Kerr,
J.:—These
two
appeals
were
heard
together
on
the
same
evidence.
The
first
appeal
(B-3484)
is
from
the
assessment
under
the
Income
Tax
Act
for
the
appellant’s
1964
taxation
year.
The
second
appeal
(B-3485)
is
from
the
assessment
for
the
appellant’s
1967
taxation
year.
The
first
appeal
is
in
respect
of
land
in
Halifax,
N.S.,
which
will
be
referred
to
as
the
‘Bayers
Road
property’’.
The
second
appeal
is
in
respect
of
land
in
Halifax
referred
to
as
the
‘
‘
Piercey
property
’
’.
Each
of
the
properties
was
purchased
by
the
appellant
and
subsequently
sold
at
a
profit.
The
respondent
included
the
profit
in
each
instance
as
a
profit
from
the
appellant’s
business
in
the
year
concerned,
within
the
meaning
of
Sections
3,
4
and
139
(1)
(e)
of
the
Income
Tax
Act.
The
appellant
says
that
each
of
the
properties
was
purchased
for
a
store,
supermarket
or
shopping
centre*
development,
without
any
intention
to
sell
at
a
profit,
and
that
each
was
sold
when
it
became
unsuitable
for
such
development;
that
the
appellant
was
not
in
the
business
of
buying
and
selling
properties,
because
it
was
never
its
intention
to
make
a
profit
on
the
properties
it
sold;
and
that
at
no
time
did
the
company
form
any
secondary
intention
sufficient
to
classify
either
of
the
transactions
as
an
adventure
in
the
nature
of
trade.
The
appellant
says,
also,
that
it
was
merely
a
vehicle
by
which
its
parent
company,
Sobeys
Stores
Limited,
could
conveniently
deal
with
properties
purchased
for
the
latter’s
supermarket
development,
the
relationship
between
the
two
companies
being
such
that
for
the
purchase
and
sale
of
land
such
land
when
purchased
was
in
effect
a
capital
asset
of
Sobeys
Stores
Limited,
which
was
not
trading
so
far
as
the
two
subject
properties
were
concerned.
It
is
essential
to
consider
the
relationship
between
the
two
companies
and
the
objects
and
activities
of
Food
City
Limited
in
that
relationship.
Sobeys
Stores
Limited
had
its
origin
in
a
small
grocery
store
in
Stellarton,
N.S.
Frank
H.
Sobey,
a
son
of
the
owner
of
the
store,
caused
Sobeys
Stores
Limited
to
be
incorporated,
and
from
its
humble
beginning
the
company
has
developed
into
a
large
supermarket
chain
in
the
Atlantic
Provinces,
with
by
now
about
60
stores.
Frank
H.
Sobey
master-minded
the
expansion
of
the
company
for
many
years,
being
its
president
until
1960,
but
in
the
more
recent
years
the
time
he
has
been
able
to
devote
directly
to
the
company
has
become
more
limited,
because
of
other
extensive
business
activities,
for
he
became
president
of
Industrial
Estates
Limited
(a
Nova
Scotia
Crown
Corporation)
some
14
years
ago,
and
he
is
also
a
director
of
Dominion
Steel
and
Coal
Corporation,
The
Nova
Scotia
Trust
Company,
and
other
large
corporations.
In
1960,
his
son,
William
MacDonald
Sobey,
became
president
of
the
company
and
he
is
carrying
on
the
family
tradition
and
enterprise.
Frank
H.
Sobey
is
chairman
of
the
Board
of
Sobeys
Stores
Limited
and
of
Food
City
Limited.
In
the
course
of
its
expansion
the
time
came
when
Sobeys
Stores
found
it
advisable
to
issue
debentures,
and
in
that
connection
it
entered
into
a
Deed
of
Trust
and
Mortgage
(Exhibit
A-9)
with
The
Nova
Scotia
Trust
Company,
as
trustee,
to
secure
the
debentures
and
thereby
mortgaged
and
gave
a
floating
charge
on
all
its
real
and
personal
property
and
assets,
then
owned
or
thereafter
acquired.
Sun
Life
Assurance
Company
was
a
debenture
holder
at
all
relevant
times.
