Delmer
E
Taylor:—This
is
an
appeal
heard
in
the
City
of
Toronto,
Ontario,
on
September
18,
1979,
against
an
income
tax
assessment
in
which
there
was
added
to
the
appellant
corporation’s
reported
taxable
income
for
the
year
1975
a
net
amount
of
$32,876.69
which
resulted
from
the
expropriation
of
certain
real
property
owned
by
the
taxpayer.
The
above
amount
of
profit
was
regarded
by
the
Minister
as
on
revenue,
not
capital
account,
as
provided
for
under
sections
3,
9
and
248
of
the
Income
Tax
Act,
SC
1970-71-72,
c
63,
as
amended.
Background
The
basic
facts
are
not
in
dispute
and
can
be
briefly
summarized
as
follows:
—The
appellant
is
a
Canadian
corporation
incorporated
in
Canada
to
carry
on
business;
—The
chief
shareholder
of
the
appellant
is
F
Califano;
—
In
1970
the
appellant
acquired
two
parcels
of
real
estate
in
the
Township
of
Markham
for
a
total
consideration
of
$52,500;
—
Both
of
the
said
two
parcels
of
real
property
were
forcibly
taken
by
the
Department
of
Public
Works
of
the
Government
of
Canada
on
January
30,
1973;
—
By
way
of
total
compensation
(exclusive
of
interest),
the
appellant
received
for
the
said
forcible
taking
the
sum
of
$96,512.69,
which
sum
was
received
by
the
appellant
in
the
following
amounts
on
the
following
dates:
Date
|
Amount
received
|
24
April,
1973
|
$27,321.89
|
10
October,
1973
|
15,108.00
|
12
October,
1973
|
19,262.00
|
28
July,
1974
|
22,614.00
|
10
May,
1975
|
12,206.80
|
—
During
ownership,
the
appellant
had
incurred
certain
carrying
costs
associated
with
the
property.
Contentions
The
position
of
the
appellant
was
as
follows:
—The
amount
received
by
it
as
compensation
for
the
forcible
taking
of
its
Said
two
parcels
of
real
property
was
on
capital
account;
—The
property
was
not
acquired
as
part
of
an
adventure
in
the
nature
of
trade.
The
position
of
the
respondent
was
as
follows:
—The
appellant
acquired
its
interest
in
the
property
and
at
all
times
held
it
with
a
view
of
trading
in,
dealing
in,
or
otherwise
turning
it
to
account
for
a
profit;
—The
profit
realized
by
the
appellant
on
the
expropriation
of
the
properties
was
income
from
a
business.
Evidence
The
chief
(and
controlling)
shareholder
of
Gianita
Holdings
Limited,
Mr
Califano,
confirmed
the
general
background
facts
and
in
examination
and
cross-examination,
added
that
he
had:
—
been
in
the
building
construction
business
in
Italy;
—come
to
Canada
in
1967,
acquired
landed
immigrant
status
and
although
he
returned
to
Italy
to
wind
up
his
business
affairs
there,
he
came
back
to
Canada
two
or
three
times
a
year
for
the
next
few
years
to
maintain
that
status,
until
he
finally
became
a
Canadian
resident;
—substantial
cash
from
winding
up
his
businesses
in
Italy,
which
he
gradually
transferred
to
Canada;
—
incorporated
a
company
(not
the
appellant)
in
1968
and
through
that
company,
in
the
same
year
(1968),
purchased
31
acres
of
vacant
agricultural
land
in
the
general
vicinity
of
the
Village
of
Markham,
in
the
Province
of
Ontario.
This
property
was
subsequently
sold
in
the
year
1974;
—
incorporated
the
appellant
company
in
1969
and
acquired
through
it
the
subject
property
consisting
of
two
parcels
of
vacant
agricultural,
unserviced
land,
totalling
some
23
acres
about
six
or
seven
miles
from
the
Village
of
Markham;
—
no
prior
knowledge
of
the
expropriation
of
the
subject
property
by
the
Government
of
Canada;
—
no
particular
purpose
or
intention
in
mind
in
either
acquisition—specifically
the
one
under
appeal
in
this
hearing—other
than
to
safely
invest
the
money
he
was
bringing
from
Italy.
