KERR,
J.:—This
is
an
appeal
with
respect
to
income
tax
assessments
under
the
Income
Tax
Act
for
the
appellant’s
1963,
1964
and
1965
taxation
years.
It
relates
to
amounts
of
$18,750
paid
by
the
appellant
in
each
of
those
years
to
the
Royal
Bank
of
Canada
to
make
good
a
guarantee
given
by
him
to
the
bank
by
which
he
personally
guaranteed
the
credit
of
Calgary
Iron
and
Engineering
Limited.
The
appellant
deducted
the
payments
in
his
income
tax
returns.
The
Minister
disallowed
the
deductions.
The
appeal
is
against
such
disallowance.
The
appellant’s
Notice
of
Appeal
states,
inter
aha:
It
is
submitted,
however,
that
the
facts
of
this
case
bring
the
loss.
within
the
deductions
allowed
under
Section
32(5)
(d)
of
the
Income
Tax
Act
....
*
The
taxpayer
entered
into
the
guarantee
with
the
company’s
bankers
for
a
consideration
which
itself
would
have
been
classified
as
income
in
the
hands
of
the
taxpayer
under
the
provisions
of
the
Income
Tax
Act.
It
is
submitted
that
in
entering
into
such
an
Agreement
the
taxpayer
was
carrying
on
a
business,
i.e.,
entering
into
an
Agreement
with
the
intention
of
earning
income
.
.
.
.
The
entering
into
of
a
guarantee
for
a
consideration
is
an
“adventure
in
the
nature
of
trade”.
.
.
the
taxpayer
in.
this
case
entered
into
the
guarantee
for
the
purpose.
of
earning
income
and
in
so
doing
was
entering
into
an
“adventure
in
the
nature
of
trade”.
In
the
alternative,
as
the
taxpayer
was
the
owner
of
one
hundred
(100%)
percent
of
the
shares
of
Calgary
Iron
and
Engineering
Limited,
the
guarantee
was
entered
into
by
the
taxpayer
in
the
hope
that
the
said
Company
would
make
a
profit
and
generate
income,
which
would
accrue
to
the
taxpayer.
The
transaction
was
therefore
an
income
transaction
being
in
the
nature
of
trade.
The
taxpayer
relies
upon
the
decision
in
Freud
v.
M.N.R.,
[1968]
C.T.C.
438.
The
interest
portion
of
the
payments
made
by
the
taxpayer
to
the
Bank
are
in
any
event
deductible
as
being
interest
paid
for
the
purpose
of
earning
income.
The
main
issue
is
whether,
as
contended
by
the
appellant,
the
payments
were
business
losses
sustained
by
him
in
the
course
of
the
carrying
on
of
a
business
and
an
adventure
in
the
nature
of
trade,
within
Sections
32(5)
(d)
and
139(1)(e)
of
the
Act,
on
the
one
hand,
or,
as
contended
by
the
Minister,
the
payments
were
capital
outlays
for
losses
within
Section
12(1)
(b)
and
were
not
payments
made
or
incurred
by
the
appellant
for
the
purpose
of
gaining
or
procuring
income
from
property
or
a
business
of
the
appellant,
within
the
meaning
of
Section
12(1)
(a).t
The
appellant
is
a
barrister
and
solicitor
who
has
practised
law
in
Calgary
continuously
since
1940.
That
is
his
principal
occupation
but
he
has
also
had
other
fairly
extensive
business
activities.
At
relevant
times
he
was
an
officer
and
beneficial
owner
of
all
the
shares
of
the
aforesaid
Calgary
Iron
and
Engineering
Limited,
a
company
that
he
caused
to
be
incorporated
in
1953,
which
I
shall
refer
to
as
‘the
new
company’’.
There
was
an
old
predecessor
company,
Calgary
Iron
Works
Limited.
The
life
of
this
company
went
back
to
before
1900
and
continued
until
1953.
The
appellant’s
father
had
control
of
it
and
owned
90%
of
its
shares.
The
father
died
in
1950,
at
which
time
the
company
was
a
going
concern.
By
his
will
he
gave
a
fixed
income
to
his
widow
and
left
her
a
life
estate
with
the
residue
going
to
the
appellant
and
the
appellant’s
younger
brother,
who
was
practising
law
with
him.
The
appellant
explained
why
he
caused
the
new
company
to
be
incorporated.
He
said
that
his
brother
had
taken
no
interest
in
the
old
company,
but
he
himself
had
taken
an
interest
in
it
even
while
his
father
was
alive
and
he
wanted
to
keep
its
business
going
after
his
father’s
death
because
he
thought
it
would
be
a
good
source
of
income
for
himself.
The
old
company
was
the
major
asset
of
his
father’s
estate.
The
other
assets
were
not
nearly
suffiicient
to
keep
his
widow
in
the
way
she
was
accustomed
to
live,
and
after
the
father’s
death
efforts
were
made
to
sell
the
old
company
for
a
price
sufficient
to
meet
the
widow’s
needs.
But
no
purchaser
was
found.
The
appellant
then
took
steps
to
serve
the
dual
purpose
of
providing
his
father’s
estate
with
capital
to
meet
the
widow’s
needs
and
of
retaining
the
old
company
business
for
his
own
benefit.
This
involved
a
purchase
minus
(d)
business
losses
sustained
in
the
taxation
year
in
the
course
of
the
carrying
on
of
a
business
either
alone
or
as
a
partner
actively
engaged
in
the
business,
139.
(1)
In
this
Act,
(e)
“business”
includes
a
profession,
calling,
trade,
manufacture
or
undertaking
of
any
kind
whatsoever
and
includes
an
adventure
or
concern
in
the
nature
of
trade
but
does
not
include
an
office
or
employment;
12.
(1)
In
computing
income,
no
deduction
shall
be
made
in
respect
of
(a)
an
outlay
or
expense
except
to
the
extent
that
it
was
made
or
incurred
by
the
taxpayer
for
the
purpose
of
gaining
or
producing
income
from
property
or
a
business
of
the
taxpayer,
(b)
an
outlay,
loss
or
replacement
of
capital,
a
payment
on
account
of
capital
or
an
allowance
in
respect
of
depreciation,
obsolescence
or
depletion
except
as
expressly
permitted
by
this
Part,
by
him
of
the
assets
of
the
old
company
from
his
father’s
estate,
incorporation
of
the
new
company,
and
a
sale
by
him
of
the
said
assets
to
the
new
company
that
he
owned
and
controlled.
By
an
agreement
dated
January
2,
1952
he
purchased
the
assets
of
the
old
company
for
a
consideration
which
included
payment
of
$225,000
and
assumption
of
debts.
In
turn,
by
an
agreement
dated
February
19,
1953,
he
sold
the
assets
to
the
new
company
for
a
consideration
which
included
a
cash
payment
of
$225,000
and
issue
of
shares
of
the
company.
