Judge
Flanigan
(orally:
May
28,
1974):—This
is
an
appeal
by
some
thirteen
appellants*
against
reassessments
by
the
Minister
of
National
Revenue
for
the
1969
taxation
year.
I
propose
to
use
as
the
lead
case
for
the
purpose
of
this
judgment
the
appeal
of
Donald
G
Wilson,
Tax
Review
Board
File
No
73-316,
mainly
because
the
evidence
of
this
appellant
is
the
basic
evidence
upon
which
all
these
appeals
turn,
and
which
each
of
the
other
appellants
agreed
to
adopt.
Two
appellants
are
not
before
me
today.
W
Wallace
Muir,
File
No
73-331,
I
am
informed
by
counsel,
is
prepared
to
abide
the
outcome
of
this
appeal.
I
have
elicited
some
information
about
him,
from
Mr
McKendry,
one
of
the
other
appellants.
In
respect
of
the
Estate
of
Anthony
C
Butler,
File
No
73-308,
it
is
agreed
that
at
the
time
of
Mr
Butler’s
death
he
was
engaged
in
the
general
practice
of
law
in
the
City
of
Ottawa,
and
that
he
had
a
one-third
interest
in
a
property
at
74
Somerset
Street
and
owned
110
Gloucester
Street.
The
evidence
is
that
he
also
at
one
time,
with
others,
owned
another
property
that
was
revenue-producing
and
which
was
subsequently
sold.
This
is
a
very
difficult
case,
not
only
to
decide
but
also
to
put
down,
in
some
semblance
of
order,
my
reasons
for
judgment,
so
that,
should
the
matter
go
further,
they
will
be
of
some
assistance
to
anyone
hearing
it.
There
are,
however,
certain
factors
that
are
common
to
all
the
appellants.
One
of
the
factors
that
makes
it
a
difficult
case
to
decide,
and
out
of
the
realm
of
the
normal
trading
case,
is
that
not
all
of
the
members
of
the
group
entered
the
picture
at
the
same
time.
I
think
some
eleven
of
the
nineteen
entered
in
1963
when
the
property
was
originally
purchased,
and
the
balance
over
the
years,
mainly
from
1964
to
1966.
They
were
all
members,
I
think,
at
the
time
of
the
sale
of
the
property
in
1969,
at
which
time
the
profit
was
made.
In
addition,
the
company
that
originally
purchased
the
property
subsequently,
in
1966,
transferred
it
to
the
individual
members
at
book
value—and
that
was
a
non-arm’s
length
transaction—so
that
the
members
of
the
company
would
hold
title
as
tenants
in
common
through
a
trust
agreement,
and
each
would
thereby
be
able
to
take
advantage
of
any
tax
concessions
that
would
come
to
them
by
way
of
capital
cost
allowance.
The
original
group,
although
several
in
number,
were
closely
associated
through
either
business
connections
or
friendship,
save
and
except
one
party
with
whom
I
shall
deal
in
a
moment.
My
recollection
is
that,
of
those
appearing
before
me,
Mr
Kenny,
Mr
Lamothe,
Mr
Pittaway,
Mr
McKendry,
Mr
Butler,
Mr
Wilson,
Mr
Adams
and
Mr
Rothwell
were
the
originals
of
this
company.
Some
were
active;
some
were
not.
I
think
it
is
fair
to
say
that
those
active
were
Mr
Wilson,
Mr
McKendry
and
Mr
Sheen,
and
perhaps
Mr
Adams,
who
certainly
ended
up
in
a
less
than
enviable
position
in
the
final
result
just
prior
to
the
sale
in
1969.
Although
the
evidence
of
Mr
Wilson
is
the
evidence
upon
which
a
great
deal
of
the
case
rests,
I
think
I
must
really
start
with
the
evidence
of
another
of
the
appellants.
Let
me
say
first
of
ail
that
in
each
instance
the
appellants
have
taken
the
witness
box,
and
have
sworn
under
oath
that
their
intention
at
the
time
they
entered
the
transaction
was
to
make
a
long-term
investment
to
supplement
their
earnings
in
their
later
years
when
their
productive
years
of
high
income
were
past,
and
as
a
hedge
against
inflation
and
that
they
had
no
intention
to
resell.
These
pronouncements
under
oath
are
the
typical
pronouncements
of
people
in
trading
cases,
who
must,
at
the
very
least,
give
this
testimony
under
oath,
because,
in
trying
to
determine
what
was
the
intention
of
the
parties,
one
must
look,
or
try
to
look,
into
their
heads
and
assess
what
they
really
had
in
mind.
I
say
this,
fully
aware
that
each
and
every
one
of
them,
at
the
time
of
giving
evidence,
believed
firmly
that
that
was
his
intention
at
the
time
he
entered
the
project.
What
makes
it
difficult
for
anyone
trying
such
a
case
is
having
to
find
something
in
the
overall
evidence
to
support
or
contradict
this
subjective
evidence
of
the
appellants.
For
that
purpose
I
must
leave
the
general
and
direct
my
attention
to
the
specifics.
