Kerr,
J.:—This
is
an
appeal
from
a
decision
of
the
Tax
Appeal
Board
which
upheld
the
Minister’s
re-assessment
of
the
appellant’s
income
tax
for
its
1962
taxation
year.
In
making
that
assessment
the
Minister
added
to
the
appellant’s
reported
income
the
sum
of
$222,320.70
as
recovery
of
capital
cost
allowances.
The
appellant’s
primary
objection
is
to
that
addition,
which
resulted
in
an
increase
in
tax.
The
appellant
commenced
business
in
1956
as
Twin
Bridges
Sand
&
Gravel
Ltd.,
and
thereafter
carried
on
the
business
of
mining,
processing
and
selling
sand
and
gravel,
principally
in
the
vicinity
of
Edmonton.
Eventually,
pursuant
to
a
plan
which
played
a
part
in
this
dispute,
it
changed
its
name
to
Avril
Holdings
Ltd.
Its
income
tax
returns
for
its
taxation
years
ending
March
31,
1957-61
are
in
its
former
name
and
for
its
taxation
year
ending
March
31,
1962
in
its
present
name.
The
latter
year
will
be
referred
to
hereinafter
as
its
1962
taxation
year.
At
the
commencement
of
its
1962
taxation
year
the
appellant
owned
or
was
entitled
to
become
owner
of
certain
parcels
of
land*
containing
sand
and
gravel
pits,
known
as
Pit
No.
1
East
Side
Lands,
Pits
Nos.
8,
4
and
7
Clover
Bar
Lands,
and
Pit
No.
5
Entwistle
Lands,
in
respect
of
which
it
had
claimed
and
had
been
allowed
deductions
by
way
of
capital
cost
allowances
in
previous
taxation
years.
In
its
1962
taxation
year
it
sold
or
entered
into
agreements
to
sell
all
the
lands
and
the
remaining
sand
and
gravel.
It
was
from
these
transactions,
3
in
number,
that
the
Minister’s
addition
to
the
appellant’s
reported
income
resulted.
One
of
the
sales
was
to
Calgary
Power
Ltd,
for
a
right-of-way,
at
a
price
of
$30,900.
The
appellant’s
income
tax
return
for
its
1962
taxation
year
recites
this
disposal
and
selling
price.
Mr.
N.
J.
Hertz,
Secretary
Treasurer
of
the
appellant
company,
explained
and
gave
reasons
for
the
other
sales.
In
brief,
it
was
that
the
appellant,
a
young
company,
wanted
to
ensure
that
it
would
have
an
adequate
future
supply
of
sand
and
gravel,
and
it
was
worried
that
its
competitors
would
acquire
the
sand
and
gravel
lands
in
the
area
in
which
it
was
operating.
A
plan
was
therefore
conceived
to
form
a
new
company
(Clover
Bar
Land
Co.
Ltd.)
which
would
acquire
the
needed
lands
from
their
respective
owners.
This
new
company
would
have
no
money
at
the
outset
to
pay
for
the
lands,
but
would
issue
long
term
debentures
to
each
landowner
in
proportion
to
the
value
of
the
lands
contributed
by
such
landowner
to
the
new
company.
The
new
company
would
receive
royalties
for
sand
and
gravel
removed
from
the
land
in
subsequent
years,
and
from
such
royalties
and
the
proceeds
of
any
future
sales
of
land
would
in
due
course
be
put
in
funds
to
pay
the
debentures
as
they
became
payable.
The
plan
was
proposed
to
landowners
in
the
area
concerned,
the
largest
being
Bailey
Farms
Ltd.,
and
members
of
the
Bailey
family,
and
they
agreed
to
join
in
the
plan.
In
furtherance
of
the
plan
the
appellant
changed
its
name
to
Avril
Holdings
Ltd.,
as
already
mentioned,
and
caused
a
new
company,
Twin
Bridges
Sand
&
Gravel
(1960)
Ltd.,
to
be
incorporated.
This
new
company
would
have
the
benefit
of
the
former
name
of
the
appellant
and
would
continue
the
sand
and
gravel
business
previously
carried
on
by
the
appellant.
It
would
obtain
its
supply
of
sand
and
gravel
from
the
lands
contributed
to
Clover
Bar
Land
Co.
by
the
appellant
and
by
Bailey
Farms
Ltd.
and
other
landowners.
Then
came
the
other
2
sales
involved
in
this
appeal,
viz.,
(a)
sale
of
sand
and
gravel,
and
(b)
sale
of
lands.
Sale
of
sand
and
gravel.
