WALSH,
J.:—This
is
an
appeal
from
a
decision
of
the
Tax
Appeal
Board
dated
the
11th
day
of
January,
1967,
which
main-
tained
the
income
tax
assessments
of
the
appellant,
for
the
taxation
years
1949
to
1954,
inclusive,
with
one
minor
modification
which
is
no
longer
in
issue.
In
assessing
the
appellant
for
the
taxation
years
in
question
the
respondent
had
utilized
the
net
worth
method
of
calculation
of
income
and
in
doing
so
had
included
certain
items
which
the
appellant
claims
should
not
have
been
so
included.
There
are
two
main
questions
involved.
The
first
concerns
the
farm
property
consisting
of
some
31
arpents
in
the
Cote-de-Liesse
section
of
Montreal
known
as
Lot
No.
569
on
the
official
plan
and
book
of
reference
of
the
Parish
of
St.
Laurent
which
was
purchased
on
August
9,
1948
for
$13,429.35
by
Louis
Lavut
and
Harry
Rothman,
with
Lavut
contributing
$2,000
towards
the
purchase
price
and
Rothman
$3,000,
though
the
property
was
at
the
time
purchased
in
Rothman’s
name,
and
it
was
agreed
that
each
party
would
have
a
half
interest
in
same,
subject
only
to
each
party
first
drawing
the
amount
of
his
down
payment
out
of
the
proceeds
of
any
eventual
sale
(Agreement
page
24,
Book
of
Documents).
The
appellant
purchased
Lavut’s
undivided
half
interest
in
the
property
for
the
sum
of
$3,000
by
two
Agreements
dated
August
11,
1948,
and
November
2,
1949,
(Agreement
on
pages
25
and
71,
Book
of
Documents).
On
December
14,
1949,
Harry
Rothman
acknowledged
at
the
bottom
of
the
agreement
of
August
11,
1948,
that
he
had
taken
communication
of
both
documents,
that
he
had
received
from
appellant
the
sum
of
$500
to
make
up
the
difference
betwen
his
investment
of
$3,000
and
the
investment
of
$2,000
by
Lavut
and
that
appellant
now
owned
one-half
interest
in
the
said
farm
with
him.
Part
of
this
property
amounting
to
25.2
arpents
was
expropriated
by
the
Canadian
National
Railways
on
July
31,
1952,
the
expropriation
indemnity
amounting
to
$51,464.50,
and
the
respondent
considered
the
appellant’s
share
of
the
profit
therein
to
amount
to
$23,189.87
and
taxed
this
as
income.
The
remaining
6
arpents
were
sold
on
June
16,
1953
for
the
sum
of
$99,616.50
and
respondent
considered
the
appellant’s
share
of
the
profits
of
this
sale
to
amount
to
$31,-
367.18
which
was
also
included
as
part
of
his
income.
The
appellant
contends
that
both
these
profits
should
have
been
treated
as
capital
gain,
the
acquisition
of
the
land
by
him
not
having
been
an
adventure
in
the
nature
of
trade
within
the
meaning
of
Section
139(1)
(e)
of
the
Income
Tax
Act.
The
second
matter
in
dispute
involved
another
farm
property
involving
35
subdivision
lots
of
Lot
83
situated
in
Cote-St.
Lue,
a
suburb
of
Montreal,
which
was
purchased
on
December
16,
1952,
by
Dave
Salmon,
the
brother
of
appellant’s
wife
from
appellant’s
mother,
Mrs.
Clara
Fish,
for
the
sum
of
$28,000
payable
$20,000
prior
to
the
signing
of
the
deed,
with
the
purchaser
assuming
the
mortgage
of
$8,000
owing
to
one
Stanley
H.
MacDowell
from
whom
the
said
Clara
Fish
had
bought
the
property
on
February
12,
1952,
for
$27,535
of
which
$19,535
had
been
paid
at
the
execution
of
the
deed
with
the
balance
of
$8,000
remaining
as
a
mortgage
(pages
107
and
101A,
Book
of
Documents).
This
property
was
resold
by
Salmon
on
September
22,
1953,
to
Triangle
Realty
Corporation
for
the
sum
of
$117,685.65,
(page
124,
Book
of
Documents)
which
company
in
turn
sold
part
of
the
property
to
Smith
Building
Services
Limited.
The
proceeds
of
this
sale
were
deposited
by
Salmon
in
bank
account
No.
2025
with
the
Royal
Bank
of
Canada
which
he
opened
and
which
was
operated
largely
by
appellant’s
wife
Mrs.
Frieda
Fish
by
virtue
of
power
of
attorney
from
Salmon.
This
account
and
succeeding
accounts
to
which
the
proceeds
of
it
were
eventually
transferred
were
subsequently
used
by
the
said
Frieda
Fish
and
Salmon,
mainly
for
future
real
estate
dealings
and
investments
made
by
her,
allegedly
for
them.
The
respondent
makes
the
assumption
that
Salmon
was
a
“prête-nom”
or
mandatary
of
appellant
and
includes
in
the
net
worth
statement
of
appellant
as
of
December
31,
1954,
the
sum
of
$43,155.97
standing
at
Salmon’s
credit
in
the
said
account
No.
2025,
together
with
an
amount
of
$10,303.79
receivable
as
of
that
date
from
the
Triangle
Realty
Corporation,
being
the
balance
of
the
sale
price
and
a
further
account
receivable
in
the
amount
of
$17,456
representing
a
portion
of
the
sale
price
due
by
Smith
Building
Services
Limited
who
had
purchased
part
of
the
land
from
Triangle
Realty
Corporation.
Appellant
produced
a
Book
of
Documents
as
Exhibit
Al
containing
photostats
of
various
deeds,
agreements,
bank
statements,
cancelled
cheques,
and
other
documents
relating
to
various
dealings
of
appellant,
his
relatives
and
associates
relating
to
property
and
other
matters
not
only
during
the
years
covered
by
the
disputed
assessment
but
also
subsequently
right
down
to
the
date
of
the
appeal.
Appellant’s
attorney
pointed
out
that
a
number
of
these
documents
had
not
been
available
at
the
time
of
the
hearing
before
the
Tax
Appeal
Board
at
which
hearing
appellant
had
been
represented
by
a
different
firm
of
attorneys,
and
that
it
was
only
after
considerable
additional
research
that
some
of
these
documents
were
located,
which
no
doubt
explains
certain
statements
and
conclusions
as
to
the
facts
of
the
case
which
appear
in
the
judgment
by
the
Tax
Appeal
Board
and
which
in
the
light
of
the
subsequent
evidence
now
produced
appear
to
be
erroneous.
This
Book
of
Documents
was
produced
without
objection
by
counsel
for
respondent.
A
further
book
of
documents
entitled
Synopsis
of
Appellant’s
Evidence
re
Royal
Bank
of
Canada
account
No.
2025
was
handed
to
the
Court
without
being
filed
as
an
exhibit
with
the
consent
of
the
defense
for
use
as
working
documents
to
assist
the
Court
in
following
appellant’s
evidence
with
respect
to
his
very
involved
business
dealings.
The
documents
in
this
book
consist
of
photocopies
of
ledger
cards
of
account
No.
2025
and
its
successor
accounts,
a
summary
of
payments
relating
to
the
acquisition
of
the
Cote-St.
Lue
property
and
the
settlement
of
the
Clara
Fish
estate,
a
summary
of
transactions
relating
to
loans
and
payments
made
from
the
said
account
to
appellant
and
to
other
parties
and
appellant’s
repayment
of
same,
photostats
of
cancelled
cheques
drawn
on
the
said
account
and
payments
made
to
it,
and
other
documents.
It
was
pointed
out
by
the
attorneys
for
the
appellant
that
although
the
notices
of
assessment
for
the
years
1949
to
1954
were
made
on
December
15,
1956,
and
Notices
of
Objection
filed
on
February
8,
1957,
it
was
not
until
more
than
six
years
later
that
re-assess-
ment
notices
dated
May
15,
1963,
were
received
wherein
many
of
the
items
originally
contested
were
allowed
but
other
original
items
which
form
the
subject
matter
of
the
second
issue
of
the
present
appeal
were
added.
A
further
delay
occurred
until
January
11,
1967,
when
the
judgment
of
the
Tax
Appeal
Board
was
rendered.
In
view
of
the
lengthy
delays
it
is
not
surprising
that
some
of
the
documentation
was
difficult
if
not
impossible
to
locate
and
some
of
the
evidence
confused
to
such
an
extent
that
appellant’s
own
attorneys
had
to
submit
during
the
hearing
documents
amending
some
of
the
documents
originally
included
in
the
synopsis
of
appellant’s
evidence,
notably
an
amended
page
9
being
a
summary
of
payments
relating
to
the
acquisition
of
the
Cote-St.
