The
Assistant
Chairman:—This
is
the
appeal
of
Houg
Development
Limited
from
an
income
tax
assessment
in
respect
of
the
appellant’s
1968
taxation
year.
Because
of
a
housing
shortage
in
the
City
of
Edmonton,
Alberta
after
the
last
war,
Mr
Houg,
the
beneficiary
shareholder
of
the
appellant
company,
moved
from
his
farm
in
the
country
and
in
1945
built
a
house
for
himself.
At
that
time
the
City
sold
lots
to
builders
allowing
a
maximum
purchase
of
ten
lots
per
builder.
In
1947
and
1948
the
appellant
bought
two
lots
from
the
City
and
commenced
building
houses
for
resale
on
a
very
small
scale.
The
construction
business
was
good
and
in
1951
Houg
Construction
Limited,
in
which
Mr
Houg
was
the
beneficiary
shareholder,
was
incorporated
and
eventually
became
a
sizeable
enterprise
owning
its
own
sawmill,
its
own
foundation
equipment
and
building
houses
with
precut
lumber
in
an
assembly-line
fashion.
Consequently
it
became
uneconomical
for
the
appellant
company
to
build
less
than
20
to
30
houses
at
one
time.
From
1951
to
1955
the
appellant
purchased
land
and
built
houses
for
resale.
There
arose
a
shortage
of
city-owned
lots
and
the
builders
were
encouraged
by
the
City
of
Edmonton
to
buy
and
develop
land
outside
the
city
limits.
In
1956
Mr
Houg
acquired
240
acres
of
land,
known
as
the
Pearson
farm,
for
$202,000.
This
property
had
two
distinct
topographical
features.
The
southern
part
of
the
property
consisting
of
some
100
acres
was
on
high
ground
and
generally
suitable
for.
building
houses.
The
other
portion
of
the
property
was
made
up
of
river
flats
which
formed
an
arc
running
north
to
northeast
of
the
appellant’s
higher
land.
The
river
flats
were
not
suitable
property
on
which
to
build
houses
and
were
in
fact
considered
unusable.
However,
the
vendor
insisted
that
the
property
he
bought
as
a
whole
and
Mr
Houg,
in
order
to
acquire
the
high
land,
was
forced
to
acquire
the
river
flats
as
well.
An
important
factor
in
this
appeal
is
the
proximity
of
the
Imperial
Oil
Refineries
and
the
Canadian
Industries
Limited
plant
to
the
immediate
east
of
the
Pearson
farm.
About
the
time
the
Pearson
farm
was
acquired
by
the
appellant,
the
land
was
brought
within
the
city
limits
and
the
necessary
sewer
lines
and
municipal
services
were
assured.
However,
owing
to
delays
by
Central
Mortgage
and
Housing
Corporation
in
approving
the
construction
plans
of
the
development,
the
land
was
held
for
two
or
three
years
and
it
was
only
in
1959
that
construction
began.
From
1959
to
1961
the
appellant
constructed
approximately
150
houses
on
lots
on
the
higher
land
of
the
property.
In
1960
Houg
Development
Limited
was
incorporated
as
a
holding
company
for
the
lots
remaining
on
the
higher
land
as
well
as
on
the
river
flats.
The
appellant
company
sold
isolated
lots
on
which
it
would
have
been
uneconomical
to
build
houses
owing
to
the
production-line
construction
system
employed
by
the
Houg
Construction
Limited,
and
it
traded
lots
so
as
to
acquire
a
large
surface
in
a
given
area
enabling
it
to
build
the
number
of
houses
at
one
time
for
which
the
Houg
Construction
Limited
was
geared.
At
one
period
the
City
of
Edmonton
approached
Mr
Houg
to
purchase
lots
on
the
river
flats
for
sewage
disposal
units
but
the
appellant
company
preferred
to
exchange
the
river
lots
for
city-owned
land
situated
in
the
vicinity
of
the
Pearson
farm
and
on
which
Houg
Construction
Limited
built
other
houses.
Objection
was
raised
to
the
building
of
houses
by
the
appellant
in
the
vicinity
of
the
Imperial
Oil
Refineries
and
Canadian
Industries
Limited,
and
although
some
lots
were
sold
for
the
construction
of
a
curling
arena,
several
lots
at
the
time
of
the
appeal
were
still
vacant.