As
its
business
expanded
Sobeys
Stores
sometimes
found
it
advantageous
to
have
a
supermarket
constructed
and
developed
on
its
land
by
some
other
company
and
to
that
end
would
transfer
its
title
to
the
land
to
the
developer,
which
in
turn
would
erect
buildings
and
then
lease
back
to
Sobeys
Stores
whatever
Sobeys
Stores
wanted.
A
difficulty
in
this
arrangement
was
the
necessity,
delay
and
expense
of
getting
the
property
released
from
the
Trust
Deed
and
substituting
other
property
for
the
property
so
released.*
This
difficulty
was
avoided
in
certain
cases
by
an
arrangement
under
which
a
property
for
a
prospective
Sobeys
Stores’
site
would
be
initially
purchased,
not
by
Sobeys
Stores
but
by
Foord.
Construction
Limited,
with
money
advanced
by
Sobeys
Stores.
Foord
Construction
is
a
wholly-owned
subsidiary
of
Sobey
Leased
Properties
Limited.
The
latter
company
had
a
rental
agreement
to
lease
stores
to
Sobeys
Stores,
but
it
is
not
a
wholly-owned
subsidiary
of
Sobeys
Stores.
Sun
Life
indicated
its
dislike
of
this
arrangement
in
a
letter
of
October
20,
1961
(Exhibit
A-1).
This
led
to
a
decision
to
form
a
subsidiary
company
to
be
wholly
owned
by
Sobeys
Stores.
Food
City
Limited
was
accordingly
incorporated
in
January
1962,
principally
to
take
title
to
prospective
supermarket
sites
in
its
own
name,
but
always
under
the
direction
of
and
for
the
purposes
of
Sobeys
Stores
and
with
money
provided
by
Sobeys
Stores,
which
had
a
line
of
bank
credit
that
it
used
to
put
the
other
companies
in
funds
to
buy
and
develop
properties.
All
the
issued
shares
of
Food
City
are
beneficially
owned
by
Sobeys
Stores.
The
same
persons
are
officers
and
directors
of
both
companies.
They
have
the
same
auditors,
accountants,
solicitors
and
insurance
consultants.
They
use
the
same
banks.
Food
City
has
no
permanent
employees,
no
telephone
listing,
no
office,
cars
or
furniture;
it
makes
use
of
Sobeys
Stores’
offices,
supplies
and
secretaries.
Sobeys
Stores’
staff
keeps
Food
City’s
books
and
performs
other
services
at
no
cost
to
Food
City.
Apart
from
occasional
revenues
from
rentals
of
properties
while
being
held
prior
to
development,
sufficient
only
to
take
care
of
small
expenses,
Food
City
obtains
all
its
needed
money,
including
money
to
purchase
properties,
from
Sobeys
Stores
without
payment
of
interest.
It
has
only
a
nominal
bank
account.
Its
principal
expenses
are
taxes,
insurance,
and
depreciation
on
its
properties.
Book
and
bank
accounts,
as
between
the
two
companies,
are
reconciled
when
money
is
paid
or
received.
Food.
City
ffias
never
developed
any
property.
All
its
purchases
have:
been
for
supermarket
developments
in
which
it
was
intended
that
Sobeys
Stores
would
be
a
major
occupant.
Most
of
the
properties
subsequently
sold
by
Food
City
were
sold
to
Sobey
Leased
Properties
for
supermarket
development
and
were
sold
at
cost.
The
two
subject
properties
and
some
others
were
exceptions
to
that
rule.
Food
City’s
purchases,
sales
and
related
business
activities
are
planned,
decided,
determined
and
kept
under
review
at
executive
meetings
of
Sobeys
Stores.
The
objects
for
which
Food
City
was
established,
as
set
forth
in
its
Memorandum
of
Association,
include
the
purchase,
sale,
lease
and
disposal
of
land
and
buildings
and
the
turning
of
them
to
account
as
may
seem
expedient.