Lue
property
and
to
the
settlement
of
the
estate
of
Clara
Fish
and
an
amendment
to
page
16,
being
a
summary
of
transactions
relating
to
loans
made
to
Nathan
Fish
whereby
the
first
item
for
$1,090.10,
dated
January
1,
1954,
being
a
payment
from
Dave
Salmon
to
the
Town
of
Cote-St.
Lue
was
deleted,
when
as
a
result
of
the
evidence
of
the
witnesses
heard
it
became
evident
that
the
summary
of
transactions
contained
in
these
documents
as
originally
drawn
was
not
entirely
accurate.
Dealing
first
of
all
with
the
Cote-de-Liesse
property
it
was
appellant’s
contention
that
this
was
purchased
by
him
as
an
investment.
It
was
his
first
acquisition
of
real
estate.
He
is
a
practising
notary
in
Montreal
and
Louis
Lavut,
for
whom
he
had
done
notarial
work
from
time
to
time
and
who
owed
him
$500,
approached
him
and
offered
to
sell
him
one-half
of
his
half
interest
in
the
property
in
question
for
$1,000.
He
disclosed
that
the
other
half
was
owned
by
Harry
Rothman
but
did
not
want
appellant
to
disclose
his
purchase
to
Rothman
at
the
time.
He
claimed
that
an
attempt
was
made
by
Rothman
to
get
immigrants
to
settle
on
the
land
as
at
that
time
they
could
be
admitted
to
Canada
on
condition
of
settling
on
a
farm.
Rothman
also
had
some
plan
to
construct
and
rent
industrial
buildings
on
the
property
but
was
unable
to
persuade
the
Parish
of
St.
Laurent
in
which
the
property
was
situated
to
provide
the
necessary
services.
The
property
was
rented
during
all
this
period
to
tenant
farmers
who
paid
about
$60
a
month
rent.
After
payment
of
taxes
and
interest
on
the
mortgage
on
the
property
in
the
amount
of
$8,429.35,
being
the
balance
of
the
price,
at
5%,
it
is
evident
that
there
would
be
little
if
any
income
accruing
to
the
owners
on
their
investment
from
this
use
of
the
property.
No
effort
was
made
to
sell
the
property
prior
to
the
expropriation
of
the
major
portion
of
same
by
the
Canadian
National
Railway
Company
in
1952
and
appellant
contends
that
he
had
no
prior
knowledge
of
any
interest
of
the
railway
company
in
the
property
at
the
time
he
purchased
his
interest
in
it.
As
a
result
of
this
expropriation
the
portion
left
was
insufficient
for
development
for
any
of
the
purpose
which
they
had
considered
and
it
was
then
sold.
Harry
Rothman
corroborated
appellant’s
evidence
with
respect
to
this
property,
stating
that
it
was
only
after
he
had
purchased
the
property
with
Lavut
that
he
learned
that
drive-in
theatres
were
not
allowed
in
Quebec.
He
then
planned
to
bring
a
relative
to
Canada
to
settle
on
the
farm
and
obtained
an
immigration
permit
for
him
but
he
never
came.
He
also
explored
the
idea
for
an
industrial
park
and
consulted
an
architect
with
respect
to
it
but
this
fell
through
as
the
necessary
services
were
not
available.
When
the
property
was
finally
disposed
of
by
expropriation
of
the
major
part
and
sale
of
the
balance
he
was
not
assessed
for
income
tax
on
his
portion
of
the
proceeds
which
were
accepted
as
capital
gain.
Louis
Lavut
in
his
evidence
insisted
that
he
learned
within
about
a
month
after
buying
the
property
that
a
drive-in
theatre
could
not
be
built
but
he
still
had
hopes
that
this
law
might
be
changed.
He
was
already
aware
of
this,
however,
when
he
sold
his
interest
in
the
property
to
the
appellant.
He
had
had
the
architect’s
sketch
for
the
drive-in
theatre
made
immediately
after
he
bought
the
land.
He
does
not
recall
any
discussion
with
Rothman
about
bringing
his
cousin
to
Canada.
He
said
that
he
was
not
in
the
business
of
buying
and
selling
land
in
1948
but
acquired
the
land
in
question
through
a
real
estate
agent
for
the
express
purpose
of
building
the
drive-in
theatre,
and
that
there
was
no
speculation
in
land
on
Cote-de-Liesse
Road
in
1948,
plenty
of
it
being
available
at
the
time.
Considerable
evidence
was
adduced
as
to
appellant’s
real
estate
dealings
since
the
purchase
of
the
interest
in
the
Cote-de-
Liesse
property
in
1948.
A
list
with
comments
which
was
produced
as
Exhibit
A3
indicates
that
twenty-three
other
properties
were
bought
between
1948
and
1965.
Of
these
thirteen
have
since
been
sold.
A
further
breakdown
based
on
the
comments
on
the
list
indicates
that
appellant
was
not
the
beneficial
owner
of
one
of
these
properties,
that
two
of
them
consisted
of
personal
residences
,
one
of
which
was
purchased
after
the
first
was
sold
being
in
appellant’s
wife’s
name,
and
that
of
the
other
twenty
ten
are
revenue
bearing
properties
and
ten
vacant
land.
Of
the
revenue
bearing
properties
four
have
been
sold
with
appellant
still
retaining
six
and
six
parcels
of
vacant
land
have
been
sold,
appellant
still
retaining
four.
It
has
been
held
that
‘‘.
.
.
on
income
tax
appeals
evidence
may
be
received
in
respect
to
any
matters
that
have
occurred
up
to
the
time
of
the
actual
hearing
of
the
appeal,
provided
such
matters
have
relevancy
to
the
taxation
year
to
which
the
assessment,
or
re-assessment,
under
appeal
applies”*,
and
it
would
appear
that
while
this
purchase
in
1948
was
appellant’s
first
venture
in
real
estate
he
has
since
dealt
in
it
regularly
sometimes
for
purposes
of
investment
and
sometimes
apparently
as
an
adventure
in
the
nature
of
trade.
Even
if
the
‘
‘.
.
.
transaction
.
.
.
(had
been)
an
isolated
one
.
.
.
(however)
this
would
not
necessarily)
exclude
it
from
the
category
of
trading
or
business
transactions
of
such
a
nature
as
to
attract
income
tax
to
the
profit
therefrom.’’t
(words
in
brackets
are
mine).
In
the
leading
case
Of
M.N.R.
v.
James
A.
Taylor,
[1956]
C.T.C.
189,
the
then
President
Thorson
reviewed
the
Canadian
and
British
jurisprudence
in
considerable
detail
in
order
to
provide
certain
criteria
for
determining
the
type
of
transaction
which
constitutes
‘‘an
adventure
in
the
nature
of
trade’’.
He
concludes
at
page
211
:
.
.
.
the
fact
that
a
transaction
is
totally
different
in
nature
from
any
of
the
other
activities
of
the
taxpayer
and
that
he
has
never
entered
upon
a
transaction
of
that
kind
before
or
since
does
not,
of
itself,
take
it
out
of
the
category
of
being
an
adventure
in
the
nature
of
trade.
.
.
a
transaction
may
be
an
adventure
in
the
nature
of
trade
although
the
person
entering
upon
it
did
so
without
any
intention
to
sell
its
subject
matter
at
a
profit.
The
intention
to
sell
the
purchased
property
at
a
profit
is
not
of
itself
a
test
of
whether
the
profit
is
subject
to
tax
for
the
intention
to
make
a
profit
may
be
just
as
much
the
purpose
of
an
investment
transaction
as
of
a
trading
one.
Such
intention
may
well
be
an
important
factor
in
determining
that
a
transaction
was
an
adventure
in
the
nature
of
trade
but
its
presence
is
not
an
essential
prerequisite
to
such
a
determination
and
its
absence
does
not
negative
the
idea
of
an
adventure
in
the
nature
of
trade.
The
considerations
prompting
the
transaction
may
be
of
such
a
business
nature
as
to
invest
it
with
the
character
of
an
adventure
in
the
nature
of
trade
even
without
any
intention
of
making
a
profit
on
the
sale
of
the
purchased
commodity.
And
the
taxpayer’s
declaration
that
he
entered
upon
the
transaction
without
any
intention
of
making
a
profit
on
the
sale
of
the
purchased
property
should
be
scrutinized
with
care.
It
is
what
he
did
that
must
be
considered
and
his
declaration
that
he
did
not
intend
to
make
a
profit
may
be
overborne
by
other
considerations
of
a
business
or
trading
nature
motivating
the
transaction.
On
the
other
hand
Kearney,
J.
in
two
judgments,
M.N.R.
v.
Valclar
Investment
Company
Limited,
[1964]
C.T.C.
22,
and
M.N.R.
v.
Cosmos
Inc.,
[1964]
C.T.C.
