The
Chief
Justice
(per
curiam)
(judgment
delivered
from
the
Bench):—
This
is
an
appeal
from
a
judgment
of
the
Trial
Division
dismissing
with
costs
an
appeal
from
a
judgment
of
the
Tax
Review
Board
dismissing
an
appeal
by
the
appellant
from
his
assessment
under
Part
I
of
the
Income
Tax
Act
for
the
1967
taxation
year.
The
sole
question
in
issue
is
whether
the
appellant’s
share
of
a
profit
of
$5,000,
made
on
the
sale
in
1967
of
a
small
apartment
building
bought
by
the
appellant
and
two
other
men
in
1965,
is
a
profit
from
a
business
within
the
meaning
of
that
word
as
enlarged
by
paragraph
139(1)(e)
of
the
Income
Tax
Act
to
include
“an
adventure
or
concern
in
the
nature
of
trade”.
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.
Evidence
was
led
in
the
Trial
Division
of
surrounding
circumstances
that
were
relied
on
by
the
respondent
as
tending
to
show
that
the
appellant
was
dealing
in
real
estate.
In
my
opinion
such
evidence
does
not
lend
any
support
for
the
assessment.
I
refer
to
evidence
of
a
profit
from
a
sale
of
land
made
by
the
appellant
which
was
first
assessed
by
the
respondent
as
a
profit
from
a
business
and
was
subsequently
dropped
from
the
assessment,
to
evidence
of
two
or
three
options
by
which
the
appellant
made
minor
profits,
to
evidence
of
the
appellant
doing
legal
work
for
real
estate
companies,
and
to
evidence
of
investments
made
by
the
appellant
in
real
estate
companies
by
way
of
share
purchases
and
loans.
There
is
in
such
evidence,
in
my
opinion,
no
evidence
of
any
of
the
indications
on
which
the
courts
have
relied
as
giving
rise
to
an
inference
of
a
so-called
“secondary
intention”
to
resell
at
a
profit
as
a
motivating
reason
for
the
original
acquisition.
In
my
opinion,
the
assessment,
and
the
decision
of
the
Trial
Division,
must
be
supported,
if
they
are
to
be
supported,
on
the
basis
of
the
statement
in
the
statement
of
defence
in
the
Trial
Division
that,
in
assessing
the
appellant
for
1967,
the
respondent
acted,
inter
alia,
upon
the
assumption
that
the
property
in
question
“was
acquired
for
the
purpose
of
being
turned
to
account
at
a
profit”.
As
indicated
by
the
learned
trial
judge,
the
onus
was
on
the
appellant
to
rebut
that
assumption.
(Compare
R
IV
S
Johnston
v
MNR,
[1948]
SCR
486;
[1948]
CTC
195;
3
DTC
1182.)
The
learned
trial
judge
said
that,
on
the
evidence,
no
error
in
the
assessment
had
been
proven.
Before
reaching
that
conclusion,
he
reviewed
the
evidence,
in
part,
as
follows:
The
Glenayr
Apartment
from
which
the
profit
arose
consisted
of
four
or
five
apartments
situate
in
Nanaimo.
In
1965
that
apartment
was
purchased
by
Goodwin,
Ney
and
the
appellant
and
in
1967,
two
years
later
was
resold
at
a
profit
for
which
the
appellant
has
been
assessed
one-third,
the
extent
of
the
interest
received
by
him.
Goodwin
is
a
chartered
accountant,
employed
by
the
Nanaimo
Realty
Limited
and
is
a
close
friend
of
the
appellant.
Ney
is
manager
of
the
insurance
department
at
the
Nanaimo
Realty
Limited.
The
appellant
has
testified
that
he
bought
as
an
investment;
that
the
apartment
block
proved
uneconomical
in
that
four
to
five
units
required
the
bookkeeping
expense
of
an
apartment
block
of
twenty.
units.
Accordingly
the
apartment
block
was
resold
and
was
later
replaced
by
premises
which
contained
a
butcher
shop
and
also
a
repair
shop
in
which
the
tenant
and
family
lived
overhead.
The
relationship
of
the
three
purchasers
Goodwin,
Ney
and
the
appellant
was
that
of
partners
and
each
partner
had
an
equal
share,
that
is,
one-third.