I
shall
refer
first
to
the
evidence
of
Mr
Gerald
McKendry,
who
is
now
a
real
estate
agent,
a
fact
that
has
no
bearing
whatsoever
on
this
case
because
in
1963
he
was
vice-president
and
general
manager
of
Morrison
Lamothe
Bakery
in
this
city.
He
has,
since
that
date,
worked
on
a
contract
basis
with
Dustbane
Enterprises
Limited,
an
international
company
with
its
head
office
for
Canada
in
this
city,
and
on
a
contract
basis
with
the
federal
government,
but
at
the
material
time
he
was
inexperienced,
as
were
all
of
them,
in
this
type
of
rental
endeavour.
He
was
contacted
by
a
man
named
Sheen
who
was
an
agent
for
a
well
known
real
estate
firm
in
this
city,
Percy
Kerwin
Realties
Limited,
which
subsequently,
for
what
it
is
worth,
was
the
agent
for
the
sale
in
1969.
No
evidence
was
adduced
as
to
whether
or
not
a
commission
was
paid
on
that
sale,
and
I
was
not
able
to
ascertain
that
by
a
brief
glance
at
the
agreement
of
purchase
and
sale,
although
the
information
may
be
there.
In
any
event,
I
do
not
place
any
great
weight
on
the
fact
that
it
is
or
is
not
there,
because
I
am
satisfied
that,
in
1969,
when
the
sale
to
NDM
Leaseholds
was
consummated,
the
property
was
sold
as
a
result
of
a
majority
vote
pursuant
to
paragraph
4(k)
of
the
trust
or
management
agreement,
which
gave
the
majority
the
right
to
sell
and
do
many
other
things.
This
is
the
type
of
clause
that
one
would
expect
to
find
in
such
an
agreement,
because
wherever
so
many
people
are
involved
there
must
be
some
rules
laid
down
to
bind
the
whole.
In
any
event,
Mr
McKendry’s
evidence
is
that
he
did
not
know
Mel
Sheen
before,
and
he
did
not
know
how
he
had
come
to
approach
him
with
this
proposition.
He
said
that
Sheen
may
have
known
about
him,
but
he
certainly
did
not
know
Sheen.
He
said
he
remembers
his
own
motivation
because
he
was
seeking
something
at
that
time
to
secure
him
in
later
life.
Mr
McKendry
approached
those
who
worked
around
him.
He
approached
Mr
Wilson,
who
was
a
chartered
accountant
and,
I
think,
secretary-treasurer
of
Morrison
Lamothe
at
that
time;
Mr
Thomas
P
Lamothe,
who
was
director
of
personnel
of
the
company
at
that
time;
Mr
Butler,
who
was
the
solicitor
for
them
in
other
matters;
and
Mr
Kenny,
who
was
a
farmer,
not
retired,
and
who
I
think
had
done
business
with
them
but
who
was
certainly
known
to
them
all.
So
much
for
how
the
project
got
under
way,
and
here
I
should
say
a
few
words
about
the
project.
It
was
a
4-unit
apartment
complex,
apparently
containing
50
units
in
each
building,
situated
on
the
north
side
of
Baseline
Road,
just
east
of
what
is
now
Woodroffe
Avenue.
My
knowledge
of
the
geography
of
the
area
in
1963
is
not
great,
but
today
it
is
a
built-up
area.
The
project
was
a
forerunner
of
the
many
low-rental
highrise
apartment
buildings
we
are
familiar
with
today.
It
was
designated
for
those
on
lower
incomes,
and
was
purchased
for
the
group
by
two
of
them
as
trustees
for
a
company
to
be
incorporated.
but
for
all
intents
and
purposes
by
Kenwin
Realty
Company
Limited.
Mr
Wilson,
being
a
chartered
accountant
and
secretarytreasurer
of
the
company,
was
interested
in
an
investment
for
the
future
because
he
had
been
employed,
as
I
recall
it,
for
some
ten
years
and
had
received
a
lump
sum
payment
for
whatever
pension
contributions
he
had
made
with
his
former
employer,
and
had
been
only
some
three
years
with
Morrison
Lamothe
at
the
time
that
this
offer
was
brought
to
his
attention.
He
referred
to
a
prospectus
being
handed
to
him
(Exhibit
A-1),
which
is
really
a
pro-forma
projection
of
the
income
and
expenses
and
the
possibilities
of
return
on
this
project.
He
was
given
it
the
day
before
the
meeting
which
was
held
to
decide
whether
or
not
this
group
would
purchase
the
Four
Winds,
as
it
was
known
and
is
still
known,
and
he
went
out
to
the
site.
He
made
an
eyeball
assessment,
and
took
the
figures
home
with
him.
My
recollection
of
his
evidence
is
that,
although
the
figures
were
based
on
100%
occupancy,
he,
applying
his
general
accountancy
conservatism,
I
suppose,
because
he
was
not
experienced
in
the
rental
field,
allowed
for
a
5%
vacancy
factor,
and
to
him
it
still
looked
like
a
good
proposition
for
a
long
term
investment.
