GIBSON,
J.:—This
is
an
appeal
from
re-assessments
of
the
appellant’s
income
for
the
taxation
year
1966
whereby
the
appel-
lant’s
income
was
increased
by
an
amount
of
$531,706.28,
being
made
up
of
what
was
alleged
to
be
a
gain
of
$451,706.23
realized
on
the
sale
of
shares
in
Spooner
Mines
and
Oils
Limited
and
the
sum
of
$80,000
purportedly
representing
‘‘Income
arising
from
settlement
of
claim
against
Mr.
V.
N.
Harb
ins
on”.
In
essence,
the
re-assessments
constitute
a
claim
for
taxes
in
respect
(1)
of
moneys
received
and
gains
realized
by
the
appellant
from
shares
of
Spooner
Oils
Limited,
and
(2)
other
moneys
received
which
the
appellant
obtained
from
the
said
Vincent
Noble
Harbinson,
by
way
of
settlement
of
two
actions
brought
by
the
appellant
in
the
Supreme
Court
of
Ontario
against
Harbinson
and
others
for
the
purpose
of
recovering
assets
of
which
the
appellant
allegedly
had
been
deprived
by
the
wrongdoings
of
Harbinson
and
other
persons.
To
understand
what
is
at
issue,
certain
background
facts
were
given
in
evidence.
Some
of
these
facts
are
also
set
out
in
the
criminal
cases
of
Regina
v.
Ben
Smith,
[1965]
4
C.C.C.
151;
Regina
v.
Ben
Smith
and
Harry
Smith,
[1963]
1
O.R.
249;
and
Regina
v.
Smith,
Stuart,
Schonbrun,
Rauch
and
Rauch
(1961),
131
C.C.C.
14;
[1962]
S.C.R.
215.
These
will
be
referred
to
later
in
these
reasons.
In-brief,
as
at
December
31,
1956
the
appellant,
according
to
its
consolidated
balance
sheet,
had
assets
of
a
value
of
$1,487,518.10
;
but
during
the
year
1957
several
persons
fraudulently
appropriated
to
themselves
substantially
all
of
these
assets.
How
this
came
about
is
now
recited.
The
situation
was
that
in
1956
the
appellant
was
effectively
controlled
and
managed
by
one
Ben
Smith
and
one
Harry
Smith
of
Toronto.
As
at
December
31,
1956,
the
consolidated
balance
sheet
of
the
appellant
listed
assets
totalling
$1,487,518.10,
consisting
of
current
assets
of
$56,727.89,
investments
amounting
to
$914,945.09,
fixed
assets
consisting
of
mining
rights
and
claims
and
other
physical
equipment,
exploration
and
other
expenditures
and
so
forth
of
$476,827.67,
and
other
assets
valued
at
$39,018.10.
The
assets
listed
on
the
said
balance
sheet
as
investments
were
as
follows:
Perseverance
Mining
&
Development
|
|
Company
Ltd.
|
|
Shares
(50,000
shares
of
$1.00
par
value
|
|
at
cost—no
quoted
market
value)
|
$50,000.00
|
|
Advances
|
28,902.62
|
78,902.62
|
Pronto
|
|
Uranium
|
Mines
|
Limited
|
Shares
|
|
(3,200
|
shares
|
of
|
$1.00
|
par
value
|
at
cost—•
|
|
quoted
|
market
|
value
|
$21,600.00)
|
|
53,293.80
|
|
Highwood—Scarcee
|
Oils
|
Limited
|
Shares
|
|
(180,000)
|
shares
|
of
.20^
par
value
at
cost
|
|
—quoted
|
market
value
|
$54,000.00)
|
|
48,925.90
|
|
Spooner
|
Oils
|
Limited
|
Shares
|
(569,000
|
|
shares
|
of
|
.30^
|
par
|
value
|
at
|
cost—quoted
|
|
market
|
value
|
$145,095.00)
|
|
192,582.18
|
|
New
|
Chamberlain
|
|
Petroleums
|
Limited
|
|
Shares
|
|
(494,668
shares
of
.50¢
par
value
at
|
|
cost—quoted
|
market
|
value
|
$1,122,896.36)
|
541,240.29
|
914,945.09
|
Ben
Smith
and
Harry
Smith
together
with
Harbinson
and
others
in
concert
during
the
year
1957
appropriated
to
themselves
substantially
all
the
above-mentioned
assets
and
also
made
certain
gains
or
profits
for
themselves
by
dealing
in
said
investments
listed
above
and
also
by
various
ways
using
these
investments
for
themselves
personally,
so
that
probably
it
can
fairly
be
said
that
there
was
appropriated
from
the
appellant
$1,712,705.94
made
up
as
follows
:
1,
|
May
|
1,1957
cheque
to
D.
Charles
|
|
|
Stuart
for
payment
of
mining
|
|
|
claims
|
|
$
|
960,000.00
|
2.
|
Re
|
Spooner
|
Oils
|
Limited
Shares
|
|
(a)
|
Through
|
|
Richard
|
Chernosky,
|
|
|
Accountant
|
|
71,622.38
|
|
183,400
|
Spooner
|
shares,
|
market
|
|
|
value
|
$95,368.00
|
|
(b)
|
Sold
|
to
|
Harbinson
|
at
|
30^-_„_=
|
$
|
55,020.00
|
40,348.00
|
(b).
|
|
|
Market
value
538,500
Spooner
shares
|
|
|
@
|
604
|
........................................
|
323,100.00
|
|
(c)
|
Sold
to
Harbinson
and/or
Chap-
|
|
|
coe
|
Investments
|
Ltd.
@
|
306
|
|
161,550.00
|
|
|
Loss
to
Brilund
|
|
-J—____
|
|
171,550.00
|
3.
|
Re
New
Chamberlain
Petroleums
|
|
|
Limited
Shares
|
|
(a)
|
202,668
|
|
New
|
|
Chamberlain
|
|
|
shares,
|
market
|
value
|
—
|
|
$456,002.00
|
|
(b)
|
Sold
|
to
|
|
Harbinson
|
202,668
|
x
|
|
|
$2.00
|
....„.l
|
|
405,336.00
|
50,666.00
|
(c)
|
Retained
|
|
by
|
Ben
|
Smith
|
in
|
|
|
respect
|
of
|
the
|
240,000
|
shares
|
|
|
in
|
New
|
Chamberlain
|
|
in
|
the
|
|
|
Ben
Smith
|
trust
account
|
|
202,257.56
|
(d)
|
Paid
out
of
the
Brilund
account
|
|
|
at
S.
R.
|
McKellar
|
..
|
...
|
|
24,000.00
|
|
and
|
finally,
|
|
(e)
|
The
|
purchasers
|
denuded
|
the
|
|
|
company
|
of
|
|
127,262.00
|
|
Cheque
to
|
Perseverance
|
Mining
|
|
|
&
Development
Limited
in
the
|
|
|
sum
of
|
|
...
|
|
75,000.00
|
|
$1,712,705.94
|
As
a
result
of
these
transactions,
all
of
its
cash
and
investments
were
appropriated
by
these
several
persons.
The
several
persons
involved
in:
this
fraudulent
conspiracy
which
accomplished
this
result
were
the
said
Ben
and
Harry
Smith
and
other
members
of
the
board
of
directors
of
the
appellant
with
the
complicity
of
the
Canadian
Imperial
Bank
of
Commerce
at
Toronto,
Ontario
and
the
active
co-operation
of
Harbinson,
a
Roy
Hamilton
Smith
(no
relation
to
Ben
and
Harry
Smith),
who
had
offices
in
the
same
building
as
Harbinson
in
Toronto
who
was
a
vice-president
and
director
of
New
Chamber-,
lain
Petroleums
Limited
and
Spooner
Oils
Limited
and
president
and
director
of
Hywood
Scarcee
Oils
Limited,
one
Hyman
Goldstein,
a
salesman
employed
by
A.
E.
Osler
&
Company
Limited
and
George
Carnegie,
a
customers
man
employed
by
the
stock
borkerage
firm
of
S.
R.
McKellar
&
Company;
and
also
by
the
conspiracy
of
Ben
and
Harry
Smith
with
four
others.
who
purchased
control
of
the
appellant
from
Ben
and
Harry
Smith
in
May
1957,
namely,
D.
Charles
Stuart
of
North
Bay,
who
was
the
owner
of
21
unpatented
mining
claims
acquired
by
him
in
1957
at
a
cost
of
$5,800
which
were
sold
to
the
appellant
for
$960,000,
and
Stanley
I.
Schonbrun,
Sol
R.