He
considered
land
as
a
good
hedge
against
inflation
and
had
thought
that
at
some
time
he
might
be
able
to
use
the
property
in
question
in
this
appeal
for
the
construction
of
some
buildings—apartments
or
stores
perhaps;
—no
intention
at
the
time
of
acquisition
of
disposing
of
the
property;
—earned
only
nominal
income
from
the
rent
of
the
property,
not
sufficient
even
for
the
carrying
charges;
—
been
frustrated
by
the
expropriation
in
his
desire
and
expectation
to
keep
the
property
for
a
long-term
investment,
and
make
some
use
thereof.
Argument
Counsel
for
the
appellant
relied
heavily
upon
the
decision
in
Regin
Properties
Limited
v
MNR,
[1979]
CTC
2149;
79
DTC
156,
to
support
the
contention
that
the
gain
must
be
on
capital,
not
revenue
account,
and
quoted
from
pp
2155
and
162
respectively
of
that
decision
as
follows:
With
respect
to
the
gain
on
the
settlement
for
the
property
expropriated,
I
have
seen
no
evidence
that
the
stated
objective
of
the
taxpayer
was
violated
by
him.
I
can
accept
that
while
the
appellant’s
purpose
in
acquiring
the
property
was
indefinite,
perhaps
unusual,
even
unique,
it
was
not
invalid.
It
was,
however,
terminated
by
the
expropriation.
There
is
no
evidence
that
the
appellant
anticipated
the
expropriation
at
acquisition,
or
actively
promoted
the
event
during
ownership.
The
appellant
did
not
consciously
decide
to
‘trade
in’
the
asset
in
the
sense
of
accepting
cash
for
land—that
decision
was
made
for
the
Company
at
the
date
of
the
expropriation
order
by
the
Province
of
Ontario
and
only
the
quantum
of
the
settlement
remained.
Following
the
same
line
of
reasoning
as
that
indicated
for
the
portion
of
the
land
that
was
sold,
I
find
no
basis
in
that
event
(the
expropriation)
to
accord
the
character
of
‘a
venture
in
the
nature
of
trade’,
or
‘trading’
to
this
part
of
the
transaction
in
question.
I
would
refer
to
the
decision
of
Southern
Investments
Limited
v
MNR,
[1970]
Tax
ABC
1149
at
1150;
70
DTC
1729,
at
1730:
The
appellant
says
that
the
sum
mentioned
should
be
treated
as
a
capital
gain,
as
it
was
neither
its
desire
nor
intention
to
sell
the
property
involved
and
the
expropriation
that
occurred
was
something
over
which
it
had
no
control.
That
the
fruits
of
expropriation
might
ordinarily
constitute
a
capital
accretion
is
true,
but
there
are
exceptions
that
depend
on
the
circumstances
that
obtain.
The
present
matter
strikes
me
as
coming
within
one
of
these
exceptions.
(Italics
mine.)
Since
the
gain
at
issue
here
does
not
appear
to
me
to
come
within
any
exceptions,
it
should
be
taxed
as
on
capital
account.
According
to
counsel,
the
conditions
from
Regin
(supra)
should
obtain
equally
in
the
present
appeal
because,
although
the
intentions
of
this
appellant
for
the
use
of
the
property
were
indefinite,
such
intentions
included
its
possible
use
as
a
capital
item
for
the
production
of
income.
Also,
Gianita
had
done
nothing
to
enhance
the
potential
for
resale
of
the
property.
Counsel
made
a
substantial
point
of
reinforcing
that
this
appellant
had,
for
all
intents
and
purposes,
left
the
property
quite
idle—no
improvements,
no
“for
sale”
signs,
no
efforts
to
dispose
of
it.
Counsel
advanced
a
second
argument,
to
be
considered
only
in
the
event
the
Board
found
against
the
taxpayer
on
the
main
contention—that
the
funds
received
should
be
regarded
as
income
in
the
particular
years
re-
ceived
rather
than
all
in
1975
when
final
settlement
was
reached.
