
the
correctness
of
my
conclusion,
I
am
of
opinion
that
paragraph
139(1)(e)
does
not
operate
to
make
a
non-resident
person
subject
to
Canadian
income
tax
in
respect
of
a
profit
from
an
adventure
that
otherwise
does
not
amount
to
and
is
not
part
of,
a
“business”.
and
then
follows
the
passage
cited
above,
beginning
with
“With
considerable
hesitation
.
.
.”
Paragraph
139(1
)(e)
of
the
old
Act,
which
is
the
definition
of
a
business,
reads
as
follows:
(a)
“business”
includes
a
profession,
calling,
trade,
manufacture
or
undertaking
of
any
kind
whatsoever
and
includes
an
adventure
or
concern
in
the
nature
of
trade
but
does
not
include
an
office
or
employment;
In
this
case,
one
of
the
problems
which
the
Court
had
to
resolve
was
whether
an
“adventure
in
the
nature
of
trade”
made
a
non-resident
(not
taxable
under
subsection
2(1)
of
the
old
Act)
taxable
under
subsection
17(1)
of
the
old
Act
by
“carrying
on
a
business”
in
Canada.
Jackett,
C
J
concluded
that
“having”
an
adventure
in
the
nature
of
trade
is
different
from
“carrying
on
a
business”,
and
thus
that
a
non-resident
whose
activity
in
Canada
constitutes
“an
adventure
in
the
nature
of
trade”
cannot
be
regarded
as
“carrying
on
a
business
in
Canada”
and
so
was
not
subject
to
subsection
2(2).
In
the
case
before
the
Board,
the
evidence
did
not
establish
that
the
appellant’s
only
commercial
activity
consisted
in
an
adventure
in
the
nature
of
trade.
The
evidence
showed
that
the
appellant
Couillard
Entreprises
(Division
Construction)
Inc,
incorporated
in
Canada,
purchased
land
and
regularly
carried
on
business,
constructed
buildings
and
sold
land
and
buildings
(para
5.02.12).
The
Board
is
of
the
opinion
that
in
1974
the
appellant
was
“a
taxpayer
carrying
on
a
business
in
Canada”
within
the
meaning
of
subsection
17(1)
of
the
old
Act,
and
that
accordingly
paragraph
69(1
)(a)
of
the
new
Act
must
apply.
The
appeal
of
the
appellant
is
therefore
allowed
only
in
part,
as
to
the
quantum
of
the
profits
in
accordance
with
the
agreement
(para
4.02.1).
7.04
Estate
Pol
land
Couillard
7.04.1
Decisions
on
certain
objections
taken
under
advisement
7.04.1.A
Exhibit
A-51
—
letter
dated
August
23,
1976
from
Mr
G
St-Pierre
of
Revenue
Canada
to
Mr
Rolland
Couillard
This
letter
to
the
taxpayer
from
the
Department
of
National
Revenue
contains,
inter
alia,
the
following
sentence:
We
propose
to
use
this
value
in
determining
the
capital
gain
resulting
from
the
sale
of
shares
in
1974.
Naturally,
the
respondent
objected
to
the
filing
of
this
letter.
The
content
of
the
letter,
to
begin
with,
constitutes
in
part
an
attempt
at
a
settlement
between
the
parties,
an
attempt
which
did
not
succeed
as
the
case
was
submitted
to
the
Board.
The
Board
cannot
admit
the
document.
The
burden
of
proof
resulting
from
the
assessment
thus
remains
unchanged.
7.04.1.B
Exhibit
A-55
—
Letter
of
transfer
of
April
12,
1979
from
Mr
I
G
Wahn,
QC
to
Mr
Jean
Marier;
certificate
of
April
12,
1979
by
Mr
I
G
Wahn,
QC
in
his
capacity
as
a
notary
public
in
the
province
of
Ontario,
to
the
effect
that
the
enclosed
document
is
an
authentic
copy
of
the
statutory
declaration
of
May
16,
1974
by
Rolland
Couillard,
the
original
of
which
is
contained
in
his
files;
a
sworn
statement
by
Rolland
Couillard,
dated
May
16,
1974,
regarding
the
application
of
the
Foreign
Investment
Review
Act.