Also,
the
majority
would
carry
in
any
decision
to
which
the
partnership
might
come
in
purchasing.
The
partnership
relied
in
this
instance
on
the
decision
of
Goodwin
and
Ney.
.
.
.
As
the
appellant
has
purchased
an
interest
in
the
partnership
assets
and
as
the
partnership
decision
was
determined
by
a
majority
of
the
partners,
therefore
the
question
must
be
whether
the
majority—that
is,
Goodwin
and
Ney—at
the
time
of
the
purchase
had
the
alternative
intention
of
reselling
at
a
profit.
Racine,
Demers
and
Nolin
v
MNR,
[1965]
CTC
150;
65
DTC
5098,
per
Noël,
J
(now
Associate
Chief
Justice)
at
159
[5103].
Here
the
question
must
be,
not
whether
the
appellant
acquired
his
interest
as
an
investment
but
whether
the
profit
realized
by
the
partnership
on
the
resale
is
taxable
income
by
reason
of
the
two
partners
Goodwin
and
Ney
having
bought
the
apartment
with
the
alternative
intention
of
reselling
at
a
profit.
Goodwin
and
Ney
were
associated
in
a
realty
company,
the
Nanaimo
Realty
Limited,
and
as
such
could
readily
see
whether
the
full
purchase
price
was
realized
and
whether
the
property
could
be
replaced
to
advantage.*
He
does
not,
however,
refer
to
the
following
passages
from
the
testimony
of
the
appellant:
The
reason
for
the
purchase,
my
lord,
was
my
own
retirement,
and
this
was
—I
am
informed
by
the
other
two
gentlemen
and
do
verily
believe
their
reason
for
purchasing
rental
buildings.
Now,
!
say
that
it
was
not
sold
for
profit,
it
was
sold
so
it
could
be
replaced
by
another
building
which
would
be
economic
and
would
look
after
our
retirement,
and
that
is
the
total
of
my
testimony.
This
latter
evidence
was
not
challenged
or
contradicted
and
no
objection
of
any
kind
was
taken
thereto.
The
question,
in
my
view,
is
whether
it
rebuts
the
assumption
of
the
respondent,
on
which
he
based
the
assessment,
that
the
property
“was
acquired
for
the
purpose
of
being
turned
to
account
at
a
profit’.
Had
the
other
two
persons
involved
also
been
called
each
to
say
on
his
own
behalf
that
the
reason
for
the
purchase
was
to
acquire
a
permanent
investment
for
his
retirement,
in
my
view,
in
the
context,
in
the
absence
of
challenge
or
contradiction,
the
evidence
would
rebut
the
assumption
that
the
property
was
acquired
for
the
purpose
of
being
turned
to
account
at
a
profit.
That
assumption
would
also
have
been
rebutted
if
the
appellant
had,
by
unchallenged
and
uncontradicted
evidence,
testified
that
the
joint
purpose
of
all
three
in
acquiring
the
property
was
to
acquire
it
as
a
revenue-producing
investment
for
their
retirement.
While
I
do
not
find
the
evidence
as
satisfactory
as
it
might
be,
I
have
concluded
that
it
comes
to
the
same
thing.
It
is
so
improbable
that
the
three
men
would
have
purchased
the
property
together
with
one
intending
it
as
a
permanent
investment
and
the
others
intending
a
short-term
resale
for
a
profit
that
I
think
that,
if
one
accepts
the
appellant’s
testimony
as
being
honest,
and
there
is
no
suggestion
that
it
is
not,
the
balance
of
probability
is
that
none
of
the
three
intended,
even
“secondarily”,
when
they
bought
the
property,
to
turn
it
to
account
for
a
profit.
In
my
view
the
assumption
was
rebutted,
the
appeal
should
be
allowed,
the
judgment
of
the
Trial
Division
should
be
set
aside,
the
appellant’s
assessment
under
Part
I
of
the
Income
Tax
Act
for
the
1967
taxation
year
should
be
referred
back
to
the
respondent
for
reassessment
on
the
basis
that
the
profit
in
question
was
not
a
profit
from
a
business
and
the
respondent
should
pay
to
the
appellant
his
costs
in
the
Trial
Division
as
well
as
in
this
Court.