He
said
that,
because
it
was
a
low-
rental
type
of
accommodation,
he
felt
that
they
could
look
forward
to
100%
occupancy.
The
next
day
he
met
with
the
rest
of
the
group,
and
they
came
to
an
oral
understanding
that
they
would
purchase
the
property,
and
they
did
purchase
it.
I
should
also
say,
in
my
comments
that
are
general
to
all
the
appellants,
that
none
of
them
had
ever
been
involved
in
this
sort
of
real
estate
transaction
before.
None
of
them
were
real
estate
agents
or
brokers,
save
and
except
Sheen.
The
evidence
indicates
that
none
of
them
had
ever
disposed
of
raw
land
prior
to
this
time,
although
one
of
them,
to
whom
I
shall
refer,
did
at
some
later
date.
Some
of
them,
prior
to
1963,
had
small
real
estate
holdings,
all
of
which
I
find,
on
the
facts
before
me,
to
have
been
purchased
as
revenue-
producing
investments
by
them
at
the
material
times.
I
shall
deal
with
the
individuals
who
did
have
such
holdings
as
I
proceed.
I
return
to
the
evidence
of
Mr
McKendry,
who
said
that
after
they
took
over
the
property
they
discovered
several
things,
and
this
is
borne
out
by
the
evidence
of
Mr
Wilson.
First
of
all,
the
building
was
not
as
well
constructed
as
they
had
anticipated.
They
experienced
difficulties
with
this
low
income
class
of
tenant
that
they
had
not
foreseen.
Shortly
after
the
purchase—about
eight
months
after,
I
believe—they
were
forced
into
a
serious
financial
position,
mainly
as
a
result
of
having
to
evict
40
or
50
undesirable
tenants,
and
a
gas
explosion
in
the
City
of
Montreal
that
resulted
in
injury
and/or
death
to
several
people
caused
a
mass
exodus
of
some
fifty
tenants
from
the
Four
Winds,
which
was
heated
by
gas,
who
removed
not
only
themselves
but
some
of
the
property
of
the
appellants.
The
appellants
generally
ran
into
difficulty
so
far
as
the
law
is
concerned
by
virtue
of
the
contents
of
the
minutes
of
a
meeting
of
the
board
of
directors
in
May
of
1964,
which
clearly
show
a
desire
to
sell
by
authorizing
the
sale
by
Sheen
because
of
these
two
difficulties
I
have
just
mentioned.
A
third
difficulty,
that
was
not
yet
evident
to
them
but
which
became
evident
shortly
thereafter,
was
that
Sheen,
who
was
the
only
man
among
them
experienced
in
real
estate
and
a
man
who
had
a
substantial
interest
at
the
outset
of
some
$20,000,
and
who
had
been
made
manager
or
superintendent
of
the
apartments,
turned
out
to
be
less
capable
than
they
had
expected,
and
the
loss
of
market
that
they
experienced
was
subsequently
found
not
to
be
the
result
of
general
trends
but
the
result
of
his
operations,
and
he
was
subsequently
discharged.
But
this
was
not
an
easy
matter
to
accomplish,
because
they
had
to
raise
$20,000
with
which
to
purchase
his
equity
before
they
could
get
rid
of
him.
In
1964
they
were
faced
with
what
they
had
done,
and
the
answer
given
by
Mr
Wilson—and
perhaps
by
Mr
McKendry,
but
certainly
adopted
by
them
all—was
that,
faced
with
obvious
losses
that
were
occurring
and
that
were
going
to
continue
to
occur,
they
panicked
and
agreed
to
sell
the
property.
They
agreed
to
pay
a
substantial
bonus,
as
I
recall,
to
Sheen
if
he
could
achieve
sale.
I
do
not
have
the
evidence
of
Sheen
before
me
to
see
what
efforts
he
made,
but
I
note
that
not
many
months
passed
before
they
managed
to
bring
in
some
outside
money
by
enticing
additional
people—!
think
primarily
Dr
Hamel
in
1964
or
1965—which
helped
provide
the
money
to
dispose
of
Sheen’s
services.
In
1965
Mr
Pittaway
as
well
as
Dr
Hamel,
put
in
additional
funds,
and
also
Mr
Elvins,
and
Mr
Muir
came
in
in
1966.
There
was
a
substantial
infusion
of
capital
into
the
business,
and
this
allowed
them
to
discharge
a
third
mortgage,
or
sufficient
encumbrances,
in
any
event,
to
make
the
operation
viable
and
to
make
it
attractive
to
the
people
who
were
putting
in
money
as
an
investment,
as
alleged
by
them.
One
other
aspect
of
the
documentary
evidence
that
I
have
not
yet
mentioned,
and
that
counsel
for
the
respondent
would
have
me
look
at,
is
the
letters
patent,
which
contain
an
object
that
is
obviously
sufficient
to
cover
trading
in
real
estate.
They
also
had
an
appraisal
value
made
of
the
property
to
determine
what
their
position
was
with
respect
to
the
capital
they
had
invested,
and
what
their
prospects
were
of
retrieving
their
capital
if
the
complex
was
not
going
to
succeed
as
an
investment
project.