This
exhibit
should
be
admitted
in
evidence
because
the
sworn
statement
of
Rolland
Couillard
constitutes
a
document
written
for
third
parties
and
containing
certain
statements
which
may
shed
some
light
on
the
taxpayer’s
intent
for
the
Board.
As
Addy,
J
of
the
Federal
Court
observed
in
Roy
M
Power
v
HMQ
(see
supra),
the
only
direct
evidence
of
what
a
person
had
in
his
mind
at
a
given
time
must
necessarily
come
from
a
statement
by
that
person,
either
at
the
trial,
orally,
or
in
writing
to
another
person,
and
such
a
statement
of
intent
is
very
relevant
and
significant.
This
rule
indicates
clearly
that
the
oral
or
written
statements
of
the
taxpayer,
admissible
in
evidence,
are
not
limited
to
those
made
as
part
of
the
trial
proceeding.
We
contend
that
the
effect
of
the
rules
of
evidence
in
civil
law
allows
this
exhibit
to
be
filed.
in
Royal
Victoria
Hospital
et
al
v
Mary
Morrow,
[1974]
SCR
501,
Pigeon,
J,
speaking
for
the
Supreme
Court,
set
forth
the
rule
that
in
Quebec
hearsay
evidence
is
prohibited
(see
508);
he
then
went
on
to
state
a
second
rule:
It
would
appear,
then,
that
in
principle
the
exceptions
allowed
in
English
law
must
be
recognized
as
applicable,
in
so
far
as
there
is
no
express
provision
in
this
regard
or
any
incompatibility
with
an
express
rule,
(p
509)
According
to
Phipson
(On
Evidence,
12th
ed,
London,
Sweet
and
Maxwell,
1976,
p
221)
evidence
of
intent
constitutes
an
exception
to
the
ban
on
hearsay:
When
the
question
of
intention
arises
in
relation
to
the
act
done,
it
may,
as
has
been
shown,
be
proved
either
by
declarations
made
at
the
time
of
the
act
or
when
the
latter
is
of
a
continuous
nature
—
e.g.
longer
user
of
property,
the
protracted
absence
of
a
debtor,
or
settled
residence
in
cases
of
domicile,
by
declaration
made
at
any
time
during
its
currency.
In
Lloyd
v
Powell
Duffryn
Steam
Coal
Company
Limited,
[1914]
AC
733,
Lord
Moulton
of
the
House
of
Lords
stated:
Now,
it
is
well
established
in
English
jurisprudence,
in
accordance
with
the
dictates
of
common
sense,
that
the
words
and
acts
of
a
person
are
admissible
as
evidence
of
his
state
of
mind.
Indeed,
they
are
the
only
possible
evidence
on
such
an
issue.
It
was
urged
at
the
Bar
that
although
the
acts
of
the
deceased
might
be
put
in
evidence,
his
words
might
not.
I
fail
to
understand
the
distinction.
Speaking
is
as
much
an
act
as
doing.
It
must
be
borne
in
mind
that
there
is
nothing
in
the
admission
of
such
evidence
which
clashes
with
the
rooted
objection
in
our
jurisprudence
to
the
admission
of
hearsay
evidence.
(pp
751-752)
Furthermore,
the
document
in
question
is
not
a
family
register
or
paper
in
accordance
with
Art
1227
of
the
Civil
Code,
which
could
be
the
basis
for
rejecting
this
document,
as
in
Les
Meubles
de
Maskinongé
Inc
et
al
v
MNR,
[1979]
CTC
2028;
79
DTC
66.
It
is
an
affidavit
required
by
the
Foreign
Investment
Review
Agency
for
purposes
of
giving
effect
to
the
Foreign
Investment
Review
Act.
The
document
is
admitted.
7.04.1.C
Questions
concerning
the
sale
of
Couillard
Entreprises
Inc
shares
by
Headway
Corporation
Limited
to
a
subsidiary
of
Fidinam
Inc
These
questions
concern
a
well-known
act
of
the
witness
being
examined,
William
Boyd,
namely
the
profit
made
by
Headway
Corporation
Limited
in
reselling
the
shares.