Rauch
and
Harold
Rauch,
all
of
New
York.
Following
the
appropriation
of
all
of
the
cash
and
investments
of
the
appellant
by
various
actions
of
the
above-mentioned
persons,
certain
criminal
proceedings
took
place
and
also
certain
civil
litigation
was
instigated.
The
criminal
proceedings
were
as
follows
:
Ben
and
Harry
Smith
were
first
charged
with
theft
in
1958
of
65,920
shares
of
Spooner,
the
property
of
Perseverance,
and
the
theft
of
$52,036,
the
property
of
Perseverance.
The
trial
came
on
before
Gale,
J.
(as
he
then
was)
and
a
jury
on
December
3,
1959.
The
jury
found
the
accused
not
guilty.
No
appeal
was
taken
by
the
Crown.
Ben
Smith,
D.
Charles
Stuart,
Stanley
I.
Schonbrun,
Sol
R.
Rauch
and
Harold
K.
Rauch
were
charged
with
stealing
moneys
and
securities
to
the
value
of
$960,000,
the
property
of
Brilund.
The
case
came
on
for
trial
before
Gale,
J.
(as
he
then
was)
with
a
jury
at
the
assizes
at
the
City
of
Toronto
on
September
19,
1960.
None
of
the
accused
adduced
any
evidence
in
defence.
Harold
Rauch
was
found
not
guilty.
Ben
Smith,
D.
Charles
Stuart,
Stanley
I.
Schonbrun
and
Sol
R.
Rauch
were
found
guilty
and
each
of
them
was
sentenced
to
a
term
of
imprisonment
of
six
years.
They
all
appealed
to
the
Court
of
Appeal
and
by
judgment
delivered
June
20,
1961
the
Court
of
Appeal
dismissed
the
appeal
((1961),
131
C.C.C.
14).
The
accused
then
appealed
to
the
Supreme
Court
of
Canada.
It
was
there
held
that
as
the
cheque
for
$960,000
was
a
forgery
(the
signing
officers
never
having
been
properly
elected)
the
company
did
not
have
any
ownership
or
special
interest
in
the
cheque
and
therefore
it
could
not
have
been
stolen.
The
appeals
were
therefore
allowed
(
[1962]
S.C.R.
215).
Ben
and
Harry
Smith
were
also
charged
with
stealing
240,000
shares
of
New
Chamberlain
Petroleums
Limited,
the
property
of
Brilund,
by
pledging
the
shares
to
the
Canadian
Imperial
Bank
of
Commerce,
King
&
York
Streets
Branch,
to
secure
an
overdraft
of
the
joint
account
of
the
said
Ben
and
Harry
Smith
at
the
said
branch.
Their
trial
came
on
before
Gale,
J.
(as
he
then
was)
and
a
jury,
commencing
on
April
12,
1960.
They
were
convicted
and
sentenced
to
imprisonment
for
two
years
less
a
day.
The
appeal
to
the
Court
of
Appeal
for
Ontario
was
dismissed
([1963]
1
O.R.
249).
Leave
to
appeal
to
the
Supreme
Court
of
Canada
was
refused.
Ben
Smith
and
D.
Charles
Stuart
were
charged
with
conspiring
with
Schonbrun
and
the
two
Rauch’s
to
defraud
Brilund
of
$960,000.
The
citizens
of
the
United
States
could
not
be
extradited
on
a
conspiracy
charge
and
declined
the
invitation
to
attend
voluntarily.
Ben
Smith
and
Stuart
were
tried
separately.
Stuart
pleaded
guilty
in
a
trial
before
Ferguson,
J.
He
then
gave
evidence
at
the,
trial
of
Ben
Smith
before
Donnelly,
J.
with
a
jury.
Smith
was
convicted
and
sentenced
to
imprisonment
for
six
years.
His
appeal
to
the
Court
of
Appeal
was
dismissed
[1965]
4
C.C.C.
151).
So
much
for
the
criminal
proceedings.
The
civil
proceedings
instigated
and
how
they
came
about
and
were
concluded
are
now
recited.
In
1962
one
Emanual
Rosenblat,
Manny
Mazur
and
Paul
Mazur
of
New
York,
obtained
effective
control
and
management
of
the
appellant.
It
was
not
given
in
evidence
precisely
how
many
shares
of
the
appellant
they
obtained,
but
in
any
event,
it
was
sufficient
for
such
purposes.
Rosenblat
stated
at
this
trial
that
he
was
a
graduate
of
the
Harvard
Law
School
and
had
practised
law
in
New
York
prior
to
Word
War
II,
but
that
after
the
war
he
had
gone
into
business
and
during
all
the
material
times
he
operated
a
chemical
plant
just
outside
New
York
City.
He
was
the
person
who
almost
singlehandedly
investigated
what
had
been
done
in
this
appropriation
of
cash
and
investments
of
the
appellant
by
the
said
several
persons
and
who
effectively
caused
the
appellant
to
bring
several
civil
legal
proceedings
against
the
wrongdoers
for
the
return
to
the
treasury
of
the
appellant
the
said
cash
and
investments.
After
attempting
unsuccessfully
to
have
the
company
call
a
shareholders
meeting
on
November
16,
1960,
Rosenblat
obtained
an
order
of
the
Chief
Justice
of
the
High
Court
of
the
Supreme
Court
of
Ontario
ordering
that
a
meeting
of
shareholders
of
Brilund
be
held
under
the
direction
of
the
Master
on
or
before
December
15,
1960.
A
meeting
was
held
on
December
14,
1960
with
the
Master
as
chairman.
After
a
number
of
adjournments
and
applications
to
the
Court,
on
March
22,
1961
Emanual
Rosenblat,
Dr.
Henry
Weiss,
Moris
Pakien,
Carl
Goldman
and
Wallace
L.
Minto
were
elected
as
directors.
Thereafter,
the
appellant
commenced
four
actions
in
the
Supreme
Court
of
Ontario
:
(Action
No.
2989/61)
On
April
14,
1961,
an
action
was
commenced
having
the
following
style
of
cause
:
BETWEEN
:
BRILUND
MINES
LIMITED
Plaintiff
—
and
—
BEN
SMITH,
HARRY
SMITH,
D.
CHARLES
STUART,
STANLEY
I.
SCHONBRUN,
SOL
R.
RAUCH,
and
HAROLD
D.
RAUCH
Defendants.
The
endorsement
on
the
writ
was
as
follows:
The
Plaintiff’s
claim
is
for
damages
in
the
amount
of
$960,000.00
with
interest
at
5%
per
annum
from
the
1st
day
of
May,
1957,
for
loss
sustained
by
the
Plaintiff
on
or
about
the
1st
day
of
May,
1957,
by
the
theft
or
fraud
or
breach
of
fiduciary
relationship
of
the
Defendants
in
wrongfully
paying
out
or
causing
to
be
paid
out
of
the
Plaintiff’s
accounts
with
The
Imperial
Bank
of
Canada
the
sum
of
$960,000.00
to
the
Defendants
for
the
use
and
benefit
of
.'■<
the
Defendants
and
wrongful
receipt
and
detention
of
the
said
$960,000.00
by
the
Defendants.
(Action
No.
3091/61)
On
April
17,
1962,
an
action
was
commenced
having
the
following
style
of
cause:
BETWEEN:
BRILUND
MINES
LIMITED
Plaintiff
—
and
—
CANADIAN
IMPERIAL
BANK
OF
COMMERCE,
FREDERICK
FINDLAY,
and
FRANK
UDELL
Defendants.
The
plaintiff
claimed
:
(a)
the
sum
of
$1,010,000
or
in
the
alternative
the
sum
of
$960,000
;
(b)
in
the
alternative,
the
sum
of
$357,864.27
being
the
amount
by
which
the
Canadian
Imperial
Bank
of
Commerce
was
enriched
through
the
fraudulent
transactions;
(c)
the
sum
of
$127,262;
(d)
the
sum
of
$75,000;
and
(e)
interest
on
all
of
the
said
sums
from
the
dates
the
same
were
respectively
debited
from
the
account
of
the
plaintiff
until
payment
at
the
rate
of
6%
per
annum.
(Action
No.
5092/62)
On
June
28,
1962,
an
action
was
commenced
having
the
following
style
of
cause:
BETWEEN:
BRILUND
MINES
LIMITED
Plaintiff
—
and
—
VINCENT
NOBLE
HARBINSON,
ROY
HAMILTON
SMITH,
HYMAN
GOLDSTEIN,
GEORGE
W.
