Walsh,
J:—The
facts
of
these
two
cases,
which
were
heard
together,
are
identical.
Three
companies
were
originally
involved,
the
third
being
Terry
Heights
Realty
Limited,
which,
however,
paid
its
tax
assessment
for
the
year
in
question
without
protest.
The
fact
that
it
did
so
can
in
no
way
prejudice
the
appeals
of
the
other
two
companies.
Each
of
the
three
companies
was
beneficially
owned
by
one
of
the
married
daughters
of
Matthew
Elman
who
managed
them
for
his
daughters
in
consultation
with
them
and,
in
fact,
had
set
them
up
as
part
of
an
estate
planning
scheme
to
provide
for
them,
the
three
charters
being
acquired,
one
for
each
daughter,
through
his
attorney.
The
business
of
each
of
the
three
companies
was
identical,
namely
the
lending
of
money,
some
of
which
was
borrowed
from
the
bank
and
some
from
Elman
himself,
to
third
parties
on
the
security
of
promissory
notes,
mortgage
liens
and
similar
agreements.
Neither
Mr
Elman,
his
daughters
nor
any
of
the
companies
had
ever
engaged
in
the
business
of
buying
or
selling
land
although
the
objects
clauses
of
all
three
companies
were
sufficiently
broad
to
enable
them
to
do
so
should
they
so
desire.
In
about
the
year
1963
Mr
Elman
was
approached
by
the
attorney
of
three
developers,
namely
Bernard
Benjamin,
Joseph
Gordon
and
David
Leifer,
who
controlled
a
company
by
the
name
of
Brimfield
Investments
Limited,
with
a
request
to
loan
them
$65,000
by
way
of
a
mortgage
on
property
which
they
had
an
option
to
purchase
in
St
Catharines
and
on
which
they
proposed
to
build
a
number
of
townhouses.
He
was
shown
plans
and
a
commitment
to
them
from
Standard
Life
Assurance
Company
to
eventually
lend
them
some
$880,000
as
primary
lender,
and
a
further
tentative
agreement
with
the
Metropolitan
Trust
Company
for
temporary
financing
in
the
amount
of
about
$500,000.
These
commitments
convinced
him
that
the
proposal
was
a
serious
one,
and
he
had
had
satisfactory
business
relationships
with
the
three
individuals
concerned
previously,
but
he
did
not
wish
to
lend
the
money
to
buy
the
bare
land
on
the
basis
of
a
short
term
mortgage.
The
developers
themselves
had
apparently
only
put
up
$500
of
their
own
money
for
the
option
plus
whatever
other
expenses
they
had
incurred
in
connection
with
their
preliminary
plans
and
negotiations
with
the
lending
companies.
He
therefore
turned
down
the
initial
proposal.
Subsequently
they
approached
him
again
with
another
proposai
by
virtue
of
which,
if
he
would
undertake
to
lend
them
the
$65,000
which
they
required
to
take
up
their
option
on
the
property
before
it
expired
on
August
15,
they
would
undertake
to
repay
him
the
sum
of
$70,200
in
two
months
with
interest
at
12%.
This
bonus
or
premium
was
calculated
on
the
basis
of
$50
per
house
on
each
of
the
houses
which
they
proposed
to
build
on
the
property
in
question,
but
the
manner
in
which
it
was
calculated
is
of
no
significance
in
the
present
case,
as
there
is
no
suggestion
that
Elman
or
any
of
the
three
companies
he
managed
had
entered
into
any
sort
of
partnership
with
Brimfield
Investments
Limited
nor
that
they
had
at
any
time
themselves
been
builders
or
developers.
As
security
for
repayment
of
this
loan
of
$65,000,
Brimfield
Investments
Limited
signed
a
note
in
the
amount
of
$70,200
with
interest
at
12%
payable
on
demand
and
Joseph
Gordon,
Bernard
Benjamin
and
David
Leifer
jointly
and
severally
signed
the
note
as
guarantors.