He
arranged
the
financing
of
the
transactions
though
a
bank
loan
of
$150,000
and
a
second
mortgage
for
$80,000,
both
of
which
were
repaid
by
the
company
by
1958,
in
part
by
sale
of
its
real
property.
After
its
incorporation
the
appellant
also
personally
lent
$25,000
to
the
company
and
it
too
was
subsequently
repaid.
The
business
of
the
old
company
was
carried
on
until
the
incorporation
of
the
new
company
much
as
it
had
been
carried
on
before
the
father’s
death,
but
when
the
new
company
was
incorporated
the
appellant
endeavoured
to
expand
its
facilities
and
improve
its
business.
Until
1958
it
made
modest
profits.
It
paid
no
dividends
but
the
appellant
took
sums
from
it
as
salary
or
bonus.
Prior
to
1960
the
company
had
a
limited
line
of
credit
with
the
bank,
for
operational
purposes,
in
addition
to
its
loan
for
purchase
of
the
assets
of
the
old
company.
The
indebtedness
varied
from
time
to
time.
The
appellant
originally
gave
his
personal
guarantee
to
the
bank
with
respect
to
the
bank
loans.
However,
it
was
not
on
that
guarantee,
but
on
an
extension
of
it,
that
he
was
called
upon
to
pay.
In
the
period
1958-60
the
company
was
in
financial
difficulties
and
was
operating
at
a
loss,
which
the
appellant
attributed
to
an
over-ambitious
expansion
program
and
ineffective
management.
Its
indebtedness
to
the
bank
had
increased,
it
had
sold
its
real
property
and
applied
the
proceeds
towards
the
bank
loan,
it
had
taken
a
lease-back
of
the
real
estate
and
in
that
connection
gave
a
chattel
mortgage
on
the
company’s
equipment
to
the
landlord.
In
1960
affairs
reached
a
crisis.
Its
liabilities
exceeded
its
assets.
It
was
facing
bankruptcy.
The
bank
proposed
to
call
its
loans,
but
offered
to
extend
additional
credit
to
keep
the
company
going,
provided
that
the
appellant
would
give
a
formal
personal
guarantee
and
deposit
security.
He
agreed
and
gave
the
guarantee,
the
one
which
he
was
later
called
upon
to
honour.
He
also
deposited
securities
worth
$70,000,
of
which
$50,000
belonged
to
his
wife.
As
additional
security
the
company
gave
an
assignment
of
book
debts
and
accounts
receivable
to
the
bank.
Thus
the
company
was
then
able
to
continue
in
business
and
did
so
for
about
a
year,
but
in
1961
the
bank
called
its
loans
and
realized
on
the
company’s
receivables.
and
inventory
and
on
the
securities
deposited
by
the
appellant.
The
landlord
who
held
the
chattel
mortgage
seized
the
company’s
equipment.
And
the
company
went
out
of
business.
Then
the
bank
required
the
appellant
to
honour
his
guarantee.
As
already
indicated
the
company
had
a
line
of
credit
with
the
bank
in
the
years
prior
to
1960
in
respect
of
which.
the
appellant
had
given
a
limited
personal
guarantee,
but
by
the
time
of
the
1960
crisis
the
limit
of
credit
had
been
reached
and
additional
bank
financing
was
needed.
The
appellant
said
that
he
decided
to
try
to
keep
the
company
going
rather
than
have
it
eo
into
bankruptcy
and
that
he
gave
the
guarantee
so
that
it
could
continue
in
business
and
be,
as
it
formerly
had
been,
a
source
of
income
for
him.
But
he
was
concerned
about
the
additional
guarantee
and
the
possibility
that
he
might
have
to
honour
it.
He
consulted
income
tax
experts
on
the
implications,
income
tax-wise,
of
being
called
upon
to
make
payments
on
the
guarantee
and
the
advice
he
received
was
that
where
a
guarantee
is
given
for
consideration
a
payment
under
the
guarantee
would
be
deductible
from
income
as
a
business
loss.
The
result
was
that
the
agreement
which
he
entered
into
with
the
company
provided
that
in
consideration
of
his
guaranteeing
its
account
with
the
bank
it
would
pay
him
an
annual
fee.
The
terms
of
the
agreement
are
set
forth
in
a
letter
(Exhibit
A-2),
dated
March
16,
1960,
from
the
appellant
to
the
company,
as
follows:
March
16,
1960.
Calgary
Iron
and
Engineering
Limited,
CALGARY,
Alta.
Dear
Sirs,
You
have
represented
to
me
that
you
have
been
borrowing
money
from
the
Main
Branch
of
the
Royal
Bank
of
Canada,
Calgary,
and
I
have
heretofore
guaranteed
that
account
within
certain
limits.
You
are
now
at
the
extent
of
your
limits
and
require
additional
bank
financing,
which
the
bank
is
not
prepared
to
give
to
you
unless
I
extend
my
guarantee
of
your
account
and
in
addition
pledge
to
the
bank
certain
securities
as
security
for
my
guarantee.
It
is
hereby
agreed
between
us
that
if
I-
guarantee
your
account
to
the
Royal
Bank
in
an
amount
of
$300,000.00
or
in
excess
thereof
you
will
pay
me
an
annual
fee
of
$3,000.00
as
consideration
therefor,
such
amounts
to
be
paid
to
me
on
the
annual
dates
of
this
letter
agreement.
It
is
further
agreed
that
if
the
amount
of
your
indebtedness
to
the
bank
and
to
which
my
guarantee
applies
is
reduced
to
$200,000.00,
the
aforesaid
fee
will
be
reduced
to
$2,000.00
and
if
the
guarantee
is
reduced
to
$100,000.00,
the
fee
will
be
reduced
to
$1,000.00.
Should
your
indebtedness
be
reduced
or
repaid
at
any
time
during
the
year
and
the
guarantee
be
reduced
or
released
you
will
then
only
be
responsible
for
a
pro
rata
amount
of
the
fee
applicable
thereto.
Yours
truly,
(Sgd.)
Donald
McLaws.
The
foregoing
is
hereby
agreed
to.
CALGARY
IRON
AND
ENGINEERING
LIMITED
er:
(Sgd.)
W.
Dixon.
At
the
trial
the
applant
said
that
when
he
extended
the
guarantee
he
expected
that
the
company
would
get
on
its
feet
and
make
profits
and
pay
the
fee.
The
following
questions
and
answers
from
his
Examination
for
Discovery
were
put
in
evidence
on
this
aspect
of
the
case:
Q.
And
these
fees
if
they
had
been
paid
but
none
were
paid,
I
take
it?
A.
That
is
correct.
Q.
These
fees
if
they
had
been
paid
would
have
been
income?
A.
Oh,
yes.
Q.
Now,
tell
me,
was
the
provision
for
these
fees
an
afterthought,
so
to
speak,
and
was
your
primary
and
basic
intent
in
making
the
guarantee
to
save
the
company?
A.
Well,
certainly,
the
only
reason
for
giving
the
guarantee
was
so
that
the
company
could
continue
in
business.
