A
J
Frost:—This
appeal
is
from
an
income
tax
reassessment
dated
March
3,
1970
(varying
a
previous
reassessment
dated
September
19,
1968)
wherein
a
tax
of
$15,507.50
was
levied
in
respect
of
the
appellant’s
1964
taxation
year,
and
was
heard
at
Toronto,
Ontario
on
October
25
and
26,
1972
by
the
Tax
Appeal
Board
as
it
was
then
constituted.
The
appellant
company
was
incorporated
under
the
laws
of
the
Province
of
Ontario
and
has
carried
on
the
business
of
rebuilding
and
sale
of
automotive
parts
since
1956.
The
said
taxation
year
commenced
April
1,
1963
and
ended
March
31,
1964.
At
the
hearing
it
was
agreed
by
counsel
for
the
parties
that
the
appeal
of
Samuel
N
Shapiro,
the
controlling
shareholder
of
the
appellant
company,
would
be
heard
at
the
same
time
on
common
evidence.
As
at
March
31,
1964
the
balance
sheet
of
the
appellant
company
shows
in
summary
form
the
following
position:
ASSETS:
Sundry
assets
|
|
$490,766.36
|
LIABILITIES:
|
|
Current
debts
(including
|
|
outstanding
cheques)
|
|
267,738.40
|
Shareholders’
loans
|
|
48,252.44
|
CAPITAL:
|
|
Authorized
|
Issued
|
|
12,988
|
6
common
shares
|
|
|
P.V.
$1.00
|
$
|
6.00
|
|
36,000
|
—
class
A
Pfd.
|
|
1,000
|
1002
class
B
Pfd.
|
|
|
P.V.
$1.00
|
|
1,002.00
|
|
|
$
1,008.00
|
|
Earned
Surplus
|
173,767.52
|
174,775.52
|
|
$490,766.36
|
The
balance
sheet
was
audited
and
certified
correct
by
Mintz
and
Mintz,
Chartered
Accountants.
Saul
Mintz
did
the
senior
work
and,
as
a
partner
of
the
firm,
was
responsible
for
the
balance
sheet
certificate.
At
all
relevant
times
during
the
1964
taxation
year,
the
issued
class
B
preferred
shares
were
held
as
follows:
167
shares
—
Saul
Mintz
167
shares
—
Ernest
Dicker
1
share
—
Ettie
Wosnick
as
nominee
for
Saul
Mintz
1
share
—
Sari
Dicker
as
nominee
for
Ernest
Dicker
666
shares
—
Samuel
N
Shapiro
(if
not
in
his
name,
beneficially
owned)
1002
total
shares
authorized
and
issued
For
several
years
Messrs
Shapiro,
Mintz
and
Dicker
had
worked
closely
together
in
directing
the
affairs
of
the
appellant
company
and,
for
all
practical
purposes,
constituted
a
board
of
directors,
although
-neither
Mintz
nor
Dicker
were
in
fact
appointed
directors,
preferring
to
work
through
Ettie
Wosnick
and
Sari
Dicker
as
nominees.
In
accordance
with
a
long-established
practice,
the
three
directors
caused
amounts
to
be
credited
to
their
shareholder
loan
accounts
for
services
rendered.
These
amounts
were
approved
by
the
official
board
of
directors
of
the
company
and
charged
to
its
earnings,
and
T4
slips
were
issued
accordingly.
What
happened
in
the
1964
taxation
year
was
no
different
from
the
practice
followed
in
previous
years.
At
the
end
of
the
1964
taxation
year,
the
accounts
of
Mintz
and
Dicker
reflected
the
following
credit
balances:
Saul
Mintz
|
$4,623.07
|
Ernest
Dicker
|
4,623.07
|
|
$9,246.14
|
which
balances
formed
part
of
the
item
designated
on
the
balance
sheet
as
shareholders’
loans
and
amounting
to
$48,252.44.
Sometime
in
1964
or
early
1965,
serious
differences
developed
between
Shapiro,
Mintz
and
Dicker,
and
it
was
decided
to
break
up
their
long-established
working
arrangement,
the
details
of
which
are
not
relevant
to
any
question
in
issue
before
the
Board.
As
a
result
of
their
personal
disagreements,
Saul
Mintz,
Ernest
Dicker,
Ettie
Wosnick,
and
Sari
Dicker
agreed
to
transfer
their
holdings
of
preferred
shares
to
Samuel
Shapiro,
and
it
was
further
agreed
that
the
amounts
owing
by
the
appellant
company
to
Saul
Mintz
and
Ernest
Dicker
would
be
assigned
by
them
to
Samuel
Shapiro.