CARNEGIE,
BEN
SMITH,
HARRY
SMITH,
G.
MARSHALL
FERGUSON,
A.
BERTRAM
LOCKLEY,
ROBERT
AMELL,
A.
E.
OSLER
AND
COMPANY,
FREDERICK
FINDLAY,
CANADIAN
IMPERIAL
BANK
OF
COMMERCE,
SPEX
LIMITED
and
CHAPCOE
INVESTMENTS
CORPORATION
LIMITED
Defendants.
The
plaintiff
claimed
:
(a)
a
declaration
that
the
options
purportedly
granted
to
Chapcoe
Investments
Corporation
Limited
and
dated
May
22,
1956,
August
2,
1956
and
April
5,
1957
are
fraudulent
and
void
and
asks
for
a
declaration
accordingly
;
(b)
against
the
defendants
Vincent
Noble
Harbinson,
Roy
H.
Smith,
Hyman
Goldstein,
George
W.
Carnegie,
Ben
Smith,
G.
Marshall
Ferguson,
Robert
Amell,
A.
Bertram
Lockley
and
Chapcoe
Investments
Corporation
Limited
:
(i)
a
declaration
that
the
plaintiff
is
entitled
to
receive
from
them
any
and
all
shares
of
Chamberlain
or
Searcee
Petroleums
Limited
owned
by
them
or
in
their
possession,
power
or
control;
(ii)
an
injunction
restraining
them
from
selling,
transferring,
disposing
of
or
otherwise
dealing
with
any
of
the
said
shares
of
Chamberlain
or
Scarcee
Petroleums
Limited;
(iii)
an
interim
injunction
;
(iv)
an
accounting
for
all
profits
made
by
them;
.
(v)
damages
in
the
amount
of
$750,000
;
(vi)
judgment
for
the
amount
found
due
upon
the
taking
of
such
accounts
together
with
interest
thereon
at
the
rate
of
5
%
per
annum;
(c)
against
the
defendant
A.
E.
Osler
and
Company,
damages
in
the
amount
of
$350,000;
and
(d)
against
the
defendants
Canadian
Imperial
Bank
of
Commerce
and
Frederick
Findlay,
damages
in
the
amount
of
$350,000.
(Action
No.
8911/62)
On
December
10,
1962,
an
action
was
commenced
having
the
following
style
of
cause:
BETWEEN:
BRILUND
MINES
LIMITED
Plaintiff
and
—
VINCENT
NOBLE
HARBINSON,
HARRY
SMITH,
BEN
SMITH,
G.
MARSHALL
FERGUSON,
A.
BERTRAM
LOCKLEY,
ROBERT
AMELL,
CANADIAN
IMPERIAL
BANK
OF
COMMERCE,
and
FREDERICK
FINDLAY
Defendants.
The
plaintiff
claimed:
(a)
a
declaration
that
the
defendant
Harbinson
holds
all
shares
of
Spooner
acquired
from
the
plaintiff
under
the
agreement
dated
February
16,
1957
of
which
he
is
in
possession
or
control
in
trust
for
the
plaintiff
;
(b)
for
accounting
of
profits
made
by
the
defendant
Harbinson
in
respect
of
any
Spooner
shares
so
acquired
of
which
he
has
since
disposed
and
judgment
for
the
amount
of
such
profits
;
(ec)
an
injunction
restraining
the
defendant
Harbinson
from
selling,
transferring,
disposing
of,
or
otherwise
dealing
with
any
of
the
said
shares
of
Spooner
;
(d)
an
interim
injunction
in
the
terms
of
paragraph
(c)
hereof
;
(e)
in
the
alternative,
for
an
accounting
of
the
profits
made
by
the
defendants
Ben
and
Harry
Smith
and
Harbinson
from
the
sale
or
other
disposition
of
the
Spooner
shares
so
acquired
from
the
plaintiff
and
judgment
against
the
said
defendants
for
the
amount
thereof
together
with
interest
at
5%
per
annum
thereon;
(f)
a
declaration
that
the
sum
of
$52,036.38
was
money
belonging
to
the
plaintiff
and
that
the
defendant
Bank
holds
the
sum
of
$52,036.38
in
trust
for
the
plaintiff
or
in
the
alternative,
damages
against
the
defendant
Bank
and
the
defendant
Findlay
in
the
sum
of
$52,036.38
;
and
(g)
damages
against
the
defendants
in
the
sum
of
$250,000.
Action
No.
1
(the
action
between
Brilund
and
Ben
and
Harry
Smith,
Stanley
I.
Schonbrun,
Sol
R.
Rauch
and
Harold
D.
Rauch)
was
not
proceeded
with.
Instead,
the
plaintiff
decided
to
proceed
against
the
Canadian
Imperial
Bank
of
Commerce.
By
judgment
delivered
September
11,
1964
the
plaintiff
recovered
the
sum
of
$1,313,442.62,
being
the
sum
of
$960,000
with
interest
thereon
from
May
1,
1957
to
the
date
of
judgment.
The
Bank
appealed
to
the
Court
of
Appeal
and
the
plaintiff
cross-appealed.
The
action
was
finally
settled
for
$750,000.
Rosenblat
then
entered
into
negotiations
with
the
other
wrongdoers
to
recoup
for
the
plaintiff
all
the
moneys
of
which
it
had
been
unjustly
deprived.
Rosenblat
had
available
to
him
at
that
time
the
transcripts
in
the
various
trials
as
well
as
the
findings
of
the
various
courts.
This
material
provided
the
means
for
the
pursuit
of
all
those
who
had
taken
the
cash
and
investments
of
the
appellant
in
1957.
Rosenblat
in
a
letter
to
Mr.
Paul
Mazur,
the
secretary
of
Brilund,
dated
June
18,
1965,
pointed
out
the
appellant’s
intention
to
recover
the
assets
it
had
lost.
This
was
repeated
in
several
letters
Rosenblat
wrote
to
shareholders.
(See
letter
from
Brilund
to
Paul
Mazur,
June
18,
1965—
Book
14,
page
220;
letter
from
Brilund
to
Paul
Mazur,
December
23,
1966—Book
14,
page
262
at
page
267
;
and
letters
and.
reports
to
shareholders
from
Rosenblat—Book
8,
pages
49,
54,
55,
57
and
60.)
As
a
result
of
the
efforts
made,
which
were
those
mainly
of
Rosenblat,
but
with
the
advice
and
assistance
of
the
two
Mazurs,
the
appellant
recovered
from
various
persons
as
follows:
From
the
Canadian
Imperial
Bank
of
Commerce
$750,000
(less
$75,000
costs)
|
|
$675,000
|
Ben
and
Harry
Smith
|
|
500,000
|
Carnegie
(securities
now
worthless)
|
|
29,000
|
Amell
$44,000
(less
$4,000
costs)
|
.
|
40,000
|
Lockley
$2,550
(less
$250
costs)
|
|
2,300
|
Osler
$25,000
(less
$2,500
costs)
|
|
22,500
|
Roy
Smith
$18,500
(less
$2,100
costs)
|
|
16,400
|
plus
also
what
it
received
from
Harbinson,
which
is
in
issue
in
this
appeal.
What
the
appellant
received
from
Harbinson,
it
recovered
in
the
settlement
of
the
action
between
it
and
Harbinson
et
al.
(being
Supreme
Court
of
Ontario
action
No.
8911/62)
;
and
in
the
settlement
of
the
action
between
it
and
Harbinson
et
al.,
including
Chapcoe
(being
Supreme
Court
of
Ontario
action
No.
5092/62).
The
claim
against
Harbinson
which
was
used
as
a
proposed
basis
for
this
settlement,
the
appellant
alleged,
was
formulated
in
the
manner
following
(see
Exhibit
14,
page
178
being
Rosenblat’s
notes)
:
1.
|
Harbinson
received
19,800
shares
of
New
Chamber
|
|
lain
under
an
option
|
dated
|
May
|
22,
|
1956.
|
He
paid
|
|
$1.15
|
when
|
the
|
shares
|
were
|
selling
|
for
|
$2.50
|
|
19,800
x
$1.85
|
equals
|
|
...
|
|
$
26,730
|
2.
|
The
|
directors
|
|
and
|
agents
|
of
|
|
New
|
Chamberlain
|
re
|
|
ceived
20,000
shares
@
$1.15.
Rosenblat
claimed
that
|
|
Harbinson
should
be
|
charged
|
with
|
one-half
of
this
|
|
amount
or
10,000
x
$1.35
which
equals
|
|
13,500
|
3.
|
S.