I
don’t
think
the
intent
was
to
save
the
company
in
the
technical—I
mean
in
the
words
that
you
used
them.
The
intent
was
to
save
a
source
of
income
which
I
enjoyed
for
the
past
number
of
years.
And
the
saving
of
the
company
was,
of
course,
the
mechanics
by
which
that
was
done.
Q.
In
other
words,
your
primary
intent
in
making
the
guarantee
was
to
protect
your
source
of
income?
A.
That
is
correct.
Q.
Which
the
company
was?
|
A.
That
is
correct.
|
Q.
Or
had
been,
more
correctly?
|
A.
That
is
correct.
|
Q.
And
the
payment
of
fees
to
you
in
connection
with
the
guarantee
was
incidental
and
secondary
thereto
to
that
primary
purpose?
A.
At
that
time
I
began
to
realize
that
there
was
a
possibility
that
the
guarantees,
I
might
be
called
on,
if
the
company
survived
and
I
had
considered
what
my
position
was
going
to
be
and
I
had
taken
advice
of
some
tax
people
and
the
result
I
got
was
that
a
guarantee
given
for
consideration,
if
you
had
to
make
a
payment
under
a
guarantee
given
for
consideration
that
the
loss
would
be
deduction
from
income.
It
would
be
a
business
loss
and,
therefore,
that
was
put
in
there.
The
appellant’s
previous
guarantee
for
a
more
limited
amount
had
no
fee
provision.
The
only
loans
or
credit
that
he
had
otherwise
guaranteed
were
a
few
for
friends
or
companies
with
which
he
was
associated,
and
none
of
them
had
a
fee
provision
or
was
for
valuable
consideration.
The
determination
of
the
appeal
depends
upon
a
proper
appreciation
of
the
true
nature
of
the
transaction
and
payments
on
the
guarantee.
In
my
opinion
the
guarantee
and
the
appellant’s
outlays
in
honouring
it
and
his
agreement
with
the
new
company
should
not
be
considered
in
isolation,
but
in
association
with
his
basic
venture
to
acquire
the
assets
and
business
of
the
old
company
and
continue
to
carry
on
the
business
through
the
new
company
for
revenue
earning
purposes
with
the
profits
to
flow
through
to
himself
personally
as
owner
of
all
the
shares
of
the
new
company.
The
acquisition
of
the
plant
and
assets
of
the
old
company
was
of
a
capital
nature,
and
the
appellant
gave
a
guarantee
to
the
bank
in
that
respect,
which
may
properly
be
regarded
as
on
account
of
capital,
but
the
issue
in
this
appeal
is
not
on
that
guarantee
but
on
the
guarantee
that
he
gave
in
1960.
I
accept
the
appellant’s
testimony
that
he
expected
that
the
company
would
get
on
its
feet
and
be
a
source
of
income
for
him,
as
it
had
been
in
some
prior
years.
If
he
had
not
thought
so,
it
is
unlikely
that
he
would
have
thrown
good
money
after
bad,
so
to
speak,
and
committed
himself
to
the
new
guarantee
for
a
larger
amount,
and
deposited
$70,000
worth
of
his
own
and
his
wife’s
securities
as
collateral.
However,
I
attach
little
significance
to
the
provision
that
the
company
would
pay
him
an
annual
fee
in
consideration
of
his
agreement
to
guarantee
its
credit.
That
was
not
really
why
he
gave
the
guarantee.
The
fee
provision
was
incidental
and
was
resorted
to
in
the
belief
that
it
would
give
the
transaction
the
character
of
a
business
venture
in
the
nature
of
trade
and
that
a
payment
under
it
could
qualify
as
a
business
loss
that
could
be
deducted
from
his
income
for
income
tax
purposes.
In
my
opinion,
the
reason
why
he
gave
the
guarantee
was
to
keep
the
company
in
business
and
prevent
it
from
going
into
bankruptcy.
The
Supreme
Court
of
Canada
said
in
Farmers
Mutual
Petroleums
Lid.
v.
M.N.R.,
[1967]
C.T.C.
396
at
400,
that
to
be
deductible
for
income
tax
purposes
an
outlay
must
satisfy
at
least
two
basic
tests:
(1)
It
must
be
made
for
the
purpose
of
gaining
or
producing
income
(Section
12(1)
(a)).
(2)
It
must
not
be
a
payment
on
account
of
‘capital
(Section
12(1)
(b)).
Both
of
these
tests
must
be
satisfied
concurrently
to
justify
deductibility.
In
British
Columbia
Electric
Railway
Company
v.
M.N.R.,
[1958]
S.C.R.
133;
[1958]
C.T.C.
21,
Abbott,
J.
said,
at
pp.
137,
31:
“Since
the
main
purpose
of
every
business
undertaking
is
presumably
to
make
a
profit,
any
expenditure
‘made
‘for
the
purpose
of
gaining
or
producing
income’
comes
within
the
terms
of
Section
12(1)
(a)
whether
it
be
classified
as
an
income
expense
or
a
capital
outlay.
Once
it
is
determined
that
a
particular
expenditure
is
one
made
for
the
purpose
of
gaining
or
producing
income,
in
order
to
compute
income
tax
liability
it
must
next
be
determined
whether
such
disbursement
is
an
income
expense
or
a
caiptal
outlay.”
In
the
British
Columbia
Electric
Railway
Company
case
([1958]
C.T.C.
21)
there
referred
to
Abbott,
J.
also
said,
at
p.
32:
The
general
principles
to
be
applied
to
determine
whether
an
expenditure
which
would
be
allowable
under
Section
12(1)
(a)
is
of
a
capital
nature,
are
now
fairly
well
established.
As
Kerwin,
J.,
as
he
then
was,
pointed
out
in
Montreal
Light,
Heat
‘&
Power
Consolidated
v.
M.N.R.,
[1942]
S.C.R.
89
at
105;
[1942]
C.T.C.
1
at
10,
applying
the
principle
enunciated
by
Viscount
Cave
in
British
Insulated
and
Helsby
Cables
Limited
v.
Atherton,
[1926]
A.C.
205
at
214,
the
usual
test
of
whether
an
expenditure
is
one
made
on
account
of
capital
is,
was
it
made
“with
a
view
of
bringing
into
existence
an
advantage
for
the
enduring
benefit
of
the
appellant’s
business”.
In
that
case,
also,
Locke,
J.
said
that
neither
the
Canadian
nor
the
Imperial
Act
attempts
to
define
the
term
“capital”
nor,
in
the
case
of
our
Act,
what
is
meant
by
a
payment
on
account
of
capital
(p.
26).
He
also
quoted
from
leading
cases
on
the
subject
and
referred
to
the
principle
enunciated
by
Viscount
Cave
(supra),
and
in
that
respect
said,
at
p.
29:
To
say,
however,
that
an
expenditure
made
with
a
view
to
bringing
into
existence
an
asset
or
an
advantage
for
the
enduring
benefit
of
a
trade
is
a
capital
expenditure
is
not
to
say
that
all
other
expenditures
must,
in
order
to
be
properly
classified
as
outlays
of
a
capital
nature
or
on
account
of
capital,
be
made
in
order
to
produce
such
a
benefit.