They
did
get
an
offer
of
$1,650,000,
which
was
$50,000
less
than
the
valuation
of
$1,700,000
made
by
a
man
by
the
name
of
Lafontaine.
It
was
discussed
among
themselves
and
turned
down
because
of
the
low
down
payment.
They
were
on
the
covenant
for
the
first
mortgage,
and
this
was
not
a
prudent
sale.
They
decided
that
if
they
had
to
sell
they
would
not
sell
for
less
than
sufficient
to
recover
their
original
investment.
At
the
same
time,
however,
they
were
considering
the
possibility
of
turning
this
over
to
the
trust,
as
they
referred
to
it,
to
gain
the
advantage
of
capital
cost
allowance
against
their
own
income
tax,
and
this
would
make
it
possible
to
generate
more
new
capital
for
the
business.
As
has
been
pointed
out
by
more
than
one
of
them,
if
they
had
intended
to
sell
the
property,
there
would
have
been
no
benefit
in
changing
it
into
a
trust,
as
they
would
have
lost
the
advantage
of
the
loss
of
$70,000
that
they
then
had
in
the
company.
It
is
suggested
that,
when
they
did
turn
it
over
to
the
trust,
they
retained
the
chattels
of
the
company
for
the
purpose
of
utilizing
this
loss,
but
nothing
much
was
made
of
it.
If
it
was
in
their
minds—and
it
is
only
speculation
on
my
part—it
would
not
have
been
bad
consideration,
in
any
event.
The
trustees
were
given
the
task
of
managing
the
Four
Winds,
and
they
began,
after
the
infusion
of
capital
in
1965
and
1966,
to
reduce
their
losses
from
$30,000-odd
down
to
$500
and
subsequently,
as
I
have
said,
they
sold,
as
a
result
of
a
majority
vote.
I
come
back
now
to
deal
with
the
reasoning
of
the
individuals.
Dr
Hamel
was
called.
He
was
a
practising
physician.
He
did
not
have
a
pension
plan.
Mr
Butler,
who
was
his
solicitor,
contacted
him
and
told
him
that
this,
in
his
opinion,
was
a
safe
long
term
investment.
The
point
that
appealed
to
Dr
Hamel
most,
I
think,
was
the
fact
that
his
money
would
be
managed
for
him.
He
looked
at
it
as
a
saving,
and
he
would
not
have
to
be
bothered
wiht
it;
it
would
be
looked
after
by
Mr
Butler
and
the
others.
He
attended
meetings
of
shareholders
and
agreed
or
disagreed
with
various
decisions,
but
he
is
quite
firm
that
he
was
against
the
sale
at
the
time
it
was
being
discussed
in
1969,
as
were
some
of
the
others.
Perhaps
he
was
in
a
better
position
financially
to
take
such
a
strong
stand,
but
he
had
the
most
in
it
and
he
still
believed
it
to
be
a
good
investment.
Dr
Lidington,
who
is
also
a
practising
physician,
joined
in
1966.
He
had
a
connection
with
Mr
McKendry
through
his
daughter
and
Mr
McKendry’s
son,
I
gather,
who
were
going
together,
and
Mr
McKendry
convinced
him
it
was
a
good
investment,
and
that
if
they
could
get
enough
people
into
the
group
to
pay
off
the
third
mortgage
a
good
revenue
would
result.
This
to
me
is
indicative
of
the
type
of
man
I
have
assessed
Mr
McKendry
of
being,
in
that
he
made
no
attempt
at
the
time
of
speaking
to
Dr
Lidington
to
gloss
over
the
problems
that
the
group
were
facing.
He
told
him
that
it
was
only
by
people
like
Dr
Lidington
putting
in
more
money
that
the
investment
would
right
itself
and
produce
revenues
sufficient
to
satisfy
their
original
avowed
intention.
According
to
Dr
Lidington,
what
happened
after
this
infusion
of
money
in
1966
and
the
transfer
to
the
individuals
was
that
the
rents
went
up,
and
he
said,
“We
started
to
realise
a
good
income
from
it,
and
since
we
were
going
to
keep
it
for
a
long
time
it
made
sense
to
transfer
it
to
the
individuals”.
He
said,
“We
would
not
even
have
considered
this
if
we
had
planned
to
sell
it
because
of
the
recapture
situation”.
He
had
never
been
in
such
a
syndicate
before.
He
had
owned
a
duplex
which
was
revenue-producing,
and
which
he
owned
for
some
twenty
years.
He
built
an
apartment
building
in
1953
on
Holmwood
Avenue
in
this
city
in
which
his
office
was
located.
He
found
that
the
disadvantages
of
being
so
close
to
his
tenants
far
outweighed
the
advantages,
and
he
finally
disposed
of
it
for
this
reason.
During
the
time
he
held
it
he
earned
income
on
which
he
paid
tax.
He
also
held
six
or
more
mortgages
and
never
discounted
them.