By
an
agreement
(Exhibit
A-9)
dated
December
20,
1961,
between
Twin
Bridges
Sand
&
Gravel
Ltd.,
as
vendor,
and
Twin
Bridges
Sand
&
Gravel
(1960)
Ltd.,
as
purchaser,
the
appellant
sold
to
the
purchaser
all
its
right,
title
and
interest
both
at
law
and
in
equity
in
and
to
all
sand
and
gravel
contained
in,
upon
or
under
the
said
lands,
as
of
the
31st
day
of
January
A.D.
1962”,
and
granted
to
the
purchaser
a
right
to
enter
upon
the
lands
and
remove
the
sand
and
gravel,
etc.
In
consideration
thereof,
the
purchaser
agreed
to
pay
to
the
appellant
the
book
value
of
the
sand
and
gravel
as
disclosed
on
an
interim
balance
sheet
of
the
appellant
as
at
January
31,
1962,
to
be
prepared.
A
memorandum
signed
by
officers
of
the
companies
on
March
2,
1962
acknowledged
and
confirmed
that
the
said
book
value
and
consideration
payable
was
$194,
716.
91.
The
appellant’s
income
tax
return
for
its
1962
taxation
year
shows
the
sale
price
of
gravel
deposits
January
31,
1962,
at
that
amount.
Sale
of
lands.
By
an
agreement
(Exhibit
A-ll)
dated
February
2,
1962,
between
Twin
Bridges
Sand
&
Gravel
Ltd.
and
Clover
Bar
Land
Co.
Ltd.,
which
referred,
inter
alia,
to
the
sale
of
the
right-of-way
to
Calgary
Power,
to
a
mortgage
on
the
said
lands
in
favour
of
the
Industrial
Development
Bank
and
to
an
issue
of
debentures
by
Clover
Bar,
the
appellant
agreed
to
sell
its
interest
in
the
lands
to
Clover
Bar.
Paragraphs
numbered
1,
2
and
3
of
the
agreement
read
as
follows:
1.
Twin
Bridges
hereby
agrees
to
sell,
transfer
and
assign
to
Clover
Bar
all
its
right
title
and
interest
both
at
law
and
in
equity
in
and
to
the
lands
described
in
Schedules
A
,
“B”,
and
“C”
hereto
excepting
thereout
the
Calgary
Power
right-of-way
and
for
a
total
consideration
of
Seven
Hundred
Sixty
One
Thousand
Eight
Hundred
Forty
One
($761,841.00)
Dollars
allocated
as
between
the
said
lands
as
follows:
As
to
the
Clover
Bar
lands—One
Thousand
Dollars
per
acre.
As
to
the
East
Side
lands—One
Hundred
Dollars
per
acre.
As
to
the
Entwistle
lands—Thirty
Thousand
Dollars.
2.
Clover
Bar
hereby
agrees
to
issue
and
allot
to
Twin
Bridges
debentures
as
aforesaid
in
the
principal
amount
of
Seven
Hundred
Sixty
One
Thousand
Eight
Hundred
Forty
One
($761,841.00)
Dollars
being
the
total
purchase
price
as
provided
for
in
paragraph
1
herein,
and
Twin
Bridges
hereby
agrees
to
accept
such
debentures
as
payment
in
full
for
all
the
said
lands
herein
referred
to.
8.
Clover
Bar
hereby
agrees
to
issue
and
allot
to
Twin
Bridges
or
its
nominee
Four
Thousand
One
Hundred
Ninety
(4,190)
fully
paid
up
shares
of
no
par
value
in
the
capital
of
Clover
Bar
at
and
for
the
nominal
sum
of
One
Cent
($0.01)
per
share
(representing
5.5
such
shares
for
each
One
Thousand
Dollars
worth
of
debentures
accepted
by
Twin
Bridges
in
consideration
of
this
sale).
Mr.
Hertz
said
that
the
sale
price
of
$1,000
per
acre
for
the
so-called
Clover
Bar
lands
was
arrived
at
pursuant
to
negotiations
with
the
Baileys
to
establish
values
for
their
own
lands
and
all
the
other
lands
that
were
to
be
acquired
by
Clover
Bar
Land
Co.
The
sale
price
of
$30,000
for
the
Entwistle
lands
was
similarly
agreed
upon.
The
appellant
did
not
engage
an
appraiser
to
appraise
the
value
of
the
lands.
Paragraph
numbered
6
of
the
agreement
reads
in
part
as
follows:
6.
It
is
agreed
that
(a)
In
effecting
the
transfer
of
the
said
lands
contemplated
by
this
Agreement
Twin
Bridges
may
except
the
Calgary
power
right-of-way,
or
include
the
same
.
.
.
In
paragraph
numbered
8
the
parties
agreed
to
execute
and
deliver
all
further
documents
deemed
necessary
to
give
force
and
effect
to
the
agreement.
The
appellant’s
income
tax
return
for
its
1962
taxation
year
shows
this
disposal
of
land
at
a
selling
price.
of:
$761,841.