In
seeking
to
distinguish
capital
from
income
it
is
not
unusual
for
parties
to
argue
from
analogy,
as
they
did
here,
the
appellant
relying
largely
on
M.N.R.
v.
Freud,
[1969]
1
S.C.R.
75;
[1968]
C.T.C.
488,
while
the
respondent
relied
largely
on
M.N.R.
v.
Steer,
[1967]
S.C.R.
34;
[1966]
C.T.C.
731.
In
neither
of
those
cases
are
the
facts
on
all
fours
with
the
facts
in
the
present
case,
but,
in
my
opinion,
this
case
resembles
the
Steer
case
more
than
the
Freud
case.
The
Steer
case
was
in
respect
of
a
deduction
claimed
for
a
sum
paid
by
the
taxpayer
to
a
bank
under
a
guarantee
of
the
indebtedness
of
a
company
‘which
needed
money
for
the
drilling
of
oil
wells.
In
delivering
the
judgment
of
the
court,
Judson;
J.
said,
at
p.
871
[732]
:
I
have
no
difficulty
in
defining
the
character
of
this
transaction.
The
company
needed
money
for
the
drilling
of
three
wells.
The
convenient
way
of
supplying
this
money
was
by
a
bank
loan
with
the
respondent’s
guarantee
to
the
extent
of
$62,500.
The
guarantee
meant
that
at
some
time
the
respondent
might
have
to
step
into
the
bank’s
shoes
to
this
extent.
This
happened
in
1957.
He
was
then
subrogated
to
the
bank’s
position.
He
subsequently
proved
as
a
creditor
in
the
company’s
bankruptcy
and
received
two
dividends
—one
in
1959
for
$6,119
and
the
other
in
1961
for
$3,200.
The
transaction
was
a
deferred
loan
to
the
company,
part
of
which
was
recovered
in
the
bankruptcy.
In
the
Freud
case
(supra)
the
outlay
of
money
was
to
develop
a,
prototype
sports
car
and
sell
it.
The
venture
from
its
inception
was
not
for
the
purpose
of
deriving
income
from
an
investment
but
for
the
purpose
of
making
a
profit
on
the
resale
of
the
prototype,
which
was
held
to
be
characteristic
of
a
venture
in
the
nature
of
trade.
It
is
not
disputed
that
the
loans
by
the
bank
to
the
company,
which
were
called
by
the
bank,
were
for
operating
purposes
of
that
company.
But
the
business
carried
on
by
the
company
cannot
be
treated
as
being
carried
on
by
the
appellant,
even
although
he
owned
all
the
shares
and
was
an
officer
of
the
company.
The
company
had
a
separate
corporate
strueture
and
existence,
it
was
not
a
sham,
it
was
not
his
agent
or
a
trustee
for
him.
He
had
a
control
over
it
and
its
affairs
by
virtue
of
his
ownership
of
the
shares
and
in
his
capacity
as
shareholder
and
officer,
and
no
doubt
there
existed
a
relationship
between
him
and
the
company
and
there
was
a
causal
connection
between
the
formation
of
the
company
and
any
benefits
that
he
received
from
its
operations,
but
it
cannot
be
held
that
he
personally
was
carrying
on
the
business
the
company
was
engaged
in.
The
ultimate
question
we
must
decide
is
whether
the
outlays
by
the
appellant
on
his
guarantee
were
outlays,
losses
or
payments
on
account
of
capital,
within
the
meaning
of
Section
12(1)(b).
If
the
answer
is
in
the
affirmative,
their
deduction
is
prohibited,
even
if
the
appellant’s
entire
venture
was
for
the
purpose
of
providing
him
with
income
and
even
if
the
money
borrowed
by
the
company
from
the
bank
was
used
in
the
process
of
performing
its
income-earning
operations.
In
M.N.R.
v.
Algoma
Central
Railway,
[1968]
C.T.C.
161,
Fauteux,
J.,
as
he
then
was,
said,
at
p.
162
:
Parliament
did
not
define
the
expressions
“outlay
.
.
.
of
capital”
or
“payment
on
account
of
capital”.
There
being
no
statutory
criterion,
the
application
or
non-application
of
these
expressions
to
any
particular
expenditures
must
depend
upon
the
facts
of
the
particular
case.
We
do
not
think
that
any
single
test
applies
in
making
that
determination
and
agree
with
the
view
expressed,
in
a
recent
decision
of
the
Privy
Council,
B.P.
Australia
Ltd.
v.
Commissioner
of
Taxation
of
the
Commonwealth
of
Australia,
[1966]
A.C.
224,
by
Lord
Pearce.
In
referring
to
the
matter
of
determining
whether
an
expenditure
was
of
a
capital
or
an
income
nature,
he
said,
at
p.
264
:
“The
solution
to
the
problem
is
not
to
be
found
by
any
rigid
test
or
description.
It
has
to
be
derived
from
many
aspects
of
the
whole
set
of
circumstances
some
of
which
may
point
in
one
direction,
some
in
the
other.
One
consideration
may
point
so
clearly
that
it
dominates
other
and
vaguer
indications
in
the
contrary
direction.
It
is
a
commonsense
appreciation
of
all
the
guiding
features
which
must
provide
the
ultimate
answer.”
In
my
opinion
the
appellant’s
outlays
were
on
account
of
capital,
within
the
meaning
of
Section
12(1)(b)
and
the
claimed
deductions
are
prohibited.
In
my
view
of
the
situation,
the
guarantee
was
given
to
protect
and
preserve
the
source
of
income,
a
business
which
was
in
immediate
danger
of
bankruptcy
and
whose
existence
was
imperilled.
The
character
of
the
ensuing
outlays
in
honouring
the
guarantee
is
quite
different
from
expenditures
which
fall
naturally
into
the
category
of
income
disbursements
and
business
losses.
In
my
opinion,
the
outlays
are
of
the
character
of
payments
on
account
of
capital
and
are
not
of
the
kind
of
expenditures
that
the
statute
contemplated
to
be
allowed
as
deductions
under
the
language
‘
‘
made
or
incurred
by
the
taxpayer
for
the
purpose
of
gaining
or
producing
income
from
property
or
a
business
of
the
taxpayer’’,
in
Section
12(1)
(a),
or
under
the
language
‘‘business
losses
sustained
.
.
.
in
the
course
of
the
carrying
on
of
a
business’’,
in
Section
32(5)(d).
There
remains
the
contention
of
the
appellant
that,
in
any
event,
a
portion
of
the
payments
in
question
were
interest
payments
deductible
under
Section
11(1)
(c)
of
the
Act.
The
nature
of
payments
to
a
bank
under
a
guarantee
was
considered
in
Commissioners
of
Inland
Revenue
v.
Sir
H.
C.
Holder
et
al.,
16
T.C.
540.