34,
in
each
of
which
cases
a
corporation
incorporated
to
invest
in
stocks
and
bonds
bought
a
parcel
of
real
estate
to
diversify
its
investments
and
resold
same
soon
after
for
a
substantial
profit,
this
being
its
only
dealing
in
real
estate,
and
the
sale
in
each
case
resulting
from
an
unsolicited
offer,
held
that
these
were
profits
on
the
resale
of
an
investment
and
not
‘‘an
adventure
in
the
nature
of
trade”.
In
each
case
the
property
had
been
rented
in
the
meanwhile
by
a
tenant
farmer
but
the
revenue
from
it
was
trivial
so
that
an
increment
could
only
be
gained
upon
resale.
He
held
that
the
land,
unlike
a
commodity,
was
at
least
susceptible
of
producing
an
annual
yield
and
that
the
purchase
of
it
was
akin
to
the
purchase
of
“growth
stocks
which
though
not
actually
dividend
paying
are
an
investment,
and
that
as
the
element
of
speculation
as
such
was
negligible
the
transaction
could
not
be
considered
as
an
undertaking
or
adventure’’.
He
cites
the
Supreme
Court
judgment
in
Irrigation
Industries
Ltd.
v.
M.N.R.,
[1962]
S.C.R.
346
at
347;
[1962]
C.T.C.
215
at
216,
where
a
corporation
made
a
profit
on
resale
of
an
investment
in
somewhat
speculative
shares
of
a
mining
company.
The
judgment
held
that:
The
transaction
in
question
did
not
fall
within
either
of
the
positive
tests
which
the
authorities
have
suggested
should
be
applied
in
determining
whether
or
not
a
particular
transaction
does
or
does
not
constitute
an
adventure
in
the
nature
of
trade,
i.e.,
(1)
whether
the
person
dealt
with
the
property
purchased
by
him
in
the
same
way
as
a
dealer
would
ordinarily
do,
and
(2)
whether
the
nature
and
quantity
of
the
subject-matter
of
the
transaction
may
exclude
the
possibility
that
its
sale
was
the
realization
of
an
investment
or
otherwise
of
a
capital
nature,
or
that
it
could
have
been
disposed
of
otherwise
than
as
a
trade
transaction.
M.N.R.
v.
Taylor,
[1956]
C.T.C.
189;
C.I.R.
v.
Livingston
(1926),
11
T.C.
538;
Leeming
v.
Jones,
[1930]
1
K.B.
279,
referred
to.
and
again
:
The
test,
applied
by
the
trial
judge,
whether
the
appellant
entered
into
the
transaction
with
the
intention
of
disposing
of
the
shares
at
a
profit
so
soon
as
there
was
a
reasonable
opportunity
of
so
doing,
standing
alone,
was
not
sufficient
to
determine
whether
or
not
the
transaction
constituted
an
adventure
in
the
nature
of
trade.
An
accretion
to
capital
does
not
become
income
merely
because
the
original
capital
was
invested
in
the
hope
and
expectation
that
it
would
rise
in
value;
if
it
does
so
rise,
its
realization
does
not
make
it
income.
Leeming
v.
Jones,
[1930]
1
K.B.
279
and
[1930]
A.C.
415,
referred
to.
The
Supreme
Court
case
of
Regal
Heights
Limited
v.
M.N.R.,
[1960]
S.C.R.
902;
[1960]
C.T.C.
384,
dealt
with
a
situation
where
a
group
of
persons
formed
a
partnership
and
purchased
certain
lands
for
the
purpose
of
developing
a
large
shopping
centre
in
the
City
of
Calgary,
and
incorporated
the
appellant
company
to
which
the
property
in
question
was
transferred.
Due
to
the
failure
to
negotiate
a
lease
with
a
major
department
store
the
shopping
centre
plan
was
dropped
and
the
holdings
of
the
company
were
later
disposed
of
at
enhanced
prices
resulting
in
a
substantial
profit
which
was
taxed.
It
was
held
the
promoters
and
the
company
failed
to
promote
a
shopping
centre
and
they
then
disposed
of
their
speculative
property
at
a
profit.
This
was
an
adventure
in
the
nature
of
trade
and
the
profit
from
it
is
taxable
within
the
meaning
of
Sections
3,
4,
and
139(1)
(e)
of
the
Income
Tax
Act.’’
In
that
case
the
judgment
of
Judson,
J.
at
p.
905
[p.
388]
states:
There
is
no
doubt
that
the
primary
aim
of
the
partners
in
the
acquisition
of
these
properties,
and
the
learned
trial
judge
so
found,
was
the
establishment
of
a
shopping
centre
but
he
also
found
that
their
intention
was
to
sell
at
a
profit
if
they
were
unable
to
carry
out
their
primary
aim.
This
case
seems
to
establish
the
doctrine
of
secondary
intention.
In
a
very
recent
case,
Bel
Dor
Holdings
Ltd,
v.
M.N.R.,
[1969]
C.T.C.
309,
Gibson,
J.
deals
with
a
somewhat
similar
matter.
In
this
case
the
appellants
purchased
property
in
the
Town
of
Oakville
on
representations
that
it
would
be
rezoned
for
a
shopping
centre,
paying
so
high
a
price
that
there
would
be
no
advantage
in
using
the
land
for
any
other
purpose.
For
ten
years
they
made
unremitting
efforts
to
have
it
rezoned
but
encountered
opposition
from
local
merchants.
They
had
the
necessary
funds
to
finance
the
building
of
the
shopping
centre
and
spent
considerable
money
on
solicitors’
fees
and
other
fees
attempting
to
secure
approval
of
the
project.
Finally
in
1963
the
Council
of
the
Town
of
Oakville
reversed
its
support
of
the
plan
for
rezoning,
the
property
was
sold
to
another
company
who
were
successful
in
arranging
the
rezoning
for
construction
of
apartment
buildings.
The
judgment
concluded
that
there
was
no
doubt
that
the
appellant
intended
during
all
the
period
to
establish
a
shopping
centre
on
the
property
and
that
at
all
material
times
it
was
practical
and
financially
sound
for
it
to
do
so
and
that
'any
secondary
intention
seems
to
have
been
nonexistent
for
any
practical
purpose’’.
The
judgment
further
concludes
that
shopping
centres
are
a
well
known
form
of
investment
which
earn
substantial
incomes
for
the
owners
of
same
and
are
not
usually
built
and
established
for
the
purposes
of
sale
and
realization
of
a
profit
on
the
sale
after
they
have
been
built
and
that
the
acquisition
in
1953
of
the
property
at
the
price
paid
made
no
economic
sense
for
any
other
use
except
as
a
shopping
centre.
The
gain
on
realization
in
1963
resulting
from
unprecedented
and
unforeseen
rise
in
land
values
is
therefore
not
treated
as
income.
In
the
present
case
it
is
apparent
that
appellant
had
no
clear
intentions
of
his
own
as
to
what
he
wished
to
do
with
the
property
at
the
time
he
acquired
his
interest
in
it
nor
at
any
time
thereafter
but
was
content
to
rely
entirely
on
the
plans
of
his
associates
to
whom
he
left
the
decisions.
His
intentions
must
therefore
be
considered
as
depending
on
the
intentions
of
his
associates
Lavut
and
Rothman
when
he
purchased
the
first
one-quarter
interest
and
subsequently
Rothman
alone
after
he
purchased
Lavut’s
remaining
interest.
He
may
well
have
believed
Lavut’s
declaration
of
the
intention
of
building
a
drive-in
theatre
and
have
considered
this
a
profitable
investment,
though
it
is
extraordinary
that,
as
a
notary,
with
the
Statutes
readily
available
to
him,
he
did
not
personally
check
into
the
existing
state
of
Quebec
law
on
the
matter.
He
explains
this
by
saying
that
the
investment
was
so
small
that
he
was
content
to
rely
on
the
plans
of
his
associates.
It
may
well
be
that
Lavut
misled
him
in
encouraging
him
to
believe
that
there
was
still
a
possibility
of
the
project
being
realized
at
the
time
he
sold
him
the
second
undivided
quarter
interest
in
the
property.
It
is
certainly
clear,
however,
that
at
the
time
he
bought
there
was
no
real
prospect
of
this
use
of
the
land
ever
being
realized.
Thereafter
he
was
content
to
rely
on
Rothman’s
plans
as
to
what
might
be
done
with
the
property
and
I
do
not
find
the
evidence
respecting
these
plans
to
be
very
satisfactory
or
the
plans
themselves
to
be
very
practical
or
realistic.
Rothman
mentions
that
he
planned
to
bring
a
cousin
to
Canada
as
an
immigrant
and
settle
him
on
the
property.
This
would
hardly
have
been
a
very
good
investment,
though
Rothman
may
have
had
a
personal
interest
in
doing
so.