(A
capital
gain
therefrom
of
$685,614
is
claimed
in
the
return.)
The
plan
involved
another
agreement
(Exhibit
A-10)
dated
December
20,
1961,
between
Twin
Bridges
Sand
&
Gravel
Ltd.,
as
vendor,
and
Twin
Bridges
Sand
&
Gravel
(1960)
Ltd.,
as
purchaser,
whereby
the
appellant
sold
as
of
January
31,
1962
to
the
purchaser
all
its
assets,
excepting
the
said
lands,
but
including
the
sand
and
gravel,
at
book
value
as
at
January
31,
1962;
and-in
consideration
thereof
the
purchaser
agreed
to
assume
certain
liabilities
of
the
appellant
and
to
pay
to
the
appellant
the
difference
between
the
book
value
of
the
assets
sold
and
the
amount
of
the
liabilities
so
assumed.
A
memorandum
signed
by
officers
of
the
companies
on
March
2,
1962,
shows
the
said
amounts
as
follows:
Total
consideration
on
sale
|
$774,232.87
|
(Book
value
of
all
assets
sold)
|
|
Total
liabilities
assumed
by
purchaser
|
723,462.00
|
Balance
payable
by
purchaser
to
vendor
|
$
50,770.87
|
The
appellant’s
income
tax
return
for
its
1962
taxation
year
states
‘
The
company
ceased
operations
and
disposed
of
its
assets
on
January
31,
1962”.
In
furtherance
of
the
plan
Twin
Bridges
Sand
&
Gravel
(1960)
Ltd.
entered
into
two
agreements
with
Clover
Bar
Land
Co.
Ltd.
(Exhibits
A-19
and
A-20)
dated
Mary
10,
1962,
whereby
Twin
Bridges
(1960)
Ltd.
(a)
sold
to
Clover
Bar
all
its
interest
in
the
sand
and
gravel
which
it
had
acquired
from
the
appellant
(by
the
agreement
—
Exhibit
A-9
—
dated
December
20,
1961)
;
(b)
received
in
return
from
Clover
Bar
a
grant
of
a
right
to
enter
upon
the
said
lands
and
to
remove
the
sand
and
gravel;
and
(c)
agreed
to
pay
royalties
to
Clover
Bar
for
sand
and
gravel
removed
from
the
lands
thereafter.
Mr.
Hertz
testified
that
negotiations
with
the
Baileys
respecting
the
debentures
to
be
issued
by
Clover
Bar
continued
into
the
appellant’s
1963
taxation
year,
and
in
confirmation
thereof
produced
a
letter
(Exhibit
A-18)
from
Field,
Hyndman,
Solicitors
for
Bailey
Farms
Ltd.,
dated
March
26,
1962,
suggesting
conditions
to
be
included
in
the
terms
of
the
debentures.
Debentures
in
the
name
of
the
appellant
were
signed
and
issued
on
June
28,
1963,
with
an
effective
date
of
issue
of
February
2,
1962,
having
a
total
face
value
of
$760,000.
They
contain
a
recitation
that
they
were
issued
under
authority
of
a
resolution
of
the
directors
dated
January
31,
1962.
Registration
was
effected
under
Section
99
of
The
Compames
Act
of
Alberta
on
July
14,
1963
(Exhibit
A-26).
The
debentures
are
shown
in
the
assets
column
of
the
March
31,
1962,
balance
sheet
of
the
appellant,
submitted
with
its
income
tax
return
for
that
taxation
year,
at
$761,
841,
although
they
had
not
been
issued
by
that
date;
and
an
accompanying
note
of
the
chartered
accounts
reads
as
follows:
Note
2:
On
January
31,
1962,
the
company
ceased
operations
and
sold
all
of
its
assets,
except
certain
lands,
to
Twin
Bridges
Sand
&
Gravel
(1960)
Ltd.
for
$774,232.87.
As
partial
consideration,
the
purchaser
assumed
liabilities
of
the
vendor
of
$732,462.00.
The
remaining
$50,770.87
was
re-
ceivable
by
the
company
at
March
31,
1962.
The
remaining
lands
were
sold
to
Clover
Bar
Land
Co.
Ltd.
for
$761,841.00
with
the
company
accepting
longterm
debentures
in
payment.
Mr.
Hertz
said
that,
before
exercising
options
to
purchase
the
lands
which
it
acquired,
the
appellant
had
tests
made
to
estimate
their
quantities
and
areas
of
sand
and
gravel,
and
that
the
exercise
of
such
options
was
dependent
upon
the
results
of
the
tests.
Each
of
the
pits
involved
was
acquired
separately
as
a
source
of
supply
for
the
company’s
business.
The
capital
cost
of
each
parcel
of
land
as
shown
in
the
income
tax
returns
is
the
capital
cost
of
the
land
with
its
sand
and
gravel.