The
Bayers
Road
property
consists
of
a
block
of
land
measuring
100’
x
150’,
bounded
on
the
north
by
a
used
car
lot,
on
the
east
by
Canadian
National
Railways
land,
on
the
south
by
a
Petrofina
Service
Station,
and
on
the
west
by
the
boundary
of
a
proposed
Kenneth
Street.
A
parcel
of
land
lies
between
it
and
Bayers
Road,
but
there
is
a
30’
right
of
way
running
northerly
from
Bayers
Road
and
along
the
western
boundary
of
the
subject
land,
giving
access
to
it
from
Bayers
Road.
Foord
Construction
bought
the
property
in
1961,
for
Sobeys
Stores
with
the
latter’s
money
and
obtained
also
a
lease
of
a
parcel
of
the
C.N.R.
land
for
parking
purposes.
The
subject
land
is
adjacent
to
the
Bayers
Road
Shopping
Centre,
which
by
that
time
had
been
developed
by
a
Mr.
Butler.
Dominion
Stores
had
the
first
store
there,
and
other
stores
followed.
The
area
was
residential.
Zoning
was
commercial.
The
subject
land
was
regarded
by
Sobeys
Stores
as
a
good
location
for
one
of
its
stores,
and
although
the
Dominion
Store
would
be
a
competitor
it
was
thought
that
the
Sobeys
store
would
live
off
the
overflow
of
customers
from
the
shopping
centre.
Butler
and
Dominion
Stores
disliked
the
prospect
of
a
Sobeys
store
coming
and
Butler
soon
erected
a
makeshift
wooden
fence,
made
from
packing
cases
or
some
such
material,
along
the
right
of
way
adjacent
to
the
subject
land.
Whether
the
fence
actually
crossed
the
right
of
way
is
not
clear,
but
in
any
case
it
was
unsightly
and
would
be
detrimental
to
the
proposed
Sobeys
store.
Sobeys
took
no
action
to
have
the
fence
removed
and
made
no
protests
or
representations
to
Butler
about
it.
The
reason
given
for
not
taking
any
action
was
that
the
Sobey
people
thought
it
preferable
to
get
along
on
good
terms
with
Dominion
Stores
and
avoid
trouble
with
Butler
and
his
Shopping
Centre.
Sobeys
Stores
hesitated,
in
the
circumstances,
to
proceed
with
its
plans
for
that
site,
and
did
not
reach
the
stage
of
applying
to
the
City
of
Halifax
for
a
permit
to
build
on
the
land.
There
was
evidence
that
some
very
preliminary
drawings
of
the
proposed
development
had
been
made
by
John
Scott,
a
draughtsman
in
Sobeys
Stores’
real
estate
department.
Eventually
the
property
was
sold
to
the
Butler
interests.
F'oord
Construction
originally
purchased
the
Bayers
Road
land
in
1961
and
transferred
title
to
Food
City
in
April,
1962.
It
was
sold
to
Bayers
Road
Shopping
Centre
Limited
in
June,
1963.
The
appellant
was
in
the
field
earlier
to
sell
the
property,
for
Food
City
and
Foord
Construction
gave
an
option
in
the
summer
of
1962
to
one
Forbes
MacDonald,
of
Glace
Bay,
to
purchase
the
property
for
$50,000.
A
Halifax
real
estate
firm
was
the
go-
between.
The
option
was
not
exercised.
Food
City
purchased
the
property
at
a
cost
of
$25,500
and
a
commission
of
$1,500
paid
to
one
McKeage,
and
sold
it
for
$50,000,
realizing
thereby
a
net
profit
of
$23,000,
which
the
respondent
included
in
the
appellant’s
income
as
a
profit
from
its
business
in
its
taxation
year
ending
May
2,
1964.
The
Piercey
property
is
at
the
northwest
corner
of
Almon
and
Robie
Streets
in
Halifax.
In
May,
1959,
when
it
was
bought
by
Foord
Construction,
it
consisted
of
several
parcels
of
land
known
as
125-127-129
Almon
Street
and
710
to
724
Robie
Street,
with
a
20’
wide
right
of
way
from
Almon
Street
to
the
rear
of
the
parcels
fronting
on
Robie
Street.