There
was
also
some
evidence
from
Rothman,
entirely
uncorroborated
by
the
production
of
any
plans
or
correspondence,
that
an
attempt
was
to
be
made
to
build
an
industrial
park
on
the
property
and
rent
same.
Since
no
municipal
services
were
available
to
the
land
at
the
time
this
scheme
was
also
quite
nebulous
and
incapable
of
immediate
realization.
The
attempt
to
acquire
a
cinerama
franchise
in
that
part
of
town
was
equally
unlikely
to
succeed.
It
is
true
that
the
eventual
disposal
of
the
major
part
of
the
property
was
not
by
any
voluntary
act
on
the
part
of
the
owners
but
as
the
result
of
the
expropriation
by
the
Canadian
National
Railway
Company.
It
is
evident
however
from
the
price
paid
by
the
railway
company,
which
must
be
assumed
to
bear
some
relation
to
the
property
value
at
the
time,
that
it
had
already
increased
very
substantially
in
value
between
1948
and
1952.
Certainly
the
income
derived
from
the
rental
of
the
property
in
the
interval
was
so
slight
as
to
have
been
of
no
interest
to
the
owners
aS
an
appropriate
investment
of
their
equity
in
the
property.
I
am
inclined
to
believe
that
the
appellant
was
content
to
be
associated
with
Rothman
in
the
ownership
and
development
for
eventual
sale
of
this
land
and
even
if
he
believed
in
the
feasibility
of
the
drive-in
theatre
project
at
the
time
he
acquired
his
interest
in
it
he
nevertheless
had
in
mind
the
secondary
objective
that
even
if
this
project
did
not
succeed
an
eventual
profit
could
be
made
on
a
resale
of
the
property.
The
facts
would
seem
to
resemble
more
closely
those
in
the
Regal
Heights
case
(supra)
than
in
the
Valclair
Investment
(supra)
Cosmos
(supra)
or
the
Bel
Dor
cases
(supra)
in
view
of
the
proof
subsequent
conduct
of
appellant
in
other
real
estate
dealings
indicating
that
this
was
not
an
isolated
one,
and
the
reasonable
presumption
of
the
existence
of
secondary
intention.
I
therefore
agree
with
the
finding
of
the
Tax
Appeal
Board
with
respect
to
this
portion
of
appellant’s
assessment.
Turning
to
the
second
question
in
which
the
assessment
rests
on
the
assumption
of
the
Minister
that
appellant’s
brother-in-law
Dave
Salmon
was
his
prête-nom
or
mandatary
in
the
purchase
and
eventual
sale
of
the
property,
the
case
of
M.N.R.
v.
Pillsbury
Holdings
Ltd.,
[1965]
1
Ex.
C.R.
676;
[1964]
C.T.C.
294,
holds
that
the
taxpayer
can
meet
this
by
(a)
challenging
the
Minister’s
allegation
that
he
did
assume
those
facts,
(b)
assuming
the
onus
of
showing
that
one
or
more
of
the
assumptions
was
wrong,
or
(c)
contending
that,
even
if
the
assumptions
were
justified,
they
do
not
of
themselves
support
the
assessment.
In
this
case
the
appellant
has
chosen
to
adopt
alternative
(b)
and
we
must
now
examine
whether
he
has
successfully
discharged
the
onus
of
proof
and
rebutted
the
assumption
of
the
respondent
on
which
the
assessment
is
based.
A
considerable
amount
of
evidence
was
adduced
and
documents
produced
in
the
Book
of
Documents
to
show
that
over
a
period
of
years
appellant
has
been
in
the
habit
of
purchasing
and
selling
land
in
the
names
of
various
préte-noms,
some
being
relatives
and
some
business
associates.
He
has
also
on
occasion
purchased
and
sold
land
in
his
name
when
he
was
merely
acting
as
a
préte-
nom
for
someone
else.
There
appears
to
have
been
a
great
deal
of
mutual
trust
and
confidence
involved
between
the
parties
to
these
various
deals,
since
in
some
circumstances
there
have
been
merely
letters
or
other
private
writings
between
the
parties
setting
out
the
true
situation
as
to
ownership
as
opposed
to
the
legal
situation
disclosed
in
the
deed
of
purchase
or
of
sale,
and
in
other
cases
the
dealings
between
the
parties
have
been
merely
of
a
verbal
nature.
Repayments
of
sums
due
as
a
result
of
these
dealings
have
frequently
been
made
indirectly
by
the
debtor
discharging
his
obligation
to
the
creditor
by
paying
the
amount
due
to
some
third
party
to
whom
the
creditor
indicated
he
was
indebted
and
suggested
that
payment
of
the
obligation
due
to
him
be
made
in
this
way.
Appellant’s
explanation
of
the
motivation
back
of
these
dealings
and
the
reason
why
he
so
frequently
used
prête-noms
is
not
entirely
satisfactory.
He
explains
that
as
a
notary
he
is
prohibited
from
receiving
deeds
to
which
he
or
his
wife
is
a
party.*
Since
most
of
these
deeds
were
received
by
him
he
could
only
insert
his
name
as
purchaser
or
vendor
as
the
case
may
be,
by
having
the
deed
prepared
and
received
by
another
notary.
This
would
involve
some
delay
and
inconvenience
and
perhaps
expense
and
he
therefore
preferred
to
adopt
the
alternative
of
making
the
purchase
and
the
subsequent
sale
where
applicable
in
the
name
of
a
third
party
who
permitted
his
name
to
be
so
used.
He
maintained
that
he
always
declared
the
income
from
any
such
properties
which
produced
revenue
as
part
of
his
income
even
though
the
actual
title
deed
would
show
someone
else
as
the
owner.
He
admitted,
however,
that
when
another
notary
received
the
deed
he
would
normally
not
charge
him
for
it
as
a
matter
of
professional
courtesy.
He
also
admitted
that
on
at
least
one
occasion,
that
of
a
sale
by
Rebecca
Smilovitz
to
Frieda
Salmon,
appellant’s
wife,
he
acted
as
notary
(page
117,
Book
of
Documents)
in
flagrant
contravention
of
the
Notarial
Code.
He
claimed
that
he
did
this
by
oversight.
It
would
appear
that
his
constant
acting
as
notary
in
deeds
in
which
he
was
the
actual
purchaser
though
he
used
a
prête-nom
in
his
place
would
be
against
the
spirit
and
intention
of
the
Notarial
Code
even
if
not
against
the
letter
of
it.
It
is
not
his
conduct
as
a
notary
which
concerns
us
here
but
it
would
seem
to
be
a
fair
inference
that
in
making
frequent
purchases
of
property
for
his
own
account,
but
buying
same
in
the
name
of
others,
he
was
not
entirely
guided
by
the
convenience
of
being
able
to
make
the
deed
himself
but
may
well
have
had
the
secondary
intention
of
attempting
to
conceal
as
far
as
possible
from
public
scrutiny
some
of
the
ramifications
of
his
fairly
extensive
real
estate
investment
and
dealings.
It
is
of
course
neither
illegal
nor
improper
to
purchase
land
in
the
name
of
a
préte-nom
and
this
device
is
frequently
used
for
perfectly
legitimate
purposes.
A
lawyer
or
notary
may
well
agree
to
have
lands
acquired
in
his
name
on
behalf
of
a
client
who
is
endeavouring
to
assemble
a
parcel
of
land
for
some
development
which
necessitates
acquisitions
from
a
number
of
different
vendors
and
who
does
not
want
to
disclose
his
identity
until
all
the
land
has
been
acquired
as
this
might
affect
the
price.
In
1948,
for
example,
appellant
was
approached
by
Messrs.
Lavut,
Balinsky
and
Perlini
Builders
who
wished
to
purchase
some
property
on
Ridgedale
Avenue
in
Montreal
and
construct
houses
thereon.
The
borrowed
$2,000
from
appellant
at
10%
and
to
protect
his
loan
the
property
was
purchased
in
his
name.
Subsequently
during
the
course
of
construction
he
advanced
further
sums
of
$3,000
and
of
$5,000.
Canada
Housing
Act
loans
on
each
of
the
six
houses
being
constructed
on
the
property
were
made
by
Confederation
Life
to
him.
As
each
of
the
houses
was
sold
he
received
back
a
proportional
amount
of
his
advances.
By
a
private
Agreement
made
December
14,
1948,
between
appellant
and
Lavut
when
appellant
made
the
second
advance
of
$3,000
he
was
to
receive
one-quarter
of
the
net
profit
from
the
sale
of
the
buildings,
(page
34,
Book
of
Documents)
but
he
testified
that
after
making
the
third
advance
in
the
amount
of
$5,000
he
decided
that
he
preferred
to
revert
to
the
original
agreement
of
repayment
of
his
loans
with
10%
interest.