R.
|
McKellar
&
Company
paid
out
of
the
Brilund
|
|
account
by
cheque
to
Harbinson
|
|
...
|
|
24,000
|
4,
|
Re:
Spooner
Oils
Limited
|
|
|
In
respect
to
Spooner,
Ben
Smith
|
received
a
|
profit
|
|
of
$52,000.
He
gave
to
Harbinson
a
cheque
for
|
|
10,000
|
5.
|
Re:
Highwood-Scarcee
Oils
Limited
|
|
|
Ben
|
Smith
|
made
|
a
|
profit
|
of
|
$153,000.
|
He
|
gave
|
to
|
|
Harbinson
a
cheque
for
|
$45,000
which
was
used
to
|
|
pay
the
balance
of
the
moneys
owing
by
Harbinson
|
|
and
Roy
Smith
on
the
purchase
of
64,000
shares
on
|
|
February
|
19,
|
1957.
|
(At
the
|
time
|
of
|
the
|
purchase,
|
|
Chapcoe
|
(the
“alter
ego”
of
Harbinson)
|
paid
only
|
|
$28,600
instead
of
$73,600
leaving
a
balance
due
of
|
|
$45,000.)
|
Ben
Smith
owed
Harbinson
and
Roy
Smith
|
|
$45,000
|
from
|
|
the
|
profits
|
of
|
|
$153,000
|
he
|
made
|
in
|
|
selling
|
the
|
controlling
|
block
|
|
of
|
Highwood-Scarcee.
|
|
He
did
not
pay
this
money
he
received
in
October
of
|
|
1956
but
instead
paid
it
from
the
profits
he
made
on
|
the
sale
of
240,000
shares
of
New
Chamberlain
in
|
|
the
Ben
Smith
trust
account.
/2
of
$45,000
equals
|
$
22,500
|
6.
Re
:
538,000
Spooner
Oils
Limited
|
|
Harbinson
received
538,000
shares
of
Spooner
at
30¢
|
|
when
the
shares
were
selling
at
prices
ranging
be
|
|
tween
68¢
and
68¢.
538,000
x
30$
$161,400
equals
|
160,009
|
|
$256,730
|
Rosenblat
sought
to
settle
the
two
actions
against
Harbinson
and
the
others
from
this
sum
rounded
out
to
$257,000.
He
wrote
Paul
Mazur
on
June
18,
1965
(see
Exhibit
14,
page
220
at
page
223)
that
he
should
try
to
negotiate
a
settlement
with
Harbinson
by
getting
Harbinson
to
give
the
appellant
600,000
shares
of
Spooner
Oils
Limited
plus
$67,500.
His
precise
words
were:
.
.
.
It
is
for
this
reason
that
Brilund
will
entertain
a
proposal
which
offers
the
shares
of
Spooner
stock.
This
is
something
which
Harbinson
has
and
which
he
can
part
with.
For
this
reason
I
thought
that.
600,000
shares
of
Spooner
with
a
market
value
of
$150,000
plus
$67,500
was
such
a
“bargain”.
The
difference
between
the
538,500
shares
and
the
600,000
shares
of
Spooner
provides
the
necessary
cash
to
cover
the
$24,000
McKellar-Brilund
check.
This
proposal
waived
all
interest
claims
and
the
payment
of
attorney’s
fees.
The
acceptance
of
stock
in
lieu
of
cash
in
a
sharply
declining
market,
at
present
market
price,
puts
on
Brilund
Mines
a
very
serious
risk
and
hence
a
proposal
of
this
kind
should
not
be
available
more
than
10
days.
At
our
last
discussion
at
Harbinson’s
office,
where
we
talked
over
what
might
constitute
a
“real
bargain”,
Brilund
indicated
that
it
would
consider,
subject
to
the
approval
of
the
Board
of
Directors
$67,500
plus
300,000
shares
of
Spooner
stock.
This
$67,500
was
a
rough
figure
based
upon
30,000
shares
of
Chamber-
lain
at
$1.50
the
$22,500
explained
on
page
2
paragraph
2.
How-
eevr,
a
proposal
of
this
kind
would
require
that
Harbinson
pay
attorneys’
fees
in
an
amount
of
$14,250
which
is
10%
of
the
total
value
of
the
settlement
($67,500
plus
$75,000
—
the
$75,000
is
300,000
shares
of
Spooner
at
25$
per
share).
This
offer
cannot
be
offered
for
more
than
10
days
for
the
reasons
expressed
above.
I
feel
this
a
true
bargain
and
I
do
not
feel
Brilund
should
accept
less.
Apparently
at
this
juncture
Harbinson
took
the
position
that
he
was
not
interested
in
this
proposal,
saying
that
he
was
not
personally
involved
in
the
fraud
of
Ben
Smith
and
Harry
Smith
against
the
appellant.
Rosenblat
was
adamant.
He
then
ordered
a
transcript
of
the
evidence
in
the
criminal
case
of
Regina
v.
Ben
and
Harry
Smith
(supra)
at
which
Harbinson
had
been
a
witness
for
the
Crown.
This
was
the
case
above
referred
to
in
which
Ben
and
Harry
Smith
were
charged
with
theft
in
1958
of
65,920
shares
of
Spooner,
the
property
of
Perseverance,
and
theft
of
$52,036,
the
property
of
Perseverance,
in
which
the
jury
found
them
not
guilty.
The
transcript
of
the
evidence
disclosed
what
Harbinson
said
at
this
trial.
This
evidence
of
his
involvement
was
entirely
different
from
what
he
had
heretofore
told
Rosenblat.
Rosenblat
also
obtained
two
documents,
Exhibit
14,
page
182,
being
a
cheque
to
Harbinson
for
$10,000
which
Harbinson
had
not
told
Rosenblat
about;
and
Exhibit
14,
page
183,
being
minutes
of
a
meeting
of
Perseverance
Mining
&
Development
Company.
He
obtained
the
latter
from
Mr.
Ferguson,
the
lawyer
in
the
said
criminal
case
(referred
to
as
‘‘Smith’s
man’’
by
Gale,
J.
as
he
then
was).
Harbinson
was
recorded
as
being
present
at
that
meeting
and
being
part
of
the
transaction,
which
he
had
previously
denied.
Rosenblat
gave
this
transcript
and
copies
of
these
documents
to
Harbinson
and
to
Harbinson’s
solicitors
to
prove
to
them
the
validity
of
the
appellant’s
civil
lawsuits
against
Harbinson.
Following
this,
on
September
2,
1965,
Rosenblat
again
saw
Harbinson
and
told
him
that
the
appellant
would
settle
then
for
600,000
shares
of
Spooner
plus
$97,000
plus
$25,000
from
Carnegie.
Then
on
September
24,
1965
Donald
D.
Carrick,
solicitor
for
the
appellant
at
the
time,
prepared
the
following
memorandum
addressed
to
T.
P.
O’Connor
his
partner,
from
an
interview
he
had
with
Rosenblat
and
Mazur.
This
sets
out
the
proposal
for
settlement.
Mr.
Rosenblat
and
Mr.
Mazur
told
me
to-day
about
negotiations
for
a
settlement
of
the
action
against
Noble
Harbinson.
The
action
arises
out
of
dealing
in
shares
of
Spooner
owned
by
Brilund
by
Harbinson.
Our
clients
have
got
to
the
point
where
Mr.
Harbinson
has
indicated
desire
to
settle
the
action
and
he
is
furnishing
them
with
information
about
the
Spooner
Company.
Mr.
Rosenblat
has
in
mind
an
Agreement
under
which
Harbinson
turns
over
to
Brilund
600,000
shares
of
Spooner
and
pays
a
sum
of
money
to
Brilund,
the
exact
amount
of
which
is
to
be
negotiated.
The
directors
of
Spooner
will
give
an
employment
contract
to
Harbinson
for
a
period
of
time
at
a
salary
to
be
negotiated.
Manny
and
Paul
feel
that
this
will
return
to
Brilund
the
shares
of
Spooner
they
are
entitled
to
receive
plus
a
sum
of
money
and
Brilund
will
then
acquire
the
services
with
his
ingenuity
of
Harbinson
working
on
behalf
of
Brilund
and
Spooner.
There
is
another
consideration
that
enters
into
this.
Harbinson
represents
to
him
that
all
he
has
is
the
shares
of
Spooner
and
to
lose
them
would
ruin
him.
This
is
an
attempt
to
work
out
a
compromise
with
Harbinson
which
will
accomplish
what
I
have
mentioned
above
and
it
will
also
enable
Brilund
to
settle
the
litiga-
tion
with
Harbinson
which,
like
all
litigation,
carries
an
element
of
uncertainty
about
the
outcome.
