JACKETT,
P.:—This
is
an
appeal
from
a
decision
of
the
Tax
Appeal
Board
dismissing
the
appeal
of
the
appellant
from
reassessments
made
against
him
on
a
net
worth
basis
for
the
1952,
1953,
1955,
1956,
1957,
1958,
1959
and
1960
taxation
years,
and
a
cross-appeal
by
the
Minister
from
the
Board’s
decision
that
the
penalties
for
all
except
the
1960
taxation
year
under
Section
56
of
the
Income
Tax
Act
were
wrongly
imposed.
As
far
as
the
appeal
is
concerned,
no
submission
was
made
to
me
on
the
basis
of
which
I
could
hold
that
the
penalty
for
the
1960
year
was
wrongly
imposed
and
that
part
of
the
appeal
is,
therefore,
dismissed.
The
main
thrust
of
the
appeal
was
directed
to
bringing
about
an
elimination
of
part,
but
not
all,
of
the
additional
tax
levied
by
re-assessment
as
a
result
of
a
‘‘net
worth’’
appraisal
of
the
taxpayer’s
affairs.
In
my
view,
an
attack
on
such
an
assessment
should
be
dealt
with
in
the
manner
indicated
by
Cameron,
J.
in
Chernenkoff
v.
M.N.R.
[1950]
Ex.
C.R.
15
at
22-21;
[1949]
C.T.C.
369
at
374-379,
where
he
said:
In
effect,
the
appellant
agrees
that
the
“net
worth”
computation
of
her
income
is
a
satisfactory
basis
for
arriving
at
her
taxable
income,
but
that
some
of
the
items—those
which
I
have
indicated
—are
wrong.
When
these
are
corrected
in
accordance
with
the
evidence
adduced—so
she
states—the
result
is
that
there
is
no
taxable
income
for
any
of
the
years
in
question.
My
opinion
is
that
the
appellant
must
do
far
more
than
she
has
attempted
to
do
here
if
her
appeal
is
to
be
successful.
There
can
be
no
question
that
the
onus
lies
on
the
appellant
and
that,
in
my
view,
means
that
she
must
establish
affirmatively
that
her
taxable
income
was
not
that
for
each
of
the
years
for
which
she
was
assessed.
Two
courses
were
open
to
her,
the
first
being
to
establish
her
income
with
proper
deductions
and
allowances,
and
that
course
could
quite
readily
have
been
followed.
In
the
absence
of
records,
the
alternative
course
open
to
the
appellant
was
to
prove
that
even
on
a
proper
and
complete
“net
worth”
basis
the
assessments
were
wrong.
But
that
also
she
has
failed
to
do.
In
this
case,
it
was
found
that
there
was
an
increase
of
over
$45,000
in
the
appellant’s
net
worth
over
the
period
in
question
that
was
unexplained
by
his
declared
income
or
other
apparent
sources.
He
was
re-assessed
accordingly:
Of
this
amount,
some
$16,381.07
was
explained
by
undeclared
reventies
and
claims
for
expenditures
not
made
that
the
investigators
were
able
to
uncover.
The
balance
of
$26,801.27
not
being
explained,
the
assessments
were
made
on
the
assumption
that
it
came
from
income
that
had
not
been
revealed.
The
appellant,
in
this
Court,
made
no
attempt
to
show
what
his
actual
income
for
each
year
was.
He
contented
himself
with
a
principal
attack
on
the
Minister’s
net
worth
calculations
—
being
that
he
had
over
$20,000
in
currency
in
a
trunk
at
the
beginning
of
the
period
and
not
merely
the
$3,800
allowed
by
the
Minister
—
and
some
rather
subsidiary
attacks.
As
far
as
the
currency
on
hand
at
the
beginning
of
the
period
is
concerned,
I
find
the
appellant’s
evidence
unconvincing.
Not
only
did
his
story
vary
according
to
the
circumstances
put
to
him,
but
it
would
appear
that,
during
the
period
when
he
claims
to
have
had
a
large
part
of
the
money
in
currency,
he
swore
an
affidavit
under
the
Farmers
Creditors
Arrangement
Act
that
is
inconsistent
with
his
having
any
of
it.
While
I
do
not
think
that,
in
these
cases,
one
should
be
to
suspicious
of
testimony
by
the
taxpayer
that
supports
his
case
—
because:frequently
it
will
be
the
only
testimony
available
to
him
—
in
this
case,
the
appellant
must
be
assumed
to
have
had
a
much
better
knowledge
of
his
affairs,
as
they
then
were,
when
he
took
that
affidavit
than
he
has
now
many
years
later.
I
am
of
the
view
that
the
appellant’s
testimony
on
many
vital
points
is
a
mere
reconstruction
today
of
what
he
now
thinks
must
have
been
the
facts
at
an
earlier
time,
and
that
that
reconstruction
is
influenced
by
what
he
would
like
the
facts
to
be.
That
being
so,
I
cannot
accept
it.
With
reference
to
the
subsidiary
attacks
on
the
amounts
of
the
re-assessments,
they
fall
far
short
of
establishing
that
any
particular
assessment
was
excessive.
I
am
of
the
view
that
the
allowances
made
in
the
statements
for
personal
expenses
were,
far
from
being
excessive,
on
the
low
side,
and
that
any
minor
errors
revealed
in
other
parts
of
the
statements
are
more
than
compensated
for
by
that
fact.