It
should
be
noted
that
in
the
Confederation
Life
loans
to
appellant
Lavut,
Balinsky
and
Perlini
intervened
to
guarantee
payment
(pages
45,
49,
52,
55,
58,
and
61,
Book
of
Documents).
This
appears
to
be
an
example
of
a
legitimate
situation
where
he
retained
the
properties
in
his
name
so
as
to
give
him
complete
protection
for
his
advances
to
the
builders
but
at
the
same
time
protected
himself
with
respect
to
the
building
loans
made
on
the
properties
by
having
the
builders
intervene
to
guarantee
payment
of
them.
It
is
the
converse
case,
where
he
acquired
properties
for
his
own
account
by
using
the
names
of
others
that
is
more
open
to
question.
While
the
use
of
préte-noms
is
relatively
common
and
not
illegal
as
I
have
already
stated
it
does
of
necessity
give
rise
to
considerable
confusion
as
to
the
real
ownership
of
property
and
has
the
effect
of
defeating
the
purpose
of
registration
laws
in
that
the
deeds
affecting
the
properties
and
registered
at
the
Registry
Office
do
not
disclose
the
true
ownership.
It
is
not
suprising
therefore
that
the
suspicions
of
the
Minister
should
have
been
aroused
as
to
whether
appellant
has
in
fact
disclosed
in
his
tax
returns
all
the
income
realized
from
investments
in
real
estate
or
profits
from
the
sale
of
same
in
cases
when
the
purchase
was
an
adventure
in
the
nature
of
trade,
when
these
properties
have
been
held
for
him
in
the
names
of
relatives,
friends
or
business
associates.
This
no
doubt
led
to
the
assumption
by
the
Minister
that
appellant’s
brother-in-law
Dave
Salmon
was
merely
a
prête-nom
for
him
in
the
acquisition
and
disposal
of
the
Cote-St.
Lue
property
and
that
the
bank
account
opened
by
Salmon
in
which
the
proceeds
of
the
sale
were
deposited
and
subsequent
withdrawals
made
for
further
real
estate
purchases,
by
appellant’s
wife
Frieda
Salmon
Fish,
loans
to
appellant
and
other
purposes,
was
in
reality
a
bank
account
operated
under
the
direction
and
control
of
appellant
and
that
the
contents
could
therefore
justifiably
be
included
in
his
net
worth
statement.
It
must
here
be
stated,
however,
that
while
proof
of
system
or
of
a
course
of
conduct
may
create
a
presumption
that
it
was
also
followed
in
the
business
transaction
with
respect
to
the
Cote-St.
Lue
property,
the
presumption
must
be
based
on
something
more
than
mere
suspicion
and
there
must
have
been
some
evidence
with
respect
to
the
dealings
with
that
particular
property
and
the
bank
account
in
which
the
proceeds
of
its
sale
were
deposited
which
would
justify
the
presumption
that
the
course
of
conduct
which
had
been
followed
by
the
appellant
in
many
other
cases
had
also
been
followed
in
this
particular
instance
and
that
Dave
Salmon
was
another
prête-nom
for
the
appellant.
The
presumption
made
by
the
Minister
is
not
an
irrebuttable
one
and
while
the
burden
of
proof
falls
on
the
appellant
to
successfully
refute
it
he
can
discharge
this
obligation
by
acceptable
and
credible
explanations
of
the
facts
which
gave
rise
to
the
Minister’s
presumption
in
this
specific
instance.
Reviewing
the
history
of
the
acquisition
and
disposal
of
this
property
and
the
opening
of
the
bank
account
relating
thereto
considerable
evidence
was
adduced
and
substantiating
documents,
many
of
which
were
not
produced
before
the
Tax
Appeal
Board,
were
now
produced
in
the
Book
of
Documents.
Appellant
testified
that
his
mother
Clara
Fish
(Mrs.
Osias
Fish),
a
widow,
liked
to
invest
in
real
estate.
As
he
was
a
notary
it
was
natural
enough
that
most
of
her
dealings
would
be
handled
through
him.
Apparently
the
proceeds
of
some
of
her
real
estate
dealings
were
left
in
his
hands
or
in
the
hands
of
his
brother
Gerald
Fish
until
reinvested
for
her.
A
document
in
private
writing
on
appellant’s
letterhead
dated
February
5,
1952,
signed
by
both
him
and
his
mother,
acknowledges
that
he
owes
her
$10,000
paid
to
him
some
years
prior
thereto
and
that
he
has
the
same
day
received
from
Mrs.
Fish
a
further
sum
of
$9,883.20
and
that
he
is
to
use
the
total
amounting
to
$19,383.20
to
pay
for
the
lots
which
she
has
acquired
on
Randall
and
Borden
in
Cote-St.
Lae,
with
any
differences
by
reason
of
adjustments
of
taxes
or
otherwise
to
be
reimbursed
to
him
if
and
when
he
pays
same
to
the
vendor.
(page
101M,
Book
of
Documents).
On
February
12,
1952,
by
deed
of
sale
passed
before
the
appellant,
Stanley
Herbert
Mac-
Dowell
sold
the
properties
in
question
to
Clara
Fish
for
$27,535
acknowledging
the
receipt
of
$19,535
at
the
execution
of
the
deed
with
a
balance
of
$8,000
to
be
paid
within
four
years,
or
prior
thereto
if
any
of
the
lots
are
resold
by
the
purchaser.
The
cheque
for
$19,535
however
payable
to
S.
H.
MacDowell
was
drawn
by
Gerald
Fish
on
his
own
account
(page
2,
Book
of
Documents).
Gerald
Fish
in
his
evidence
indicated
that
prior
to
issuing
this
cheque
from
his
own
account
he
had
received
his
mother’s
cheque
for
$9,383.20
from
appellant
who
eventually
covered
the
balance
by
payments
to
him
of
$5,098.67
and
$5,000.
These
deposits
appear
on
a
photostat
of
entries
from
Gerald
Fish’s
bank
statement
filed
as
Exhibit
A5
at
the
trial,
the
deposits
being
made
on
February
8
and
February
12.
This
seems
to
be
approximately
in
conformity
with
the
provisions
of
the
document
referred
to
above
on
page
101M
of
the
Book
of
Documents,
but
why
payment
was
made
in
this
involved
way
with
MacDowell
receiving
his
actual
payment
from
Gerald
Fish
was
not
satisfactorily
explained.
In
any
event
this
would
not
seem
to
justify
a
conclusion
that
the
property
was
purchased
with
appellant’s
funds
or
that
his
mother
was
merely
a
préte-nom
for
him
when
she
acquired
it.
Soon
after,
Mrs.
Clara
Fish
took
ill
with
cancer
and
decided
she
did
not
wish
to
retain
the
property.
Appellant
testified
that
she
offered
to
sell
the
property
to
him
but
that
he
did
not
wish
to
buy
it
as
he
was
afraid
that
his
brothers
and
sisters
might
feel
that
he
had
taken
advantage
of
them
if
he
did
so
and
subsequently
resold
it
at
a
profit.
Mrs.
Frieda
Fish,
appellant’s
wife,
herself
a
lawyer
by
profession,
being
separate
as
to
property
from
appellant
by
marriage
contract,
testified
that
she
practised
her
profession
for
a
time
following
their
marriage
in
1951
until
their
son
was
born
and
then
became
interested
in
real
estate.
She
was
very
fond
of
her
mother-in-law
and
discussed
real
estate
matters
with
her.
Her
mother-in-law,
Mrs.
Clara
Fish,
indicated
when
she
became
ill
soon
after
buying
the
Cote
St-Lue
property
that
she
wished
to
dispose
of
it.
She
was
incurring
heavy
medical
bills
and
was
always
a
very
generous
person
and
wanted
to
have
ready
cash
available
for
charitable
and
other
purposes.
Frieda
Fish
did
not
like
to
see
the
property
go
outside
the
family
and
induced
her
brother,
Dave
Salmon,
to
buy
it
in
partnership
with
her.
Her
husband,
the
appellant,
had
no
objection
to
this
though
he
did
not
wish
to
purchase
the
property
himself.
She
and
Salmon
agreed
to
pay
Mrs.
Clara
Fish
$28,000
for
it,
approximately
what
she
paid
and
the
deed
was
passed
before
appellant
on
December
16,
1952,
the
purchaser
being
her
brother
Dave
Salmon
who
gave
his
address
however
as
appellant’s
office.
I
do
not
believe
too
much
significance
can
be
attributed
to
this
or
to
the
fact
that
the
deed
was
passed
before
appellant.
Payment
was
to
be
made
in
the
amount
of
$20,000
prior
to
the
signing
of
the
deed
and
the
assuming
by
the
purchaser
of
the
mortgage
of
$8,000
payable
to
Stanley
H.
MacDowell.