This
argument
was
based
on
the
perspective
that
the
interim
payments
(for
which
the
relevant
documentation
was
submitted)
were
in
fact
final
payments
up
to
the
particular
points
in
time—to
which
the
appellant
had
complete
right,
and
therefore
were
income.
Counsel’s
view
was
founded
on
the
decision
in
MNR
v
Benaby
Realties
Limited,
[1967]
CTC
418;
67
DTC
5275.
The
third
argument
of
counsel
(again
contingent
upon
the
Board
finding
against
the
taxpayer
on
the
main
point)
was
that
the
Minister
had
not
allowed
the
taxpayer
the
“small
business
deduction’’
permitted
to
active
business
corporations
under
subsection
125(1
)
of
the
Act.
It
was
proposed
that
the
decision
in
The
Queen
v
Cadboro
Bay
Holdings
Ltd,
[1977]
CTC
186;
77
DTC
5115,
left
no
doubt
that
if
it
is
to
be
regarded
as
a
business,
then
it
is
an
active
business.
With
respect
to
the
appellant’s
main
argument,
counsel
for
the
respondent
pointed
out
that
the
appellant
had
been
specifically
incorporated
to
hold
the
land;
the
company
charter
(submitted
as
an
exhibit)
was
for
dealing
in
real
estate;
the
property
had
been
heavily
mortgaged;
no
early
commercial
or
industrial
use
of
the
property
was
discernable
at
the
date
of
purchase;
and
it
was
not
used
to
produce
income.
The
acquisition,
therefore,
could
only
have
been
speculative
on
the
part
of
the
appellant
for
purposes
of
resale,
and
was
an
adventure
in
the
nature
of
trade.
With
regard
to
Regin
Properties
(supra),
it
was
the
view
of
counsel
that
this
appellant
could
not
claim
the
same
relief,
and
he
quoted
from
pp
2152
and
159
respectively
of
that
decision:
The
family
philosophy
is
that
land
is
the
safest
and
best
method
of
preserving
capital.
The
family
acquired
and
continues
to
own
vast
tracts
of
land
in
Europe,
although
some
two-thirds
of
the
holdings
were
lost
during
or
after
the
Second
World
War.
Thereafter
the
Prince
embarked
on
a
policy
of
buying
land
in
North
and
South
America.
In
view
of
the
political
stability
of
Canada,
he
purchased
farms,
timber
limits
and
revenue-producing
properties
in
Canada.
He
also
purchased
a
huge
ranch
in
Brazil
which
he
is
actively
cultivating.
The
property
involved
in
this
dispute
was
acquired
in
keeping
with
this
philosophy,
and
held
the
potential
of
industrial
or
commercial,
or
even
agricultural
use
within
the
framework
of
the
total
holdings
and
business
interests
of
the
family.
Dealing
with
the
“year
of
taxation’’
question,
counsel
for
the
respondent
rejected
the
proposition
of
the
appellant
that
the
law,
and
the
arrangements
for
payment
accepted
by
Gianita,
provided
any
foundation
for
allocating
to
the
years
of
receipt
the
income
in
question,
rather
than
accumulating
the
payments
until
the
time
that
a
final
settlement
was
reached.
The
1973
and
1974
payments
were
made
“on
account”
of
the
final
settlement
in
1975.
On
the
“active”
business
issue,
counsel
did
not
agree
that
one
single
transaction—buying
a
property
and
selling
it—could
be
classified
as
an
“active”
business,
even
though
treated
by
the
Minister
as
a
“business”.
However,
a
rationale
for
such
a
view
by
the
Minister
was
not
made
quite
clear
to
the
Board.
Findings
The
decision
in
Regin
(supra)
conceded
that
the
use
of
the
property
ina
productive
manner
could
not
be
ruled
out,
and
the
benefit
of
any
doubt
for
the
gain
on
the
property
expropriated
was
accorded
to
the
taxpayer.
Some
Similarity
may
be
drawn
between
Regin
(supra)
and
the
instant
appeal
on
the
following
bases
to
be
found
at
pp
2154
and
161
respectively:
One
possibility
in
the
mind
of
the
Prince
was
to
use
the
property
at
some
time
in
the
future
in
a
productive
capacity
(#3),
and
the
other
was
to
hold
the
property,
whether
or
not
it
was
productively
used,
as
a
means
of
preserving
the
family
wealth
(#4).
