The
Chairman
(orally:
September
26,
1973):—This
is
an
appeal
by
E
V
Keith
Enterprises
Ltd
against
a
reassessment
of
the
Minister
of
National
Revenue
for
the
1969
taxation
year.
The
point
in
issue
is
whether
or
not
the
appellant
is
entitled
to
deduct
from
its
income
the
sum
of
$15,000
loaned
to
one
Alan
James
who,
the
evidence
indicates,
became
a
bankrupt
in
the
year
in
question.
The
Minister
of
National
Revenue
has
disallowed
the
write-off
of
this
sum
under
paragraph
11(1)(f)
of
the
Income
Tax
Act
as
it
applies
to
the
1969
taxation
year,
on
the
basis
that
this
company
was
not
in
the
business
of
moneylending.
The
facts
are
that,
as
shown
in
appellant’s
Exhibit
A-1,
over
a
period
of
time
from
1953
to
1970
the
company
did
make
a
series
of
advances
to
various
individuals
and
companies.
They
seem
to
break
down
into
about
four
groups:
In
the
first
group
are
advances
to
individuals
or
corporations,
who
would
then
enter
into
a
business
that
would
be
a
potential
supplier
to
one
of
the
appellant’s
“associated
companies”,
although
there
is
no
evidence
that
they
were
associated
in
law
under
the
Income
Tax
Act
(and
I
refer
mainly
to
the
company
that
has
been
referred
to
in
evidence
as
Keith
Construction
Limited).
There
is
also
a
second
group
of
individuals,
who
purchased
cabins
on
land
owned
by
the
appellant,
but
which
said
cabins
had
been
constructed
by
Keith
Construction
Limited.
In
some
instances
the
money
went
directly
from
the
appellant
to
the
construction
company,
in
other
instances,
it
went
from
the
appellant
to
the
alleged
borrower
and
back
to
the
construction
company.
The
third
group
is
a
smaller
group—but
a
large
sum
of
money
is
involved
in
each
instance—of
companies
in
which
the
principal
shareholder
of
the
appellant
company,
Mr
Keith,
was
also
a
shareholder.
The
fourth
group
would
appear
to
be
made
up
of
persons
who,
when
Mr
Keith
decided
to
get
out
of
the
ranching
business,
had
purchased
parcels
of
real
estate
from
someone
and
to
whom
the
appellant
company
lent
money
on
the
strength
of
their
agreements
of
sale,
which
I
think,
by
analogy,
could
be
referred
to
as
a
type
of
mortgage
or
charge
upon
real
estate.
Then
there
is
a
fifth
group
of
advances,
which
I
do
not
really
consider,
by
any
stretch
of
the
imagination,
to
have
been
loans,
namely,
the
term
deposits
with
the
bank
and
treasury
bills
purchased.
If
I
were
faced
only
with
the
evidence
contained
in
Exhibit
A-2
for
the
years
1970
to
1973,
where
all
but
one
or
two
of
the
alleged
loans
involved
this
type
of
term
deposit,
I
would
have
less
difficulty
with
this
case,
because,
in
my
view,
that
is
clearly
not
what
is
contemplated
by
the
Act
as
the
lending
of
money
by
a
company
in
the
ordinary
course
of
its
business.
It
is
agreed
by
both
parties
that,
if
the
advances
in
question
were
made
in
the
ordinary
course
of
the
company’s
business,
then
the
appellant
will
succeed;
and
if
they
were
not,
then
of
course
the
Minister’s
reassessment
must
be
upheld.
Both
parties
have
cited
two
English
cases,
both
very
old,
namely,
Litchfield
v
Dreyfus,
[1906]
1
KB
584,
and
Newton
v
Pyke
(1908),
25
TLR
127.
These
two
cases
really
say
no
more
than
has
been
said
so
many
times
in
tax
cases,
that
each
case
depends
upon
its
individual
facts.