Lord
Thankerton
said,
at
p.
567
:
.
.
.
Interest
is
the
return
given
for
the
use
of
the
advances
and
is
due
by
the
person
who
obtains
the
advances;
the
liability
of
the
guarantor
is
direct
to
the
creditor
and
is
an
undertaking
to
indemnify
him
against
loss.
The
creditor
computes
his
loss
by
the
amount
of
the
failure
of
the
principal
debtor
to
pay
him
principal
and
interest.
In
paying
the
amount
of
the
indemnity,
whether
limited
or
otherwise,
I
am
of
opinion
that
the
guarantor
cannot
be
said
to
be
paying
interest
to
the
creditor,
though
he
is
makinggood
the
loss
of
interest.
and
Lord
Macmillan,
in
referring
to
the
guarantor’s
relationship
to
the
bank,
said,
at
p.
569:
.
.
.
The.
short
answer,
in
my
opinion,
is
that
the
Appellants
received
no
advance
from:
the
bank
and
owed
no
interest
to
the
bank,
Their
relationship
to
the
bank
was
not
that
of
borrower
and
lender,
and
their
liability
to
the
bank
was
solely
that
of
guarantors
of
a
third
party’s
indebtedness
to
the
bank.
When
they
paid
the
sum
of
£64,482
163.
8d.
to
the
bank,
they
did
so
in
discharge
of
their
liability
to
pay
whatever
sum,
whether
of
principal
or
interest,
Blumfield,
Limited,
owed
to
the
bank.
and
in
the
same
respect.
Viscount
Dunedin
said,
at
p.
564:
.
.
.
The
guarantor
does
not
pay
on
an
advance
made
to
him,
but
pays
under
his
guarantee.
It
is
true
that
he
pays
a
sum
which
pays
all
interest
due
by
the
person
to
whom
the
advance
is
made,
but
his
debt
is
his
debt
under
the
guarantee,
not
a
debt
in
respect
of
the
advance
made
to
him.
That
disposes
of
the
whole
case.
I
think
that
the
same
reasoning
may
be
applied
to
the
payments
made
by
the
appellant
to
the
bank
in
this
case.
He
made
them
pursuant
to
his
guarantee,
which
included
interest
due
to
the
bank
by
the
company
to
which
it
had
advanced
the
amounts
of
the
loans,
but
what
the
appellant
paid
the
bank
was
his
debt
under
the
guarantee,
not
a
debt
in
respect
of
money
borrowed
by
him.
Consequently,
the
appellant
is
not
entitled
to
deduct
any
part
of
the
payments
as
‘‘interest’’
pursuant
to
Section
11(1)
(c),
whatever
right,
if
any,
to
deduction
he
may
have
under
other
sections.
The
appeal
will
be
dismissed
with
costs.
MINISTER
OF
NATIONAL
REVENUE,
Appellant,
STEWART
&
MORRISON
LIMITED,
Respondent.
Exchequer
Court
of
Canada
(Kerr,
J.),
August
14,
1970,
on
appeal
from
a
decision
of
the
Tax
Appeal
Board,
reported
[1969]
Tax
A.B.C.
65.
Income
tax—Federal—Income
Tax
Act,
R.S.C.
1952,
c.
148—Section
12(1)
(a),
(b)—Uncollectable
advances
to
subsidiary
corporation
for
operational
expenses—Whether
loss
deductible
by
parent
corporation
—Whether
subsidiary
operating
independently
or
as
branch
of
parent
corporation.
In
1963
the
taxpayer
corporation,
a
firm
of
industrial
designers,
formed
a
U.S.
subsidiary
to
carry
on
a
similar
business
in
New
York.
The
New
York
office
had
its
own
staff,
letterhead,
invoices,
etc.
but
was
master-minded
by
the
taxpayer,
which
supplied
or
guaranteed
the
funds
required
by
the
subsidiary
for
rent,
salaries,
travelling
expenses
and
other
operating
expenses.
Funds
so
advanced
by
the
taxpayer
were
shown
on
the
books
as
loans.
The
New
York
office
failed
to
prosper
and
was
closed
in
1966,
leaving
the
taxpayer
with
an
irrecoverable
outlay
of
$72,343
which
it
sought
to
deduct
in
that
year
on
the
ground
that
the
New
York
office,
though
set
up
as
a
separate
legal
entity,
was
in
fact
operated
as
a
branch
of
the
Canadian
company.
That
view
was
accepted
by
the
Tax
Appeal
Board,
from
whose
decision
the
Minister
now
appealed
on
the
grounds
that
the
outlay
was
not
an
expense
incurred
in
1966
nor
was
it
incurred
to
earn
income
from
the
taxpayer’s
business
but
was
a
payment
on
account
of
capital
within
Section
12(1)(b).
HELD:
The
advances
were
correctly
treated
as
loans
and
were
outlays
of
a
capital
nature
the
deduction
of
which
was
prohibited
by
Section
12(1)
(b).
The
Minister’s
appeal
was
allowed.
D.
G.
H.
Bowman
and
J.
R.
Power
for
the
Appellant.
J.
G.
Edison,
Q.C.
and
R.
Dalgarno
for
the
Respondent.
KERR,
J.:—This
is
an
appeal
by
the
Minister
of
National
Revenue
from
a
decision
of
the
Tax
Appeal
Board
with
respect
to
the
Minister’s
assessment
of
the
respondent
for
income
tax
for
its
1966
taxation
year.
In
determining
its
taxable
income
for
that
year
the
respondent
deducted
$72,348.14
as
‘
advances
to
New
York
office
written
off’’.
The
so-called
New
York
office
was
Stewart
&
Morrison
Inc.
a
wholly
owned
subsidiary
of
the
respondent.
The
Minister
disallowed
the
deduction.
The
respondent
appealed
to
the
Tax
Appeal
Board
against
the
disallowance
of
the
deduction
and
the
Board
allowed
the
appeal
and
referred
the
matter
back
to
the
Minister
for
re-assessment
accordingly.
The
respondent
is
a
company
incorporated
under
‘the
laws
of
the
Province
of
Ontario.
It
is
a
firm
of
industrial
designers.
At
all
relevant
times
it
was
the
beneficial
owner
of
all
the
issued
shares
of
its
subsidiary,
Stewart
&
Morrison
Inc.
This
subsidiary
was
incorporated
in
December
1963
under
the
laws
of
the
State
of
New
York
under
the
name
Stewart
Morrison
Roberts
Inc.,
subsequently
changed
to
Stewart
&
Morrison
Inc.
The
respondent
claims
that
its
New
York
subsidiary
was
incorporated
to
serve
as
a
branch
office
of
the
respondent
and
that
the
office
in
New
York
was
a
branch
office
of
the
respondent.
In
its
Reply
to
Notice
of
Appeal
it
states,
inter
aha:
4.