It
was
purchased
by
Foord,
with
Sobeys
Stores
money,
for
$68,000
and
transferred
to
Food
City
in
September,
1962,
for
$72,000
after
expenses
of
$4,000
had
been
incurred
for
demolishing
buildings
on
the
land.
When
the
property
was
acquired
in
1959
the
main
highway
entrance
to
Halifax
was
Kempt
Road,
which
led
into
Robie
Street
near
the
Piercey
property.
The
property
was
at
a
busy
intersection
and
Sobeys
thought
that
there
were
good
prospects
of
an
increase
in
residential
population
in
the
area
and
that
it
would
be
a
good
location
for
a
food
market
store.
William
Sobey
hoped
to
be
able
to
acquire
an
adjoining
property
owned
by
McLellan
sisters,
for
he
favoured
a
shopping
centre
rather
than
a
single
store.
Frank
H.
Sobey
felt
that
a
single
food
store
would
be
good
business
and
that
the
Piercey
land
would
be
adequate
for
such
a
store
even
without
the
McLellan
land.
There
was
a
division
of
opinion
between
them
as
time
went
on
regarding
the
value
of
the
site
for
a
Sobeys
Stores’
development,
and
the
matter
was
discussed
at
executive
meetings
from
time
to
time.
A
sketch
plan
(Exhibit
A-16)
of
a
store
for
the
Piercey
property
was
prepared
by
John
Scott
in
December,
1963.
It
was
one
of
several
sketches.
There
were
buildings
on
the
Piercey
property
when
it
was
purchased
in
1959.
The
buildings
were
demolished
in
1960
to
free
the
land
for
store
construction.
Foord
got
rents
from
the
buildings
meanwhile.
One
of
the
buildings
was
attached
to
the
McLellan
home
and
its
removal
left
an
unsightly
wall,
which
the
McLellans
complained
about.
Foord
re-shingled
the
wall
in
response
to
the
complaint.
Sobeys
Stores
tried
to
buy
the
McLellan
property.
Sobeys’
real
estate
dealer
in
Halifax,
J.
G.
DeWolf,
was
active
on
Sobeys’
behalf
in
that
respect
as
early
as
1960
and
on
into
1963.
Sobeys’
solicitor
in
Halifax
also
tried.
Their
efforts
were
not
successful.
Charles
G.
MacLellan,
President
and
General
Manager
of
A.
E.
Fowles
Limited,
which
had
a
Ford
Motor
Dealership,
testified
that
his
company
had
property
on
Almon
Street,
near
the
Piercey
land
and
the
McLellan
sisters’
land,
and
had
built
a
showroom
and
service
department
on
it
in
1962,
and
also
had
other
land
a
short
distance
away.
His
company
tried
hard
to
get
the
McLellan
sisters
to
sell
their
land
and
also
tried
in
various
ways
to
get
Sobeys
Stores
to
sell
the
Piercey
land,
as
the
Fowles
Company
needed
more
land.
In
1964
he
wrote
to
Sobeys
Stores
asking
if
they
would
sell
the
Piercey
property
and
he
had
a
discussion
with
Donald
Sobey
in
that
respect.
He
got
the
impression
that
Sobeys
still
wanted
to
hold
on
to
it
in
order
to
develop
it.
He
also
got
friends
to
make
overtures
to
Sobeys
to
sell
to
his
company.
The
Fowles
Company
obtained
the
McLellan
land
in
1967
on
a
sealed
tender
bid
after
the
death
of
one
of
the
sisters.
Meanwhile
Foord
Construction
had
leased
the
Piercey
property,
in
January
1963,
to
Atlantic
Renault
Limited,
automobile
dealers,
for
a
3-year
term,
with
an
option
to
the
lessee
to
renew
the
lease
for
2
additional
periods
of
2
years
each,
subject
to
the
following
proviso
:
PROVIDED
HOWEVER
that
the
Lessor
may
terminate
this
lease
at
the
end
of
the
three
year
term
herein
granted
or
at
the
end
of
the
first
two
year
renewal
term
(1)
by
giving
to
the
Lessee
a
notice
in
writing
respectively
at
least
three
months
prior
to
the
expiration
of
the
three
year
term
or
three
months
prior
to
the
expiration
of
the
first
two
year
renewal
of
its
bona
fide
intention
to
sell
the
demised
premises
which
intention
is
already
evidenced
by
a
bona
fide
agreement
of
sale
or
(2)
gives
notice
that
it
will
be
erecting
a
permanent
substantial
building
on
the
demised
premises
and
has
already.
entered
into
bona.
fide
agreements
for
the
construction.
of
the
said
building.