These
possibilities
were
never
brought
to
fruition,
they
were
terminated
and,
since
that
termination
activated,
accompanied
or
encompassed
profit
on
the
transaction,
it
rests
with
the
taxpayer
to
show
that
it
should
not
remain
in
income
account
where
the
Minister
has
placed
it.
And
at
pp
2155
and
162
respectively:
There
is
no
evidence
that
the
appellant
anticipated
the
expropriation
at
acquisition,
or
actively
promoted
the
event
during
ownership.
The
appellant
did
not
consciously
decide
to
‘trade
in’
the
asset
in
the
sense
of
accepting
cash
for
land—that
decision
was
made
for
the
Company
at
the
date
of
the
expropriation
order
by
the
Province
of
Ontario
and
only
the
quantum
of
the
settlement
remained.
There
are,
however,
at
least
three
points
upon
which
distinctions
of
merit
can
be
made
between
Regin
(supra)
and
the
instant
appeal,
all
noted
by
counsel
for
the
respondent.
First,
there
was
ample
evidence
in
Regin
(supra)
that
a
world-wide
family-controlled
business
already
existed
within
which
the
property
acquired
could
easily
have
had
a
productive
purpose,
a
Situation
which
does
not
obtain
in
the
instant
case.
This
appellant,
Gianita,
acquired
the
property
“when
there
was
no
business
..a
condition
which
would
entail
substantial
obstacles
for
an
appellant,
as
indicated
in
Regin
(supra).
In
the
instant
appeal,
the
business
purpose
at
the
time
of
acquisition
was
not
only
indefinite,
it
was
non-existent.
Second,
at
the
date
of
acquisition
of
the
subject
property
by
Gianita,
Mr
Califano
(through
a
separate
company)
already
had
owned
for
about
two
years
another
parcel
of
land
in
the
Village
of
Markham,
acquired
under
similar
circumstances,
for
which
no
productive
use
had
developed.
Third,
the
company
charter
for
Gianita
in
this
matter
is
significant
since
the
objects
of
the
company,
except
for
clauses
(a)
and
(b)
thereof
(which
themselves
deal
with
the
construction
industry),
through
clauses
(c)
through
(h)
entirely
relate
to
transactions
in
land
and
buildings,
including
all
forms
of
purchasing,
subdividing,
selling,
mortgaging,
etc.
The
point
was
made
by
counsel
for
the
appellant
that
since
no
action
was
taken
to
enhance
the
value
or
potential
of
the
property
for
resale,
the
transaction
should
be
considered
on
capital
account.
It
is
of
very
little
substance
either
way
on
that
particular
point—but
it
does
have
significance
later
on
in
this
decision
in
connection
with
one
of
the
appellant’s
alternative
arguments.
Finally,
the
appellant’s
position
that
the
acquisition
was
a
hedge
against
inflation,
is
less
than
persuasive.
It
was
acknowledged
by
Mr
Califano
that
the
inflation
rate
in
1970
was
perhaps
5
to
6%
while
the
investment
interest
rate
was
8
or
9%.
Considered
together
with
the
fact
that
the
property
earned
less
income
than
its
carrying
costs,
it
is
difficult
indeed
to
accord
any
merit
to
this
argument.
In
my
view,
Gianita
can
find
little
comfort
in
either
of
Regin
(supra)
or
Southern
Investments
Limited
(referenced
in
Regin)
for
its
contention
that
the
profit
on
the
expropriation
should
be
on
capital
account.
The
appellant
in
this
case
has
failed
to
eliminate
or
even
minimize
the
prospect
of
sale
as
the
motivating
factor
in
the
purchase
of
the
property.
The
profit
on
this
expropriation
fits
precisely
into
the
exceptions
noted
in
Southern
(supra),
and
the
decision
to
dismiss
the
main
contention
of
the
appellant
will
be
consistent
therewith.