(c)
Stewart
&
Morrison
Inc.
was
incorporated
as
a
branch
of
the
Respondent
in
order
to
emphasize
to
potential
U.S.
clients
that
the
Respondent
was
in
business
in
the
U.S.A,
and
because
the
Respondent
was
aware
of
a
reluctance
of
U.S.
clients
to
deal
with
a
“limited”
company
incorporated
in
a
foreign
jurisdiction;
(d)
only
a
nominal
amount
of
capital
in
the
New
York
office
was
subscribed
for
by
the
Appellant
as
most
of
the
financing
of
the
New
York
office
was
to
be
provided
by
direct
advances
from
the
Respondent
and
bank
loans
guaranteed
by
the
Respondent
and
one
of
its
officers;
(e)
the
New
York
office
did
not
prosper
and
eventually
ceased
operations
in
March
of
1966.
On
June
30th,
1966,
the
New
York
office
owed
the
Respondent
$72,343.14
which
debt
was
made
up
of
funds
which
had
been
expended
for
operating
expenses
such
as
rent,
salaries,
travel
expenses,
etc.
None
of
this
amount
was
expended
by
the
New
York
office
on
capital
investment.
Since
it
was
obvious
that
no
part
of
this
amount
could
be
recovered
the
whole
amount
of
$72,343.14
was
written
off
the
books
of
the
Respondent
on
the
30th
day
of
June,
1966.
6.
(a)
the
said
amount
of
$72,343.14
represented
expenses
or
disbursements
incurred
or
laid
out
by
the
Respondent
for
the
purpose
of
gaining
or
producing
income
from
property
or
a
business
of
the
Respondent;
(b)
the
funds
advanced
to
the
New
York
office
were
expenditures
reasonably
made
by
the
Respondent
as
a
business
person
for
operating
expenses
of
the
New
York
office
and
for
the
purposes
of
gaining
or
producing
income
from
a
branch
of
its
business
operations;
(d)
the
New
York
office
was
incorporated
for
the
purpose
of
attracting
clients
in
the
U.S.A.
and
for
convenience
of
operation
of
the
Respondent’s
business
and
in
fact
the
affairs
of
the
New
York
office
were
fully
integrated
with
the
business
operations
of
the
Respondent;
(e)
the
business
operations
of
the
Respondent
would
have
been
seriously
damaged
if
the
Respondent
had
not
assumed
responsibility
for
and
paid
the
expenses
of
the
New
York
office.
As
I
understand
the
Reasons
for
Judgment
of
the
Tax
Appeal
Board,
the
Board
found
that
the
situation
was
as
so
claimed
by
the
respondent.
The
Board
said,
inter
alia,
that
the
New
York
office
‘‘was
no
more
than
a
branch
office
of
the
appellant,
despite
its
corporate
name
’
’
and
that
‘
in
financing
it,
the
appellant
was
really
striving
to
promote
what
was
actually
a
part
of
its
business’’,
and
“while
the
appellant
had
set
up
its
New
York
office
within
a
corporate
structure,
the
resulting
corporation
was
never
more
than
such
in
name
only’’.
The
appellant
disputes
the
respondent’s
claim
and
says,
inter
alia,
in
the
Notice
of
Appeal:
(a)
the
said
amount
of
$72,343.14
was
not
an
expense
or
disbursement
incurred
or
laid
out
by
the
Respondent
in
the
1966
taxation
year;
(b)
it
was
not
an
outlay
or
expense
made
or
incurred
for
the
purpose
of
gaining
or
producing
income
from
property
or
a
business
of
the
Appellant
in
the
1966
taxation
year;
(c)
it
was
a
payment
on
account
of
capital
and
that
accordingly
the
deduction
of
this
amount
was
prohibited
by
Sections
12(1)
(a)
and
12(1)
(b)
of
the
Income
Tax
Act.
In
the
alternative,
the
appellant
submits
that
if
the
amount
was
incurred
or
laid
out
by
the
respondent
for
the
purpose
of
gaining
or
producing
income
from
property
or
a
business
of
the
respondent,
it
is
income
that
is
exempt
in
the
hands
of
the
respondent
under
Section
28
of
the
Act
and
accordingly
the
deduction
of
the
amount
is
prohibited
by
Section
12(1)(e)
of
the
Act
in
determining
the
taxable
income
of
the
respondent
(para.
10
of
Notice
of
Appeal).
Also
that
if
any
of
the
payments
are
deductible,
they
are
deductible
only
in
the
year
in
which
they
were
made.
The
subsidiary
never
prospered
and
it
ceased
operations
in
the
spring
of
1966,
owing
the
respondent
the
amount
in
issue,
$72,343.14,
which
was
written
off
the
respondent’s
books
in
June
1966
as
a
non-recoverable
debt.
Additional
amounts
paid
by
the
respondent
on
a
guarantee
that
it
gave
to
the
bank
in
respect
of
a
bank
loan
to
the
subsidiary
were
written
off
by
the
respondent
in
subsequent
years,
but
they
are
not
in
issue
for
determination
in
this
appeal.
Evidence
was
given
by
Clair
Stewart,
who
is
the
respondent’s
president
and
principal
shareholder,
and
by
its
Chief
Financial
Officer,
Harry
Pope.
The
company
started
its
business
in
1960,
operating
from
Toronto.
It
extended
its
business
to
other
parts
of
Canada
and
into
the
United
States.
It
had
clients
from
that
country,
including
General
Foods,
Eastman
Kodak
and
Nestles,
some
of
whom
suggested
that
the
company
could
get
more
business
in
the
United
States
if
it
would
open
an
office
in
New
York.
But
it
was
thought
that
a
purely
Canadian
incorporation
with
‘‘Limited’’,
rather
than
“Inc.”,
as
part
of
the
company’s
name,
would
be
a
disadvantage
in
doing
business
there,
so
it
was
decided
to
incorporate
the
subsidiary
in
New
York
to
deal
with
clients
and
potential
clients
in
the
United
States.
It
was
also
thought
that
an
office
in
New
York
and
an
American
name,
in
addition
to
being
necessary
or
at
least
better
for
business
dealings
in
the
United
States,
would
also
assist
the
respondent’s
operations
in
Canada,
for
its
principal
competition
came
from
the
United
States,
and
Canadians
appeared
to
have
some
preference
for
designs
originating
in
the
United
States.
Accordingly,
the
subsidiary
was
incorporated
and
commenced
its
operations
from
an
office
in
New
York.
In
the
evidence
and
in
these
Reasons
“the
New
York
office’’
is
distinguishable
from
the
respondent’s
Toronto
office
and
sometimes
the
words
are
used
synonymously
with
Stewart
&
Morrison
Inc.
At
the
organization
meeting
of
the
subsidiary,
held
in
New
York
in
December
1963,
1,000
common
shares
were
allotted
to
the
respondent
at
an
aggregate
price
of
$1,000,
and
the
following
officers
were
elected
:
Name
Office
Clair
Stewart
|
President
|
John
H.