As
further
security
title
to
the
property
was
taken
in
the
name
of
Bardot
Realty
Limited,
Joleen
Investments
Limited
and
Terry
Heights
Realty
Limited
by
virtue
of
a
direction
given
to
the
vendors
by
Messrs
Benjamin,
Gordon
and
Leifer.
This
direction,
the
promissory
note,
and
the
conveyance
were
all
executed
on
August
15,
1963
and
on
the
same
date
an
agreement
was
made
between
Bardot
Realty
Limited,
Joleen
Investments
Limited
and
Terry
Heights
Realty
Limited
on
the
one
hand
and
Brimfield
Investments
Limited,
Bernard
Benjamin,
Joseph
Gordon
and
David
Leifer
on
the
other
hand,
giving
Brimfield
an
option
to
purchase
the
lands
back
for
the
price
of
$70,200
subject
to
adjustments
at
any
time
up
to
October
15,
1963.
The
agreement
provided
that
in
this
event
the
promissory
note
would
be
delivered
to
Brimfield
for
cancellation
and
interest
thereon
waived,
but
if
the
option
was
not
exercised
by
that
date
then
the
note
would
immediately
become
due
and
payable
and,
furthermore,
that
Brimfield
and
Benjamin,
Gordon
and
Leifer
would
indemnify
Bardot
Realty
Limited,
Joleen
Investments
Limited
and
Terry
Heights
Realty
Limited
for
any
costs,
expenses
or
losses
incurred
by
them
in
any
sale
of
the
land,
which
sale
they
could
make
either
by
private
sale
or
by
public
auction.
Brimfield:
Investments
Limited
made
default
in
payment
of
the
loan
and
their
option
to
repurchase
the
property
accordingly
expired
on
October
15,
1963,
but
Mr
Elman
testified
that
although
he
kept
pressing
them
for
payment
he
did
not
wish
to
avail
himself
of
their
default
in
order
to
retain
the
property.
All
he
was
interested
in
was
securing
repayment
of
the
loan
together
with
the
$5,200
premium
and
the
interest
due,
and
there
is
nothing
in
his
conduct
or
in
the
evidence
to
contradict
this.
He
was
not
unduly
concerned
when
no
building
took
place
during
the
winter
months
but
in
May
1964
he
saw
a
letter
from
the
Public
Works
Department
of
the
City
of
St
Catharines
which
indicated
that
difficulties
had
arisen
in
connection
with
the
installation
of
the
sewers
and
utilities
and
he
was
given
to
understand
by
the
borrowers
that
these
might
now
cost
about
$130,000
instead
of
the
$15,000
they
had
anticipated.
Finally
they
indicated
to
him
that
they
were
not
going
to
proceed
with
the
project
at
all,
and
on
September
18,
1964
Brimfield
Investments
Limited
entered
into
a
quit
claim
deed
with
Bardot
Realty
Limited,
Joleen
Investments
Limited
and
Terry
Heights
Realty
Limited
whereby
the
former
divested
itself
of
all
interest
of
whatsoever
kind
which
it
had
in
the
above-mentioned
property
in
consideration
of
which
the
three
lending
companies
released
it
from
any
of
its
obligations
as
set
out
in
the
agreement
between
them
of
August
15,
1963.
No
specific
mention
was
made
of
the
promissory
note
and
it
would
appear
that
the
effect
of
this
quit
claim
agreement
was
that
Brimfield
Investments
Limited
would
no
longer
be
liable
to
make
good
any
expenses
or
losses
incurred
by
the
lending
companies
in
the
resale
of
the
property
which
they
were
now
retaining,
but
that
Messrs
Benjamin,
Gordon
and
Leifer
might
still
be
liable
on
the
promissory
note.
It
is
not
necessary
to
reach
a
conclusion
on
this
point,
however,
to
decide
the
present
case.