For
the
above
reasons,
I
decided
at
the
end
of
the
argument
for
the
appellant
to
dismiss
the
appeal
and
I
did
not
call
on
counsel
for
the
respondent
with
regard
thereto.
On
the
cross-appeal,
I
note
first
that
the
penalties
in
question
were
levied
under
Section
56(1)
of
the
Income
Tax
Act,
which
reads
as
follows:
56.
(1)
Every
person
who
has
wilfully,
in
any
manner,
evaded
or
attempted
to
evade
payment
of
the
tax
payable
by
him
under
this
Part
for
a
taxation
year
or
any
part
thereof
is
liable
to
a
penalty,
to
be
fixed
by
the
Minister,
of
not
less
than
25%
and
not
more
than
50%
of
the
amount
of
the
tax
evaded
or
sought
to
be
evaded.
and
that
they
were
disallowed
by
the
Tax
Appeal
Board
for
the
reasons
given
in
Légaré
Foundry
Limited
v.
M.
N.
R.,
36
Tax
A.B.C.
351.
The
reasons
referred
to
are,
I
believe,
in
part,
those
set
out
in
the
quotation
at
page
375
from
Mr.
Fisher’s
Judgment
in
No.
632
v.
M.N.R.,
22
Tax
A.B.C.
120,
reading:
.
.
.
Section
51A
is
merely
a
penalty
provision
which
is
to
be
applied
if
the
Minister
is
of
the
opinion
that
the
taxpayer
has
wilfully
evaded,
or
attempted
to
evade,
payment
of
the
tax
payable
by
him,
or
any
part
thereof,
for
a
taxation
year.
Evasion
or
attempted
evasion
of
payment
of
the
whole
or
any
part
of
the
tax
payable
by
a
taxpayer
can
very
easily
be
quite
a
different
thing
from
committing
a
fraud
or
making
wilful
misrepresentation,
and
is
a
distinct
and
separate
offence
from.
that
envisaged
by
the
provisions
of
subsection
(4)
of
Section
46
of
chapter
148
of
the
Revised
Statutes
of
Canada
which
gives
the
Minister
the
power
to
re-assess
at
any
time.
I
need
only
indicate
one
example,
where
a
taxpayer
has
fully
reported
all
his
income
and
has
made
no
mis-
representation,
either
innocent
or
wilful,
and
has
committed
no
fraud
whatsoever.
He
has
not,
however,
made
any
payment
against
his
assessed
tax
and
has
so
dealt
with
his
assets,
by
transferring
them
to
other
parties
or
taking:
them
outside
the
jurisdiction,
that
he
has
attempted
to
evade
payment
of
the
tax
which
the
Minister
has
assessed
against
him.
In
such
a
case,
the
legislation
provides
that
the
Minister
may
impose
an
additional
penalty
and
endeavour
to
collect
this
amount
in
addition
to
the
tax
previously
owing,
but
IJ
am
sure
it
will
be
recognized
that
this
is
not
the
same
thing
as
the
misrepresentation
or
fraud
referred
to
in
Section
46
of
the
Income
Tax
Act.
I
cannot
agree
with
the
view
expressed
in
this
passage
that
the
penalty
provision
only
applies
to
action
taken
to
evade
collection
of
tax.
In
my
view,
one
can
evade
payment
of
income
tax
by
concealing
the
existence
of
the
income
just
as
effectively
as
by
concealing
one’s
assets
so
that
the
tax
cannot
be
collected.
The
view
of
the
effect
of
Section
56(1)
adopted
in
the
Légaré
case
is
also
supported
(page
382)
by
reference
to
the
definition
of
“tax
payable’’
contained
in
Section
139(1)
(ba).
I
cannot
agree
that
this
provision
makes
Section
56(1)
inapplicable
in
respect
of
what
has
happened
before
the
assessment.
I
am,
however,
of
the
view
that
the
closs-appeal
should
nevertheless
be
dismissed
because
the
Reply
to
the
Notice
of
Appeal
does
not
sufficiently
allege
the
facts
necessary
for
its
success.
The
allegations
of
facts,
or
of
facts
that
were
assumed
in
making
the
assessments
for
penalties,
as
set
out
in
the
Reply,
do
not
establish,
if
correct,
that
the
penalty
assessments
were
properly
made.
Without
saying
whether
or
not
the
pleading
would
otherwise
be
sufficient,
it
will
suffice
to
say
that
there
is
no
allegation
of
any
amount
of
tax
that
was
evaded,
or
sought
to
be
evaded.
In
the
absence
of
such
information,
it
is
impossible
for
the
Court
to
determine
whether
any
particular
penalty
was
in
an
amount
authorized
by
Section
56(1).
If
such
amounts
had
been
so
alleged,
the
allegations
would
have
necessarily
involved
connecting
up
the
amounts
with
the
facts
giving
rise
to
the
application
of
Section
56(1)
in
such
a
way
as
to
raise
the
factual
issues
that
the
Court
would
have
to
decide
to
determine
whether
the
penalties
were
properly
imposed.
The
appellant
would
then
have
been
put
on
notice
of
what
was
alleged
against
him
and
could
have
pleaded
accordingly
so
that
the
issues
of
fact,
if
any,
would
have
been
crystallized
for
purposes
of
trial.*
In
the
result,
both
appeals
are
dismissed
without
costs.