(Exhibit
A-15).
The
Fowles
Company
bought
an
assignment
of
the
lessee’
Ss
interest
in
the
lease,
and,
having
acquired
also
the
McLellan
sisters’
property,
renewed
its
efforts
to
obtain
the
Piercey
prop-
erty
and
eventually
was
successful
in.
doing
so,
in
the
appellant’s
1967
taxation
year,
for
$100,000.
Both
William
and
Frank
H.
Sobey
confirmed
that
the
Fowles
company
had
repeatedly
tried
from
1961
to
1962
on
to
purchase
the
Piercey
land
from
Sobeys;
and
that
both
companies
were
trying
to
obtain
the
McLellan
sisters’
property.
For
various
reasons
Sobeys
Stores
delayed
development
of
the
Piercey
property.
A
new
highway,
Centennial
Drive,
was
constructed
subsequent
to
the
purchase
of
the
property,
and
it
provided
another
major
entrance
to
Halifax
and
attracted
passenger
traffic
and
shopping
trade
from
Kempt
Road
and
Robie
Street.
By
1963
the
area
had
also
become
more
industrial
and
the
residential
construction
that
Sobeys
had
expected
did
not
materialize.
Dominion
Stores
were
making
an
extensive
enlargement
of
one
of
their
stores
about
4
mile
away
from
the
Piercey
site,
which
would
mean
more
competition
for
a
Sobeys
store
on
that
site.
There
were
also
the
efforts,
unsuccessful,
of
Sobeys
to
obtain
the
McLellan
sisters’
property;
and
indecision
on
the
question
whether
a
single
store
or
a
shopping
centre
should
be
built,
somewhat
dependent
upon
success
or
failure
to
obtain
the
McLellan
property.
Also,
in
1963
and
1964
there
was
much
talk
about
building
a
second
bridge
across
Halifax
Harbour.
City
Council
favoured
construction
of
the
bridge
in
the
north
end
of
the
city
and
the
widening
of
Robie
Street
in
that
connection.
Such
widening
would
take
part
of
the
Piercey
land
and
make
the
remaining
land
too
small
for
a
Sobeys
store.
Eventually
Sobeys
Stores
abandoned
its
plan
to
develop
the
Piercey
property
and
sold
it
to
A.
EK.
Fowles
Limited,
as
already
stated.
Charles
H.
Vaughan,
who
was
Mayor
of
Halifax
for
the
terms
1957-60
and
1963-66
and
who
also
was
manager
of
the
Halifax
Shopping
Centre,
in
which
Sobeys
Stores
had
a
financial
interest
as
well
as
a
store,
confirmed
that
in
1964
the
city
was
seriously
considering’
a
scheme
involving
the
construction
of
a
second
bridge
across
the
harbour
and
related
street
improvements
that
would
involve
a
widening
of
Robie
Street
and
the
taking
of
part
of
the
Piercey
land,
and
that
he
had
discussed
the
matter
with
William
Sobey
and
told
him
of
the
proposed
scheme
in
that
year.
The
proposal
was
not
carried
into
effect
and
there
was
no
expropriation
of
land
or
widening
of
Robie
Street
for
that
purpose,
but
City
Staff
had
drawn
plans
for
the
street:
improvements.
Exhibit
A-45
is
a
list
of
some
40
properties
sold
by
Food
City
in
the
period
January
12,
1962,
to
May
3,
1969,
and
a
further
list
of
8
properties
sold
in
the
period
May,
1969,
to
March,
1971.
As
appears
from
the
exhibit,
most
of
the
properties
were
sold
at
cost
to
Sobey
Leased
Properties
Limited
or
Foord
Construction
for
shopping
centre
and
store
developments.
