The
Chairman:—The
least
that
can
be
said
of
this
income
tax
appeal
is
that
it
is
a
formidable
one;
the
notice
of
appeal
occupies
13
pages
and
these
contain
39
paragraphs
of
allegations,
plus
a
further
17
paragraphs
of
reasons
for
appealing,
all
of
which
paragraphs
require
to
be
noted.
In
addition,
eight
exhibits
were
filed
and
the
hearing,
which
took
place
at
Toronto,
lasted
the
better
part
of
two
days.
The
taxation
years
1964,
1965
and
1966
are
involved
and
the
appellant’s
fiscal
year
corresponds
with
the
calendar
year.
There
are
three
issues
to
be
decided.
The
first
has
to
do
with
the
alleged
right
to
deduct
from
income
certain
trading
losses
incurred,
in
1964
and
1965,
in
dealing
with
the
shares
of
Phantom
Industries
Limited,
hereinafter
called
“Phantom”,
the
said
shares
having
been
acquired
at
a
high
price,
but
sold
at
a
low
figure.
Counsel
for
the
parties
agreed
that
the
losses
claimed
were
$2,960
in
1964
and
$640
in
1965.
The
second
issue
relates
to
the
correct
quantum
of
a
reserve
claimable
for
doubtful
debts
under
paragraph
11(1)(e)
of
the
Income
Tax
Act,
the
reserve
claimed
in
this
matter
being
$78,156.29.
The
third
and
major
issue
concerns
a
reserve
for
doubtful
debts
arising
from
transactions
in
the
ordinary
course
of
appellant’s
business
which,
it
says,
involved
the
lending
of
money,
a
statement
which
the
respondent
challenges.
These
are
just
brief
descriptions
of
the
three
facets
of
this
contest
that
call
for
adjudication.
In
the
evidence
adduced,
it
developed
that
in
1964
the
appellant
had
offices
at
121
Richmond
Street
West
and,
in
1965
and
1966,
at
365
Bay
Street
where
it
now
occupies
approximately
3,500
or
more
square
feet.
There
are
about
15
full-time
employees,
but
this
number
varies
downward
from
time
to
time.
The
pertinent
income
tax
returns
show
the
appellant’s
business
to
be
“Management
services
and
securities
trading”
in
1964,
1965
and
1966,
but
in
an
amended
return
for
the
latter
year
filed
on
June
28,
1968,
the
appellant’s
business
is
stated
to
be
“Loans
and
administration
services”
—
a
noteworthy
change.
(The
italics
are
mine.)
The
notice
of
appeal
describes
it
as
“the
business
of
rendering
management
and
administrative
services,
lending
money
and
trading
in
securities”.
The
most
accurate
description
is
something
that
has
to
be
determined
in
this
proceeding.
At
the
outset,
Mr
R
D
Thomas,
respondent’s
counsel,
informed
the
Board
that
a
loss
of
$40,959
on
trading
transactions
in
Phantom
originally
claimed
by
the
appellant,
had
been
forgone
by
it.
According
to
my
understanding
of
the
resulting
situation
an
agreement
between
counsel
left
only
$2,960
in
1964
and
$640
in
1965
as
Phantom
losses
still
in
abeyance.
I
propose
returning
to
this
phase
of
the
appeal
later
herein.
As
regards
the
second
issue,
Schedule
A
at
the
end
of
the
Reply
to
Notice
of
Appeal
contains
the
figures
and
their
relevancy
that
are
material
in
considering
this
facet
of
what
is
in
dispute,
which
is
the
quantum
of
a
certain
reserve
for
doubtful
debts
claimed
by
the
appellant,
but
only
partly
accepted
by
the
respondent,
a
circumstance
that
has
led
to
the
appeal.
In
respect
of
1965,
debts
due
from
seven
companies
were
included
in
a
reserve
amounting
to
$80,034.37.
The
first
six
ranging
from
$79.84
to
$660
were
accepted
in
full,
but
the
seventh
for
$78,156
was
accepted
to
the
extent
of
only
$19,539,
or
one-quarter
of
the
amount
claimed.