They
confirm
the
testimony
of
Jean-Pierre
Ruel
that
the
selling
price
agreed
between
Rolland
Couillard,
Jean-Pierre
and
Claude
Ruel
of
the
first
part
and
Headway
Corporation
Limited
of
the
second
part
was
“$500,000
below
the
price”,
that
is,
below
its
actual
value
(trans
p
1480)
and
that
the
sale
at
this
price
was
the
means
of
facilitating
termination
of
the
relationship
between
Rolland
Couillard
and
the
Ruel
brothers
(trans
p
1479).
The
Board
is
of
the
opinion
that
the
objections
of
the
respondent
should
be
dismissed.
7.04.2
Capital
gain
or
business
income
Here
again,
the
Board
must
consider
the
following
points:
(1)
1)
the
nature
of
the
property;
(2)
the
intent
at
the
time
of
the
purchase;
(3)
the
number
of
years
held;
(4)
the
number
and
frequency
of
similar
transactions;
(5)
the
taxpayer’s
activities;
and
(6)
the
circumstances
of
the
sale,
for
the
shares
in
Couillard
Entreprises
Inc
as
well
as
the
Le
Murray,
Le
Bourgogne,
Desjardins
and
Manoir
Levis
properties.
7.04.2.1
The
Couillard
Entreprises
Inc
shares
7.04.2.1.1
Intent
and
time
held
The
shares
in
Couillard
Entreprises
Inc
were
purchased
by
Mr
Couillard
(80%)
and
the
Ruel
brothers
(10%
and
10%)
when
the
various
companies
were
merged
in
1972.
The
merger
of
the
various
companies,
(1)
Couillard
Entreprises
Inc,
(2)
Couillard
Entreprises
(Division
Domiciliaire)
Inc,
and
(3)
Immeubles
des
Seigneurs
Inc,
was
undertaken
to
meet
the
requirements
of
the
bank
and
to
simplify
administration
(see
para
5.02.27,
part
1).
There
was
no
evidence
that
the
shareholders
were
in
the
business
of
buying
and
selling
shares
(para
5.02.43).
The
shares
in
themselves
are
more
in
the
nature
of
an
investment.
In
the
case
at
bar,
there
is
no
reason
why
obtaining
the
shares
of
the
new
company
should
not
be
based
on
the
same
intent
as
the
purchase
of
the
shares
of
the
merged
companies.
The
evidence
as
a
whole
leaves
no
doubt
that
the
purchase
of
the
shares
in
these
companies
was
made
for
investment
purposes.
Furthermore,
before
the
merger
the
shareholders
had
held
the
shares
for
thirteen
years
(Couillard
Entreprises
Inc);
ten
years
(Couillard
Entreprises
(Division
Domiciliaire)
Inc);
and
seven
years
(Immeubles
des
Seigneurs).
The
shares
of
the
new
company
were
held
for
a
year
and
a
half.
In
the
circumstances
of
the
case
at
bar,
these
time
periods
work
in
appellant’s
favour
and
confirm
the
original
intent
to
invest.
The
affidavit
(Exhibit
A-55)
of
Mr
Couillard
is
clear.
Paragraphs
1,
2
and
4
of
that
affidavit
read
as
follows:
1.
I
am
the
President
and
own
approximately
80%
of
the
outstanding
shares
of
Couillard
Entreprises
Inc.
(hereinafter
called
“Couillard
Entreprises”),
a
corporation
incorporated
under
the
laws
of
the
Province
of
Quebec.
2.
Couillard
Entreprises
owns
three
groups
of
apartment
buildings
known
as
Immeubles
des
Seigneurs
and
Jardins
des
Seigneurs
in
the
City
of
Ste
Foy
and
Place
des
Seigneurs
in
the
City
of
Charlesbourg
in
the
vicinity
of
the
City
of
Quebec
and
comprising
in
total
approximately
840
apartment
units,
and
Couillard
Entreprises
has
no
other
income
producing
assets.
4.
I
have
been
active
in
the
acquisition
of
real
estate
for
many
years
and,
in
general,
my
practice
is
to
form
a
corporation
to
hold
each
separate
real
estate
investment.
Accordingly
I
control,
as
majority
shareholder,
a
number
of
corporations
in
addition
to
Couillard
Entreprises
of
which
approximately
nine
corporations
are
corporations
which
I
have
formed
to
hold
real
estate
investments
including
apartment
buildings,
shopping
plazas
and
other
business
and
commercial
real
estate
properties.