Roberts
|
Vice
President
|
Eliot
Morrison
|
Vice
President
|
John
Ziegler
|
Vice
President-
|
|
Assistant
Secretary
|
Veronica
Cadwell
|
Secretary-Treasurer
|
Stewart,
Roberts
and
Morrison
were
elected
directors.
They
were
also
directors
of
the
respondent.
Roberts
was
entrusted
with
the
organization,
development
and
operation
of
the
New
York
office.
He
spent
about
four
days
per
week
there,
the
remainder
with
the
respondent
in
Toronto,
and
carried
on
in
that
way
until
April
1964.
He
was
succeeded
by
Ziegler,
who
also
went
from
the
Toronto
office
to
New
York
about
four
days
per
week
until
the
fall
of
that
year
when
another
manager,
Robert
Fraser,
took
over.
A
Procedure
Plan
for
the
New
York
office
(Exhibit
5)
was
prepared
in
December
1963
by
Roberts
and
approved
by
Stewart.
It
called,
inter
alia,
for
the
Toronto
and
New
York
offices
to
interchange,
weekly,
a
record
of
projects;
setting
up
of
a
system
of
bookkeeping
for
New
York
dovetailed
with
Toronto;
publicity
in
the
United
States;
budget
forecasts;
payment
by
the
New
York
office
of
Roberts’
living
expenses
in
New
York
and
payment
by
the
respondent
of
his
salary
until
July
1964,
and
also
of
expenses
of
the
respondent’s
directors
on
all
their
visits
to
the
New
York
office
from
Toronto.
The
New
York
office
had
a
total
staff
of
4
persons,
as
compared
with
40
to
50
in
the
respondent’s
Toronto
office.
Officers
and
staff
went
from
Toronto
to
the
New
York
office
from
time
to
time,
with
their
travelling
expenses
charged
directly
to
Toronto.
Stewart
said
that
the
New
York
office
was
masterminded
from
Toronto,
with
day-to-day
details
carried
on
in
New
York.
He
also
said
that
the
New
York
operation
was
entered
upon
with
enthusiasm
and
in
a
hurry,
he
expected
that
it
would
make
profits
but
the
concern
was
to
get
it
started
and
provide
necessary
money
for
it
to
do
business;
and
not
much
thought
was
given
to
the
mechanics
or
manner
by
which
profits
would
flow
back
to
the
respondent
by
dividends
or
otherwise.
Nor
was
any
consideration
given
to
charging
interest
to
the
subsidiary
on
advances
made
by
the
respondent.
The
New
York
office
was
required
to
furnish
weekly
to
the
Toronto
office
a
statement
of
business,
expenses,
bank
account,
clients
and
firms
being
solicited
for
business,
and
short,
medium
and
long
range
business
prospects.
The
subsidary
had
its
own
corporate
organization,
letterhead
and
office.
It
solicited
clients
in
its
own
name
and
billed
them
accordingly.
It
had
accounts
and
bookkeeping
separate
from
its.
parent.
It
had
employees
of
its
own.
When
it
did
work
for
the
Toronto
office,
it
billed
the
respondent
for
it.
The
reverse
was
also
the
case.
All
of
the
subsidiary’s
revenues
came
from
its
clients,
except
charges
for
work
done
for
its
parent
company.
Loans
from
the
Bank
of
Nova
Scotia,
Toronto,
aggregating
$40,000,
were
arranged
for
the
New
York
office
by
the
respondent.
Payment
of
the
funds
was
made
to
the
New
York
office
directly
by
Bankers
Trust
Company,
New
York,
under
arrangements
with
the
Bank
of
Nova
Scotia.
They
were
guaranteed
by
the
respondent
and
by
its
president
in
his
personal
capacity.
Apart
from
the
money
so
obtained,
the
respondent
made
advances
of
money
from
time
to
time
to
the
New
York
office,
sometimes
using
Bankers
Trust
Company
as
an
intermediary
between
the
respondent,
the
Bank
of
Nova
Scotia
and
the
New
York
office.
A
summary,
in
round
figures,
of
such
advances
and
other
payments
by
the
respondent
that
make
up
the
$72,343.14
written
off
by
the
respondent
and
claimed
as
a
deduction,
is
set
forth
in
Exhibit
14
as
follows
:
March
5,
1964
|
|
$10,000
|
|
February
24,
1965
|
|
5,000
|
|
March
25,
1965
|
|
5,000
|
|
May
17,
1965
|
|
5,000
|
|
July
7,
1965
|
|
5,000
|
|
August
2,
1965
|
.x_
|
1,500
|
|
September
13,
1965
|
|
5,000
|
|
October
25,
1965
|
|
5,000
|
|
December,
1965
|
1
|
5,000
|
|
December,
1965
|
|
4,000
|
|
January
24,
1966
|
.
|
1,650
|
|
January
27,
1966
|
|
152
|
|
February
4,
1966
|
|
1,000
|
|
February
14,
1966
|
|
1,400
|
|
February
28,
1966
|
|
962
|
|
March
21,
1966
|
|
1,475
|
|
April
25,
1966
|
|
1,520
|
U.S.
Funds
.
|
$58,659
|
Exchange
on
U.S.
Funds
|
|
4,940
|
New
York
Accounts
Paid
by
Toronto
Office
.
|
6,833
|
Work
done
in
Toronto
Office
for
New
York
(Net)
|
1,913
|
(Canadian
Funds)
$72,345
Those
advances
and
payments,
together
with
amounts
aggregating
$40,000
obtained
through
the
bank
loans,
are
also
included
in
a
letter,
Exhibit
13,
from
Stanley
Katz
&
Company,
of
New
York,
the
accountants
of
Stewart
&
Morrison
1110.,
to
Mr.
Pope.
The
letter
states:
In
response
to
your
request
we
are
pleased
to
submit
below
a
record
of
amounts
received
by
Stewart
&
Morrison,
Inc.
from
Stewart
&
Morrison
Limited
as
capital
contributions
and
loans
payable.
Please
note
that
for
December
1964
and
December
1965,
we
indicate
the
month
only
since
the
corporate
records
do
not
show
the
day
of
receipt.
Jan.
17,
1964
|
|
$15,000.00
|
|
Mar.
|
5,
1964
_.
...
|
|
10,000.00
|
|
July
29,
1964
|
|
15,000.00
|
|
Dec.
|
1964:
|
|
10,000.00
|
|
Feb.
24,
1965
|
|
5,000.00
|
|
Mar.
25,
1965
|
|
5,000.00
|
|
May
17,
1965
|
_2._
|
5,000.00
|
|
July
|
7,
1965
|
|
5,000.00
|
|
Aug.
2,
1965
|
|
1,500.00
|
|
Sept.
13,
1965
|
|
5,000.00
|
|
Oct.
25,
1965
|
|
5,000.00
|
|
Dec.
|
1965
|
|
5,000.00
|
|
Dec.
|
1965
|
|
4,000.00
|
|
Jan.
24,
1966
|
....
|
1,650.00
|
(Total
check
is
for
|
|
$1,900
of
which
$250
|
|
was
allocated
to
|
|
A/C’s
receivable.)
|
Jan.