At
this
stage,
according
to
Mr
Elman’s
evidence,
he
did
not
know
what
to
do
with
the
property
which
the
companies
he
was
managing
had
no
desire
to
retain,
not
being
developers
or
in
the
business
of
buying
and
selling
real
estate.
He
realized
that
it
should
be
sold
but
had
no
idea
whether
this
would
result
in
the
recovery
of
the
$65,000
loaned
or
not.
It
was
conceded
at
the
hearing
before
me
that
if
the
sale
of
the
property
had
resulted
in
the
companies
recovering
the
$65,000
loaned
together
with
the
$5,200
bonus
and
the
interest,
the
sums
received
by
way
of
bonus
and
interest
would
be
taxable
income
in
the
hands
of
the
companies.
It
is
the
excess
over
and
above
these
sums
which
resulted
from
the
resale
of
the
property
by
them
that
appellants
contend
should
be
treated
as
capital
gain.
While
Mr
Elman
was
still
deciding
what
to
do
he
was
approached
in
October
by
a
Mr
David
Gallo
who
indicated
that
he
was
interested
in
buying
the
property
and
asked
him
how
much
money
he
had
tied
up
in
it.
Mr
Elman,
being
a
shrewd
bargainer,
mentioned
a
figure
of
$100,000
and
Mr
Gallo
then
asked
him
if
he
would
be
interested
in
selling
it
for
$130,000.
Needless
to
say,
Mr
Elman
accepted
with
alacrity
and
the
sale
was
completed
on
October
20,
1964,
resulting
in
the
three
companies
sharing
a
profit
of
$65,000
as
a
result
of
this
fortuitous
sale.
What
had
happened
was
that
Mr
Gallo
had
apparently
learned
that
Brock
University
was
about
to
be
built
in
the
vicinity
of
this
property
in
St
Catharines
resulting
in
a
sharp
increase
in
the
value
of
it.
Mr
Elman
did
not
know
this
at
the
time
of
the
sale
and
it
can
be
assumed
that
Messrs
Benjamin,
Gordon
and
Leifer
had
no
knowledge
of
this
development
either
or
they
would
not
have
abandoned
the
property.
It
is
true
that
their
option
to
repurchase
same
had
already
expired
the
preceding
October
but
as
Mr
Elman
indicated,
and
there
is
nothing
to
dispute
his
evidence,
all
he
wanted
was
to
get
his
$70,200
plus
12%
interest
and
on
payment
of
this
would
gladly
have
made
over
the
property
to
Brimfield
Investments
Limited
at
any
time,
even
after
their
option
to
repurchase
had
expired.
It
seems
clear
that
the
acquisition
of
the
title
in
the
property
by
Bardot
Realty
Limited,
Joleen
Investments
Limited
and
Terry
Heights
Realty
Limited
was
inextricably
associated
with
the
lending
transaction
made
by
them
in
the
normal
course
of
their
business
and
can
in
no
way
be
assimilated
in
its
effects
to
the
purchase
of
a
piece
of
land
by
them
as
an
investment.
Despite
this,
appellants
argue
that
the
profit
subsequently
realized
from
the
sale
of
this
property
as
the
result
of
an
unsolicited
offer
made
because
of
developments
which
had
taken
place
which
were
unforeseeable
at
the
time
they
acquired
the
property
should
be
treated
as
a
capital
gain
on
disposal
of
an
investment.
They
contend
that
the
profit
cannot
be
considered
as
having
resulted
from
an
adventure
in
the
nature
of
trade
since
the
sale
of
real
estate
was
not
normally
a
part
of
their
business
and
they
did
nothing
whatsoever
to
promote
or
advance
this
sale,
the
profit
being
in
the
nature
of
a
windfall.
It
is
of
interest
to
note
how
this
transaction
was
treated
in
the
books
of
appellants.
In
its
1963
balance
sheet,
appellant
Joleen
Investments
Limited
shows
among
current
assets
an
amount
of
$21,615.11
as
“inventory
—
land
(at
cost)”.
