A
J
Frost:—This
is
an
income
tax
appeal
in
respect
of
the
appellant’s
1968
and
1969
taxation
years.
It
was
agreed
at
the
opening
of
the
hearing
that
the
appeal
of
Thomas
P
Murphy,
in
respect
of
assessments
for
the
same
taxation
years,
be
heard
at
the
same
time
on
common
evidence
and
it
was
further
agreed
that
the
sum
of
$15,000
referred
to
in
paragraph
7
of
the
respondent’s
reply
was
not
in
issue
as
it
related
to
another
year.
Thomas
P
Murphy
(hereinafter
referred
to
as
“Murphy”)
was
the
controlling
shareholder
of
ABC
Steel
Buildings
Limited
(“ABC”).
Prior
to
November
11,
1968
Murphy
owned
a
building
which
housed
a
steel
fabrication.
plant
in
the
village
of
Bolton,
Ontario
and
carried
on
the
business
of
fabrication
and
erection
of
steel
buildings
as
a
sole
proprietorship
under
the
names
of
“Amalgamated
Building
Company”
and
“ABCO
Steel”.
On
April
1,1964
Murphy
caused
ABC
to
be
incorporated
and
transferred
the
said
business
to
his
new
company;
however
he
retained
ownership
of
the
land
and
buildings
which
he
rented
to
ABC.
During
ABC’s
1968
and
1969
fiscal
years,
Murphy
caused
an
extension
to
be
made
to
his
‘building
and
plant
comprising
an
outdoor
crane,
a
plate
shop
(an
extension
to
the
structural
shop)
and
a
small
joist
shop.
The
assessments
levied
by
the
respondent
against
ABC
were
based
on
the
assumption
that
Murphy
who,
as
I
just
mentioned,
held
title
to
the
land
and
buildings,
had
not
fully
reimbursed
ABC
for
all
costs
incurred
by
it
on
account
of
the
said
extensions
and
that
a
taxable
benefit
had
therefore
been
conferred
on
Murphy
within
the
meaning
of
subsection
8(1)
of
the
Income
Tax
Act.
The
Minister
of
National
Revenue
also
levied
a
25%
penalty
pursuant
to
the
provisions
of
subsection
56(2)
of
the
Act.
On
November
11,
1968,
as
reported
in
ABC’s
1969
fiscal
year,
Murphy
sold
his
land
and
buildings
to
ABC
for
a
consideration
of
$453,000
which
amount
was
credited
to
his
account
with
ABC.
In
November
of
1969,
after
supplementary
letters
patent
had
been
granted,
ABC
issued
to
Murphy
$320,000
par
value
preferred
stock
and
reduced
ABC’s
indebtedness
by
this
amount.
This
transaction
was
recorded
in
the
books
of
ABC
and
clearly
indicated
that
the
shares
were
issued
for
full
consideration.
In
the
reply
to
notice
of
appeal,
the
respondent
states:
In
the
month
of
November
1969,
ABC
for
no
consideration
whatsoever
issued
to
the
appellant
as
fully
paid
up,
preferred
shares
with
a
par
value
of
$320,000.
The
notices
of
reassessment
dated
April
30,
1971
issued
by
the
District
Taxation
Office
made
the
following
adjustments
to
Murphy’s
declared
income
for
1968:
Net
income
reported
|
$25,670.24
|
Add:
Section
8(1)
Benefits
per
Special
Investigations
|
23,798.40
|
Taxable
Allowance—Automobile
|
500.00
|
Revised
Net
Income
|
$49,968.64
|
Less:
Allowable
Deductions
|
1,100.00
|
REVISED
TAXABLE
INCOME
|
$48,868.64
|
and
adjustments
to
1969
taxation
year
as
follows:
|
|
Net
income
reported
|
$18,023.44
|
Add:
Section
8(1)
Benefit
per
Special
Investigations
|
83,904.88
|
Taxable
Allowances—Automobile
|
500.00
|
Revised
Net
Income
|
$102,428.32
|
Less:
Allowable
Deductions
|
1,100.00
|
Revised
Taxable
Income
|
$101,328.32
|
Notices
of
reassessment
dated
April
30,
1971
issued
by
the
District
Taxation
Office
adjusted
ABC’s
declared
income
for
the
taxation
year
1968
as
follows:
Taxable
income
reported
|
,.
