W
O
Davis:—This
appeal
came
on
before
me
for
hearing
at
the
City
of
London,
Ontario,
on
November
30,
1971,
at
a
sittings
of
the
Tax
Appeal
Board
as
it
was
then
constituted.
The
appellant
company
appeals
from
a
reassessment
to
income
tax
dated
February
20,
1970,
whereby,
in
levying
tax
in
respect
of
the
appellant’s
1968
taxation
year,
the
Minister
of
National
Revenue
disallowed
a
loss
of
$92,511
which,
in
its
income
tax
return
for
the
year
in
question,
the
appellant
claimed
it
had
suffered
in
the
operation
of
its
business.
For
many
years
the
appellant
has
carried
on
the
business
of
the
wholesale
and
retail
sale
of
lumber
and
builders’
supplies.
In
order
to
assure
itself
of
an
adequate
supply
of
raw
lumber
for
its
business,
the
appellant
was
in
the
habit
of
negotiating
therefor
with
sawmills
having
timber
rights
in
the
northern
parts
of
Ontario
and
Quebec.
As
a
rule
these
sawmills
required
advances
of
funds
against
deliveries
of
raw
lumber
in
order
to
enable
the
sawmill
operator
to
pay,
equip
and
provision
the
crews
sent
into
the
bush
to
cut
timber
and
skid
it
to
the
sawmill,
and
for
many
years
the
appellant
followed
the
practice
of
making
such
advances
as
and
when
necessary.
In
some
cases,
and
during
certain
years,
these
advances
against
deliveries
exceeded
the
value
of
the
raw
lumber
eventually
delivered
to
the
appellant
by
some
of
these
suppliers
and,
in
such
event,
any
overpayment
was
treated
as
an
item
of
additional
cost
in
respect
of
the
lumber
actually
supplied,
and
was
thus
recorded
in
the
books
of
the
company
as
a
business
expense.
For
some
years
prior
to
1968,
however,
the
appellant
was
dealing,
inter
alia,
with
a
supplier
known
as
P
P
Vaillancourt
Inc,
and
it
seems
that,
in
addition
to
having
received
advance
funds
from
the
appellant
for
wages
and
other
operational
expenses,
P
P
Vaillancourt
Inc
had
found
itself
in
need
of
substantial
additional
funds
for
the
purchase
of
machinery
and
equipment
to
enable
it
to
cut
and
ship
raw
lumber
in
sufficient
quantities
to
satisfy
its
commitments
to
the
appellant
and
others.
The
said
supplier
had
therefore
made
arrangements
with
the
Bank
of
Montreal
for
a
line
of
credit
and,
as
an
accommodation,
repayment
thereof
had
been
in
turn
guaranteed
by
the
appellant,
who,
admittedly,
held
no
share
interest
in
the
Vaillancourt
enterprise.
In
the
course
of
1967,
due
to
serious
financial
indebtedness
from
which
it
was
unable
to
extricate
itself,
P
P
Vaillancourt
Inc
was
compelled
to
abandon
its
lumbering
business.
At
this
time
it
was
indebted
to
the
Bank
of
Montreal,
through
its
line
of
credit,
in
an
amount
of
$158,616.
The
appellant
was
called
upon
to
make
good
to
the
Bank
on
its
guarantee,
and
did
so.
It
is
on
the
record
that,
on
November
20,
1967,
the
appellant,
having
discharged
its
liability
to
the
said
Bank,
took
over
certain
security
which
had
been
pledged
with
the
bank
as
collateral
by
P
P
Vaillancourt
Inc
and
consisting,
in
particular,
of
a
mortgage
which
the
Bank
of
Montreal
had
held
on
all
the
fixed
assets
of
the
said
P
P
Vaillancourt
Inc.