In
its
1964
balance
sheet
this
item
disappears
and
is
replaced
under
current
assets
by
an
item
“mortgage
receivable
$33,333”
(it
should
be
pointed
out
here
that
on
the
sale
to
Gallo
for
$130,000,
the
sum
of
$29,474.38
was
paid
prior
to
or
at
the
closing
after
allowing
for
tax
adjustments,
the
balance
of
$100,000
remaining
on
the
property
by
way
of
mortgage).
On
the
liability
side
of
the
balance
sheet
we
find
under
“retained
earnings”
the
item
“gain
on
realization
of
loan
$21,530”.
The
identical
figures
appear
under
the
same
headings
in
the
1963
and
1964
balance
sheets
of
Bardot
Realty
Limited.
It
is
evident
that
each
of
the
appellants
took
one-third
of
the
cost
price
of
the
land
($65,000)
into
its
inventory
of
current
assets
in
1963
($21,605.11,
evidently
after
some
small
adjustments),
that
in
the
year
1964
after
the
land
was
sold
and,
in
addition
to
the
down
payment,
they
now
held
a
mortgage
for
$100,000,
they
each
took
one-third
or
$33,333
into
current
assets
as
a
mortgage
receivable,
and
that
each
company
considered
that
the
difference
between
the
amount
loaned
of
$65,000
and
the
sale
price
of
$130,000
amounting
to
$65,000
represented
a
gain
on
realization
of
the
loan,
each
company’s
one-third
interest
(after
adjustments)
being
shown
in
the
amount
of
$21,530
as
a
separate
item
under
“retained
earnings”
rather
than
being
included
in
the
net
profit
for
the
year.
By
assessments
dated
March
12,
1969
each
of
the
appellants
was
reassessed
by
respondent
in
respect
of
its
1964
taxation
year
by
the
addition
to
its
declared
income
of
this
sum
of
$21,530
and
after
Notices
of
Objection
filed
on
April
15,
1969,
these
reassessments
were
confirmed
by
the
Minister
on
March
5,
1970.
As
a
result
of
these
reassessments
Joleen
was
assessed
tax
of
$2,878.20,
an
increase
of
$2,583.20
over
the
$295
declared,
and
Bardot
was
assessed
$2,051.52.
It
is
against
these
reassessments
that
the
present
appeals
have
been
brought.
There
are
various
ways
in
which
a
lender
can
obtain
security
for
the
repayment
of
his
loan.
He
can
content
himself
with
taking
merely
the
promissory
note
of
the
borrower,
he
can
demand
that
the
note
be
endorsed
or
guaranteed
by
third
persons,
he
can
require
that
collateral
of
some
sort
be
deposited
as
security,
he
can
take
a
mortgage
on
the
real
property
of
the
borrower,
or
he
can
take
title
to
the
real
property
of
the
borrower
(or,
as
in
the
present
case,
property
which
the
borrower
proposes
to
purchase)
and
by
a
collateral
agreement
agree
to
reconvey
same
to
the
borrower
on
the
fulfilment
of
the
terms
of
the
loan.
In
the
present
case
the
lenders
chose
to
combine
several
forms
of
security
for
repayment
of
the
amount
loaned
and
the
premium
for
making
same.
Not
only
did
they
take
a
note
from
the
primary
borrower,
Brimfield
Investments
Limited,
but,
as
is
quite
usual,
required
that
this
note
be
co-signed
as
guarantors
by
the
three
individuals
who
controlled
that
company.
In
addition
to
this
they
took
title
to
the
property
in
their
own
corporate
names
and
by
collateral
agreement
gave
the
borrowers
an
option
to
take
it
back
within
two
months
on
fulfilling
the
terms
of
the
loan
and
paying
the
premium
of
$5,200
for
same.
In
the
event
of
default,
12%
interest
on
$70,200
would
be
due
in
addition
to
this
capital
sum.