Several
properties
were
sold
at
cost
to
other
parties,
including
a
property
in
the
Town
of
New
Glasgow
sold
to
the
Town
for
street
purposes;
one
in
Port
Hawkesbury
for
a
school;
and
one
to
James
Houston,
an
employee
of
Sobeys
Stores.
The
two
subject
properties,
namely,
the
Bayers
Road
and
Piercey
properties,
are
shown
there
as
sold
at
a
profit.
Also
shown
as
sold
at
a
profit
were
other
properties,
including
one
in
Charlottetown
purchased
by
Food
City
for
$38,391
and
sold
for
$55,000
to
M.
F.
Schurman
Co.,
which
developed
a
shopping
centre
there
and
rented
a
store
back
to
Sobeys
Stores;
one
in
Fredericton,
bought
for
$196,025
and
sold
to
the
City
of
Fredericton
for
$375,000
as
a
site
for
a
new
City
Hall,
after
plans
for
development
of
a
shopping
centre
were
frustrated;
one
in
Halifax,
bought
for
$31,786,
as
one
of
several
parcels
that
Sobeys
Stores
hoped
to
obtain
and
combine,
and
sold
to
Olands
for
$43,000;
one
in
Dartmouth,
bought
for
$26,500
for
stores
development
and
sold
after
being
held
for
some
years
for
$41,360
to
Toulon
Construction
after
it
became
of
no
use
to
Food
City
for
a
store,
other
competing
stores
having
come
into
being
and
the
fronting
street
having
been
made
a
one-way
street
;
one
in
Hansport,
bought
for
$6,423
and
sold
for
$9,000
after
it
became
surplus
to
Food
City’s
needs.
There
was
also
a
sale
of
a
property
in
Truro
at
cost,
$60,000,
to
Zellers,
which
developed
the
property
and
rented
a
store
back
to
Sobeys
Stores;
a
sale
in
St.
Johns
at
cost,
$60,000,
to
Gelinas
&
Dabbin,
for
stores
construction;
and
a
sale
in
Halifax
at
cost,
$17,000,
to
Capital
Realties.
The
profits
of
$23,000
on
the
sale
of
the
Bayers
Road
property
and
$28,000
on
the
Piercey
property
were
shown
in
Food
City’s
income
tax
returns
as
capital
gains.
I
accept
fully,
as
correct
and
true,
the
evidence
given
by
F.
H.
Sobey,
W.
M.
Sobey
and
Merritt
Crawford,
who
were
the
witnesses
most
actively
concerned
in
the
operations
of
Sobeys
Stores
and
Food
City,
as
well
as
the
evidence
of
the
other
witnesses.
The
evidence,
as
I
appreciate
it,
establishes
that
in
the
relevant
years
Sobeys
Stores
was
developing
stores
and
shopping
centres
in
various
places
and
in
accordance
with
its
plans
and
requirements
in
that
respect
took
steps
to
acquire
lands
as
sites
for
such
developments.
The
sites
were
being
acquired
for
the
sole
purpose
of
constructing
stores
on
them
that
would
serve
Sobeys
Stores’
revenue-earning
activities.
Sobeys
Stores
had
built-in
financing
resources
through
a
line
of
bank
credit
and
furnished
the
funds
for
acquisition
of
the
sites
and
construction
of
stores
on
them
by
companies
associated
with
Sobeys
Stores
in
the
latter’s
scheme.
To
facilitate
its
said
purpose
Sobeys
Stores
caused
Food
City
to
be
incorporated
to
be
used
as
a
means
or
instrument
to
acquire
and
hold
the
lands
in
its
own
name
pending
their
development.
All
of
the
activities
of
Food
City
were
directed
and
controlled
by
Sobeys
Stores.
Food
City’s
decisions,
purposes
and
intentions
were
those
that
Sobeys
Stores
formed
for
it.
Food
City
had
no
funds
to
acquire
sites,
except
the
funds
that
Sobeys
Stores
provided
for
that
purpose
by
interest-free
loans.
The
sites
that
Food
City
acquired
were
purchased,
held
and
sold
pursuant
to
Sobeys
Stores’
directions.