|
$50,731.39
|
Add:
Income
per
Special
Investigations
|
|
23,798.40
|
|
$74,529.79
|
Deduct:
1969
Loss
Carry
Back
|
|
749.17
|
Revised
taxable
income
|
|
$73,780.62
|
and
the
1969
taxation
year
as
follows:
|
|
Loss
reported
|
|
$75,383.72
|
Add:
Additional
capital
cost
allowance
per
schedule
attached
|
9,270.33
|
|
$84,654.05
|
Less:
Additional
income
per
Special
Investigations
|
|
83,904.88
|
Revised
Loss
|
|
$749.17
|
Loss
carry
back
to
1968
profits
|
|
The
reassessments
in
respect
of
Murphy
were
confirmed
by
the
Minister
on
June
22,
1972
and
in
respect
of
ABC
confirmed
on
July
20,
1972
after
the
respective
taxpayers
had
filed
notices
of
objection
in
due
course.
According
to
the
evidence
adduced,
Murphy
built
his
extensions
during
slack
periods
in
order
to
keep
his
workers
fully
employed.
Murphy
stated
it
would
have
been
uneconomical
to
lay
off
workers
during
slack
periods
because
of
the
difficulty
of
rehiring
when
business
picked
up.
ABC
kept
accurate
cost
records
and
Murphy
paid
for
all
labour,
steel
and
other
materials,
and
provincial
sales
tax.
However,
Murphy
was
not
charged
with
indirect
overhead
or
a
contract
profit
which
might
have
been
charged
to
an
outside
customer.
Only
those
costs
were
taken
into
account
which
were
incurred
by
ABC
and
which
would
not
have
been
incurred
had
the
extensions
not
been
built.
Murphy
testified
that
if.
he
had
personally,
rather
than
through
ABC,
purchased
all
the
material
and
hired
all
the
same
workers
to
build
the
same
extensions,
he
would
not
have
expended
any
more
than
the
$55,386
charged
by
ABC.
In
fact,
he
said
he
might
have
expended
less
on
labour.
An
important
factor
in
the
case
was
the
amount
of
steel
used
and
its
cost
which
was
attributable
to
the
fact
that
17
tons
of
steel
out
of
a
total
of
73
tons
used
for
structural
purposes
had
been
obtained
at
salvage
cost.
The
source
of
the
salvage
steel
was
a
structure
which
had
collapsed
during
a
wind
storm.
The
purchaser
of
the
structure
which
collapsed
rejected
the
steel
and
the
supplier
provided
new
steel.
The
purchaser’s
cost
in
respect
of
the
original
steel
was
defrayed
by
insurance
thus
providing
the
appellant,
a
steel
fabricator,
the
opportunity
to
obtain
17
tons
of
steel
at
nominal
cost.
The
evidence
indicated
that
all
the
structural
steel
was
accounted
for
in
the
records
of
the
company
and
charged
against
the
appellant’s
account
at
cost.
The
only
omission
was
salvage
costs
amounting
to
about
$1,000
which
costs
were
incidental
to
the
removal
of
steel
from
the
the
said
structure.
With
respect
to
steel
other
than
structural
steel
comprising
some
40,000
square
feet
used
as
siding
and
roofing
material,
the
evidence
indicated
that
this
steel
was
acquired
at
no
cost
to
ABC.
as
it
had
been
rejected
by
the
rolling
mill.
Other
steel
material.
had
been
rejected
by
the
Department
of
Highways.
To
further
reduce
costs,
the
taxpayer
poured
his
own
cement
and
did
not
subcontract
for
lighting
and
heating.
As
a
result
of
these
“savings”,
the
taxpayer
was
able
to
build
his
extensions
for
approximately
$55,000
or
about
one-third
of
what
a
customer
might
have
had
to
pay
for
a
similar
job.
After
the
extensions
were
completed,
ABC
applied
for
a
loan
to
the
Ontario
Development
Corporation
(“ODC”)
to
help
finance
the
extensions
and
thus
place
ABC
in
a
sounder
financial.
position.
For
this
purpose
the
appellant
gave
the
ODC
estimates
of
costs
based
on
what
a
customer
would
have
been
charged
for
similar
work.
This
memorandum
showing
the
cost
estimates
fell
into
the
hands
of
the.
special
investigator
for
the
Department
of
National:
Revenue
who
assumed
that
the
costs
shown
were
the
correct
costs
and
that
ABC
and
Murphy
had
knowingly
understated
their
income
for
the
taxation
years.