The
total
number
of
apartment
units
owned
by
such
corporations
controlled
by
me,
including
Couillard
Entreprises,
is
approximately
1,340.
(para
5.02.40)
7.04.2.1.2
Circumstances
of
the
sale
of
the
shares
If
the
unsolicited
sale
of
the
shares
of
Couillard
Entreprises
Inc
and
the
absence
of
a
broker
as
an
intermediary
in
that
sale
support
the
appellant’s
argument,
the
disagreement
between
the
Rule
brothers
and
Mr
Couillard
and
the
decision
to
sell
as
a
means
of
facilitating
termination
of
the
relationship
provide
even
stronger
support
for
the
said
argument.
The
evidence
to
this
effect
is
beyond
question
(paras
5.02.34
to
5.02.39).
7.04.2.1.3
Taxpayer’s
activities
The
respondent’s
argument
that
the
profit
from
the
sale
of
the
shares
must
be
regarded
as
a
business
profit
is
based
above
all
on
the
taxpayer’s
activities.
Though
Mr
Couillard
was
not
in
the
business
of
selling
shares
(para
5.02.43),
he
was
however
in
the
real
estate
business.
In
selling
the
shares,
it
is
apparent
that
the
assets
of
the
four
companies,
including
the
real
estate,
were
transferred
to
the
buyer.
Based
on
the
evidence
presented,
the
opinion
of
the
Board
is
that
the
sale
of
the
shares
was
not
a
roundabout
means
of
selling
the
real
estate.
The
Board
adopts
the
reasons
given
by
the
appellant
in
this
regard:
The
property
which
was
the
subject
of
the
disposition
(the
shares
on
the
one
hand
and
apartment
buildings
on
the
other)
is
an
investment
by
nature,
since
it
generates
income
in
the
form
of
dividends
and
rental:
this
factor
is
therefore
in
the
appellant’s
favour.
On
this
point,
see
Bead
Realties
Ltd
v
MNR,
71
DTC
5453,
at
5453,
where
Walsh,
J
indicates
that
the
rules
regarding
securities
can
be
applied
to
land
and
other
property
capable
of
producing
income,
and
Irrigation
Industries
Ltd
v
MNR,
62
DTC
1131,
at
1133-1134
(Martland,
J);
Maclsaac
v
MNR,
74
DTC
6380,
at
6380,
where
Jackett,
C
J,
speaking
for
the
Federal
Court
of
Appeal,
said
regarding
an
apartment
building:
“The
transaction
in
question
here,
taken
by
itself,
is,
prima
facie,
the
sale
of
a
revenue-producing
asset
and,
if
that
were
the
end
of
the
matter,
the
resultant
profit
would
not
be
a
profit
from
a
business”.
Nonetheless,
the
respondent
argued
that
the
fact
that
Rolland
Couillard
disposed
of
the
shares
in
no
way
alters
the
outcome
of
the
case,
and
that
for
all
practical
purposes
this
sale
must
be
treated
like
the
sale
of
real
estate
owned
by
Couillard
Entreprises
Inc.
This
argument
appears
to
us
to
be
incorrect,
for
the
following
reasons.
In
Fraser
v
MNR,
64
DTC
5224,
Judson,
J
of
the
Supreme
Court
of
Canada
stated
the
following
rule:
Some
point
was
made
of
the
fact
that
the
appellant
did
not
in
one
case
sell
a
store
and
in
the
other
case
vacant
land
but
shares
in
two
companies.
I
agree
with
Cameron,
J
that
this
was
merely
an
alternative
method
that
they
chose
to
adopt
in
putting
through
their
real
estate
transactions.
The
fact
that
they
incorporated
companies
to
hold
the
real
estate
makes
no
diffference
(Associated
London
Properties
Ltd
v
Henriksen
(HM
Inspector
of
taxes),
(1942-1945)
26
TC
46).
(p
5226)
In
this
case,
the
taxpayer
and
an
associate
had
bought
a
vacant
piece
of
land
in
1952
and
incorporated
two
companies
to
hold
the
land,
which
was
divided
into
two
parcels.
In
1953,
they
built
a
shopping
centre
on
one
parcel
and
sold
it
to
Dominion
Stores.
The
other
parcel
was
sold
at
about
the
same
time
to
an
individual.