He
paid
tax
on
the
recapture
when
he
sold
some
of
his
other
properties,
but
the
apartment
building
he
had
sold
for
what
it
had
cost
him.
Here
is
a
history
of
this
man’s
putting
his
money
into
what
would
be
a
very
practical
thing
for
a
man
in
his
position
without
a
pension,
and
a
history
of
doing
it
over
the
years.
Mr
Rothwell
was
one
of
the
original
group.
He
was
a
bank
manager
in
1963,
and
he
indicated
that
he
was
then
expecting
to
retire
in
1972.
I
infer
from
his
evidence
that
in
order
to
continue
to
live
in
the
manner
to
which
he
had
become
accustomed
it
was
necessary
to
supplement
any
pension
income
he
had
from
the
bank,
and
he
was
interested
in
a
long-term
investment.
In
fact,
he
said
he
was
looking
for
one.
It
is
interesting
to
note,
in
answer
to
the
allegations
of
the
Minister
that
the
operation
was
undercapitalized
from
the
beginning,
that
Mr
Wilson
and
Mr
Rothwell,
a
chartered
accountant
and
a
banker,
respectively,
both
professions
being
noted
for
conservatism
in
their
approach
to
this
sort
of
investment,
felt
there
was
sufficient
capital
to
substantiate
the
program
of
rental,
if
it
produced
on
the
basis
of
the
Original
so-called
prospectus,
which
is
filed
as
Exhibit
A-1.
Mr
Rothwell
gave,
as
the
reasons
for
the
damning
minutes
of
May
1964,
the
mass
exodus,
the
market
deterioration,
and
panic
decision.
Some
evidence
was
adduced
through
the
various
witnesses
(but
it
was
not
too
clear
in
some
of
their
minds)
that
some
three
months,
or
some
short
while,
after
they
had
purchased
it
they
became
aware
that
the
owner,
Gladstone
Realty
Limited,
had
had
an
opportunity
to
sell
it
for
$100,000
more.
They
investigated
this
and
discussed
it
at
a
meeting
and,
whether
they
believed
it
to
be
a
fact
or
not,
none
of
them
was
interested
in
the
prospect
of
a
quick
profit
of
$100,000.
This
is
interesting
because
later,
after
many
trials
and
tribulations,
they
sold
the
property
for
only
twice
as
much
money
in
profit
but
with
twice
as
many
people
in
the
group
to
share
it.
Mr
Alarie,
who
was
a
plumber,
gave
a
pretty
honest
reason
for
joining
the
operation.
He
had
had
no
previous
real
estate
transactions
except
that
he
had
sold
a
duplex
four
years
before.
Things
were
picking
up
in
1966,
and
he
had
lots
of
work.
His
bank
manager,
Mr
Rothwell,
said
it
would
take
a
long
time
to
get
the
money
out,
but
it
would
be
a
good
pension
for
him.
He
said
he
agreed,
based
mainly
on
the
advice
of
his
bank
manager,
which
is
probably
the
most
persuasive
advice
that
one
can
get.
He
also
voted
against
the
sale
but,
as
he
said,
the
majority
ruled.
He
had
a
duplex
at
260
Donald
Street,
which
he
had
rented
for
over
20
years.
He
also
had
a
duplex
on
Clementine
Boulevard
which
he
had
to
take
over
in
order
to
get
his
account
for
plumbing
services
paid.
He
kept
it
for
three
or
four
years,
and
then
disposed
of
it.
When
someone
holds
a
duplex
for
20
years
before
selling
it,
he
is
hardly
an
example
of
someone
in
the
trading
business.
Mr
Alfred
E
Adams,
again
one
of
the
originals,
was
a
general
insurance
agent
with
a
small
business.
He
felt
he
needed
supplementary
income
for
later
years.
He
had
had
no
real
estate
experience,
no
sales
experience
and
no
rental
experience.
Although
he
admitted
to
writing
policies
of
insurance
on
real
estate,
that
would
hardly
qualify
him
as
an
expert
in
the
problem
that
faces
me
today.
I
made
a
comment
earlier
that
he
ended
up
in
the
least
enviable
position
of
all,
because
apparently,
towards
the
end,
he
had
to
move
in
to
try
to
keep
the
tenants
satisfied,
and
he
bore
the
brunt
of
the
complaints
at
the
Four
Winds.
He
took
over
the
insurance
coverage
on
the
buildings
in
1965
and
received
his
normal
commission,
so
he
had
an
alternate
means
of
generating
income
by
belonging
to
this
group.
I
refer
again
to
Mr
McKendry’s
evidence.
The
first
mortgagee
required
80%
occupancy
in
the
way
of
leases
before
the
final
mortgage
advance
would
be
made.
The
required
number
of
leases
were
obviously
produced,
but
among
them
were
those
of
the
undesirable
tenants
who
had
to
be
evicted.
This
left
the
group
with
an
almost
25%
loss
in
occupancy
in
one
fell
swoop
shortly
after
taking
over.
Mr
McKendry
said
that
he
was
reluctant
to
sell,
but
the
offer
was
sufficient
to
free
him
from
his
personal
covenant
and,
since
he
had
changed
jobs,
he
voted
for
it.