Harbinson
has
indicated
that
if
he
is
obliged
to
give
up
the
600,000
shares
of
Spooner
without
anything
more,
he
will
fight
the
litigation
to
the
end
because
it
means
his
ruination.
Manny
and
Paul
are
going
to
get
further
information
about
the
assets
and
liabilities
of
Spooner
from
Harbinson
and
if
they
are
satisfied
with
the
financial
situation,
they
will
try
to
negotiate
a
settlement
along
the
lines
mentioned
with
Harbinson.
The
way
the
matter
stands
at
the
present
time,
is
Harbinson
is
going
to
get
the
information
for
our
clients
and
he
is
going
to
come
up
with
some
proposal
which
our
clients
will
hear.
Manny
used
the
word
“merger”
when
he
discussed
this
matter
with
Mr.
Harbinson.
I
explained
to
Manny
that
a
merger
in
our
law
would
involve
the
union
of
Brilund
and
Spooner,
either
under
the
name
of
one
of
the
companies,
or
under
the
name
of
a
separate
company
and
that
is
not
what
could
be
done
at
the
present
time.
This
may
affect
the
proposal
that
Harbinson
puts
forward
to
him.
Manny
wants
to
leave
the
matter
so
that
at
a
future
date,
depending
upon
the
circumstances,
a
merger
of
Spooner
and
Brilund
could
be
considered.
It
may
be
necessary
in
negotiations
to
give
Harbinson
an
option
on
a
block
of
Brilund
stock,
but
this
is
one
of
the
matters
that
will
have
to
be
negotiated.
Perhaps
the
option
would
be
on
Spooner
stock.
There
was
a
further
meeting
on
November
11,
1965
of
Rosen-
blat
with
Harbinson
and
others.
Then
on
November
12,
1965
there
was
a
tentative
agreement
for
settlement
reached
which
was
as
follows:
The
appellant
was
to
get
600,000
shares
of
Spooner;
in
addition,
the
appellant
was
to
buy
from
Harbinson
an
additional
100,000
shares
of
Spooner,
making
a
total
of
700,000
shares;
and
the
appellant
was
to
pay
Harbinson
$140,000
for
these
additional
100,000
shares.
Harbinson
was
also
to
pay
back
to
the
appellant
$80,000
representing
the
settlement
of
the
extra
claim
for
cash
heretofore
proposed
at
$97,000.
Rosenblat
said
the
reason
he
proposed
that
the
appellant
take
the
Spooner
shares
from
Harbinson
in
partial
settlement
was
because
that
was
the
only
way
the
appellant
could
get
paid,
Harbinson
not
having
sufficient
money
to
pay
the
appellant’s
claim;
and
that
the
reason
that
the
appellant,
as
part
of
the
settlement,
proposed
to
buy
an
additional
100,000
shares
from
Harbinson
of
Spooner
shares
was
so
that
the
appellant
would
get
effective
control
of
Spooner
and
that
in
paying
Harbinson
$140,000
for
those
100,000
shares,
Harbinson
would
be
in
a
position,
out
of
it,
to
pay
back
to
the
appellant
$80,000
representing,
as
stated,
the
cash
amount
of
the
proposed
settlement.
In
partial
implementation
of
this
transaction,
the
appellant
gave
Harbinson
an
unmarked
cheque
for
$140,000
and
Harbinson
deposited
561,820
shares
of
Spooner
Mines
and
Oils
Limited
in
escrow
with
the
appellant’s
solicitors,
Carrick,
O’Connor
and
Coutts.
The
understanding
was
that
a
total
of
700,000
shares
would
be
deposited
and
until
the
complete
settlement,
the
$140,000
cheque
would
not
be
cashed.
Instead,
Harbinson
had
the
$140,000
cheque
certified.
Following
this,
there
was
a
further
meeting
on
November
18,
1965
and
a
more
complete
but
still
tentative
settlement
was
reached.
The
$140,000
cheque
was
given
back
by
Harbinson
to
the
appellant.
A
so-called
letter
of
intent
dated
November
18,
1965
was
signed
by
both
Harbinson
and
the
appellant
which
was
supposed
to
form
the
basis
of
the
settlement.
It
read
as
follows:
LETTERS
OF
INTENT
VINCENT
NOBLE
HARBINSON
(called
“Harbinson”)
and
BRILUND
MINES
LIMITED
(called
“Brilund’’)
do
hereby
signify
their
intent
to
enter
into
an
agreement
as
follows:
1.
Subject
to
acceptance
of
an
Amending
Filing
Statement
of
SPOONER
MINES
AND
OILS
LIMITED
(called
“Spooner’’)
by
the
Toronto
Stock
Exchange,
reflecting
the
within
transaction,
Brilund
will
purchase
from
Harbinson
700,000
shares
of
Spooner
at
20¢
per
share
for
$140,000.00.
2.
Chapcoe
and/or
Harbinson
will
pay
Brilund
$80,000.00
in
full
settlement
of
all
Brilund’s
claims
against
him
arising
out
of
the
matters
referred
to
in
Supreme
Court
of
Ontario
Writs
of
Summons
Nos.
5092/62
and
8911/62.
3.
Harbinson
will
cause
the
resignations
of
two
of
the
directors
of
Spooner
and
cause
to
be
appointed
two
nominees
of
Brilund
and
also
deliver
resignations
in
blank
(undated)
of
two
additional
directors
of
Spooner,
including
his
own,
to
the
said
nominees
of
Brilund.
4.
Harbinson
will
agree
that
so
long
as
he
is
a
director
of
Spooner
he,
and
those
other
directors
who
are
his
nominees,
will
vote
all
shares
of
Spooner
owned
or
controlled
by
them,
including
shares
covered
by
proxies
received
or
obtained
by
them,
only
as
directed
by
Brilund.
5.
Brilund
will
cause
its
nominees
on
the
Board
of
Spoonér
to
vote
in
favour
of
the
employment
of
Harbinson
as
the
Chief
Executive
Officer
of
Spooner
for
a
minimum
5-year
term
for
an
aggregate
consideration
of
$75,000.00,
which
contract
may
be
assigned
to
Harbinson’s
personal.
corporation,
and
which
contract
will
be
guaranteed
by
Brilund.
6.
Brilund.
will
vote
all
its
shares
of
Spooner
during
the
employment
of
Harbinson
as
President
and
Chief
Executive
Officer
to
elect
Harbinson
as
a
director
of
Spooner.
7.
Harbinson
has
delivered
in
escrow
to
Carrick,
O’Connor
&
Coutts
certificates
covering
shares
of
Spooner
which,
to-
gether
with
certificates
covering
additional
shares
shall
constitute
the
700,000
shares
to
be
purchased
by
Brilund.
This
letter
of
intent
is
for
the
purpose
of
outlining
of
settling
which
must
be
approved
by
lawyers
of
both
parties.
DATED
at
Toronto,
Ontario,
this
18th
day
of
November,
1965.
(Signed)
Vincent
Noble
Harbinson
BRILUND
MINES
LIMITED
(Signed)
E.
Rosenblat
President
(Signed)
Paul
A.
Mazur
Secretary
The
next
meeting
between
Rosenblat
and
Harbinson
was
on
January
5,
1966
at
Harbinson’s
house
in
Toronto.
Between
November
18,
1965
and
January
5,
1966
Rosenblat
had
been
in
Europe
in
connection
with
the
operation
of
his
regular
business,
a
chemical
plant
in
New
York,
and,
in
addition,
on
his
return
had
been
in
New
York
and
also
in
Toronto
before
January
5,
1966.
On
his
visit
to
Toronto
before
January
5,
1966
he
had
been
engaged
in
settling
the
action
the
appellant
had
against
Ben
and
Harry
Smith
and
others.
Then
on
January
5,
1966
Rosenblat
saw
Harbinson
again
when
Harbinson
indicated
to
him
that
he
could
not
or
would
not
carry
out
the
proposed
settlement
pursuant
to
the
so-called
letter
of
intent.
Among
the
things
he
could
or
would
not
do
was
to
cause
four
of
the
seven
directors
of
Spooner
Oils
Limited
to
be
elected.
In
addition,
Rosenblat
had
found
out
that
Spooner
had
divested
itself
of
the
Scarcee
shares.
The
Scarcee
Company
apparently
owned
very
valuable
mineral
rights
and
were
vital
in
so
far
in
Rosenblat’s
view,
and
their
absence
made
the
Spooner
shares
much
less
valuable
as
an
investment.