In
each
case,
the
method
of
sale
consisted
in
the
sale
of
the
shares
of
the
company.
The
Exchequer
Court
and
the
Supreme
Court
concluded
that
business
income
was
involved,
even
though
the
sale
was
made
through
the
shares.
The
rule
in
Fraser
(p
5226)
was
considered
by
the
Exchequer
Court
in
Shipp
et
al
v
MNR,
67
DTC
5222.
The
Court
had
to
decide
whether
the
profit
resulting
from
the
sale
by
the
appellants
of
their
shares
in
Applewood
Village
Shopping
Centre
Limited
was
business
income
or
a
capital
gain.
The
company
was
incorporated
in
1953
and
shares
distributed
among
the
appellants
between
1953
and
1957.
In
1959,
the
appellants
sold
their
shares
to
NC
Properties
Limited,
and
the
Minister
of
National
Revenue
included
the
resulting
profit
in
the
appellants’
income
proportionately.
The
appellants
objected,
alleging
that
they
had
never
carried
on
the
business
of
buying
and
selling
shares,
and
that
the
company
was
created
to
purchase
a
site
for
a
shopping
centre,
and
that
in
fact
it
had
built
and
operated
the
shopping
centre
for
four
years.
Additionally,
the
appellants
had
at
no
time
put
their
shares
up
for
sale.
The
respondent
submitted
that
the
land
had
been
purchased
by
the
company
for
resale
and
that
the
sale
of
shares
was
only
an
alternative
means
of
selling
the
land.
The
evidence
showed
that
two
of
the
taxpayers
(the
other
two
were
their
wives)
had
incorporated
three
other
companies
which
bought
lots,
built
houses
on
them
and
sold
them,
and
that
by
doing
so
they
were
creating
a
market
for
a
shopping
centre
in
the
area
in
question.
Furthermore,
before
the
shopping
centre
was
built
they
received
an
offer
to
purchase
the
land,
and
it
was
not
until
1959,
in
response
to
an
unsolicited
offer,
that
they
sold
the
company’s
shares.Finally,
the
incorporation
of
the
company
was
prompted
by
genuine
commercial
considerations.
Gibson,
J
disposed
of
the
respondent’s
arguments
as
follows:
From
the
evidence
it
is
clear
that
the
appellants
were
not
in
the
business
of
trading
in
shares.
To
be
taxable,
therefore,
the
profit
from
the
sale
of
these
shares
must
be
categorized
as
income
as
a
result
of
trading
in
the
“business”
of
real
estate
carried
on
by
the
appellants.
In
my
view,
on
the
evidence,
inter
alia,
the
appellants
established
that
this
shopping
centre
was
built
in
response
to
a
demand
which
was
created
by
the
other
companies
above
referred
to
owned
by
the
appellants;
that
this
shopping
centre
company
was
not
incorporated
as
an
alternative
method
of
the
appellants
to
put
through
a
real
estate
transaction;
and
that
they
did
not
incorporate
the
company
as
a
shield
for
the
purpose
of
attempting
to
get
a
profit
on
capital
account.
(Separate
legal
entity)
In
my
view,
on
the
facts
of
this
case,
it
is
not
correct
to
assume
for
the
purpose
of
the
Income
Tax
Act
that
the
corporation
of
Applewood
Shopping
Centre
Limited
does
not
exist
as
a
separate
legal
person
distinct
from
the
appellants.
The
principles
of
Ronald
K
Fraser
v
MNR,
[1964]
SCR
657;
(64
DTC
5224),
have
no
application
here.
Such
principles
apply
when
at
the
time
of
incorporation
persons
(1)
have
acquired
real
estate
with
the
thought
that
it
be
sold
as
well
as
for
income
and
(2)
have
caused
a
company
to
be
incorporated
for
the
express
purpose
of
attempting
to
get
profit
on
capital
account
which
otherwise
would
be
income.
The
husband
appellants
in
this
case,
in
my
view,
acquired
the
shares
in
Applewood
Village
Shopping
Centre
Limited
as
an
investment;
and
the
appellant
wives
by
the
gift
transactions
above
referred
to
acquired
them
also
as
an
investment;
and
the
sale
of
such
shares
in
1959
was
the
realization
of
such
investments.