In
this
connection,
I
quote
from
Southern
(supra)
at
pp
1150
and
1730
respectively:
...
I
think
that
dealing
in
real
estate
may
very
well
be
said
to
be
a
part,
at
least,
of
its
real
business.
Paragraph
(b)
of
the
Letters
Patent
reads
as
follows
(the
italics
are
mine):
TO
carry
on
business
as
investors,
brokers
and
agents,
and
to
undertake,
carry
on
and
execute
all
kinds
of
financial,
commercial,
trading
and
other
operations
which
may
seem
to
be
capable
of
being
conveniently
carried
on
in
connection
with
any
of
the
objects
of
the
Company
or
calculated
directly
to
enhance
the
value
of
or
facilitate
the
realization
of
or
render
profitable
any
of
the
Company’s
property
or
rights.
I
think
that,
without
referring
to
any
of
the
other
nine
comprehensive
paragraphs
relating
to
objects
and
powers
in
the
Letters
Patent,
the
paragraph
quoted
could
well
embrace
dealing
in,
or
turning
real
estate
to
account.
The
expropriation
proceedings,
whether
they
were
welcomed
or
not
by
the
appellant,
nevertheless
afforded
a
means
of
disposing
of
the
property
and
gave
the
appellant
a
profit;
it
was
one
way
of
turning
the
land
to
account
even
if
not
in
the
manner
originally
anticipated.
In
the
circumstances,
the
proceeds
of
the
expropriation
became
income
in
the
coffers
of
the
appellant.
While
not
dealing
with
the
identical
point
raised
in
this
appeal,
some
further
enlightenment
on
this
general
matter
of
“revenue
account
versus
capital
account”
transactions
can
be
gained
from
a
review
of
the
recent
decision
of
the
Federal
Court
of
Appeal
in
Kensington
Land
Developments
Ltd
v
Her
Majesty
The
Queen,
[1979]
CTC
367;
79
DTC
5283.
On
the
matter
of
the
proper
year
or
years
for
assessment
of
income
tax
on
the
receipts
from
the
expropriation
(counsel’s
second
proposition),
the
appellant
largely
bases
his
position
on
Benaby
Realties
(supra),
particularly
the
quotation
to
be
found
at
pp
420
and
5276
respectively:
.
.
.
in
the
absence
of
a
binding
agreement
between
the
parties
or
of
a
judgment
fixing
the
compensation,
the
owner
had
no
more
than
a
right
to
claim
compensation
and
there
is
nothing
which
can
be
taken
into
account
as
an
amount
receivable
due
to
the
expropriation.
It
is
contended
by
counsel
that
at
each
stage
of
the
financial
settlement
proceedings
when
an
amount
(or
a
second,
third
or
fourth
amount)
was
paid,
this
was
complete—subject
only
to
the
rights
of
the
appellant
to
claim
additional
compensation.
According
to
counsel,
while
the
fifth
and
last
amount
(10
May
1975—$12,206.80)
established
the
total
compensation,
since
the
appellant
did
not
pursue
the
matter
further,
it
was
no
more
than
one
in
a
series
of
payments,
each
equally
complete
at
that
particularly
relevant
moment
in
time.
I
can
appreciate
that
certain
phrases
from
Benaby
(supra)
such
as
final
settlement,
binding
agreement,
finally
determined,
or
the
amount
fixed,
could
give
support
to
the
position
of
counsel
for
the
respondent
that
these
are
not
trade
receipts
for
the
particular
year
in
which
they
were
received.
However,
in
my
view
such
a
possible
interpretation
is
clearly
rejected
in
the
subsequent
decisions
in
Vaughan
Construction
Company
Limited
v
MNR,
both
at
the
Exchequer
Court
level,
[1968]
CTC
165;
68
DTC
5099,
and
at
the
Supreme
Court
level,
[1970]
CTC
350;
70
DTC
6268.
At
pp
355
and
6271
respectively
of
the
Supreme
Court
decision,
it
is
noted:
What
was
then
directed
to
be
paid
(and
which
was
in
fact
paid
in
that
year)
was,
so
far
as
it
represented
in
any
portion
thereof
a
gain
arising
out
of
the
appellant’s
business,
properly
assessable
to
tax
in
1957.