On
October
29,
1965
the
transfer
of
shares
was
registered
and,
at
a
later
date,
the
indebtedness
was
transferred
by
journal
entry
to
the
account
of
Samuel
Shapiro
by
the
new
auditor,
Mr
Frank
Risman,
a
chartered
accountant.
Mr
Risman
was
apparently
well
acquainted
with
the
details
and
made
the
necessary
entries
on
the
books
of
the
appellant.
Although
the
story
is
uncomplicated,
negotiations
relating
to
the
sale
of
the
shares
and
the
assignment
of
the
loans
took
many
months.
Many
documents
were
prepared.
The
evidence
adduced
indicated
that
the
first
few
drafts
prepared
by
Mr
H
F
Goulding,
QC
were
unacceptable
to
Mintz
and
Dicker
as
they
showed
the
true
balances
owing
to
them,
which
they
wanted
assigned
for
the
sum
of
$1
for
the
obvious
purpose
of
avoiding
the
incidence
of
taxation.
The
final
documentation
split
the
deal
into
two
parts,
resulting
in
two
agreements,
one
covering
the
purchase
of
the
shares
and
the
other
the
assignment
of
the
amounts
owing
by
the
appellant
company
to
Mintz
and
Dicker.
The
second
document
was
referred
to
throughout
the
hearing
as
the
secret
or
escrow
document.
The
secret
agreement
assigned
the
balances
in
the
sum
of
$9,246.14
owing
to
Mintz
and
Dicker
for
the
sum
of
1.:
The
question
before
the
Board
is
whether
the
amounts
credited
by
the
appellant
company
in
its
1964
taxation
year
to
the
accounts
of
Mintz
and
Dicker
represent
income
in
their
hands
under
the
appropriate
provisions
of
the
Income
Tax
Act
or
are
in
fact
meaningless
bookkeeping
entries.
The
Board
accepts
the
treatment
of
entries
reflected
in
the
books
of
account
by
Saul
Mintz,
CA
and
Frank
Risman,
CA
as
being
true
and
correct,
both
having
dealt
with
them
at
different
times.
It
cannot
give
much
weight
to
the
testimony
of
Mr
Mintz,
the
former
auditor
of
the
company,
with
respect
to
what
transpired
during
the
protracted
negotiations
following
his
discharge.
The
Board
is
inclined,
however,
to
accept
the
testimony
of
Mr
Goulding
at
full
value.
Under
relentless
and
merciless
cross-examination,
Mr
Goulding’s
testimony
remained
clear
and
unequivocal
and
left
no
doubt
whatsoever
in
the
mind
of
the
Board
that
the
secret
document
was
filled
with
deceptions
and
untruths,
a
fact
which,
in
the
opinion
of
the
Board,
reflects
on
the
credibility
of
both
Mintz
and
Dicker.
Having
considered
all
the
evidence
as
a
whole,
I
find
both
in
fact
and
in
law
that
the
amounts
paid
or
credited
to
Mrs
Wosnick
and
Mrs
Dicker
were
in
fact
earned
by
Mintz
and
Dicker,
and
that
the
$10,000
in
bonuses
($5,000
each)
credited
to
Mintz
and
Dicker
on
the
books
of
the
appellant
company
was
for
services
rendered,
pursuant
to
an
understanding
between
the
three
principal
shareholders;
and
that
the
sum
of
the
balances
standing
to
the
credit
of
Mintz
and
Dicker
as
of
March
31,
1964
was
$9,246.14,
which
amount
was
part
of
the
$130,000
paid
to
Mintz
and
Dicker
in
the
final
settlement.
In
transferring
the
said
credits
to
Shapiro,
no
benefit
was
conferred
on
him
by
the
company
within
the
meaning
of
section
8
of
the
Income
Tax
Act.
I
further
find
as
a
fact
that
the
escrow
or
secret
agreement,
wherein
loans
payable
to
Mintz
and
Dicker
were
settled
for
$1,
did
not
reflect
what
really
happened
and
was
obviously
designed
to
confuse
and
distort
the
incidence
of
taxation
payable
on
the
bonuses
recorded
on
the
books
of
the
appellant
company
for
its
1964
taxation
year
to
the
credit
of
Saul
Mintz
and
Ernest
Dicker.
Appeal
allowed
in
full.
Appeal
allowed.