Although
substantial
corporations
such
as
the
Standard
Life
Assurance
Company
and
the
Metropolitan
Trust
Company
had
made
commitments
to
finance
the
borrowers’
project
it
had
not
reached
the
stage
when
drawings
could
be
made
against
these
financial
commitments,
and
in
fact
the
borrowers
did
not
even
own
the
property
yet
but
merely
had
an
option
to
buy
same.
The
fact
that
there
was
some
speculation
and
risk
involved
is
apparent,
as
subsequent
events
proved
when
the
borrowers
were
unable
to
go
through
with
the
project
and
abandoned
the
property,
and
this
element
of
risk
justified
the
lenders
charging
$5,200
for
what
was
to
have
been,
in
effect,
a
loan
of
the
sum
of
$65,000
for
two
months,
and
in
demanding
various
forms
of
security.
It
was
a
business
transaction
made
in
the
ordinary
course
of
the
business
of
appellant
companies
of
lending
money,
and
Mr
Elman
evidently
considered
that,
with
the
security
offered,
the
profit
to
be
anticipated
justified
the
risk.
The
possibility
of
having
to
keep
the
property,
therefore,
in
order
to
recover
the
sum
loaned,
premium
for
making
the
loan
and
interest,
always
existed,
and
in
this
event
if
the
property
had
to
be
sold
this
resale
might
have
resulted
in
either
a
profit
or
a
loss
and
it
was
unforeseeable
at
the
time
of
the
loan
or
of
the
quit
claim
deed
confirming
the
decision
to
retain
the
property
that
a
large
profit
in
excess
of
the
premium
anticipated
and
interest
would
be
realized.
My
view
as
to
the
nature
of
the
transaction
is
fully
borne
out
by
the
judgment
of
Grant,
J
of
The
High
Court
of
Justice
of
Ontario
in
the
case
of
Sidmay
Ltd
et
al
v
Wehttam
Investments
Ltd,
[1966]
1
OR
457,
in
which
it
is
interesting
to
note
the
same
parties
were
involved
in
an
identical
transaction,
although
the
issue
was
not
one
of
taxation
but
rather
of
the
validity
of
mortgages
taken
by
the
defendant
corporation
which
was
not
registered
under
The
Loan
and
Trust
Corporations
Act,
RSO
1960,
c
222.
In
this
case
Matthew
Elman
and
his
three
daughters
owned
all
the
preferred
shares
of
the
defendant
company
and
Mrs
Elman
owned
all
the
common
shares.
The
Messrs
Gordon
and
Benjamin,
who
were
the
owners
of
the
shares
in
the
plaintiff
companies,
caused
Natham
Leifer
to.
purchase
as
a
nominee
for
a
company
to
be
formed
by
them
(which
company
became
the
Sidmay
Company)
certain
land
in
the
Town
of
Burlington
for
$55,000
on
which
they
proposed
to
construct
64
two-storey
maisonettes.
They
approached
Elman
for
a
loan
and
after
he
had
ascertained
that
the
Canada
Trust
Company
had
agreed
to
advance
funds
by
mortgage
loan
on
the
buildings
he
offered
to
purchase
the
land
in
the
name
of
the
Bardot,
Joleen
and
Terry
companies
instead
of
having
same
purchased
by
Sidmay,
and
Sidmay
would
then
have
the
option
to
repurchase
the
land
from
these
companies
for
the
price
paid
plus
$50
for
each
apartment
to
be
constructed
thereon,
which
in
this
case
amounted
to
a
bonus
of
$3,200
so
that
on
taking
title
back
they
would
be
paying
$58,200
for
the
$55,000
loan.
The
loan
was
made
on
April
17,
1964
and
they
had
until
July
1,
1964
to
exercise
the
option
to
repurchase.
It
will
be
seen
that
the
method
adopted
to
carry
out
the
transaction
and
the
parties
involved
was
identical
with
the
present
case.