The
Bayers
Road
property
and
the
Piercey
property
were
acquired
by
Food
City,
as
part
of
Sobeys
Stores’
purpose
and
scheme,
with
the
intention
that
Sobeys
Stores
would
cause
stores
to
be
constructed
on
them
as
revenue-producing
investments
in
the
interests
of
Sobeys
Stores.
Buildings
on
the
Piercey
property
were
demolished
to
make
way
for
development
of
the
site.
There
was
trouble
with
Butler
in
connection
with
the
Bayer’s
Road
site.
Events
were
such
that
development
was
delayed,
and
eventually
Sobeys
Stores
decided,
for
reasons
which
in
its
business
judgment
it
considered
prudent
and
which
I
cannot
hold
to
have
been
imprudent,
that
the
lands
would
not
usefully
serve
Sobeys
Stores’
scheme
and
that
the
investments
should
be
realized
by
sale
of
the
lands
to
parties
outside
the
Sobeys
Stores’
organization.
It
is
true
that
Food
City’s
business
was
to
buy
and
sell
lands,
which
were
not
to
be
developed
by
Food
City
itself,
and
that
a
profit
was
made
in
its
name
on
each
of
the
Bayers
Road
and
Piercey
transactions.
On
that
view,
the
respondent
says
that
the
profits
were
taxable
income
from
a
business
of
Food
City
and
that
the
subject
transactions
were
adventures
in
the
nature
of
trade.
In
my
opinion
that
view
fails
to
appreciate
the
true
nature
of
the
matter.
The
view
I
have
is
that
from
beginning
to
end
the
two
transactions
were
ventures
by
Sobeys
Stores,
using
its
wholly-owned
subsidiary
Food
City
as
an
instrument
or
machinery
to
carry
out
particular
parts
of
such
ventures.
There
can,
of
course,
be
trading
or
ventures
in
the
nature
of
trade
without
an
intention
to
make
a
profit.
However,
in
the
present
cases
there
was
no
element
of
speculation
in
the
purchase
of
the
lands
or
in
Sobeys
Stores’
plans
to
develop
them;
there
was
a
firm
intention
to
develop
them
as
revenue-producing
investments
and
there
was
no
intention
to
dispose
of
them,
for
profit
or
otherwise,
other
than
in
Sobeys
Stores’
overall
scheme
for
development
of
the
lands
by
construction
of
stores
and
shopping
centres
in
which
Sobeys
Stores
would
operate
its
own
retail
outlets
and
otherwise
derive
revenue
from
the
developments.
I
do
not
think
that
the
essential
nature
of
the
transactions
as
ventures
of
Sobeys
Stores
is
negatived
by
the
fact
that
implementation
of
the
scheme
involved
purchase
of
the
lands
by
Food
City
and
an
intention
to
sell
them
subsequently
to
one
of
the
other
companies
that
would
carry
out
the
construction
and
development
of
stores
and
related
facilities.
Neither
of
the
subject
properties
was
purchased
by
Food
City
with
a
view
to
selling
it
at
a
profit.
Neither
was
bought
as
part
of
a
scheme
for
profit-making.
Neither
Food
City
nor
its
parent
Sobeys
Stores
was
carrying
on
a
business
of
trading
in
lands
for
profit-making.
In
my
opinion,
neither
transaction
was
an
adventure
or
concern
in
the
nature
of
trade,
as
contemplated
by
Section
139(1)
(e)
of
the
Income
Tax
Act,
and
the
profits
made
on
the
ultimate
sales
of
the
properties
were
not
income
from
a
business
within
the
applicable
provisions
of
that
Act,
but
were
capital
gains.
Therefore,
the
appeals
will
be
allowed
and
the
assessments
made
upon
the
appellant
for
its
1964
and
1967
taxation
years
will
be
referred
back
to
the
respondent
for
re-assessment
on
the
basis
that
the
profits
arising
on
the
sales
of
the
Bayers
Road
property
and
the
Piercey
property
were
not
profits
from
a
business.
The
appellant
will
be
entitled
to
be
paid
by
the
respondent
its
costs
of
the
appeals,
to
be
taxed.