The
Chairman
(orally:
September
11,
1973):—These
appeals
by
Garden
Investments
Ltd
are
against
reassessments
of
the
Minister
of
National
Revenue
for
the
taxation
years
1968,
1969
and
1970.
It
was
agreed
at
the
outset
that
the
evidence
applicable
to
the
appeal
for
any
one
of
the
three
years
in
question
will
be
the
evidence
for
all,
and
the
outcome
of
the
appeal
in
any
one
year
would
be
the
same
as
in
the
other
two
years.
The
appeals
arise
out
of
the
interpretation
of
losses
that
can
be
carried
forward
under
paragraph
27(1
)(e)
of
the
Income
Tax
Act,
and
the
appellant
has
claimed
such
losses
that
occurred
in
the
year
1965
as
a
deduction
from
its
income
for
each
of
the
years
under
appeal.
The
claim
has
been
disallowed
by
the
Minister,
the
Minister
basing
his
case
mainly
on
the
fact
that
the
appellant
cannot
qualify
by
virtue
of
subsection
27(5a)
of
the
said
Act.
The
appellant
company
was
incorporated
as
a
Manitoba
company
on
April
2,
1958
with
a
general
investment
clause
in
its
objects.
On
the
evidence
of
Mr
Levin,
who
is
president
and
was
a
50%
shareholder
at
all
the
material
times
up
to
1965,
it
is
clear
to
me
that
from
1958
on
the
company
was
engaged
in
building,
renting
and
investing
in
investment
properties.
The
building
aspect
was
necessary,
of
course,
to
obtain
the
buildings
to
rent.
I
presume
the
company
carried
on
its
own
construction
rather
than
purchasing
ready-built
buildings
because
it
owned
raw
land.
Difficulties
arose,
apparently,
in
1964,
and
as
is
evidenced
by
an
agreement
entered
into
by
Garden
Investments
Ltd,
the
appellant,
with
City
Lumber
Company,
the
latter
company,
which
was
controlled
by
Mr
Levin,
acquired
the
assets,
or
the
interest,
in
Garden
Investments
Ltd,
which
included
the
writing-off
of
some
$116,000
in
debts
and
the
assumption
of
the
mortgages
on
the
apartment
buildings
in
question.
The
actual
date
of
the
document
filed
as
Exhibit
R-1
is
difficult
to
pin
down,
but
I
am
satisfied
in
my
own
mind,
by
reference
to
the
schedule
and
from
listening
to
the
evidence
of
Mr
Levin
that
the
document
was
effective
at
least
as
of
the
first
day
of
December
1964,
and,
in
any
event,
the
fiscal
year
of
the
company
ends
on
March
31
and
its
financial
statement
shows
that
on
March
31,
1965
all
the
assets
of
the
appellant
company
had
been
disposed
of.
The
evidence
further
indicates,
by
respondent’s
exhibits
R-2
and
R-3,
that
the
company
had
no
assets
in
the
1966
or
1967
taxation
years.
The
evidence
of
Mr
Levin
is
that
he
was
not
prepared
to
continue
the
business.
The
other
50%
“partner”,
Mr
Golden
and
Garry
Builders
Ltd,
the
company
vehicle
through
which
Mr
Golden
operated,
was
not
only
unable
to
meet
its
50%
share
of
the
operating
costs,
but,
further,
it
was
not
able
to
meet
its
obligations
with
respect
to
other
outstanding
debts.
Mr
Levin
says
that
he
was
not
prepared
to
do
anything
in
a
formal
business
way
to
affect
or
commit
the
appellant
company
in
any
way
between
January
1,
1965
and
August
of
1967,
when
he
acquired,
and
had
registered
in
his
name,
the
balance
of
the
shares
of
the
appellant
company.
This,
he
indicated
at
the
time
he
gave
evidence,
was
a
sound
business
approach
to
the
proposition.
Whether
or
not
it
was
a
sound
approach
from
an
income
tax
point
of
view
remains
to
be
seen.
As
pointed
out
by
counsel
for
the
appellant
at
the
outset,
the
question
is
whether
or
not
this
company
at
any
time
ceased
to
carry
on
business.
In
addition
to
invoking
the
provisions
of
subsection
27(5a),
the
respondent
has
argued
that
this
company
was
not
carrying
on
the
same
business
in
the
taxation
years
1968
and
1969
and
1970
that
it
was
carrying
on
in
the
year
that
the
loss
was
incurred,
but
I
have
indicated
that
I
do
not
accept
that,
because
by
their
own
evidence
and
in
the
documents
they
have
filed
and
in
the
evidence
of
Mr
Levin,
it
is
clear
to
me
that
this
was
always
intended
to
be
and
was
a
rental
company
for
some
years
prior
to
the
year
1965
and
continued
to
be
one
after
the
purchase
of
some
duplexes
some
time
after
March
31,
1967,
which
would
fix
the
acquisition
and
the
reactivation,
if
there
was
a
reactivation,
of
the
company
in
its
1968
fiscal
year.