I
think
it
is
safe
to
say
that
by
1969
they
had
all
had
enough.
Without
meaning
any
disrespect,
and
before
going
on
to
describe
the
other
members
of
the
group,
I
think
this
is
a
perfect
example
of
where
the
admonition
“Shoemaker,
stick
to
your
last”
is
apt.
The
whole
venture
smacks
of
amateur
night
in
a
great
many
of
things
that
were
done.
I
have
seen
some
pretty
spectacular
sophisticated
plans
to
deprive
the
treasury
of
some
money
by
way
of
capital
gains,
but
never
have
I
seen
one
like
this,
where
so
much
was
done
by
so
many
for
so
little.
Another
of
the
appellants,
Mr
Aldous
E
Pittaway,
who
is
retired
by
reason
of
medical
necessity,
was
one
of
the
originals.
He
had
$10,000
in
life
savings,
of
which
he
invested
$5,000,
and
then
he
had
to
put
in
the
other
$5,000,
as
he
said,
to
try
to
salvage
the
first
$5,000.
He
said
that
originally
the
investment
was
for
a
long
term.
Here
I
find
one
of
the
most
truthful
answers
I
could
expect.
He
said
he
became
frightened
when
he
nearly
lost
his
life’s
savings
and
he
could
not
see
any
reason
for
not
selling
in
1969,
which
showed,
I
think,
some
honesty
as
well
as
good
sense
on
his
part.
Mr
Thomas
Lamothe
gave
the
usual
reasons.
He
said:
“!
considered
it
a
15-
to
20-year
proposition
before
it
would
be
good.”
He
told
Mr
McKendry
this,
and
said:
“There
was
no
intention
to
make
a
quick
sale.”
Mr
Percy
Kenny,
who
is
a
farmer
and
was
a
farmer
in
1963,
was
one
of
the
original
shareholders
whom
Mr
Lamothe
asked
to
join
the
group.
It
was
obvious
from
his
evidence
and
his
attitude
that
he
plans
to
work
until
somebody
prevents
him
from
doing
so,
but
he
did
have
one
of
the
most
cogent
reasons
for
wanting
something
secure
in
his
future,
and
that
was
the
fact
that
he
is
the
parent
of
a
deaf
child,
and
he
was
thinking
of
this
as
security
for
her.
He
also
said
there
was
a
great
concern
in
his
own
mind
that
at
some
time
during
his
association
he
might
lose
the
money
he
had
put
in.
He
said,
“That
was
enough
for
me
in
1969”,
and
!
think
it
would
have
been
enough
for
most
people.
Mr
Charles
E
Elvins,
another
of
the
appellants,
was
retired
at
the
time
he
gave
his
evidence.
He
is
a
former
vending
machine
operator
who
naturally
would
have
had
some
connection
with
Morrison
Lamothe.
He
was
friendly
with
Mr
McKendry.
He
had
no
pension,
and
he
talked
to
Mr
Lamothe
and
Mr
Butler.
He
says
he
was
a
silent
partner,
but
I
find
that
hard
to
believe.
That
he
did
not
take
any
active
part
in
the
operation
of
the
buildings,
I
think
would
be
a
better
way
to
put
it.
He
said
he
did
not
want
to
sell,
and
he
felt
they
should
keep
it.
He
was
cross-examined
at
some
length
about
his
other
real
estate
holdings.
It
is
clear
that
he
owns
seven
town
houses
which
he
built
in
1970,
and
which
are
all
rented.
He
has
a
plant
on
Boyd
Avenue
from
which
he
collects
rent.
I
suppose
that
is
the
plant
from
which
he
carried
on
his
business,
but
when
he
sold
the
business
he
retained
the
plant.
He
had
another
piece
of
land
in
the
east
end
that
he
had
planned
to
build
a
plant
on
if
he
stayed
in
the
vending
machine
business,
but
when
the
purchasers
of
his
business
did
not
wish
to
take
on
that
responsibility
he
disposed
of
the
site
after
holding
it
for
10
or
11
years.
These
are
hardly
the
actions
of
a
trader.
He
sold
a
piece
of
land
on
Richmond
Road
when
he
ran
into
problems
with
City
Hall.
He
had
a
cottage
chalet
that
he
lived
in,
and
then
sold.
He
has
now
bought
a
house
for
himself
in
Florida.
in
respect
of
the
activities
of
Mr
Butler,
it
is
agreed
that
he
had
an
interest
in
the
Winston
Apartments
as
one
of
the
tenants
in
common,
and
with
some
others
he
sold
a
piece
of
property
to
Dominion
Chalmers
United
Church.
When
the
two
churches
united,
they
needed
more
space
for
parking,
and
Mr
Tilley,
Mr
McKendry,
Mr
Butler
and
Mr
Muir,
who
owned
a
piece
of
property
on
Lisgar
Street
for
three
or
four
years,
sold
it
to
the
church
at
a
profit
of
about
$3,000
each,
upon
which
I
place
no
significance
in
this
transaction.