It
follows
from
this
decision
that
the
principle
stated
in
Fraser
is
only
applicable
if
two
preconditions
are
established,
namely
(1)
the
properties
must
have
been
purchased
with
the
intent
of
reselling
them
for
a
profit;
(2)
the
taxpayer
must
have
incorporated
the
companies
and
arranged
that
they
purchase
the
properties
for
the
express
purpose
of
attempting
to
convert
business
income
into
a
capital
gain,
by
using
the
sale
of
shares
as
a
means
of
disposing
of
the
properties
(see
also:
MNR
v
Kato
et
al,
69
DTC
5308,
P
5315
(Cattanach,
J)
and
Dumas
v
MNR,
78
DTC
1704
(Mr
St-Onge,
Member)).
None
of
these
conditions
apply
in
the
case
at
bar.
It
has
been
clearly
shown
that
the
three
building
projects
(Jardins
des
Seigneurs,
Place
des
Seigneurs
and
Immeubles
des
Seigneurs)
were
not
purchased
with
the
intent
of
reselling
at
a
profit.
The
incorporation
of
Couillard
Entreprises
Inc,
Couillard
Entreprises
(Division
Domiciliaire)
Inc
and
Immeubles
des
Seigneurs
Inc
and
the
merger
of
these
companies
with
Domaine
Du
Versant
Inc,
resulting
in
Couillard
Entreprises
Inc,
was
certainly
not
undertaken
for
the
express
purpose
of
attempting
to
convert
business
income
into
a
capital
gain,
since
each
of
these
companies,
except
for
Domaine
Du
Versant,
Inc,
sold
buildings
or
land
from
time
to
time
and
reported
the
profits
so
realized
as
operating
profits.
This
method
of
financing
building
projects
held
as
investments
and
the
reasons
for
the
merger
have
been
explained
at
length.
There
is
no
basis
in
the
evidence
for
concluding,
directly
or
by
implication,
that
one
or
other
of
these
companies
was
used
as
a
device
to
camouflage
the
true
nature
of
the
transactions
in
question.
Moreover,
the
respondent
had
not
made
any
allegation
of
fact
regarding
the
preconditions
for
the
rule
in
Fraser
to
apply,
and
he
has
presented
no
evidence
on
this
point.
Accordingly,
the
sale
of
the
shares
of
Couillard
Entreprises
Inc
must
be
regarded
solely
as
a
sale
of
shares.
7.04.2.1.4
Finally,
the
refusal
by
the
shareholders
of
the
companies
of
several
offers
they
received
to
purchase
the
three
properties
confirms
the
intent
to
keep
the
properties,
which
were
in
due
course
owned
by
the
merged
companies
(para
5.02.22
—
Part
2).
7.04.2.1.5
In
conclusion,
the
appellant
has
shifted
the
burden
of
proof
upon
it
with
regard
to
the
sale
of
the
shares.
Its
evidence
was
not
substantially
contradicted.
The
profit
must
be
regarded
as
a
capital
gain.
7.04.2.2
The
properties
sold:
Le
Bourgogne,
Manoir
Lévis,
Desjardins
and
Le
Murray
7.04.2.2.1
Nature
of
the
property,
intent,
time
the
properties
were
held
By
their
very
nature
the
Le
Bourgogne,
Manoir
Lévis,
Desjardins
and
Le
Murray
housing
complexes
are
investments.
Jackett,
C
J,
in
Ronald
F
T
Maclsaac
v
MNR,
[1974]
CTC
576;
74
DTC
6380,
stated
regarding
the
housing
complex
which
was
the
subject
of
that
case:
The
transaction
in
question
here,
taken
by
itself,
is,
prima
facie,
the
sale
of
a
revenue-producing
asset
and,
if
that
were
the
end
of
the
matter,
the
resultant
profit
would
not
be
a
profit
from
a
business.
In
the
case
at
bar
the
housing
complexes
were
treated
as
investments
in
the
appellant’s
financial
statements.
They
were
not
included
in
inventory,
and
the
appellant
took
the
capital
cost
allowance
on
these
properties.
The
appellant
held
the
buildings
for
several
years:
Le
Murray,
fifteen
years;
Le
Bourgogne,
six
years;
Manoir
Lévis,
five
years;
Le
Desjardins,
four
years
(see
paras
5.02.45
to
5.02.48).