In
order
to
acquire
this
property
from
Mrs.
Clara
Fish
she
and
her
brother
Dave
Salmon
persuaded
their
father
to
borrow
$10,000
from
a
friend
David
Becker,
which
sum
they
paid
to
Mrs.
Clara
Fish,
giving
her
a
note
for
$10,000
for
the
balance.
Eventually
they
repaid
David
Becker
$6,000
on
February
5,
1956,
(page
14
Synopsis
of
Appellant’s
Evidence)
and
their
father
Mr.
Salmon,
Sr.,
arranged
with
Becker
for
payment
of
the
balance.
He
absolved
them
from
repaying
him
this
additional
$4,000
provided
they
would
pay
$2,000
to
another
son
Herbert
Salmon
which
they
did
by
cheque
dated
March
1,
1960
(page
15,
Synopsis
of
Appellant’s
Evidence).
In
effect
Salmon,
Sr.,
made
a
gift
to
Dave
Salmon
and
Frieda
Salmon
Fish
of
$2,000
but
this
has
no
bearing
on
the
present
case.
The
repayment
of
$6,000
to
David
Becker
from
Dave
Salmon
was
further
corroborated
by
a
photostat
of
an
affidavit
from
Becker
(page
158,
Book
of
Documents).
The
repayment
of
the
$8,000
due
to
MacDowell
is
established
by
a
notarial
acknowledgment
and
acquittance
passed
before
appellant
on
November
25,
1953
(page
128A,
Book
of
Documents).
This
payment
would
appear
to
have
been
made
by
cheque
dated
October
16,
1953,
to
S.
H.
MacDowell
for
$8,186.50,
the
difference
being
accounted
for
by
interest,
(pages
207
and
208,
Book
of
Documents).
This
left
a
balance
of
$10,000
owing
to
Mrs.
Clara
Fish
who
had
died
on
March
9,
1953
—
that
is
to
say,
some
time
before
the
sale
of
the
property
by
Salmon
on
September
22,
1953,
so
the
amount
was
now
due
to
Mrs.
Fish’s
estate.
Her
estate
was
wound
up
in
an
unusual
manner.
She
had
made
a
will
dated
October
3,
1952,
during
her
mortal
illness,
in
holograph
form,
in
which
she
leaves
$1,000
to
each
and
every
grand-
child
and
also
$1,000
to
her
great-grandchild
and
after
the
above
deductions
leaves
40%
to
her
daughter
Bertha,
40%
to
her
son
Gerald
and
20%
to
her
son
Nathan
of
all
my
possessions,
land,
houses
and
money’’.
When
she
sold
the
Cote
St-Lue
property
to
Dave
Salmon
on
December
16,
1952,
she
no
longer
owned
any
land,
and
if
she
had
previously
been
in
the
habit
of
investing
in
real
estate
as
indicated
in
the
evidence
of
appellant
and
of
his
wife
she
owned
none
at
the
time
of
her
death.
Moreover
it
appears
that
her
cash
and
liquid
assets
resulting
from
earlier
investments
was
for
the
most
part
held
for
her
by
appellant
and
Gerald
Fish.
The
acknowledgment
already
referred
to
on
page
101M
of
the
Book
of
Documents
in
which
appellant
acknowledges
that
he
owes
her
$10,000
paid
to
him
some
years
prior
thereto,
was
explained
by
him
in
his
evidence
as
being
a
loose
way
of
saying
that
he
had
$10,000
of
her
money
on
hand
resulting
from
earlier
investments
he
had
made
for
her
and
did
not
indicate
that
he
had
borrowed
this
sum
from
her.
However
Mrs.
Fish
apparently
had
a
bank
account
of
her
own
at
that
time
(February
5,
1952)
as
she
allegedly
made
out
a
cheque
for
$9,383.20
which
eventually
found
its
way
into
Gerald
Fish’s
hands
and
he
made
the
payment
of
$19,535
to
MacDowell
on
the
property
purchase,
receiving
the
balance
from
the
appellant.
Oddly
enough
no
Succession
Duty
Declarations
were
ever
filed
for
Mrs.
Clara
Fish’s
estate
and
her
will
was
not
even
probated
until
February
15,
1965,
nearly
twelve
years
after
her
death.
It
may
well
have
been
a
desire
to
liquidate
her
assets
and
avoid
the
necessity
of
filing
Succession
Duty
Declarations
that
induced
her
to
sell
the
property
shortly
before
her
death,
but
this
need
not
concern
us
here.
In
any
event
Dave
Salmon
and
Frieda
Fish,
appellant’s
wife,
liquidated
the
$10,000
they
owed
the
estate
of
Mrs.
Clara
Fish
on
the
purchase
of
the
property
by
making
payments
in
February
and
March,
1954,
to
her
heirs
in
accordance
with
the
terms
of
her
will.
One
of
Clara
Fish’s
daughters
Estelle
Fish
had
married
a
Mr.
Gold
and
had
two
children
and
this
payment
of
$2,000
was
made
in
cash.
Another
daughter
Alice
Fish
had
married
a
man
by
the
name
of
Constantine
and
had
one
daughter
Helen
who
was
a
widow
with
one
daughter
(the
grand-daughter
referred
to
in
the
will)
and
$2,000
was
paid
to
settle
these
legacies,
also
in
eash.
A
further
payment
of
$1,000
was
made
to
Sheldon
Fish,
son
of
appellant
and
his
wife,
and
a
payment
of
$2,340
was
made
to
the
deceased’s
daughter
Bertha
Fish
representing
her
40%
interest
in
the
residue,
plus
her
share
of
the
interest
which
had
amounted
to
$800
on
the
$10,000
loan
by
the
time
payment
was
made.
Under
the
terms
of
the
will
Gerald
Fish
would
have
been
entitled
to
an
equal
amount
$2,340
and
the
appellant
to
20%
or
$1,170.
Gerald
Fish
was
somewhat
annoyed,
however,
that
the
mother’s
property
which
had
been
sold
to
Dave
Salmon
had
been
later
resold
at
such
a
very
substantial
profit
and
that
the
appellant’s
wife
who
had
gone
into
this
venture
with
Salmon
had
also
benefited
from
the
profit
on
this
resale
and
to
avoid
friction
with
his
brother
appellant
stated
that
he
waived
his
20%
in
favour
of
his
brother
Gerald.
A
cheque
was
issued
on
the
Dave
Salmon
account
to
Triangle
Realty
Corporation
for
$4,500
allegedly
on
account
of
the
purchase
of
a
residential
property
which
Gerald
Fish
was
buying
from
them.
It
is
to
be
noted
that
the
same
day,
February
19,
1954,
an
identical
cheque
for
$4,500
was
issued
to
Triangle
Realty
Corporation
allegedly
no
account
of
the
purchase
price
of
a
property
which
Frieda
Salmon
Fish
was
buying
from
them,
though
the
deed
of
sale
was
not
passed
until
July
14,
1954,
and
then
called
for
a
down
payment
of
$9,000.
This
$4,500
was
eventually
repaid
to
the
Salmon
account
by
appellant
as
he
felt
that
he
should
be
paying
for
the
property
he
was
living
in,
according
to
the
evidence
of
appellant’s
wife.
These
payments
would
total
$11,840,
some
$1,000
more
than
the
amount
owed
to
the
estate
with
interest,
the
excess
being
something
in
the
nature
of
a
gratuitous
payment
to
Gerald
Fish.
With
respect
to
these
payments
in
settlement
of
the
purchase
price
of
the
property
bought
from
Clara
Fish
therefore
which
were
made
from
Dave
Salmon’s
bank
account
No.
2025
for
which
Frieda
Salmon
Fish
had
power
of
attorney
and
which
was
opened
by
deposit
of
the
down
payment
received
from
the
resale
of
the
property,
there
is
nothing
to
indicate
that
any
of
these
payments
were
made
under
the
direction
of
appellant
(save
to
the
extent
that
he
waived
his
20%
in
the
residue
of
the
estate
in
favour
of
his
brother
Gerald
which
does
not
affect
the
present
question)
or
that
he
had
any
control
over
bank
account
No.
2025.
We
now
come
to
another
series
of
entries
from
the
ledger
sheets
of
this
bank
account
which
indicate
that
a
number
of
loans
were
made
from
it
to
appellant
or
payments
made
from
it
on
his
behalf
and
for
his
benefit,
which,
unless
he
could
establish
that
all
such
loans
were
repaid
might
well
justify
an
assumption
that
the
account
was
being
used
as
if
it
were
his
own.
If
all
such
loans
were
duly
repaid
however
there
would
appear
to
be
nothing
unusual
or
even
suspicious
in
the
fact
that
he
might
readily
be
able
to
borrow
money
from
time
to
time
as
required
from
his
wife
and
brother-in-law
rather
than
go
to
strangers
for
it.