The
appellant
immediately
took
steps
to
realize
on
this
mortgage,
and
succeeded
in
recovering
$85,000
thereunder,
leaving
an
unrecovered
balance
of
$73,616
in
respect
of
the
monies
paid
out
by
it
in
the
process
of
honouring
its
guarantee.
There
had
been
certain
added
disbursements
and
expenditures
which
the
appellant
had
had
to
make
in
the
attending
circumstances,
and
which
can
be
set
forth
as
follows:
Unrecovered
balance
|
$73,616
|
Bank
Interest
paid
by
appellant
in
1968
|
$11,337
|
Legal
costs
on
realization
of
security
|
$
3,568
|
Accounting
costs
|
$
4,000
|
|
$92,521
|
This
out-of-pocket
balance
of
$92,521
the
appellant
sought
to
deduct
from
its
1968
income
for
taxation
purposes.
From
a
consideration
of
all
the
facts
which
have
been
disclosed
in
the
evidence
adduced
at
the
hearing,
I
have
reached
the
conclusion
that
the
liability
assumed
in
connection
with
Vaillancourt
Inc’s
line
of
credit,
and
which
the
appellant
was
called
upon
to
pay,
was
nothing
other
than
an
outlay
of
capital
made
by
it
on
behalf
of
P
P
Vaillancourt
Inc,
no
doubt
with
the
hope
of
preserving
what
had
in
the
past
proved
to
be,
for
the
appellant,
a
valuable
source
of
lumber
at
an
advantageous
price.
This
amount
was
therefore
not
deductible
as
a
business
expense
by
reason
of
the
provisions
of
paragraphs
12(1)(a)
and
(b)
of
the
Income
Tax
Act.
The
judgment
of
the
Supreme
Court
of
Canada
in
MNR
v
George
H
Steer,
[1967]
SCR
34;
[1966]
CTC
731,
appears
to
be
very
much
in
point.
Put
briefly,
the
facts
of
that
matter
were
that
the
taxpayer
and
an
associate
made
an
agreement
with
two
other
individuals
to
acquire
an
interest
in
a
petroleum
company.
The
two
other
individuals
had
obtained
a
farm-out
agreement
from
Imperial
Oil
which
they
had
assigned
to
the
petroleum
company
in
return
for
1,000
shares
and
a
stated
royalty.
They
had
incurred
an
obligation
to
drill
four
wells
on
the
property,
and
when
they
admitted
the
taxpayer
and
his
associate
into
the
enterprise,
three
wells
remained
to
be
drilled.
Each
of
the
four
participants
then
received
one-quarter
of
the
1,000
shares
assigned
by
the
company
and
a
one-quarter
interest
in
the
stated
royalty,
and
the
taxpayer
and
his
associate
agreed
to
guarantee
advances
from
the
bank
up
to
a
maximum
of
$62,500
each.
In
1957,
the
latter
were
called
upon
to
make
good
on
their
undertaking
to
the
bank.
Part
of
the
taxpayer’s
outlay
was
later
recovered,
as,
following
the
bankruptcy
of
the
company,
certain
distributions
were
made
to
its
creditors,
which
included
Steer
and
his
associate.
The
taxpayer
in
that
case
sought
to
treat
his
$62,500
outlay
as
a
deduction
from
his
1957
income.
However,
the
Supreme
Court
of
Canada
held
that
the
transaction
entered
into
by
the
taxpayer
was
in
the
nature
of
a
deferred
loan
to
the
company,
and
that
whatever
amount
of
the
said
outlay
remained
unrecovered
after
receipt
of
his
share
of
the
distribution
made
to
the
unsatisfied
creditors
of
the
bankrupt
company
was
a
non-deductible
capital
loss
within
the
meaning
of
paragraph
12(1
)(b)
of
the
Act.
If
I
have
correctly
interpreted
the
evidence,
this
same
principle
is
present
in
the
instant
matter,
and
I
therefore
conclude
that
the
appeal
cannot
succeed
and
it
is
therefore
dismissed.
Appeal
dismissed.