These
figures
were
similarly
treated
in
respect
of
1966.
It
seems
that
initially
the
respondent
denied
that
the
$78,156
was
shown
as
income
by
the
appellant
in
1964
and
let
his
opposition
to
the
claim
of
this
sum
as
a
reserve
stop
at
that.
Later,
however,
it
developed
that
1965
and
not
1964
was
the
relevant
year.
Counsel
having
agreed
that
1965
was
the
pertinent
year
of
deduction
and
this
evidently
having
been
the
only
bone
of
contention,
I
fail
to
see
why
the
appellant
should
not
be
allowed
the
sum
claimed
and,
accordingly
I
find
in
the
appellant’s
favour
in
this
connection
and
direct
that
a
larger
reserve
be
granted
by
the
respondent
regard
being
had
to
the
fact
that
reserves
for
the
six
other
debts
were
allowed
in
toto.
The
fact
that
these
were
only
small
accounts
should
not
prejudice
the
indebtedness
of
Ottawa
Sanitation
Services,
the
debtor
in
reference
to
the
$78,156.
Next,
I
turn
to
what
evidently
is
viewed
as
the
major
issue.
In
this
connection
there
is
in
dispute
a
claimed
doubtful
debts
reserve
of
$118,579.95
arising
principally
from
the
lending
of
money
by
the
appellant
to,
for
the
most
part,
certain
selected
borrowers.
I
think
that
the
main
difference
between
the
parties
in
this
respect
is
the
refusal
of
the
respondent
to
accept
the
submission
that
the
lending
of
money
was
part
of
the
appellant’s
ordinary
business.
After
listening
to
the
evidence
adduced
!
consider
that
the
making
of
judicious
loans
of
substantial
sums
was
a
part
of
appellant’s
income-earning
process.
Mr
Thomas,
in
his
argument,
made
much
of
the
fact
that
often
no
security
was
given
by
the
borrower.
Mr
Sydney
Rosen,
the
appellant’s
president,
had
stressed
that
only
recommended
and
selected
borrowers
were
dealt
with
and
that
on
the
whole
this
policy
had
worked
out
well.
Mr
Rosen
is
no
fool
and
impressed
me
as
being
shrewd
and
canny
and
not
likely
to
make
rash
commitments.
If,
as
occasionally
happened,
a
borrower
turned
out
to
be
a
disappointment
as
a
risk,
the
making
of
a
loan
to
him
could
be
put
down
as
an
error
of
judgment
rather
than
carelessness
or
insufficient.
investigation.
As
may
be
well
known,
the
great
international
banker,
the
late
J
Pierpont
Morgan,
used
to
say
that
he
was
more
concerned
with
the
character
and
integrity
of
a
would-be
borrower
than
with
what
could
be
offered
as
security.
This
principle
appears
to
have
been
observed
by
the
appellant,
albeit
things
seem
often
to
have
gone
wrong
and
default
resulted.
But
this
is
simply
part
and
parcel
of
money-lending
as
a
business.
Mr
Thomas
put
before
the
Board
some
well-known
cases
such
as
Orban
v
MNR,
10
Tax
ABC
178,
but
these
have
no
place
in
a
proceeding
of
this
kind
and
relate
to
the
makers
of
small
individual
shortterm
loans.
Here,
what
was
done
was
the
advancing
of
large
sums
on
loans
for
longer
or
shorter
periods
at
an
agreed
rate
of
interest.
One
may
call
it
financing,
if
one
will,
but
it
was
still
the
placing
of
money
on
loan.
While
the
appellant
could
not
profess
to
be
a
moneylender
within
the
restricted
meaning
of
Orban
v
MNR
(supra),
it
was
nevertheless
a
lender
of
money
but
to
a
much
larger
degree
in
that
it
dealt
in
the
thousands
and
made
only
what
may
be
designated
as
commercial
loans.
Hence,
I
am
of
the
opinion
that
such
loans
as
are
involved
in
this
matter
were
made
in
the
ordinary
course
of
appellant’s
business
and,
where
they
have
not
proved
satisfactory
and
collectable,
are
qualified
to
be
classified
as
doubtful
debts
and
made
the
subject
of
a
reasonable
reserve
accordingly.