All
these
points
support
the
appellant’s
argument
that
the
appellant’s
original
intent
in
purchasing
these
properties
was
to
invest.
The
intent
to
keep
them
is
confirmed
by
the
refusals
of
purchase
offers
for
any
of
their
housing
complexes,
including
the
four
which
are
the
subject
of
the
case
at
bar,
but
Messrs
Paul
Morin,
Henri
Paquet
and
William
Boyd,
as
well
as
the
testamentary
clause:
(para
5.02.51)
relating
to
the
apartment
buildings.
Mr
Couillard’s
will
is
dated
October
8,
1969.
At
this
time,
the
Le
Murray,
Le
Bourgogne
and
Desjardins
buildings
had
already
been
built
and
the
Manoir
Lévis
was
under
construction.
7.04.2.2.2
Circumstances
of
the
sale
Between
September
1973
and
June
1974
the
appellant
sold
the
four
housing
complexes
in
question.
These
sales
were
made
as
a
result
of
his
failure
with
the
Association
des
Payeurs
de
Taxe
in
June
1973,
and
as
a
result
of
the
disastrous
break
with
the
Ruel
brothers
in
August
1973.
According
to
Mr
William
Boyd,
who
met
him
at
the
end
of
1973,
Mr
Couil-
lard
was
a
dejected
man
who
wanted
to
liquidate
everything:
“I
am
going
to
sell
everything
I
own
and
go
to
my
summer
camp
in
the
bush”.
Throughout
this
period
he
was
in
a
discouraged
frame
of
mind
and
took
to
drinking
(para
5.02.33).
From
another
standpoint,
it
would
appear
that
because
of
the
increase
in
school
and
municipal
taxes,
he
wanted
to
realize
on
his
investments
immediately
rather
than
lose
everything.
The
testimony
of
Messrs
Paul
Laberge
and
Léopold
Marotte
are
in
agreement
on
this
point
(para
5.02.49).
All
these
points
support
the
appellant’s
argument.
7.04.2.2.3
The
taxpayer’s
activities
In
arriving
at
the
conclusion
that
the
profit
resulting
from
the
sales
was
a
business
profit,
the
respondent
relied
primarily
on
this
point,
namely
the
taxpayer’s
activities.
It
is
true,
on
the
one
hand,
that
Mr
Couillard,
both
personally
and
through
his
companies,
had
completed
hundreds
and
hundreds
of
real
estate
transactions
since
he
had
been
in
business.
On
the
other
hand,
the
evidence
showed
that
Rollard
Couillard
and
his
companies
were
engaged
in
two
types
of
activity
involving
real
estate:
one
of
investment,
and
the
other
of
buying
and
selling.
The
one
complemented
the
other
(see
paras
5.02.15
—
part
2,
5.02.16,
5.02.21
and
5.02.22).
7.04.2.2.4
The
Board
is
of
the
opinion
that
the
appellant
has
shifted
the
burden
of
proof
and
that
there
has
been
no
substantial
evidence
in
rebuttal
on
which
the
Board
could
base
a
decision
to
uphold
the
assessment.
The
profit
must
therefore
be
regarded
as
a
Capital
gain.
7.04.3
Penalty
7.04.3.1
The
amount
of
$56,565.11
interest
was
not
included
in
Mr
Couil-
lard’s
income
for
his
1974
taxation
year.
The
respondent
imposed
a
penalty
of
$5,188.32.
The
bookkeeper,
Mr
Gilles
Béland,
who
prepared
the
tax
return
for
1974,
explained
in
his
testimony
how
the
omission
occurred
(trans
pp
1207
to
1210,
and
in
cross-examination,
pp
1230
to
1256).
7.04.3.2
The
interest
of
$56,565.11
was
reported
in
1973
as
“earned
interest
outstanding”
in
computing
the
income
in
accordance
with
the
financial
statements
by
the
accountants
Marotte,
Boily,
Giguere
et
Cie.
Since
for
tax
purposes
Rolland
Couillard
reported
his
interest
income
according
to
the
cash
method,
the
amount
of
“earned
interest
outstanding”
in
1973
was
deducted
from
the
income
in
accordance
with
the
financial
statements
in
computing
the
taxable
income
for
1973.