There
are
some
general
principles
referred
to
in
them,
such
as
that
the
company
or
individual
alleging
that
it
or
he
is
a
moneylender
must
be
ready
and
willing
to
lend
to
anyone
eligible;
but
how
can
anyone
determine
who
is
eligible
until
one
looks
at
the
facts
of
each
individual
application?
In
the
Newton
v
Pyke
case
(supra)
the
principle
cited
to
support
the
appellant’s
position
is
that
there
must
be
some
systematic
and
continuous
course
of
conduct
to
substantiate
the
allegation
of
being
in
the
business
of
moneylending.
On
the
other
side
of
the
coin,
the
respondent’s
counsel
points
out,
and
appellant’s
counsel
acknowledges,
that
one
of
the
criteria
is
whether
or
not
the
appellant
company
advertised
or
held
itself
out
as
being
in
the
moneylending
business.
The
evidence
in
this
case
is
clearly
that
it
did
not;
in
fact,
the
evidence
is
that
this
appellant
company
did
no
advertising
whatsoever
in
the
carrying
out
of
its
operations.
There
is
no
evidence
as
to
whether
or
not
the
company
was
ever
licensed
as
a
moneylender,
because
the
only
witness,
one
Bernard
Eeles,
the
treasurer
of
the
company,
has
said
that
he
does
not
know.
I
must
say
that
I
find
that
difficult
to
accept
from
a
man
who
has
been
with
the
company
since
1956.
Nevertheless,
that
is
his
evidence.
The
respondent’s
counsel
also
points
out
that,
in
the
memorandum
of
association
under
The
Companies
Act
of
Alberta
which
incorporated
this
private
company
the
objects
or
powers
are
wide
and
general
and
do
not
in
themselves
constitute
prima
facie
evidence
of
the
company’s
being
in
the
moneylending
business.
I
think
that
one
must
take
these
assertions,
as
they
have
been
put
by
learned
counsel
for
the
respondent,
as
the
various
bits
and
pieces
that
one
must
consider
to
make
up
the
whole
when
deciding,
on
the
facts
before
the
Board,
whether
or
not
at
the
material
time,
the
appellant
company
was
in
the
business
of
lending
money.
As
has
been
pointed
out
by
learned
counsel
for
the
appellant,
it
is
not
necessary
that
moneylending
be
the
company’s
only
business,
and
it
can
be
in
the
business
of
lending
money
as
well
as
in
the
land
development
business
which
apparently
was
its
main
occupation
or
endeavour.
Appellant’s
Exhibit
A-1
indicates
approximately
thirty
advances
of
the
type
that
I
have
grouped
earlier.
It
is
true
that
in
a
great
many,
if
not
all
instances,
the
money
that
went
from
the
appellant
found
its
way
either
directly
or
indirectly
back
into
one
particular
company,
namely,
Keith
Construction
Company.
However,
the
evidence
is
not
sufficient
to
establish
that
these
advances
were
a
sham
in
any
sense
of
the
word.
The
evidence
of
the
only
witness,
Mr
Eeles,
the
treasurer
of
the
company,
is
that
in
all
instances
cash
was
advanced,
cash
was
received
in
return,
and
interest
was
paid
and
taken
into
revenue.
Although
I
find
the
evidence
of
the
appellant’s
witness
something
less
than
overwhelming,
I
think
that
this
is
a
borderline
case
and
that
the
appellant
has
established
a
course
of
conduct
over
the
period
of
years
shown
in
Exhibit
A-1
sufficient
to
indicate
that
one
of
its
occupations
or
endeavours
was
the
lending
of
money,
albeit
perhaps
only
to
individuals
with
whom
its
officers
were
acquainted,
but
nevertheless
to
a
wide
group
of
individuals
and
sufficient
to
satisfy
me,
on
all
the
facts
of
this
case,
that
it
has
discharged
the
onus,
albeit
only
slightly.
The
appeal
with
respect
to
the
taxation
year
1969
should
therefore
be
allowed
and
the
matter
referred
back
to
the
Minister
for
reassessment
accordingly.
Appeal
allowed.