In
rendering
judgment
Mr
Justice
Grant
stated
at
page
460:
Although
such
arrangements
took
the
form
of
such
agreement
with
an
option
to
Sidmay
to
repurchase,
the
true
intent
of
the
parties
was
that
it
was
in
fact
a
loan
on
the
security
of
the
lands
to
be
so
acquired.
The
amount
advanced
was
to
be
$55,000
and
the
interest
was
to
be
$3,200.
I
agree
entirely
with
these
conclusions
which
are
applicable
in
the
present
case.
The
fact
that
appellants
acquired
the
property
as
part
and
parcel
of
a
lending
transaction,
however,
and
not
with
the
intent
of
reselling
same
at
a
profit,
and
that
the
profit
was
in
the
nature
of
a
windfall
does
not
lead
to
the
conclusion
sought
by
appellants
that
it
should
therefore
be
considered
as
in
the
nature
of
capital
gain.
In
support
oi
this
contention,
appellants’
attorney
cited
several
cases,
none
of
which
appear
to
me
to
be
directly
in
point
or
to
lead
to
the
conclusion
he
wishes
to
draw
from
them.
In
the
Tax
Appeal
Board
case
of
Douglas
Casey
v
MNR,
25
Tax
ABC
49,
appellant
had
accepted
a
piece
of
vacant
land
which
he
considered
at
the
time
to
be
worth
about
$300
in
satisfaction
of
a
debt
of
$600
which
he
was
having
difficulty
collecting.
Subsequently
he
was
able
to
sell
this
property
for
$850
making
a
profit
of
$250
which
the
judgment
treated
as
capital
gain.
Mention
was
made
in
the
judgment,
however,
of
the
fact
that
the
debtor
also
owed
appellant
another
three
or
four
hundred
dollars
in
respect
of
other
transactions
which
was
uncollectable
so
the
total
owed
was
more
than
the
sale
of
the
land
realized.
More
important,
appellant
was
not
in
the
money
lending
business
but
this
was
merely
an
incidental
transaction
of
a
capital
nature.
In
another
Tax
Appeal
Board
case,
Baker
Estates,
Limited
v
MNR,
11
Tax
ABC
391,
a
company
which
had
acquired
property
on
which
to
build
dwellings
as
an
investment
was
forced
to
sell
the
property
due
to
the
ever-increasing
cost
of
labour
and
materials
and
lack
of
funds
to
carry
out
the
building
project.
Although
the
sale
resulted
in
a
profit,
the
basis
of
the
decision
was
that
the
lands
had
been
bought
as
an
investment
and
were
sold
only
when
what
was
thought
to
be
a
good
investment
turned
out
to
be
a
dangerous
risk
and
this
was
simply
the
realization
of
an
investment
rather
than
a
real
estate
transaction.
This
was
also
the
basis
of
the
finding
of
Kerr,
J
in
Shields-Snow
Limited
v
MNR,
[1971]
CTC
848,
where
a
gain
realized
on
the
sale
of
a
shopping
centre
was
held
to
be
a
capital
gain
from
the
sale
of
an
investment
and
not
income
from
an
adventure
in
the
nature
of
trade.
The
project,
although
financed
almost
wholly
by
borrowed
funds,
was
a
viable
operation
which
was
sold
after
three
years
under
pressure
from
the
bank
as
the
result
of
an
unexpectedly
tight
money
situation
which
left
the
company
short
of
cash.
Similarly,
in
the
case
of
Bead
Realties
Limited
v
MNR,
[1971]
CTC
774,
the
basis
of
the
decision
was
that
the
appellant
had
a
sincere
intention
of
developing
property
which
it
had
acquired
as
an
investment
by
building
warehouses
or
similar
industrial
buildings
on
same
to
the
specifications
of
tenants
to
whom
it
would
lease
them.
When
the
member
of
the
firm
who
was
managing
this
enterprise
was
moved
out
of
town
and
the
appellant
received
soon
after
an
unsolicited
but
generous
offer,
the
property
was
sold.