Various
loans
were
made
from
the
account
from
time
to
time
or
payments
made
from
it
on
behalf
of
appellant
as
appears
from
a
list
on
page
16
in
the
Synopsis
of
Appellant’s
Evidence.
The
first
item
on
this
however
dated
January
1,
1954,
being
a
payment
in
the
amount
of
$1,090.10
to
the
Town
of
Cote
St-Luc,
for
taxes
was
eventually
after
considerable
conflicting
evidence
established
to
be
a
misunderstanding
and
was
in
fact
a
payment
made
for
taxes
on
the
property
purchased
by
Salmon
and
not
on
the
unsubdivided
part
of
Lot
83
in
Cote-St.
Luc
which
was
later
purchased
by
appellant
and
certain
associates
on
which
the
taxes
were
much
less.
This
item
must
therefore
be
deleted
from
the
list.
The
payment
dated
December
13,
1954,
to
Philippe
Delorme
and
Roger
Delorme
in
the
amount
of
$6,250
appears
to
have
been
for
the
benefit
of
the
appellant
on
account
of
the
purchase
price
of
a
property
purchased
by
Esther
Nobleman
Gold,
Estelle
Fish
Gold
and
Sylvia
Salmon,
the
latter
for
a
one-half
interest
on
December
16,
1953,
(page
129,
Book
of
Documents),
with
respect
to
which
the
said
Sylvia
Salmon
acknowledged
by
deed
dated
February
12,
1954,
that
appellant
was
the
actual
owner
and
transferred
her
interest
in
same
to
him
(page
18,
Book
of
Documents).
The
cheque
for
$5,543.76
drawn
on
the
Salmon
account
on
January
15,
1956,
payable
to
S.
II.
MacDowell
and
N.
Fish
was
explained
as
being
on
account
of
the
purchase
price
of
the
unsubdivided
part
of
Lot
83
which
appellant
and
certain
associates
were
buying
from
Mr.
MacDowell.
This
was
repaid
by
cheque
dated
February
13,
1956,
from
Nathan
Fish
to
D.
Salmon
(page
20,
Synopsis
of
Appellant’s
Evidence).
A
further
cheque
dated
July
19,
1956,
was
paid
on
Salmon’s
account
to
Nathan
Fish
and
Jack
Liberman
in
the
amount
of
$6,250.
This
was
issued
in
connection
with
the
purchase
by
appellant
and
one
Bennie
Singer
of
a
property
from
Jack
Liberman
on
the
same
date,
(page
160,
Book
of
Documents)
and
was
allegedly
repaid
by
a
deposit
in
Salmon’s
account
on
December
14,
1956,
in
the
amount
of
$6,250
(page
212,
Book
of
Documents).
Four
other
cheques
were
issued
by
appellant
on
account
of
the
purchase
price
of
a
property
on
Notre
Dame
St.,
purchased
by
Frieda
Fish
allegedly
on
behalf
of
herself
and
her
brother
from
one
Aimé
Bibeau
on
May
24,
1957,
(page
187,
Book
of
Documents).
These
four
cheques
were
issued
as
follows:
the
first,
dated
May
8,
1957,
in
favour
of
B.
Bélanger,
agent,
for
$1,000
endorsed
on
the
back,
‘‘deposit
on
account
of
offer
to
purchase
property
on
Notre
Dame
East
and
Desjardins,’’
the
second
dated
May
24,
1957,
in
favour
of
Aimé
Bibeau
in
the
amount
of
$3,227.32,
the
third
bearing
the
same
date
in
favour
of
Edouard
Cousineau
and
Aimé
Bibeau
in
the
amount
of
$5,070.72,
and
the
fourth
also
dated
May
24,
1957,
in
favour
of
Aimé
Bibeau
is
in
the
amount
of
$1,480.
Three
of
these
cheques
bear
the
notation
‘‘repay
loan
of
Mrs.
F.
and
D.
8S.
re
Notre
Dame,’’
but
it
appears
that
this
notation
may
have
been
added
later
when
the
documents
were
being
prepared
in
connection
with
the
appeal.
These
four
payments
would
total
$10,728.04
and
would
approximately
repay
the
$4,500
paid
to
Triangle
Realty
and
one
of
the
$6,250
payments
made
on
behalf
of
appellant
which
was
not
paid
directly
to
the
Salmon
account
(see
summary,
page
16,
Synopsis
of
Appellant’s
Evidence).
It
would
seem
that
it
was
the
appellant’s
wife
Frieda
Fish
that
benefited
from
these
repayments
however
rather
than
her
brother
Dave
Salmon
as
she
admits
that
the
Notre
Dame
Street
property
was
revenue
producing
though
by
no
means
profitable,
and
that
she
declared
all
the
revenue
from
same
as
hers.
Frieda
Fish
also
benefited
from
a
further
cheque
in
the
amount
of
$9,000
drawn
on
the
Salmon
account
dated
May
24,
1957,
payable
to
Edouard
Cousineau
and
Aimé
Bibeau
in
connection
with
the
purchase
of
the
Notre
Dame
St.
property.
Three
other
withdrawals
from
the
Salmon
account
(page
26,
Synopsis
of
Appellant’s
Evidence)
consisting
of
a
cheque
dated
April
19,
1955,
payable
to
Nathan
Fish
and
International
Plumbing
for
$10,000,
another
dated
December
6,
1955,
payable
to
International
Plumbing
and
Heating
Supplies
Limited
for
$8,000
and
a
third
dated
February
11,
1957,
for
$3,500
payable
to
B.
Simonovitch
were
explained
as
being
for
loans
to
International
Plumbing
and
Heating
Supplies
Limited
(B.
Simonovitch).
Mrs.
Fish
explained
that
Mr.
Simonovitch
was
an
old
friend
of
her
family
and
she
did
not
insist
on
putting
a
hypothec
on
his
property
to
guarantee
this
loan,
as
this
would
have
affected
other
borrowing
by
him
but
that
her
husband,
the
appellant,
was
also
made
a
party
as
a
further
guarantee.
Two
documents
acknowledging
the
$10,000
and
$8,000
loans
from
Dave
Salmon
appear
on
pages
150A
and
150B,
Book
of
Documents.
These
loans
were
fully
repaid
according
to
Mrs.
Fish’s
evidence
by
a
series
of
monthly
cheques,
first
in
the
amount
of
$250
and
subsequently
in
the
amount
of
$499.37
which
appear
as
deposits
in
the
ledger
sheets
of
the
account
at
pages
209
and
following
of
the
Book
of
Documents.
Another
series
of
cheques
issued
on
the
Salmon
account
between
January
11,
1956,
and
January
11,
1964,
to
either
Frieda
Salmon
or
Georges
Henri
Brossard
totalling
$21,800
were
used
for
the
purchase
of
a
property
bought
from
Georges
Henri
Brossard
by
Frieda
Salmon
on
January
11,
1956.
Brossard
testified
as
a
witness
that
he
dealt
only
with
Mrs.
Fish
and
only
met
the
appellant
when
he
signed
the
deed
to
authorize
his
wife
as
required
by
Quebec
law
and
that
all
payments
for
the
purchase
of
the
property
were
made
to
him
by
Mrs.
Fish.
Further
cheques
were
issued
on
the
account
on
October
17,
1958,
for
$1,000
and
October
22,
1958,
for
$16,000
to
Frieda
Salmon
in
connection
with
the
purchase
of
a
property
by
her
from
one
Georges
Duquette
on
October
22,
1958,
(page
197,
Book
of
Documents).
Duquette
testified
that
all
his
dealings
had
been
with
Frieda
Fish
and
that
he
had
never
dealt
with
the
appellant,
only
meeting
him
when
he
signed
the
deed
to
authorize
his
wife
and
that
all
payments
had
been
made
by
her.
Finally
there
were
two
further
cheques,
one
dated
March
9,
1955,
for
cash
in
the
amount
of
$15,000
and
the
other
November
6,
1961,
payable
to
Norman
C.
Denys,
an
attorney,
the
latter
being
explained
as
payment
to
him
of
legal
fees
in
connection
with
services
rendered
to
Dave
Salmon
in
objecting
to
an
assessment
of
the
profit
on
the
resale
of
the
Cote
St-Luc
property
as
income.
A
notice
of
objection
was
made
and
this
was
maintained
by
the
department,
the
profit
being
accepted
as
capital
gain
(Exhibit
A6
filed
at
trial).
The
$15,000
was
used
in
connection
with
expenses
resulting
from
the
serious
illness
in
a
hospital
in
New
York
and
eventual
death
from
leukemia
of
Sylvia
Salmon
Nevard,
the
sister
of
Dave
Salmon
and
Frieda
Salmon
Fish.