I
may
add
that
whereas
at
the
end
of
1966
the
unpaid
loans,
according
to
the
evidence
of
Mr
I
M
Noble,
the
appellant’s
secretarytreasurer,
amounted
to
$1,152,000,
ail
became
paid
in
1970
—
an
indication
that
perhaps
some,
at
least,
of
the
loans
involved
were
not
so
doubtful
after
all.
Still,
that
is
judging
by
hindsight
and
in
1964,
1965
and
1966
the
appellant
could
not
be
certain
as
to
what
might
occur
as
far
forward
as
1970.
Matters
might
improve
or
they
might
not
—
no
one
really
knew.
Nevertheless,
as
the
loans
evidently
were
much
better,
as
such,
than
was
believed
to
be
the
case
during
the
years
under
review,
I
think
that
not
much
above
the
minimum
level
should
be
fixed
and
granted
as
a
reserve.
It
should
have
been
mentioned
earlier
herein
that
counsel
informed
the
Board
that
claims
relating
to
a
loss
of
$28,000
arising
with
respect
to
shares
in
Capital
Leasing
Limited
and
to
a
loss
of
$9,999
concerning
34
shares
of
Designex
Limited
had
been
abandoned
by
the
appellant.
Returning
to
the
Phantom
affair,
it
is
acknowledged
at
page
11
of
the
Notice
of
Appeal
that
the
dealing
in
the
shares
of
that
company
was
basically
an
“adventure
or
concern
in
the
nature
of
trade”.
Therefore,
I
think
that,
taking
into
account
its
history,
it
should
be
regarded
as
having
been
outside
the
appellant’s
normal
course
of
business
activities
and
not
properly
the
subject
of
the
loss
provisions
of
the
Income
Tax
Act.
Accordingly,
no
relief
can
be
forthcoming
where
this
branch
of
the
appeal
is
involved.
Before
parting
from
this
review
of
the
merits
of
the
appeal,
it
should
be
noted
that,
as
happens
too
often,
no
assessor
or
other
witness
was
put
forward
on
behalf
of
the
respondent
and
that
the
only
direct
evidence
was
that
of
two
officers
of
the
appellant;
it
went
wholly
uncontradicted.
There
is
a
minor
point
of
procedure
that
should
not
be
overlooked.
After
the
appellant’s
solicitors
had
already
lodged
a
Notice
of
Appeal
covering
the
three
years
involved,
together
with
a
filing
fee
of
$15,
a
second
and
duplicate
such
notice
was
sent
to
the
Board.
This
was
done
under
the
mistaken
impression
that,
because
the
firm’s
name
on
the
first
notice
was
typewritten
and
not
in
ink,
that
first
notice
might
not
be
valid.
Hence,
to
be
on
the
safe
side,
the
second
notice
with
the
firm’s
name
duly
endorsed
in
ink
went
forward
to
the
Board.
Shortly
thereafter
a
second
cheque
for
$15
also
was
sent
as
a
result
of
some
further
misunderstanding
among
the
solicitors
concerned.
Incidentally,
the
precaution
of
filing
a
second
Notice
of
Appeal
was:
unnecessary;
the
Board
observes
the
practice
that
has
obtained
in
the
Ontario
courts
for
many
years
of
accepting
solicitors’
typewritten
endorsements
of
their
names
on
pleadings,
etc.
Accordingly
—
and
this
is
why
reference
is
made
to
the
circumstance
—
the
second
filing
fee
of
$15
should
be
refunded
to
the
solicitors
concerned
forthwith;
the
initial
deposit
of
$15
was
sufficient.
In
the
light
of
the
foregoing
observations,
the
appeal
should
be
allowed
in
part
as
to
all
three
years
affected
and
the
entire
matter
referred
back
to
the
respondent
for
the
allowance
of
such
appropriate
reserves
for
doubtful
debts
as
is
hereinbefore
indicated.
Appeal
allowed
in
part.