No
further
acts
of
implementation
of
the
proposed
settlement
were
accomplished
until
February
18,
1966,
when
Rosenblat
caused
the
appellant
to
order
that
the
shares
held
in
escrow
be
sold.
Harbinson
did
not
agree
that
the
apepllant
had
the
right
to
order
that
these
shares
be
sold,
because
according
to
the
terms
of
the
escrow,
these
shares
were
held
pending
directions
from
both
parties
by
their
solicitors.
This
dispute
was
not
resolved,
but
the
solicitors
were
given
a
direction
signed
by
both
Harbinson
and
Brilund
Mines
Limited
(see
Exhibit
14,
page
191).
It
read
as
follows:
February
18,
1966
Mr.
T.
P.
O’Connor,
Barrister
&
Solicitor,
320
Bay
Street,
Toronto
1,
Ontario.
Dear
Sir:—
With
reference
to
the
700,000
shares
of
Spooner
Mines
and
Oils
Limited
which
you
are
holding
in
voluntary
escrow
pending
a
determination
and
a
settlement,
you
are
hereby
authorized
to
dispose
of
this
stock
at
the
following
average
prices:
100,000
shares
at
70
Cents
per
share,
100,000
shares
at
75
Cents
per
share,
100,000
shares
at
80
Cents
per
share,
and
400,000
shares
at
85
Cents
per
share.
You
are
authorized
to
deliver
this
stock
against
payment
and
retain
the
proceeds
pending
instructions
from
Mr.
E.
Rosenblat
and
the
writer.
It
is
the
intention
that
these
shares
will
be
distributed
through
G.
W.
Nicholson
&
Co.
Ltd.
and
confirmations
will
be
forwarded
to
you
“In
Trust”.
You
are
also
authorized
to
return
the
shares
you
are
holding
in
excess
of
700,000
to
the
writer.
Yours
very
truly,
(Signed)
V.
N.
Harbinson
Agreed
and
Accepted:
BRILUND
MINES
LIMITED,
by
(Signed)
E.
Rosenblat
President
(Signed)
Paul
A.
Mazur
Secretary.
Certain
of
the
wording
of
this
authorization
is
significant,
namely,
the
words
‘‘pending
a
determination
and
a
settlement,
you
are
hereby
authorized’’
etc.;
and
the
words:
“You
are
authorized
.
.
.
pending
instructions
from
Mr.
E.
Rosenblat
and
the
writer’’.
Apparently,
and
I
accept
the
evidence
to
this
effect,
at
this
juncture,
Harbinson
unknown
to
Rosenblat
was
running
a
market
in
the
shares
of
Spooner
Mines
and
Oils
Limited
for
the
purpose
of
facilitating
an
underwriting
and
distribution
of
further
shares
of
Spooner
carried
out
by
a
company
known
as
New
Brunswick
Uranium
Metals
&
Mining
Limited,
which
latter
was
also
unknown
before
to
Rosenblat.
By
March
10,
1966,
after
certain
of
the
shares
had
been
sold,
Rosenblat
was
insisting
that
all
the
Spooner
shares
in
escrow
be
sold
and
apparently
Harbinson
did
not
wish
any
more
of
these
shares
sold
because
sales
of
these
shares
was
spoiling
the
market
he
was
running.
Finally,
on
April
7,
1966
the
settlement
which
had
been
tentative
up
to
that
time
was
made
between
the
appellant
and
Harbin-
son.
The
settlement
did
not
implement
the
terms
spelled
out
in
the
so-called
letter
of
intent
in
toto,
but
instead
the
terms
were
somewhat
modified
and
changed
in
certain
respects.
The
settlement
was
accomplished
in
the
following
manner
:
(1)
the
appellant
gave
a
release
to
Harbinson
for
the
sum
of
$5,000
(see
Exhibit
14,
page
213)
;
(2)
the
appellant
gave
a
release
to
Chapcoe
Investments
Corporation
Limited
(the
‘‘alter
ego’’
of
Harbinson)
for
the
sum
of
$75,000
;
(3)
the
appellant
gave
Harbinson
a
cheque
for
$140,000;
and
(4)
(as
of
April
7,
1966,
pursuant
to
the
said
direction
of
February
18,
1966,
T.
P.
O’Connor
had
caused
to
be
sold
322,000
shares
of
Spooner
and
had
received
for
such
$275,406.23,
and
there
were
still
378,000
shares
of
Spooner,
out
of
the
700,000,
in
escrow.
Harbinson
agreed
to
give
the
appellant
85^
a
share
for
these
shares,
the
market
was
then
about
$1.40.)
As
a
result,
Harbinson
gave
to
the
appellant
the
sum
of
$321,300.
Following
this,
Harbinson
directed
the
solicitor
T.
P.
O’Connor
to
deliver
the
said
moneys
and
the
said
378,000
shares
to
the
appellant
so
that
this
could
be
accomplished
(see
Exhibit
14,
page
209)
:
6th
April,
1966.
T.
P.
O’Connor,
Esq.,
Q.C.,
Messrs.
Carrick,
O’Connor
Coutts
&
Crane,
Barristers,
etc.,
320
Bay
Street,
TORONTO
Dear
Sir:
Re
:
Spooner
Mines
and
Oils
Ltd.
With
reference
to
my
agreement
with
Brilund
Mines
Limited
and
my
letter
to
you
of
18th
February,
1966,
you
are
hereby
authorized
and
directed
to
deliver
forthwith
to
Brilund
Mines
Limited
378,000
shares
of
Spooner
Mines
and
Oils
Limited
and
the
proceeds
from
the
sale
of
the
balance
of
the
700,000
shares
which
were
held
by
you
pursuant
to
the
letter
of
18th
February.
You
are
now
discharged
from
your
duties
as
Trustee
pursuant
to
the
said
letter
insofar
as
I
am
concerned.
Yours
very
truly,
V.
N.
Harbinson.
In
the
result,
therefore,
the
evidence
was
that
in
so
far
as
the
receipt
of
$451,706.23
is
concerned,
the
settlement
took
the
form
of
a
purchase
and
sale,
but
it
was
not..
Harbinson
did
not
wish
evidence
of
his
fraud
recorded
in
the
settlement
documents
and
the
appellant
agreed
to
this.
The
respondent
pleads
that
the
facts
upon
which
the
alleged
profit
of
$451,706.23
should
be
included
in
computing
the
appellant’s
income
for
1966
were
as
follows:
(a)
In
late
1965
or
early
1966
the
Appellant
purchased
from
one
V.
N.
Harbinson
700,000
shares
of
Spooner
Mines
and
Oils
Limited
(hereinafter
referred
to
as
“Spooner”)
at
20¢
per
share
for
the
sum
of
$140,000.00;
(b)
The
said
shares
were
purchased
pursuant
to
a
Letter
of
Intent
between
the
Appellant
and
Harbinson
dated
November
18,
1965,
which
provided
in
part
as
follows:
“VINCENT
NOBLE
HARBINSON
(called
‘Harbinson’)
and
BRILUND
MINES
LIMITED
(called
‘Brilund’)
do
hereby
signify
their
intent
to
enter
into
an
agreement
as
follows:
1.
Subject
to
acceptance
of
an
Amending
Filing
Statement
of
SPOONER
MINES
AND
OILS
LIMITED
(called
‘Spooner’)
by
the
Toronto
Stock
Exchange,
reflecting
the
within
transaction,
Brilund
will
purchase
from
Harbinson
700,000
shares
of
Spooner
at
20$
per
share
for
$140,000.00.”
(c)
The
700,000
shares
of
Spooner
were
placed
in
an
account
at
the
brokerage
house
of
G.
W.
Nicholson
&
Company
Limited,
under
the
name
of
“T.
P.
O’Connor
in
Trust”
(1.e.,
in
trust
for
the
Appellant)
;
(d)
By
letter
dated
February
18,
1966,
addressed
to
T.
P.
O’Connor,
Harbinson
instructed
T.
P.
O’Connor
to
sell
the
700,000
shares
at
prices
ranging
from
70$
per
share
to
85¢
per
share.
The
shares
were
to
be
distributed
through
G.
W.
Nicholson
&
Company
Limited.
This
letter
was
agreed
to
and
accepted
in
writing
by
the
Appellant,
by
its
President
and
Secretary;
(e)
Selling
of
the
said
Spooner
shares
on
the
open
market
commenced
on
March
2,
1966,
and
concluded
on
April
6,
1966.