The
profit
made
on
the
sale
of
all
individual
lots
on
the
upper
land
was
included
in
the
taxable
income
of
Houg
Development
Limited.
In
1967
as
a
result
of
continuous
and
serious
complaints
on
the
part
of
the
owners
of
houses
built
by
Houg
Construction
Limited
on
the
Pearson
farm
concerning
industrial
wastes
of
Canadian
Industries
Limited
which
were
discharged
from
the
plant
onto
the
river
flats
or
ravine,
with
their
accompanying
objectionable
odours,
a
statement
of
complaint
was
filed
by
Mr
Houg
against
Canadian
Industries
Limited
and
Building
Products
of
Canada
Limited
which
gave
rise
to
lengthy
legal
correspondence.
The
solution
for
eliminating
the
problem
was
the
construction
of
a
sewer,
the
cost
of
which
was
estimated
at
$250,000.
None
of
the
companies
involved,
singly
or
collectively,
was
willing
to
assume
the
responsibility
for
the
continuing
pollution.
The
position
of
Canadian
Industries
Limited
was
that
it
was
granted
an
easement
by
Mr
and
Mrs
Pearson
prior
to
the
sale
of
the
Pearson
farm
to
Mr
Houg
which
gave
Canadian
Industries
Limited
the
right
to
dispose
of
its
effluent
as
it
had
been
doing.
Mr
Houg
was
faced
with
the
possibility
of
having
to
pay
for
the
cost
of
the
sewer
if
the
problem
were
to
be
solved.
The
City
of
Edmonton
and
the
Provincial
Department
of
Health
were
also
involved
in
the
controversy.
The
ownership
of
the
river
flats
became
a
nightmare
for
Mr
Houg
and
he
approached
the
City
of
Edmonton
and
offered
to
sell
the
river
flats
for
$1,000
an
acre.
The
City
which
was
concerned
with
the
complaints
of
its
taxpayers,
as
well
as
the
rights
of
the
industries
involved,
made
the
appellant
a
counter
offer
of
$700
an
acre.
In
1968
the
river
flats
were
eventually
sold
to
the
city
for
$900
an
acre,
and
the
profit
realized
by
the
appellant
company
on
the
sale
of
land
was
$127,300
which
was
considered
by
it
as
a
non-taxable
capital
gain
and
transferred
to
capital
surplus.
The
resondent
included
the
amount
of
$127,300
in
the
appellant
company’s
income
for
1968,
contending
that
it
was
income
from
a
business
within
the
meaning
of
sections
3,
4
and
paragraph
137(1)(e)
of
the
Income
Tax
Act
and
the
assessment
was
appealed.
The
issue
in
this
appeal
deals
specifically
with
the
profit
realized
from
the
sale
of
the
river
flats
and
the
Board
must
determine
whether
the
profit
was
a
capital
gain
or
income.
Counsel
for
the
respondent
holds
that
the
sale
of
the
river
flats
by
Houg
Development
Limited
is
no
different
from
the
sale
of
lots
on
the
upper
land
on
which
the
appellant
company
paid
taxes.
The
facts
of
this
appeal
indicate
to
me
that
Mr
Houg’s
principal
concern
and
intention
was
to
buy
land
for
development
purposes.
There
is
no
doubt
in
my
mind
that
Mr
Houg
was
a
bona
fide
builder,
and
that
he
was
forced
to
accept
the
river
flats
in
order
to
acquire
the
upper
land
on
which
to
realize
his
construction
project.
There
is
no
evidence
that
would
indicate
that
Mr
Houg’s
intention
was
to
sell
the
river
flats.
On
the
contrary,
since
no
buildings
could
be
built
on
the
flats,
Mr
Houg
seemed
content
to
have
it
serve
as
a
playground
for
children
living
in
that
part
of
the
appellant’s
housing
development.
Moreover,
he
exploited
a
gravel
pit
which
was
situated
on
the
river
flats
and
which
produced
a
revenue
of
several
thousand
dollars
over
a
period
of
four
or
five
years.