These
documents
were
submitted
to
the
respondent
with
Rolland
Couillard’s
tax
return
for
1973
(see
Exhibit
1-26).
In
November
1974,
Gilles
Béland
replaced
the
accountants
Marotte,
Boily,
Giguere
et
Cie
in
preparing
the
financial
statements
and
tax
returns
of
Rolland
Couillard
and
his
companies.
On
that
date
the
interest
of
$56,565.11
had
already
been
cashed
and
there
was
no
entry
in
the
books
indicating
receipt
of
$56,565.11
In
interest
income.
On
the
contrary,
the
bookkeeper
at
the
time,
Carol
Coulombe,
credited
this
amount
to
accounts
receivable
without
specifying
that
it
represented
interest
income.
When
Gilles
Beland
prepared
the
financial
statements
and
tax
return
of
Rolland
Couillard
for
1974,
he
was
unable
to
discover
the
existence
of
$56,565.11
in
interest
income
and
he
omitted
it.
Under
close
cross-examination,
it
appeared
that
after
a
careful
study
of
the
1973
financial
statements
and
the
books
of
account
for
1974
kept
by
Mr
Carol
Coulombe,
Mr
Béland
could
have
detected
the
$56,565.11,
even
though
the
bookkeeping
was
inadequate
in
that
certain
accounts
or
certain
entries
had
not
been
made
correctly.
However,
the
Board
is
persuaded
that
the
error
was
made
by
Mr
Beland
in
good
faith.
Mr
Couillard,
however,
would
have
seen
the
financial
statements
prepared
by
Mr
Béland,
and
did
not
notice
the
error.
According
to
Mr
Béland,
Mr
Couillard
relied
on
his
accountant.
In
this
case,
in
which
the
burden
of
proof
is
with
the
respondent,
the
evidence
as
a
whole
showed
that
although
the
amount
was
objectively
substantial,
the
omission
was
not
caused
by
a
gross
error
of
the
taxpayer,
but
by
an
error
of
the
accountant
which
cannot
even
be
described
as
“gross”.
It
was
not
possible
for
Mr
Couillard,
who
had
assets
of
over
four
million
dollars
in
1974,
and
a
net
worth
of
over
two
and
a
half
million
dollars,
to
detect
from
reading
his
financial
statements
an
error
of
$56,565.11
placed
in
the
wrong
account.
Further,
the
evidence
as
a
whole
did
not
show,
not
only
with
regard
to
the
matter
of
the
penalty
but
concerning
all
the
other
points
at
issue,
that
Mr
Couillard,
who
owned
a
huge
business,
regularly
kept
his
books
improperly
or
prepared
inadequate
financial
statements:
quite
the
contrary.
The
Board
allows
the
appeal
on
this
point
and
quashes
the
penalty.
8.
Conclusion
The
appeals
in
the
cases
of
Immeubles
Versant
Nord
Inc
(77-739),
Immeubles
du
Coteau
Lévis
Inc
(77-740)
and
Place
Prévert
Inc
(77-741)
are
allowed
in
part,
regarding
the
profits
resulting
from
sales
of
the
properties
involved
as
Capital
gains
in
accordance
with
the
reasons
given
in
the
foregoing
reasons
for
judgment,
and
the
whole
is
referred
back
to
the
respondent
for
reassessment.
The
appeal
of
Couillard
Entreprises
(Division
Construction)
Inc
(77-609)
is
allowed
in
part
and
the
whole
referred
back
to
the
respondent
in
accordance
with
the
agreement
(para
4.02.1)
entered
into
between
the
parties
on
the
quantum
of
the
profits
which
must
be
taxed
and
thus
be
the
subject
of
a
reassessment.
The
appeal
of
Estate
Rolland
Couillard
(76-862)
is
allowed
as
to
the
penalty.
With
regard
to
the
other
points,
it
is
allowed
in
part,
regarding
the
profits,
resulting
from
the
sale
of
the
properties
and
the
shares
involved,
as
a
capital
gain
in
accordance
with
the
reasons
given
in
the
foregoing
reasons
for
judgment,
and
the
matter
is
referred
back
to
the
respondent
for
reassessment
in
accordance
with
the
agreements
on
the
value
of
the
property
at
December
31,
1971.
Appeals
allowed.
Appeal
of
Couillard
Estate
allowed
in
part.