Her
hospital
stay
alone
cost
between
$5,000
and
$7,000,
funeral
bill
was
$1,091.30,
and
both
Dave
Salmon,
Mrs.
Fish,
and
other
members
of
the
Salmon
family
made
frequent
trips
to
New
York
during
her
terminal
illness
to
spend
as
much
time
as
possible
with
her,
so
in
effect
this
money
was
all
spent
on
behalf
of
members
of
the
Salmon
family.
(See
pages
282
to
237,
Book
of
Documents.
)
Turning
now
to
the
circumstances
in
which
the
property
in
question
was
acquired
by
Dave
Salmon
and
the
manner
in
which
the
bank
account
in
which
the
proceeds
of
resale
were
deposited
was
operated,
Dave
Salmon
testified
that
he
had
always
been
interested
in
animals
and
wanted
to
go
in
for
chicken
farming
and
that
when
he
was
approached
by
his
sister
about
buying
the
land
from
Mrs.
Clara
Fish
he
went
to
see
it
with
his
sister
Frieda
Salmon
Fish
and
with
his
father
who,
as
outlined
above,
borrowed
the
money
for
the
down
payment
from
his
friend
David
Becker.
On
July
22,
1953,
he
formally
registered
a
declaration
of
carrying
on
business
under
the
name
of
Dave’s
Chicken
F'arm
in
the
office
of
the
Superior
Court
for
the
District
of
Montreal
(page
121A,
Book
of
Documents).
He
said
that
subsequently
he
encountered
difficulties
in
securing
the
necessary
permit
for
carrying
on
this
business
in
Cote
St-Luc
and
in
due
course
one
Lew
Kozlov,
a
real
estate
agent,
approached
his
sister
and
made
what
he
considered
to
be
a
fantastic
offer
for
the
property.
He
said
that
he
himself
does
not
enjoy
dealing
in
real
estate
and
was
very
worried
for
some
nine
months
about
the
mortgage
due
on
the
property
and
was
entirely
surprised
by
the
very
generous
offer
made.
He
considered
himself
to
be
the
owner
of
the
property
and
responsible
for
paying
the
mortgage
on
it
and
the
balance
of
price
due
to
the
estate
of
Mrs.
Clara
Fish
but
his
sister
is
much
better
educated
than
he
is,
being
a
lawyer,
and
he
left
all
business
matters
to
her.
Although
the
bank
account
in
which
the
proceeds
of
the
sale
were
deposited
was
in
his
name,
his
sister
Frieda
Salmon
Fish
had
power
of
attorney
for
it
and
all
but
a
very
few
cheques
drawn
on
it
were
drawn
by
her.
Subsequently
properties
were
bought
in
her
name
and
they
have
never
divided
the
amounts
in
the
bank
account.
He
has
a
good
position
as
Traffic
Manager
of
Domtar
and
has
not
required
funds
from
the
account
but
it
has
always
been
understood
that
he
could
get
same
whenever
they
were
required.
His
sister
Frieda
Fish
declared
the
income
on
the
properties
bought
with
funds
of
the
account
in
her
name.
He
never
acted
in
any
way
as
a
nominee
or
prête-nom
for
appellant.
Mrs.
Frieda
Salmon
Fish,
in
her
evidence,
indicated
that
she
considered
herself
and
her
brother
Dave
Salmon
to
be
in
partnership
in
connection
with
the
purchase
and
sale
of
the
Cote
St-Luc
property
and
the
bank
account
resulting
from
this
sale.
Certainly
the
relationship
between
Dave
Salmon
and
his
sister,
Frieda
Salmon
Fish,
was
an
extremely
loose
one
and
never
clearly
defined
and
he
obviously
trusted
in
her
implicitly.
From
the
legal
point
of
view
the
property
was
purchased
solely
in
his
name
and
sold
by
him
with
the
proceeds
going
into
an
account
in
his
name.
On
the
other
hand
his
sister
had
a
free
hand
in
the
operation
of
the
bank
account
as
she
apparently
made
all
subsequent
property
purchases
in
her
name
and
declared
the
income
from
such
investments
as
her
own
in
her
tax
returns.
Certainly
substantial
sums
were
drawn
from
the
account
from
time
to
time
for
her
benefit
in
connection
with
these
property
purchases
and
the
only
benefit
he
ever
gained
from
the
account
was
an
indirect
one
in
that
some
$15,000
was
spent
on
behalf
of
the
Salmon
family
generally
in
connection
with
the
illness
of
his
sister.
I
believe
that
a
very
good
case
could
be
made
for
holding
that
Dave
Salmon
was
merely
a
préte-nom
for
his
sister
Frieda
Salmon
Fish
in
connection
with
all
these
dealings
and
that
the
profit
derived
from
the
sale
of
the
Cote
St-Luc
property
was
really
hers
and
not
his.
In
this
event
in
view
of
her
subsequent
dealings
in
real
estate
the
profit
on
the
disposal
might
perhaps
have
been
considered
as
an
adventure
in
the
nature
of
trade
insofar
as
she
was
concerned.
However
there
was
nothing
to
indicate
to
the
Minister
at
the
time
that
the
beneficial
as
well
as
the
legal
ownership
in
the
property
did
not
vest
in
Dave
Salmon
and
the
profit
on
the
resale
was
eventually
accepted
as
capital
gain
insofar
as
he
was
concerned.
What
we
are
now
dealing
with
however
is
not
the
nature
of
the
business
relationship
between
Frieda
Salmon
Fish
and
her
brother
but
rather
that
of
the
business
relationship,
if
any,
between
appellant
and
Dave
Salmon
and
it
is
only
appellant’s
income
tax
returns
for
the
years
in
question
with
which
we
are
concerned.
A
finding
that
Dave
Salmon
may
well
have
been
a
préte-nom
for
Mrs.
Frieda
Salmon
Fish
does
not
necessarily
lead
to
a
finding
that
he
was
therefore
also
a
préte-nom
for
the
appellant.
It
certainly
cannot
be
held
that
a
married
woman
cannot
have
separate
business
enterprises
or
invest
or
deal
in
real
estate
entirely
separately
and
apart
from
her
husband,
and
without
necessarily
being
under
his
direction
or
control
in
connection
with
these
business
ventures.
While
it
is
entirely
conceivable
that
many
a
wife
with
little
experience
in
business
might
well
be
used
by
her
husband
as
a
cover
for
some
of
his
business
dealings
which
were
in
reality
entirely
arranged,
carried
out
and
paid
for
by
him
though
using
her
name,
there
appears
to
be
insufficient
grounds
for
making
this
assumption
in
the
present
case.
Mrs.
Fish
as
a
lawyer
with
several
years
practice
was
qualified
by
her
education
and
experience
to
deal
in
real
estate,
and
when
she
retired
from
practice
following
the
birth
of
their
son,
it
seems
perfectly
plausible
that
she
might
wish
to
do
this
on
a
part-time
basis
in
order
to
earn
some
independent
income,
or
make
capital
gains
for
herself.
In
fact
in
view
of
the
circles
in
which
appellant
and
his
wife
lived
and
the
friends
and
business
associates
they
had,
it
might
even
seem
unlikely
if
she
did
not
seek
to
use
her
training
in
some
such
business
ventures
or
investments
herself.
The
detailed
evidence
submitted
seems
to
establish
that
although
appellant
frequently
was
able
to
borrow
money
from
the
Salmon
account
he
always
repaid
same
in
one
way
or
another
though
some
of
the
repayments
were
made
to
third
parties
for
the
benefit
of
his
wife
Frieda
Salmon
Fish.
This
is
not
to
state
however
that
he
benefited
personally
from
these
advances.
I
consider
therefore
that
he
has
successfully
rebutted
the
presumption
of
the
Minister
that
Dave
Salmon
was
his
prête-nom
or
mandatary
in
connection
with
the
purchase
and
resale
of
the
Cote
St-
Lue
property
and
the
use
of
the
bank
account
in
which
the
proceeds
of
the
sale
were
deposited
and
that
therefore
the
bank
balance
of
$43,155.97
in
account
No.
2025
in
the
Royal
Bank
of
Canada
as
of
December
31,
1954,
the
account
receivable
of
$10,308.79
from
Triangle
Realty
Corporation
as
of
December
31,
1954,
and
the
account
receivable
in
the
amount
of
$17,456
as
at
December
31,
1954,
due
from
Smith
Building
Services
Limited
should
be
deleted
from
the
net
worth
statement
of
appellant
and
the
assessments
referred
back
to
the
Minister
to
be
re-assessed
accordingly.
In
view
of
the
fact
that
some
of
the
more
important
documents
on
which
appellant
relies
were
only
produced
at
a
late
date,
after
the
hearing
before
the
Tax
Appeal
Board,
and
that
he
is
only
partially
successful
in
his
appeal,
no
costs.
will
be
awarded
to
him.