In
the
instant
appeal
the
payments
made
to
the
appellant
may
not
have
been
the
result
of
specific
court
orders,
but
I
certainly
agree
with
the
proposition
of
counsel
for
the
appellant
that
at
the
particularly
relevant
dates
they
were
final.
Quotations
taken
from
the
letters
from
the
Department
of
Public
Works
to
the
appellant
confirm
this
view:
From
letter
of
April
24,
1973:
The
amount
offered
therefore,
is
the
‘net’
estimated
value
of
your
interest.
In
accordance
with
the
Expropriation
Act
you
may
accept
this
offer
without
prejudice
to
your
right
to
claim
additional
compensation.
And
from
letter
of
April
25,
1974:
We
attach
a
form
which
sets
out
all
previous
offers
made,
and
the
new
adjusted
Market
Value
offer
and
related
entitlements.
It
also
indicates
the
amount
which
we
are
now
offering
to
pay
you.
This
latest
offer
is
made
as
an
amendemnt
to
the
Original
Section
14
offer
and
is
therefore
again
without
prejudice
to
your
right
to
claim
additional
compensation.
The
Board
has
not
been
given
a
viable
argument
by
counsel
for
the
respondent
which
would
allow
for
consideration
of
the
payments
at
issue
as
other
than
“final”,
and
accordingly
the
argument
of
counsel
for
the
appellant
will
be
sustained.
On
counsel’s
third
proposition,
the
“active”
business
question,
it
is
proposed
that
since
a
single
“adventure
in
the
nature
of
trade”
constitutes
business,
it
is
axiomatically
“active”
business
based
on
the
decision
in
Cadboro
Bay
(supra).
Counsel
made
it
quite
clear
that
the
business
transactions
which
related
to
the
small
amount
of
income
earned
by
Gianita
were
not
to
be
considered
as
the
basis
for
claiming
the
“active
business”
designation;
neither
was
reference
made
to
any
effort
which
resulted
in
the
increased
payments
received
in
1973,1974
and
1975
after
the
date
of
the
expropriation.
In
its
simplest
format,
according
to
counsel
this
appellant
was
“active”
as
a
corporation
because
of
the
activity
in
acquiring
the
property
in
1970
as
a
venture
in
the
nature
of
trade,
and
holding
it
until
1973
when
it
was
expropriated.
Any
possible
“active”
characteristics
for
purposes
of
this
part
of
the
argument,
as
I
would
understand
it,
therefore
ceased
with
the
expropriation.
There
are
several
obstacles
which
the
above
proposition
has
difficulty
in
surmounting.
First,
the
year
assessed
is
1975—and
according
to
the
above
parameters
established
by
counsel
for
the
appellant,
the
company
was
not
in
“active
business”
in
that
year.
The
same
view
would
obtain
for
the
year
1974
and
for
the
period
of
the
year
1973
after
the
expropriation—there
was
no
“business”,
let
alone
“active
business”
with
relation
to
this
appeal—there
was
no
longer
real
property
owned
by
the
appellant.
For
the
year
1973,
the
appellant’s
rationale
might
have
merit
for
the
period
January
1,
1973
to
January
30,
1973,
the
date
of
the
expropriation.
However,
a
fundamental
difficulty
is
faced
by
the
appellant,
which
is
also
to
be
found
in
Cadboro
Bay
(supra).
In
that
decision,
at
pp
197
and
5122
respectively,
the
learned
judge
comments
as
follows:
(For
reasons
that
are
stated
later
in
this
judgment,
what
is
income
from
‘‘a
business
other
than
an
active
business”
must
mean
income
from
a
business
that
is
in
an
“absolute
state
of
suspension”;
(see
quotation
from
The
Queen
v
Rockmore
Investments
Limited
that
is,
devoid
of
any
quantum
of
business
activity,
but
which
has
some
asset
which
produces
income.)
The
Board
concludes
that
in
the
instant
appeal
the
“active
business”
characteristics
of
the
corporation
were
evidenced
by
the
transaction
in
which
it
acquired
the
real
property
in
the
year
1970.