I
elicited
from
Mr
McKendry,
I
think
it
was,
that
he
had
known
Mr
W
Wallace
Muir
for
a
number
of
years.
They
were
close
friends;
they
lived
relatively
close
to
each
other.
He
knew
him
to
have
no
interest
in
real
estate
other
than
what
I
have
mentioned;
that
he
had
never
engaged
in
the
buying
and
selling
of
land.
Mr
McKendry
said
that
when
this
project
did
not
turn
out
as
they
had
expected
Mr
Muir
also
was
glad
to
get
out.
I
have
now
given,
I
think,
all
of
the
reasons
advanced
by
all
of
the
people
who
have
appeared.
If
I
have
missed
any,
then
to
state
it
would
be
repetitious,
because
all
of
the
evidence
was
basically
the
same.
The
question
is:
is
there
support
for
the
allegation
of
the
original
group
in
1963
that
they
intended
to
enter
into
a
long-term
investment?
I
have
come
to
the
conclusion
that,
notwithstanding
the
time
at
which
the
others
joined,
I
am
certain
that
those
others
who
joined
in
1965
and
1966
were
also
motivated
only
by
long-term
investment
possibilities.
I
am
convinced
that
they
merely
joined
the
original
group,
who
were
really
the
controlling
group
and
whose
intention
I
should
consider
as
being
binding
on
ail.
There
has
been
filed
as
Exhibit
R-2
an
abstract
of
title,
which
begins
with
the
sale
by
Gladstone
Realty
Limited
to
Kenwin
Realty
Company
Limited.
From
that
time
on,
there
is
a
mortgage
back
to
the
vendor,
and
there
is
a
series
of
mortgages,
notices
of
leases,
releases,
discharges
of
mortgage,
agreements,
postponing
agreements,
evidence
of
borrowing
money
from
Mr
Kenny
on
one
or
two
occasions,
his
postponement
of
his
mortgage,
and
a
final
discharge
of
mortgages.
Until
1969,
other
than
the
grant
to
themselves,
there
is
a
series
of
transactions,
as
borne
out
by
the
minutes
of
the
company,
that
indicate
to
me
that
these
people,
had
they
not
intended
to
keep
this
property
and
to
turn
it
into
a
revenue-producing
future
for
them
all,
would
not
have
endured
the
difficulties
that
they
did.
They
made
arrangements
for
moratoriums.
They
made
arrangements
for
the
purchase
of
furniture
on
time;
they
furnished
50
units
in
the
hope
of
enticing
the
Ministry
of
Transport
to
rent
them
for
people
taking
courses
at
Uplands,
which
is
not
all
that
far
away.
They
spent
a
considerable
sum
of
money,
when
they
first
started
to
make
some,
on
priming
the
outside
of
the
buildings
and
then
painting
them.
They
spent
money
on
fixing
the
roof
on
a
long-term
basis.
Finally,
after
all
those
years
of
desperation,
when
they
began
to
see
a
few
dollars
coming
in,
they
turned
around
and
pumped
the
money
back
into
the
buildings.
It
seems
to
me
that
these
are
hardly
the
activities
of
people
bound
on
turning
their
property
to
a
profit
at
the
first
opportunity.
I
accept
without
question
the
test
set
out
by
Associate
Chief
Justice
Noël
of
the
Federal
Court
of
Canada
in
Racine,
Demers
and
Nolin
v
MNR,
[1965]
CTC
150;
65
DTC
5098,
which
followed
Regal
Heights
Limited
v
MNR,
[1960]
CTC
384;
60
DTC
1270,
which
originally
brought
out
the
secondary
intention
principle.
I
also
accept
the
line
of
cases
which
say
that
no
one
would
enter
into
the
purchase
of
a
property
of
this
magnitude,
or
of
any
magnitude,
if
there
was
certainty
in
his
mind
that
he
was
going
to
lose
money.
No
one,
in
my
view,
and
not
this
group
in
any
event,
would
have
gone
through
all
the
gyrations
they
did
to
keep
the
thing
going
for
six
years
if
they
had
always
intended
to
turn
it
to
a
profit
at
the
first
opportunity,
because
they
could
have
done
so
shortly
after
purchasing
it.
But
this
is
an
unusual
case,
and
there
are
difficult
problems
for
the
appellants
to
overcome.
I
was
surprised
that
the
only
other
case
that
I
am
aware
of
that
even
comes
close
to
this
case
was
not
cited.
I
refer
to
the
decision
of
Mr
Justice
Cattanach
in
MNR
v
Glen-Rouge
Parks
Limited,
[1973]
CTC
443;
73
DTC
5364.
This
was
a
case
of
a
large
group
of
individuals
from
varying
callings
in
life
who
purchased
a
piece
of
property
in
Toronto,
and
were
subsequently
frustrated
in
their
efforts,
and
sold
it
at
a
profit
of
$450,000
after
not
being
able
to
do
anything
with
it
for
some
months
or
years.