During
this
period
322,000
shares
were
sold;
(f)
On
April
7,
1966,
the
remaining
378,000
shares
were
sold
to
Harbinson
at
85¢
per
share;
(g)
In
the
result
a
profit
of
$451,706.23
was
realized
by
the
Appellant,
as
follows:
Sales:
|
(through
|
account
“T.
P.
|
|
|
O’Connor
in
Trust”
at
G.
|
|
|
W.
Nicholson
&
Co.
Ltd.)
|
|
|
March
2/66
to
April
6/66
|
|
|
322,000
shares
|
|
$275,406.23
|
|
Sale
|
by
|
Appellant
|
to
|
|
|
Harbinson
|
|
|
April
7,
1966
|
|
|
378,000
shares
|
@
85¢
|
|
321,300.00
|
|
596,706.23
|
Cost
of
Sales
|
$140,000.00
|
|
Legal
Costs
|
5,000.00
|
145,000.00
|
Profit
|
|
$451,706.23
|
(h)
Concurrently
with
the
trading
in
the
shares
of
Spooner
referred
to
in
paragraph
(e)
hereof
an
underwriting
and
distribution
of
the
shares
of
Spooner
was
being
carried
out
by
a
company
known
as
New
Brunswick
Uranium
Metals
&
Mining
Limited;
(i)
Harbinson
was
an
officer
of
Spooner
and
New
Brunswick
Uranium
Metals
&
Mining
Limited;
(j)
The
said
700,000
shares
of
Spooner
were
trading
assets
of
the
Appellant,
and
not
capital
assets,
and
their
acquisition
and
disposition
was
done
in
the
course
of
the
carrying
out
of
a
business
or
adventure
or
concern
in
the
nature
of
trade;
(k)
The
profit
of
$451,706.23
realized
by
the
Appellant
on
the
purchase
and
resale
of
the
Spooner
shares
was
income
of
the
Appellant
from
a
busines
within
the
meaning
of
sections
3,
4
and
139(1)
(e)
of
the
Income
Tax
Act.
8.
The
basis
upon
which
the
Respondent
included
in
the
computation
of
the
Appelant’s
income
the
sum
of
$80,000.00
received
from
Harbinson
or
Chapcoe
Investments
Corporation
Limited
was
as
follows
:
(a)
In
1962
the
Appellant
commenced
two
actions
against
V.
N.
Harbinson,
and
others.
in
the
Supreme
Court
of
Ontario;
(b)
In
the
Statements
of
Claim
filed
in
these
actions
the
Appellant
alleged,
among
other
things,
more
particularly
set
out
in
the
Statements
of
Claim
(i)
that
Harbinson,
as
well
as
Ray
H.
Smith,
Ben
and
Harry
Smith
and
others
conspired
to
defraud
the
Appellant
and
to
deprive
it
of
profits,
(ii)
that
Harbinson,
Chapcoe
and
others
took
a
secret
profit
at
the
expense
of
the
Appellant,
(iii)
that
as
a
result
of
certain
acts
of
Harbinson
and
others
the
Appellant
lost
profits
it
ought
to
have
made;
(c)
In
the
Statement
of
Claim
the
Appellant
claimed,
inter
alia,
(i)
a
declaration,
as
against
Harbinson
and
other
defendants,
that
it
was
entitled
to
receive
from
them
any
and
all
shares
of
New
Chamberlain
Petroleums
Limited
or
Scarcee
Petroleums
Limited
owned
by
them
or
in
their
posession,
power
or
control,
(ii)
a
declaration
that
Harbinson
held
all
shares
of
Spooner
acquired
from
the
Appellant
under
an
Agreement
dated
February
16,
1957,
of
which
he
was
in
possession
or
control
in
trust
for
the
Appellant,
(iii)
an
accounting
of
profits,
(iv)
damages;
(d)
Paragraph
2
of
the
Letter
of
Intent
referred
to
in
paragraph
7
hereof
provided:
“2.
CHAPCOE
and/or
HARBINSON
will
pay
Brilund
$80,000.00
in
full
settlement
of
all
Brilund’s
claims
against
him
arising
out
of
the
matters
referred
to
in
Supreme
Court
of
Ontario
Writs
of
Summons
Nos.
5092/62
and
8911/62.”
(e)
Pursuant
thereto
the
Appellant
received
from
Harbinson
or
Chapcoe
(a
company
owned
and
controlled
by
Harbinson)
$80,000.00;
(f)
The
said
sum
represented
payment
to
the
Appellant
of
lost
profits
or
property
of
an
income
nature
and
was
not
the
payment
of
a
capital
amount;
(g)
The
said
sum
was
income
to
the
Appellant
from
a
business.
9.
The
facts
set
out
in
paragraphs
7
and
8
hereof
were
before
the
officials
of
the
Respondent
on
assessing
and
on
confirming
the
assessment,
were
assumed
to
be
true,
and
were
taken
into
account
by
them
in
concluding
that
the
sums
of
$451,706.23
and
$80,000.00
should
be
included
in
computing
the
Appellant’s
income
for
1966.
As
appears
from
the
above
summary
of
the
facts,
the
appellant
in
this
whole
transaction,
after
the
settlement
of
the
two
lawsuits,
received
receipts
of
$451,706.23
and
$80,000.
These
receipts
were
made
up
of
(1)
the
value
of
the
cash
and
the
Spooner
and
Chamberlain
shares
appropriated
by
Harbinson,
(2)
probably
most
of
the
gain
or
profit
made
by
Harbinson
in
his
dealings
with
these
Spooner
and
Chamberlain
shares
of
the
appellant,
and
(3)
the
gain
or
profit
made
by
the
appellant
when
it
sold
the
Spooner
shares
it
obtained
in
the
settlement
by
reason
of
the
increase
in
their
market
value
over
and
above
their
market
value
when
the
basis
of
settlement
was
proposed
on
November
18,
1965.
To
be
income
within
the
meaning
of
the
Income
Tax
Act,
of
course,
the
subject
receipts
must
be
traceable
to
an
income
source
(1)
within
the
provisions
of
the
Income
Tax
Act,
and
(2)
that
was
pleaded.
The
appellant
submitted
that
the
receipt
of
all
these
moneys
and
shares
should
be
categorized
in
the
broad
way
as
a
gross
receipt
in
a
settlement
of
a
claim
for
damages
in
tort,
which
in
substance
implemented
the
prayer
for
relief
in
its
statement
of
claim
in
the
action
between
the
appellant
and
Harbinson
ef
al.
numbered
8911/62
at
paragraph
22(g),
viz.:
“damages
against
the
defendants
in
the
sum
of
$250,000’’;
that
what
really
took
place
on
April
7,
1966
was
an
abridged
implementation
of
à
tentative
settlement
made
on
November
18,
1965,
namely,
by
way
of
the
so-called
letter
of
intent
(see
Exhibit
14,
page
189)
;
that
the
fact
that
the
market
price
of
the
Spooner
shares
received
in
settlement
went
up
was
purely
fortuitous;
and
that
these
shares
were
sold
not
because
the
appellant
did
not
intend
originally
to
hold
these
shares
as
an
investment,
but,
on
the
contrary,
because
the
circumstances
had
changed
which
made
the
holding
of
such
shares
inadvisable
for
the
appellant;
that
these
changed
circumstances
were
that
Harbinson
could
not
deliver
four
of
the
seven
directors
of
Spooner
and
that
between
November
18,
1965
and
January
5,
1966
the
appellant
through
Rosen-
blat
had
found
that
Spooner
had
disposed
of
its
shares
in
Scarcee
which
the
appellant
through
Rosenblat
considered
one
of
the
most
valuable
assets
of
Spooner
and
one
which
would
have
caused
the
appellant
to
hold
the
Spooner
shares
as
an
investment;
and
that
because
of
the
underwriting
and
further
distribution
of
shares
of
Spooner
by
Harbinson
through
New
Brunswick
Uranium
Metals
&
Mining
Limited,
all
of
which
was
unknown
to
the
appellant
through
Rosenblat,
that
the
appellant
could
not
get
effective
control
of
Spooner.
The
respondent,
inter
alia,
submitted
that
the
appellant
in
1956
and
1957,
when
Ben
and
Harry
Smith
controlled
it,
held
this
portfolio
of
shares
as
inventory;
and
that
from
1962
on
and
including
the
critical
years
1965
and
1966,
that
the
appellant
continued
to
hold
shares
in
other
companies
as
inventory;
and
that,
therefore,
this
whole
transaction
with
Harbinson
in
the
manner
mentioned,
by
which
the
appellant
received
the
said
gain,
was
a
trading
transaction.