The
profit
was
held
to
constitute
capital
gain.
The
case
of
MNR
v
Valclair
Investment
Company
Limited,
[1964]
Ex
CR
466;
[1964]
CTC
22,
held
that
for
a
purchase
to
qualify
as
an
investment
the
object
purchased
must
at
least
be
susceptible
of
yielding
an
annual
return
such
as
rental,
dividends
or
interest,
although
the
amount
of
the
return
is
not
important.
In
this
case
the
respondent
had
made
an
incidental
purchase
of
real
estate
which
it
rented
for
a
very
nominal
sum.
It
made
no
effort
to
sell
the
property
but
eventually
accepted
an
unsolicited
offer
which
yielded
a
substantial
profit
and
this
was
held
to
be
the
realization
of
an
investment.
In
all
of
these
last
four
cases
the
property
in
question
had
been
purchased
as
an
investment,
according
to
the
finding
of
the
Court.
In
the
present
case,
the
fact
that
the
purchase
and
sale
of
real
estate
is
not
part
of
the
normal
business
operations
of
appellants
does
not
mean
that
they
acquired
the
property
in
question
as
an
investment.
They
did
not
acquire
ownership
of
it
because
they
wanted
to
with
the
intention
of
deriving
income
from
the
use
or
development
of
it.
On
the
contrary,
they
acquired
it
as
part
of
their
normal
business
operations
and
as
the
security
which
they
took
for
guaranteeing
repayment
of
the
loan.
The
subsequent
realization
of
this
security,
since
it
yielded
a
profit
to
appellants,
must
be
considered
as
a
profit
resulting
from
this
business
transaction
even
although
this
profit
at
least
to
the
extent
of
the
amount
realized
in
excess
of
$70,200
plus
interest,
was
not
foreseeable
and
did
not
result
from
any
active
steps
taken
by
appellants
to
obtain
such
profit,
just
as
any
loss
which
appellants
might
have
suffered
had
they
been
forced
to
sell
the
property
for
less
than
the
$65,000
advanced
by
way
of
loan
and
had
been
unable
to
recover
the
difference
from
the
guarantors
of
the
note,
would
no
doubt
have
been
claimed
by
appellants
as
a
business
loss,
chargeable
against
their
business
income
derived
from
other
loans.
There
was
even
some
evidence
that
they
themselves
had
on
previous
occasions
charged
uncollectable
advances
up
against
income.
The
case
of
Jack
Blustein
et
al
v
MNR,
[1964]
Ex
CR
200;
[1963]
CTC
326,
cited
by
respondent,
is
directly
in
point.
In
that
case
the
appellants
who
were
in
the
furniture
business
made
a
practice
of
investing
extensively
in
mortgages,
mostly
second
mortgages.
Some
were
purchased
at
a
discount
and
some
were
obtained
as
security
for
money
advanced
in
which
case
a
bonus
or
an
exceptionally
high
rate
of
interest
was
demanded.
Most
of
them
were
for
a
short
term.
Some
of
the
mortgages
matured,
some
were
sold
at
a
profit,
and
one
was
foreclosed
and
the
property
sold
at
a
profit.
The
judgment
of
Cattanach,
J
included
in
the
taxable
income
of
the
appellants
not
only
the
profits
made
by
reselling
the
mortgages
and
realizing
the
bonuses
but
also
the
profit
made
on
the
resale
of
the
foreclosed
upon
property.
In
commenting
on
this
Cattanach,
J
states
at
page
212
[336]:
Counsel
for
the
appellants
particularly
emphasized
that
the
profit
realized
upon
the
sale
of
the
property
which
the
appellants
were
forced
to
foreclose
upon
was
a
Capital
profit
and
not
assessable
to
income
tax
since
the
appellants
had
no
history
of
trading
in
real
estate
and,
therefore,
the
profit
did
not
arise
from
the
conduct
of
a
business.