This
was
a
transaction
which
would
be
carried
out
by
a
corporation
in
active
pursuit
of
the
objectives
outlined
in
the
company
charter.
In
my
view,
the
business
purpose
of
the
corporation
was
and
remained
its
interest
in
the
disposal
of
the
property
at
a
profit
but
that
objective,
by
the
evidence
provided
to
the
Board
by
the
appellant
itself,
was
not
pursued
between
1970
and
1973—it
was
placed
in
an
“absolute
state
of
suspension”.
The
reasons
for
such
suspension,
which
must
have
been
considered
appropriate
by
the
appellant
at
the
time,
were
not
provided
to
the
Board
at
the
hearing,
but
I
am
satisfied
that
such
a
description
accurately
fits
the
complete
lack
of
activity
in
this
matter.
The
appellant
company
was
brought
out
of
this
state
of
suspension
by
the
expropriation
and
the
venture
in
the
nature
of
trade
upon
which
it
had
originally
embarked,
was
completed.
(The
Board
in
not
deciding
that
there
would
have
been
any
different
result
from
some
other
form
of
disposition
of
the
property.)
The
distinction
which
is
to
be
made
from
Cadboro
Bay
(supra)
is
that
in
this
appeal
there
was
no
quantum
of
business
whatsoever
conducted
in
keeping
with
the
objective
of
the
acquisition,
during
the
period
from
the
purchase
of
the
property
to
its
expropriation.
Further
support
can
be
found
for
the
above
opinion
in
a
recent
decision
of
this
Board
(Morbane
Developments
Ltd
v
MNR,
[1979]
CTC
2794;
79
DTC
674)
in
which
facts
and
circumstances
more
indicative
of
an
“active”
business
than
those
in
the
instant
appeal
were
brought
forward,
but
the
appellant
did
not
succeed,
as
noted
at
pp
2797
and
677
respectively:
The
fact
that
the
subdivision
and
the
servicing
of
the
land
was
performed
by
someone
other
than
the
appellant
and
that
the
sales
were
made
by
an
agent
to
whom
the
appellant
paid
a
commission,
does
not,
in
my
opinion,
make
the
appellant’s
enterprise
any
less
a
business.
The
question
is
whether
the
business
was
active.
The
appellant
company,
which
admittedly,
is
not
at
arm’s
length
with
McLachlan
Construction
Ltd
or
with
Mr
Lindsay
McLachlan
(who
is
the
President
of
both
companies),
is
nevertheless
a
legal
entity
which
was
carrying
on
its
own
business.
The
fact
that
the
alpellant
had
no
office,
no
staff
and
no
telephone
are
not,
in
themselves
(s/c),
determinative
of
whether
or
not
the
appellant’s
business
was
active.
The
facts,
in
my
opinion,
that
are
very
much
more
indicative
of
the
nature
of
the
appellant’s
business
are
that:
the
appellant,
in
the
pertinent
period,
made
but
one
purchase
of
land
and
did
not
renew
its
land
inventory;
that
it
did
not
actively
advertise
(other
than
by
a
sign
on
the
land)
land
for
sale;
and,
that
it
sold
land
to
only
one
customer,
and
from
1960
to
1969
had
engaged
in
an
average
of
less
than
three
sales
a
year.
Considering
all
of
the
facts
together,
I
cannot
conclude
that
the
appellant
was
carrying
on
an
active
business
from
1960
to
1969.
Decision
The
appeal
is
allowed
in
part
and
the
matter
referred
back
to
the
respondent
for
reassessment
in
order
that
the
income
earned
by
Gianita
Holdings
Limited
be
reflected
in
the
income
tax
assessments
for
the
years
in
which
such
amounts
were
received
rather
than
all
in
the
year
1975.
No
information
was
provided
to
the
Board
upon
which
the
calculation
of
“income”
as
opposed
to
“funds
received”
might
be
made,
and
no
opinion
as
to
the
amounts
to
be
considered
taxable
in
each
of
the
three
years
is
expressed
thereon.
In
all
other
aspects
the
appeal
is
dismissed.
Appeal
allowed
in
part.