In
my
view,
the
evidence
established
the
following
:
A
lump
sum
settlement
was
made
by
the
appellant
with
Harbinson
in
respect
to
two
lawsuits
in
the
Supreme
Court
of
Ontario
which
it
had
against
Harbinson.
The
main
action
numbered
8911/62
above
referred
to
in
the
main
related
to
dealings
by
Harbinson
in
Spooner
shares
of
the
appellant;
and
the
appellant
in
it
claimed
damages
of
$250,000.
The
other
action
numbered
5092/62
above
referred
to
in
the
main
related
to
dealings
by
Harbinson
in
the
New
Chamberlain
shares
of
the
appellant.
The
manner
in
which
this
proposal
of
settlement
was
made
by
the
appellant
is
set
out
in
the
private
notes
of
Rosenblat
(see
Exhibit
14,
page
178).
In
sum
the
proposal
aimed
at
getting
back
for
the
appellant
all
the
benefits
Harbinson
realized
from
his
fraudulent
dealings
in
the
Spooner
and
Chamberlain
shares
of
the
appellant
and
the
cash
of
the
appellant
he
received.
This
lamp
sum
settlement
was
made
part
in
specie,
namely,
by
way
of
shares
in
Spooner,
and
by
a
payment
of
$80,000
in
cash.
But
as
noted
the
settlement
in
specie
involved
also
a
purchase
by
the
appellant
for
100,000
shares
of
Spooner
for
$140,000.
This
lump
sum
settlement,
also
in
so
far
as
the
shares
were
concerned,
had
another
complicating
factor
in
that
it
took
the
form
of
a
purchase
and
sale,
but
the
evidence
discloses,
and
I
so
find,
that
there
was
no
purchase
and
sale.
The
transaction
only
took
the
form
of
a
purchase
and
sale.
This
lump
sum
settlement
was
made
after
considerable
negotiations.
Such
negotiations
were
made
at
the
same
time
as
the
negotiations
for
the
settlement
of
the
lawsuits
involving
Ben
and
Harry
Smith,
the
bank
and
others.
It
was
first
of
all
put
in
tentative
form
by
way
of
a
so-called
letter
of
intent
dated
November
18,
1965
above
referred
to.
It
is
questionable
whether,
when
he
signed
this
so-called
letter
of
intent,
Harbinson
ever
intended
to
enter
into
a
firm
settlement
at
all.
On
the
contrary,
it
may
very
well
be
that
Harbinson
was.
persuaded
to
enter
into
this
lump
sum
settlement
that
be
made
with
the
appellant
because
of
the
timing
of
Rosenblat’s
activities
in
trying
to
settle
with
him
in
that
as
a
result
the
latter
experienced
a
disturbance
by
Rosenblat,
of
the
market
he,
Harbinson,
was
running
in
Spooner
shares
in
January
and
February
1966,
and
he
wished
to
get
Rosenblat
and
the
appellant
out
of
the
picture
so
that
he
could
make
his
own
gain
by
his
activities.
In
any
event,
as
a
consequence,
the
appellant
in
this
lump
sum
settlement
got
more
than
it
would
have
if
the
lump
sum
settlement
had
been
made
pursuant
to
the
so-called
letter
of
intent
and.
around
the
date
November
19,
1965,
or
in
any
event
before
the
time
when
Harbinson
commenced
to
run
a
market
in
the
Spooner
shares.
On
the
evidence
also,
I
am
of
the
view
that
the
appellant
intended,
prior
to
the
final
implementation
of
the
settlement,
to
hold
as
an
investment,
the
Spooner
shares
that
it
hoped
to
obtain
in
the
settlement,
but
the
appellant
changed
its
mind
when
and
because
Harbinson
could
not
cause
the
majority
of
directors
of
Spooner
to
be
elected
for
the
appellant,
because
the
Scarcee
shares
had
been
sold
from
the
Spooner
portfolio,
and
also
because
the
appellant
found
out
that
the
option
for
further
shares
in
Spooner
had
been
given
to
a
third
party
unknown
to
the
appellant,
which
would
have
resulted
in
the
appellant
not
having
effective
control
of
Spooner.
I
am
also
of
the
view
that
the
acts
of
the
directors
and
officers
of
the
appellant
which
made
possible
this
fraudulent
appropriation
of
the
property
of
the
appellant
by
Harbinson
were
ultra
vires
their
powers.
As
a
consequence,
the
intent
therefore
of
these
officers
and
directors
at
the
various
times
as
to
whether
the
appellant
intended
to
hold
the
Spooner
and
Chamberlain
shares
as
investments
or
trading
assets,
was
not
the
intent
of
the
appellant
which
was
the
victim
of
such
former
intent.
Because
the
intention
of
the
officers
and
directors
in
1956
in
acquiring
the
subject
shares
is
not
to
be
imputed
to
the
appellant
because
of
fraud,
the
intention
for
the
purpose
of
the
Income
Tax
Act
of
the
company
therefore
in
acquiring
these
shares
is
neutral.
In
other
words,
the
appellant
had
neither
the
intention
of
acquiring
or
holding
the
Spooner
and
Chamberlain
shares
as
trading
assets
nor
as
investments,
at
any
time
prior
to
November
18,
1965.
That
date
was
the
first
time
the
company
had
an
intention.
On
that
date
the
appellant
hoped
to
acquire
the
said
Spooner
shares
in
the
setttlement
of
these
two
actions.
Rosenblat
for
the
appellant
negotiated
the
acquisition
of
these
shares
and
intended
the
appellant
to
hold
them
as
investments
;
and
he
also
caused
the
appellant
to
dispose
of
these
shares
at
the
time
already
stated,
and
for
the
reasons
also
already
stated.
As
to
the
gains
or
profits
made
by
Harbinson
in
dealing
with
the
Spooner
and
Chamberlain
shares
of
the
appellant
that
he
fraudulently
appropriated
to
himself,
and
which
the
appellant
received
in
substantial
measure
in
the
settlement,
I
am
of
the
view
that
different
principles
apply.
While
Harbinson’s
relationship
with
the
appellant
was
not
one
of
the
classical
fiduciary
relationships,
neverthelesss,
because
of
the
fraud
he
committed
in
appropriating
to
himself
these
shares
(and
cash)
of
the
appellant
(made
possible
by
the
acts
of
Ben
Smith
and
Harry
Smith
and
others
as
mentioned),
the
appellant
was
entitled
to
have
restored
to
it
the
profits
or
gains
that
Harbinson
made
from
dealing
in
these
shares,
and
probably
the
Court,
if
the
two
actions
had
proceeded
to
judgment,
would
have
imposed,
in
respect
to
such
profits
or
gains,
a
constructive
trust
on
Harbinson
in
like
manner
as
a
court
would
have
if
the
relationship
had
been
one
of
the
classical
fiduciary
relationships.
In
other
words,
the
appellant
was
entitled
to
such
profits
or
gains.
On
the
settlement,
the
appellant
probably
received
most
of
the
gains
or
profits
Harbinson
made
in
connection
with
his
dealings
in
these
shares
he
appropriated
from
the
appellant.
To
the
extent
that
the
settlement
included
any
such
gains
or
profits
made
by
Harbinson
(and
as
to
the
quantum
of
these,
I
make
no
finding),
in
my
view,
such
profits
or
gains
are
not
receipts
from
a
“business’’
within
the
extended
meaning
prescribed
in
Section
139(1)(e)
of
the
Income
Tax
Act.
This
was
a
transaction
of
a
different
character
entirely
from
the
type
of
transaction
envisaged
in
the
judicial
concept
of
‘‘an
adventure
in
the
nature
of
trade’’.
Such
latter
type
of
transaction
was
exhaustively
examined
in
the
case
of
M.N.R.
v.
James
A.
Taylor,
[1956-60]
Ex.
C.R.
3;
[1956]
C.T.C.
189,
by.
Thorson,
P.,
the
former
President
of
this
Court.
The
subject
profits
or
gains
are
probably
in
a
similar
category
as
secret
profits
recovered
by
a
cestui
que
trust
in
a
fiduciary
relationship
case,
viz.,
not
income
from
a
source
prescribed
in
the
Income
Tax
Act.
In
the
result,
the
appeal
is
allowed
with
costs,
and
the
reassessments
are
referred
back
for
further
re-assessment
not
inconsistent
with
these
reasons.
Counsel
for
the
appellant
may
prepare
in
both
official
languages
an
appropriate
judgment
to
implement
the
foregoing
conclusions
and
may
move
for
judgment
in
accordance
with
Rule
172(1)
(b).