He
reached
this
conclusion
without,
in
my
opinion,
conducting
a
proper
investigation.
When
ABC
filed
its
notice
of
objection
on
July
21,
1971
it
enclosed
a
letter
from
Murphy
as
president
of
ABC
and
attached
thereto
an
independent
survey
report
by
Mr
H
Kirss,
professional
engineer.
The
letter
states:
Costs
have
been
entered
accurately
against
the
buildings
and
our
later
estimate
of
these
costs
as
shown
in
our
letter
dated
October
26,
1970,
(copy
enclosed)
substantiates
this.
The
engineering
survey
fully
supported
the
taxpayer’s
position.
Early
at
the
hearing
of
the
appeal
the
proposed
filing
of
the
said
engineering
report
by
counsel
for
the
appellant
was
so
strenuously
objected
to
by
counsel
for
the
respondent
as
hearsay
evidence
that
the
Board
sustained
the
objection.
The
next
day
apparently,
after
he
had
obtained
his
own
expert
advice
as
to
the
quantities
of
steel
used,
the
respondent
filed
the
survey
as
his
exhibit
(R-3)
which,
in
my
opinion,
indicates
that
the
respondent
had
not
built
his
case
on
very
solid
ground
and
that
the
taxing
authorities
had
never
really
considered
the
merits
of
the
notice
of
objection
filed
in
July
1971,
although
they
had
over
one
year
to
do
so.
The
memoranda
of
cost
records
relied
upon
by
the
respondent
were
not
integrated
with
the
financial
records
and
were
not
part
of
its
cost
accounting
system.
In
levying
the
assessments
against
which
this
appeal
is
launched,
the
taxing
authorities
did
not
rely
on
the
audited
records
of
ABC,
but
rather
on
an
unofficial
memorandum
of
costs
prepared
to
support
a
loan
application
showing
what
a
customer
would
have
to
pay
for
a
similar
job.
No
evidence
was
adduced
to
show
that
the
financial
records
did
not
reflect
the
true
and
correct
position
of
ABC’s
affairs
and
of
the
results
of
its
operation
for
the
years
in
issue,
or
that
its
cost
system
was
incomplete
or
inadequate.
The
evidence
indicated
the
authorities
ignored
all
evidence
favourable
to
the
taxpayer
and
relied
only
on
one
piece
of
unfavourable
evidence.
The
auditor
for
the
Department
of
National
Revenue,
by
his
own
admission
under
cross-examination,
said
that
he
did
not
conduct
a
proper
examination
under
the
circumstances
and
on
being
questioned
from
the
Bench
could
not
support
his
re-allocation
of
costs
between
taxation
years.
In
my
opinion,
if
the
auditor
had
approached
his
task
professionally
with
a
fair
and
just
mind
he
could
readily
have
obtained
all
the
explanations
he
required.
According
to
the
evidence,
the
seizure
of
records,
the
startling
assessments
and
ail
the
embarrassment
which
often
flows
from
a
special
investigation
resulted
in
the
taxpayer’s
loss
of
business,
his
money
and
his
credit.
The
assessments
under
review
show
a
serious
deficiency
ab
initio
in
so
far
as
the
respondent’s
case
is
substantially
based
on
memoranda
of
records
prepared
by
the
company
in
order
to
obtain
a
loan
from
ODC.
Evidence
was
adduced
to
show
that
ODC
knew
the
circumstances
and
had
agreed
on
a
level
of
capital
expenditures
which
would
‘reflect
intrinsic
or
market
values
and
not
on
incurred
expendi-
tures.
The
costs
shown
for
purposes
of
the
loan
application
were
clearly
not
the
costs
as
reflected
in
the
books
of
account
and
cost
records,
but
were
estimated
costs
as
would
have
been
incurred
by
an
outsider.
The
evidence
showed
that
the
costs
used
were
customerbased
less
about
10%.
I
see
nothing
sinister
in
what
the
company
did.
They
applied
for
a
loan
based
on
what
a
customer
would
have
to
pay
for
similar
construction
using
new
materials
and
normal
cost
charges.
ODC
knew
that
ABC
was
in
the
steel
fabricating
and
construction
business
and
could
build
an
extension
to
the
plant
for
less
than
customer
cost.
All
ODC
wanted
was
security
for
their
loan.