In
my
view,
there
is
a
very
substantail
difference
between
the
sale
by
the
appellant
of
lots
on
the
upper
ground
and
the
sale
of
the
river
flats.
The
problem
of
the
industrial
waste
being
discharged
on
the
flats
and
the
possibility
of
being
called
upon
to
construct
a
sewer
are,
in
my
opinion,
sufficient
motivation
for
Mr
Houg
to
try
to
get
rid
of
the
flats
which
might
otherwise
not
have
been
necessary.
Counsel
for
the
respondent
also
claims
that
Mr
Houg
had
the
intention
of
selling
every
portion
of
the
Pearson
farmland
and
that
he
had
a
secondary
intention
of
selling
the
flats
to
the
City
of
Edmonton—the
only
possible
purchaser
for
that
land.
Evidence
shows
that
the
decision
by
the
City
to
make
a
park
out
of
the
river
flats
was
subsequent
to
Mr
Houg’s
purchase
of
the
Pearson
farm
and
there
was
no
way
Mr
Houg
could
know,
at
the
time
of
the
purchase,
what
was
to
become
of
the
river
flats
and
he
did
not
in
fact
think
he
could
sell
the
land
that
was
considered
by
everyone
as
useless.
Mr
Houg
even
made
an
unsuccessful
attempt
to
build
a
golf
course
on
the
flats.
In
my
opinion,
all
the
facts
taken
together
indicate
that
Mr
Houg
did
not
have,
at
the
time
of
purchase,
the
intention
of
selling
the
river
flats
but
thought
he
was
in
fact
stuck
with
them.
It
appears
from
the
evidence
adduced
that
the
City
of
Edmonton
became
interested
in
the
land
because
of
the
sanitation
problem
caused
by
the
discharge
of
industrial
waste
into
the
flats.
In
order
to
solve
the
problem,
the
City
purchased
the
flats
and
made
a
park
out
of
the
area
thereby
contenting
the
taxpayers,
on
the
one
hand,
and
not
causing
an
indisposition
to
the
concerned
industries
on
the
other
hand.
This
decision
by
the
City
of
Edmonton
to
purchase
the
flats
was
extrinsic
to
Mr
Houg.
However,
he
did
benefit
from
the
decision
in
that
he
realized
a
profit
from
the
sale
of
the
land
which
he
would
not
otherwise
have
done
and
which,
in
my
opinion,
constitutes
fortuitous
circumstances.
It
is
true
that
the
river
flats
were
transferred
to
the
appellant
company
which
is
a
holding
company
created
to
hold
and
sell
land
which
had
been
acquired
by
Mr
Houg
for
housing
developments,
and
on
which
houses
could
not
be
economically
built.
However,
it
appears
to
me
that
the
circumstances
surrounding
the
acquisition
of
the
land
and
the
nature
of
the
land
in
question
do
not
vary
because
of
the
legal
vehicle
through
which
the
land
is
held
or
sold.
In
other
words,
because
the
river
flats
were
transferred
to
Houg
Development
Limited,
it
does
not
change
the
intention
that
Mr
Houg
had
when
he
was
forced
to
acquire
that
portion
of
the
Pearson
farm,
nor
does
it
make
the
river
flats
any
more
useable
or
saleable.
Mr
Houg’s
attempt
to
sell
the
land
was
amply
motivated
by
the
fear
of
having
to
build
a
$250,000
sewage
system,
but
there
is
no
evidence
to
indicate
that
Mr
Houg
had
intended
or
planned
at
the
time
of
their
acquisition
to
sell
the
flats
to
the
City.
In
my
view,
notwithstanding
the
fact
that
the
flats
were
sold
through
a
holding
company,
the
circumstances
surrounding
the
sale
of
that
portion
of
the
Pearson
farm
was
due
to
fortuitous
circumstances
over
which
the
appellant
company
had
no
prior
control.
I
conclude,
therefore,
that
the
profit
realized
by
the
appellant
company
on
the
sale
of
the
river
flats
to
the
City
of
Edmonton
was
a
capital
gain
as
a
result
of
a
fortuitous
event,
and
that
the
amount
of
$127,300
should
not
have
been
included
in
computing
the
appellant’s
income
for
1968.
The
appeal
is
allowed.
Appeal
allowed.