What
I
must
decide
is
whether
or
not
the
company
ceased
to
do
business
and
discontinued
its
operations,
within
the
meaning
of
the
Income
Tax
Act,
between
January
1,
1965
and
some
time
after
April
1,
1967
because,
as
I
have
said,
there
is
no
doubt
in
my
mind,
and
I
find
it
as
a
fact,
that
in
1968,
1969
and
1970
it
was
carrying
on
the
same
business
as
it
carried
on
in
the
fiscal
year
1965.
Therefore
I
must
look
at
the
evidence
presented
by
the
appellant,
to
which
I
have
referred,
as
well
as
at
the
documentation
contained
in
the
many
exhibits
filed.
I
have
been
inundated
by
case
law,
upon
which
I
make
the
comment
that,
except
in
cases
where
an
overriding
principle
is
clearly
established,
in
tax
law
as
in
any
other
type
of
law,
the
cases
depend
primarily
on
the
facts.
Although
the
cases
are
of
some
influence
on
given
points,
I
think
that
this
case
depends
entirely
on
its
own
set
of
facts,
and
with
those
facts
I
must
come
to
my
conclusion.
As
I
have
said,
it
is
clear
from
the
documentation
and
from
the
oral
evidence
of
Mr
Levin
that
at
the
end
of
the
1965
fiscal
year
there
was
a
terminal
loss
of
$9,000
and,
in
round
figures,
because
the
figures
do
not
really
matter
in
the
interpretation
of
the
section,
a
loss
of
about
$10,000
existed
after
the
assets
had
been
disposed
of.
It
is
urged
upon
me
by
the
very
able
counsel
for
the
appellant
that
the
appellant
merely
became
inactive
for
a
period
of
time
before
the
difficulties
between
Garry
Builders
and
City
Lumber
could
be
ironed
out
and
formal
control
passed
to
Mr
Levin.
He
says,
in
effect,
that
this
was
a
prudent
manner
for
Golden
and
Levin
to
settle
their
differences,
and
that
neither
they
nor
the
appellant
company
should
be
penalized
because
of
the
manner
in
which
it
was
done,
which
was
a
much
more
satisfactory
solution
than
if
they
had
each
dug
in
their
heels
and
resorted
to
declaring
a
formal
bankruptcy
of
the
business.
The
facts
are
inescapable
that,
from
December
1964
until
some
time
after
March
1967,
the
company
owned
nothing
with
which
to
do
business,
and
I
have
before
me
a
copy
of
Webster’s
Twentieth
Century
Dictionary,
volume
1,
which
I
happen
to
have
on
hand
as
a
result
of
a
case
yesterday,
where
“business”
is
described
as:
Employment,
occupation,
profession,
calling,
vocation,
means
of
livelihood,
that
which
occupies
the
time,
attention
and
labour
of
men
for
the
purpose
of
profit
or
improvement.
If
I
am
to
take
the
ordinary,
everyday
meaning
of
words
in
interpreting
the
Income
Tax
Act—and
I
think
I
must,
because,
complicated
though
it
may
seem,
it
is
alleged
to
have
been
written
for
the
layman
to
understand—then
by
no
stretch
of
the
imagination
can
I
find
that
this
company
was
carrying
on
business
in
the
period
that
I
have
outlined,
because
it
had
nothing
to
sell,
it
had
nothing
to
rent,
and
nothing
with
which
to
produce
profit
or
improvement
for
itself,
because
it
had
disposed
of
all
its
assets.
Mr
Levin
had
signed
a
corporate
income
tax
return
(R-3),
which
shows
the
nature
of
the
business
as
“nonoperating”,
and
he
says
he
signed
that,
as
I
am
sure
he
did,
because
his
auditors
put
it
before
him,
and
he
signed
it
without
questioning
it
because
he
assumed
that
they
knew
what
they
were
doing.
I
think
I
am
entitled
to
make
the
same
assumption,
as
the
balance
sheets
attached
to
R-2
and
R-3
for
1966
and
1967
as
well
as
the
balance
sheet
for
the
1965
taxation
year
show
no
assets
of
a
nature
to
assist
this
company
in
producing
revenue
or
in
carrying
out
the
ordinary
everyday
definition
of
business
that
I
have
just
given.
I
cannot
on
all
the
evidence
find
that
the
mere
keeping
alive
of
this
company
by
carrying
out
the
formalities
required
by
the
Provincial
Companies
Branch,
such
as
the
filing
of
annual
information
returns,
or
the
turning
of
the
company
from
a
public
into
a
private
company,
or
doing
the
normal
things
that
would
keep
it
from
losing
its
charter,
are
sufficient,
either
individually
or
taken
as
a
whole,
to
overcome
the
requirement
that
the
Income
Tax
Act
places
upon
those
who
would
take
advantage
of
the
loss
provisions
of
section
27.
In
my
view,
this
business
was
discontinued
for
a
period
of
time
at
least,
between
January
1,
1965
and
April
1,
1967
and
therefore
the
appeal
must
fail.
It
is
therefore
dismissed.
Appeal
dismissed.