What
Murphy
paid
for
were
the
actual
laid-down
costs
without
imputed
profit
elements
and
indirect
overhead
costs.
Is
this
a
benefit
under
subsection
8(1)
of
the
Act?
If
Murphy
had
had
the
same
resources
available
to
him
as
an
independent
contractor
he
could,
according
to
his
testimony,
have
constructed
the
extension
for
the
same
amount
of
money
and,
if
he
had
not
incorporated
his
business,
he
could
have
achieved
the
same
result.
As
a
matter
of
fact,
by
following
this
course,
the
taxpayer
served
the
interests
of
ABC
and
of
those
whose
livelihood
depended
upon
the
company’s
continued
existence.
If
a
taxpayer
is
able
to
save
money
through
his
own
efforts
or
the
instrumentality
of
a
company
he
controls,
he
should
not
be
taxed
on
an
imputed
benefit
which
is
the
result
of
his
personal
efforts
to
limit
his
expenses
to
the
actual
costs
incurred.
ABC
did
not
confer
any
benefit
which
affected
its
financial
position.
It
was
reimbursed
for
all
direct
costs,
except
for
a
very
minor
item
which
was
brought
to
the
attention
of
the
Board
by
the
appellant,
not
by
the
respondent.
In
that
respect,
the
appellant
presented
the
respondent’s
case
for
them
and
gave
the
only
solid
ground
the
respondent
had
for
levying
any
assessments.
Indirect
costs
are
usually
apportioned
and
charged
against
individual
jobs
on
some
realistic
basis
but,
in
this
case,
Murphy
took
the
position,
and
rightly
so,
that
these
costs
should
not
necessarily
be
charged
against
him
as
work
was
undertaken
during
slack
periods
and
the
company
did
not
incur
any
expenses
which
it
would
otherwise
not
have
made.
Like
the
estimated
$1,000
for
removal
of
salvage
steel
the
unabsorbed
burden
is
miniscule
in
the
overall
picture.
The
amount
of
benefit
is
what
a
reasonable
man
in
a
similar
position
to
Murphy
might
have
been
willing
to
pay
for
labour,
materials,
etc
in
excess
of
what
he
actually
paid.
It
seems
improbable
that
a
reasonable
man
would
charge
himself
for
actual
savings
he
effected
through
his
own
efforts
or
through
a
company
he
controlled.
Counsel
for
the
Minister
submitted
that
the
books
and
records
of
the
appellant
company
were
cooked
up
and
that
the
appellant,
Murphy,
was
coming
before
the
Board
with
“dirty
hands”.
He
said:
‘‘We
have
the
evidence
of
Murphy
who
quite
frankly
is
coming
here
seeking
equity
with
dirty
hands.”
He
further
suggested
that
the
figures
on
which
the
assessments
were
based
were
those
of
the
company
itself
and
that
the
only
reasonable
figures
were
those
used
by
the
Minister.
The
truth
of
the
matter
is
that
the
respondent
was
unable
to
establish
anything
of
the
sort.
In
my
opinion,
Murphy
was
sincere
and
candid
and
said
or
did
nothing
which
reflected
on
his
personal
integrity
or
the
reputation
of
his
company
and
further
I
find
that
the
records
of
the
company
which
were
certified
by
the
auditor,
a
qualified
chartered
accountant
who
carried
out
a
continuous
audit
of
ABC’s
affairs,
had
to
be
considered
correct
in
the
absence
of
any
evidence
to
the
contrary.
The
words
spoken
by
counsel
for
the
respondent
during
his
argument
were
disconcerting
to
the
Board
as
they
were
not,
in
any
meaningful
way,
supported
by
the
evidence
adduced.
This
weighed
even
more
heavily
as
lawyers
for
the
Crown
are
expected
to
treat
all
taxpayers
at
all
times
with
respect
and
courtesy.
Any
failure
to
do
so
is
a
serious
reflection
on
the
administration
of
justice.
Admonition
belongs
to
the
Board.
In
conclusion,
I
do
not
find
any
specific
benefit
conferred
by
ABC
on
the
appellant
within
the
meaning
of
subsection
8(1)
of
the
Income
Tax
Act
as
it
read
at
the
relevant
time.
Further,
I
find
that
the
adjustments
made
by
the
Minister
to
the
taxable
income
of
ABC
were
made
for
no
reason
whatsoever.
Appeals
allowed.