27,
1966
|
...
|
152.00
|
Feb.
|
4,
1966
|
|
1,000.00
|
Feb.
14,
1966
|
|
1,400.00
|
Feb.
28,
1966
|
|
962.00
|
Mar.
21,
1966
|
|
1,474.52
|
April
25,
1966
|
|
1,520.51
|
TOTAL
|
|
$98,659.03
|
and
after
listing
the
advances
adds
the
following
:
Of
the
total
amount
$1,000.00
was
allocated
to
Capital
Stock
and
$97,659.03
was
carried
on
the
books
of
Stewart
&
Morrison,
Inc.
as
Loans
Payable—Stewart
&
Morrison,
Limited.
The
balance
sheet
of
Stewart
&
Morrison
Inc.
for
1965,
Exhibit
7,
shows
“Stockholders
Equity”
as
follows:
Represented
By:
|
|
Loans
and/or
Capital
|
$65,000.00
|
Less:
|
Net
Loss
for
|
|
|
period
ended
|
|
|
June
30,
|
1965
|
54,528.23*
|
|
$10,471.77
|
An
accompanying
covering
letter
from
Katz
&
Company
states
that
the
total
capital
and
loans
are
to
be
considered
as
$1,000
capital
stock
and
$64,000
corporate
loans.
A
different
method
was
used
in
its
balance
sheet
for
1966,
Exhibit
8,
and
Exhibit
A
to
the
respondent’s
1966
tax
return,
in
which
$97,105.85
was
shown
as
‘‘Due
to
Stewart
&
Morrison,
Ltd.”
and
the
Stockholders
Equity
was
shown
as
follows:
Capital
|
stock
|
|
$
1,000.00
|
|
Deficit
July
1,
1965
|
|
$54,528.23
|
|
Loss
for
fiscal
year
ended
June
30,
|
|
1966—per
Exhibit
“B”
|
42,656.16
|
|
Deficit—June
30,
|
1966
|
97,184.39
|
|
Total
|
Stockholders
|
Equity
|
|
96,184.39
|
TOTAL
LIABILITIES
AND
STOCKHOLDERS
|
|
EQUITY
|
|
_..
|
$
1,205.36
|
Katz
&
Company
explained
the
change
in
the
following
terms
:
We
have
reviewed
the
reports
for
this
corporation
prepared
by
us
for
the
fiscal
years
ended
June
30,
1964,
1965
and
1966.
In
the
first
two
years
of
this
period,
we
presented
the
investment
in
Capital
Stock
and
the
loans
advanced
by
Stewart
&
Morrison
Limited
as
“The
balance
sheet
for
1964
(Exhibit
6)
shows
a
similar
method.
a
combined
figure
in
arriving
at
the
total
stockholder’s
equity.
In
the
year
1966,
we
showed
as
“Other
Liabilities”
the
amount
due
to
Stewart
&
Morrison
Limited.
We
felt
that
this
presented
a
clearer
report
since
it
did
not
require
the
reader
to
refer
to
the
letter
of
transmittal
to
see
the
breakdown
between
Capital
Stock
of
$1,000.00
and
the
loan
balance
for
the
remainder.
The
respondent’s
balance
sheet,
as
at
June
30,
1966,
in
its
income
tax
return
for
that
year,
shows
as
an
asset,
investment
in
other
companies,
Stewart
&
Morrison
Inc.,
a
sum
of
$29,463.78
in
1965
and
a
corresponding
item
of
$1
in
1966,
with
a
note
to
the
effect
that
the
subsidiary
has
ceased
business,
its
accounts
have
not
been
consolidated
and
no
audited
figures
were
available
at
that
time,
also
that
there
is
a
contingent
liability
in
respect
of
a
$40,000
bank
loan
to
the
subsidiary.
Up
to
June
30,
1966
the
subsidiary
had
gross
profits
of
$22,589.34,
expenses
of
$119,773.73
for
rent,
salaries
and
other
operational
expenses,
and
a
loss
for
that
period
of
$97,184.39,
all
as
shown
in
detail
in
Exhibit
10.
The
advances
from
the
respondent
were
used
by
the
New
York
office
in
the
operation
of
its
business
and
were
applied,
along
with
revenues
from
its
clients
and
loans
from
the
bank,
to
pay
the
expenses
of
doing
business.
They
were
treated
in
the
respondent’s
books
as
loans
to
the
New
York
office
and
were
carried
forward
until
written
off
in
June
1966.
In
a
letter
to
Stewart
&
Morrison
Inc.,
dated
November
7,
1966,
with
which
the
company’s
financial
statements
for
its
1966
taxation
year
were
enclosed,
Katz
&
Company
said
that
the
company
had
available
for
carry-forward
tax
offsets
of
$97,000.
The
question
for
determination
is
what
was
the
true
nature
of
the
advances
that
made
up
the
amount
claimed
as
a
deduction
by
the
respondent.
The
evidence
adds
up
to
this,
as
I
appreciate
it.
The
respondent
decided
that
an
American
subsidiary,
to
be
wholly
owned
by
the
respondent,
would
be
incorporated
and
would
carry
on
business
in
the
United
States
and
be
a
source
of
income
and
profit
for
the
respondent.
The
subsidiary
would
carry
on
business
as
a
separate
American
company
in
its
own
name
and
right,
but
it
would,
to
use
Stewart’s
words,
be
master-minded”
by
its
parent
company
and
their
affairs
would
be
closely
related
and
managed.
The
subsidiary
needed
capital,
but
had
none.
The
respondent
would
supply,
or
arrange
to
supply,
the
needed
capital.
It
arranged
and
guaranteed
a
bank
loan
direct
to
the
subsidiary
and
also
made
direct
advances
of
money
to
enable
it.
to
get
started
and
continue
to
operate.
The
advances
were
treated
by
both
companies
and
by.
their
auditors,
and
in
the
respective
books
and
accounts,
as.
loans
from
the
respondent.
Book
entries
do
not
necessarily
denote
the
true
nature
of
transactions,
but
I.
think
that
the
advances
in
question
were
correctly
treated
as
loans:
The
fact
that
the
money
so
provided
was
used
by
the
subsidiary
to
pay
its
operating
expenses,
and
was
lost
in
a
losing
cause,
does
not
determine
or
change
its
nature
of
money
lent
by
the
respondent
to
the
subsidiary.
In
my
opinion,
the
advances
were
outlays
by
the
respondent
of
a
capital
nature,
so
far
as
it
is
concerned,
the
deduction
of
which
is
prohibited
by
Section
12(1)(b).
of
the
Act
and
the
appeal
may
be
disposed
of
on
that
finding
alone.
Accordingly,
the
appeal
will
be
allowed,
the
decision
of
the
Tax
Appeal
Board
set
aside,
and
the
re-assessment
made
upon
the
respondent
by
the
Minister
will
be
restored.
The
appellant
is
also
entitled
to
his
costs
of
the
appeal,
to
be
taxed.