What
makes
that
case
so
vivid
in
my
mind
in
relation
to
this
one
is
that
there
was
among
that
group
a
very
active
real
estate
personage
who
wrote
letters
exhorting
people
to
put
money
into
the
business
on
the
basis
that
they
could
never
lose
their
money;
that
they
could
sell
at
any
time
at
a
profit
because
Toronto
was
moving
quickly
in
that
direction,
and
it
was
a
sure
thing.
He
even
went
further,
in
some
of
the
minutes
of
that
company,
as
I
recall,
than
is
the
case
here.
There
was
no
question
of
panic
in
that
instance.
It
was
simply
a
case
of
sitting
tight
until
the
conservation
authority
came
along
and,
as
I
said,
gave
them
$450,000
more
than
they
paid
for
it.
In
that
case
it
was
decided
that,
write
what
he
may,
say
what
he
may,
or
infer
what
he
may
the
real
estate
personage
could
not
dominate
the
transaction,
because
it
took
a
majority
of
the
members
of
that
corporation
to
vote
for
the
sale.
I
find
that
case
very
close
to
this
one.
Mr
Justice
Cattanach
had
no
hesitation
in
finding
that
they
had
the
primary
intention
of
investing
on
a
long-term
basis.
Secondly,
there
was
evidence
in
that
case,
from
at
least
one
of
the
dominant
figures
in
the
group,
that
there
may
well
have
been
a
time
when
in
10
or
15
years
the
revenue
was
not
keeping
pace
with
the
value
of
the
land,
and
when
they
might
well
have
decided
to
sell
it.
It
was
found
that
this
did
not
meet
the
test
of
a
secondary
intention,
motivated
by
profit,
to
turn
the
property
to
account
at
the
first
opportunity,
but
was
an
honest
straightforward
answer
as
to
what
any
sound
group
of
businessmen
would
be
expected
to
do
should
that
circumstance
arise.
I
find
this
case
very
much
along
the
principle
of
that
case.
If
the
evidence
of
the
realtor
and
the
evidence
of
the
decision
to
sell
could
be
overcome
in
that
case,
then
I
have
no
hesitation
whatsoever
in
saying
that
this
is
a
far
weaker
case
on
behalf
of
the
respondent.
I
am
satisfied,
on
all
the
evidence,
that
there
was
a
primary
intention
of
the
parties
involved
in
this
transaction
to
hold
this
property
as
a
long-term
investment
for
the
supplementing
of
their
individual
incomes
at
a
time
when
their
earning
power
would
be
less,
and
the
question
of
selling
it
never
entered
the
minds
of
the
original
group
in
1963,
and
certainly
was
never
in
the
minds
of
people
like
Dr
Liding-
ton
and
those
who
came
in
later
in
1965
and
1966.
Therefore,
the
appeal
will
be
allowed
and
the
matter
referred
back
to
the
Minister
for
reassessment.
Appeals
allowed.
MR
PYNE:
Mr
Chairman,
before
proceeding
with
the
appeal
scheduled
for
this
morning,
may
I
address
a
few
remarks
to
the
Board
concerning
yesterday’s
proceedings?
THE
CHAIRMAN:
Yes.
MR
PYNE:
I
spoke
to
Mr
Shaw,
who
represents
Mr
Muir,
again
on
the
telephone,
and
I
agreed
with
him
that
we
could
adjourn
Mr
Muir’s
appeal
until
such
time
as
the
department
decides
how
it
wishes
to
proceed.
THE
CHAIRMAN:
I
thought
the
understanding
we
had
was
that
Muir’s
appeal
would
follow
the
event.
That
is
what
I
think
I
said
in
my
judgment.
I
allowed
his
appeal
based
on
the
evidence,
because
the
same
evidence
applies.
MR
PYNE:
When
you
said
his
appeal
would
abide
the
result,
I
was
a
little
confused.
However,
that
is
fine.
It
is
just
that
the
department
does
not
want
to
be
in
the
position
of
having
to
consent
to
judgment,
because
we
might
be
in
trouble
if
.
..
.
THE
CHAIRMAN:
No,
I
have
found
on
the
evidence
that
he
should
succeed,
so
you
are
not
prejudiced.
In
that
way
we
can
dispose
of
all
of
them,
and
if
you
appeal
then
they
will
all
go
together.
That
is
agreeable
to
you?
MR
PYNE:
Yes,
perfectly.
THE
CHAIRMAN:
That
is
my
understanding
of
what
I
said
in
my
reasons.
I
referred
to
McKendry’s
evidence
as
being
support
for
the
fact
that
Muir
was
not
a
trader.
I
referred
to
him
in
connection
with
the
church
property
on
Lisgar
Street.
On
that
evidence
I
found
that
he
should
succeed
also,
as
I
did
with
Butler
on
the
basis
of
what
had
been
admitted,
because
I
felt
that
if
any
of
them
won,
they
all
would.
MR
PYNE:
Yes,
I
think
I
submitted
that
either
they
all
win,
or
they
all
lose.
THE
CHAIRMAN:
Yes.
So
judgment
will
go
for
them
all,
but
it
will
not
be
a
consent
judgment
so
you
will
not
be
prejudiced.