Since
I
have
found
that
the
present
appellants
were
engaged
in
a
scheme
of
profit-making,
it
follows
that
the
sale
of
a
property
under
the
covenant
in
a
mortgage
thereon
or
the
instigation
of
foreclosure
proceedings
are
incidental
remedies
of
that
business
and
any
profit
arising
therefrom
is
as
much
a
profit
in
the
business
as
holding
the
mortgage
to
maturity
and
realizing
the
discount
thereon
where
no
foreclosure
proceedings
were
necessary.
In
highly
speculative
ventures
such
as
the
appellants
engaged
in,
they
must
be
taken
to
have
contemplated
that
the
monies
might
have
to
be
realized
by
foreclosure
and
sale
rather
than
by
being
collected
at
maturity.
In
two
Supreme
Court
Cases,
namely
James
Frederick
Scott
v
MNR,
[1963]
SCR
223;
[1963]
CTC
176,
and
MNR
v
William
Hedley
Mac-
Innes,
[1963]
SCR
299;
[1963]
CTC
311,
the
facts
were
almost
identical.
In
the
Scott
case
the
appellant
was
a
barrister
and
solicitor
who
purchased
agreements
for
sale
of
land,
lease-option
agreements
on
land
and
mortgages
at
a
discount
and
then
held
the
securities
to
maturity,
and
in
the
Maclnnes
case
the
respondent
was
an
elderly
soap
manufacturer
who
had,
over
a
period
of
ten
years,
purchased
309
mortgages
at
a
discount.
They
were
usually
for
small
amounts
and
for
relatively
short
terms.
In
both
cases
Judson,
J,
rendering
the
unanimous
judgment
of
the
Court,
held
that
the
profits
realized
resulting
from
these
discounts
were
taxable
income.
The
headnote
to
the
SCR
report
of
the
Scott
case
reads,
in
part,
as
follows:
It
was
true
that
the
appellant
purchased
the
agreements
by
himself
and
never
in
association
with
anyone
else,
and
that
he
did
not
set
up
any
organization
for
their
acquisition.
He
was
not
in
the
business
of
lending
money
nor
in
the
business
of
buying
and
selling
agreements.
That
there
was
an
element
of
risk
in
the
transactions
was
obvious.
Nevertheless,
the
facts
established
that
the
appellant
was
in
the
highly
speculative
business
of
purchasing
these
agreements
at
a
discount
and
holding
them
to.
maturity
in
order
to
realize
the
maximum
amount
of
profit
out
of
the
transactions.
The
profits
were
taxable
income
and
not
a
Capital
gain.
The
Maclnnes
case
was
held
to
be
indistinguishable
from
this.
While
neither
case
dealt
with
the
realization
of
an
unexpected
profit
as
the
result
of
the
resale
of
a
property
acquired
as
a
result
of
these
money
lending
transactions,
and
in
this
respect
differed
from
the
Blustein
case
(supra)
which
also
included
as
taxable
income
the
profit
realized
from
the
sale
of
a
property
acquired
as
the
result
of
a
foreclosure
of
a
mortgage,
I
feel
that
no
distinction
should
be
made.
The
appellants
did
not
buy
this
property
as
an
investment
but
rather
acquired
it
as
an
incident
to
the
money
lending
transaction
on
which
they
anticipated
earning
a
bonus
of
$5,200
in
a
two-month
period.
To
say
that
only
this
bonus
together
with
the
interest
earned
on
the
loan
should
be
taxable
and
the
excess
considered
as
capital
gain
is
equivalent
to
finding
that
the
property
was
acquired
as
an
investment,
which
it
was
not.
The
money
loaned
was
not
loaned
as
an
investment
but
as
a
business
transaction
in
the
normal
course
of
appellants’
business
and
the
acquisition
of
the
property
was
an
incidental
result
of
this
loan.
The
appeals
of
both
appellants
are
therefore
dismissed,
with
costs.