Hertz
also
gave
a
description
of
the
sand
and
gravel
operations,
which
involved
the
removal
of
overburden
or
topsoil,
piling
it
elsewhere
on
the
land,
and
the
extraction
of
the
sand
and
gravel
by
means
of
loaders
and
drag
lines.
When
extraction
took
place
the
land
would
have
trenches,
mounds,
depressions,
and
a
lower
level
than
surrounding
lands,
and
work
would
be
involved
in
making
it
level
and
covering
it
with
topsoil
or
otherwise
making
it
fit
for
building
or
other
use.
In
its
1960
income
tax
returns
the
appellant
provided
a
Schedule
of
Land
and
Gravel
Deposits
and
Accumulated
Depletion,
set
forth
next,
which
shows
as
of
March
31,
1960
accumulated
depletion,
book
value
of
gravel
deposits,
residual
value
of
the
lands,
etc.
The
depletion
rate
per
yard
was
arrived
at
by
taking
(a)
the
cost
of
the
land
and
gravel,
less
the
stated
residual
value
of
the
land,
and
dividing
the
resulting
figure
by
(b)
the
estimated
total
number
of
yards
of
gravel
recoverable.
As
to
the
residual
values
of
the
lands,
Mr.
Hertz
said
that
he
had
talked
with
officers
of
the
Department
of
National
Revenue
and
they
agreed
on
a
residual
value
of
$1,600
or
approximately
$10
per
acre
for
the
Entwistle
lands
(Pit
No.
5).
This
figure
is
shown
in
Exhibit
A-14,
D.N.R.
income
adjustment
for
the
1959
taxation
year.
He
also
said
that
a
residual
value
of
$100
per
acre
had
been
agreed
with
officers
of
the
Department
for
the
Clover
Bar
lands
(Pits
3,
4
and
7).
Pit
No.
1
was
fully
depleted
by
March
31,
1960,
a
total
of
653,145
cubic
yards
having
been
extracted,
but
depletion
allowance
was
claimed
on
only
635,000
yards.
An
investment
dealer,
Mr.
Ritchie,
gave
his
opinion
that
the
Clover
Bar
Land
Co.’s
debentures
which
were
issued
to
the
appellant
had
no
market
value
as
of
February
2,
1962.
In
his
opinion
the
interest
was
out
of
line,
the
company
had
no
liquidity
and
no
assets
except
the
lands,
which
were
heavily
mortgaged,
and
the
company
was
a
private
company
whose
debentures
could
be
marketed
only
within
the
company.
In
cross
examination,
he
said
that
he
was
not
qualified
to
give
an
estimate
as
to
the
value
of
the
lands
and
he
did
not
know
what
their
value
was;
and
he
had
no
knowledge
of
any
intention
on
the
part
of
the
appellant
to
sell
the
debentures.
Mr.
Hertz
signed
the
various
sales
agreements
on
behalf
of
the
appellant
and
Twin
Bridges
Sand
&
Gravel
(1960)
Ltd.
and
Clover
Bar
Land
Co.
Ltd.
These
companies
were
not
dealing
at
arm’s
length
in
the
transactions.
The
appellant’s
Notice
of
Appeal
to
this
Court
contains
a
Statement
of
Facts,
as
follows
:
1.
Avril
Holdings
Ltd.
(hereinafter
called
“Avril”),
the
name
of
which
was
then
Twin
Bridges
Sand
and
Gravel
Ltd.,
had
carried
on
a
sand
and
gravel
business
for
a
number
of
years.
Avril
purchased
land
containing
sand
and
gravel
deposits
in
the
Clover
Bar
area
immediately
east
of
the
City
of
Edmonton.
To
improve
its
competitive
position,
Avril
endeavoured
to
acquire
additional
land
in
the
vicinity
which
might
contain
sand
and
gravel.
2.
As
the
costs
of
acquiring
the
necessary
lands
appeared
beyond
Avril’s
resources,
Avril
proposed
to
Bailey
Farms
Ltd.,
the
largest
owners
of
land
in
the
area,
that
a
land
development
company
be
formed
to
acquire
the
land
surface
ownership
rights
of
Avril
and
the
Baileys
and
perhaps
adjacent
parcels
owned
by
others.
A
separate
operating
company
would
acquire
the
sand
and
gravel
rights.
3.
Avril’s
sand
and
gravel
undertaking,
including
sand
and
gravel
at
its
undepleted
value
of
$194,716.91,
was
sold
at
book
value
by
Avril
to
Twin
Bridges
Sand
and
Gravel
(1960)
Ltd.
When
Avril
had
acquired
the
lands
originally,
in
each
case
engineers
had
been
retained
to
determine
the
extent
of
the
sand
and
gravel
reserves.
Capital
cost
or
depletion
allowance
was
claimed
on
the
sand
and
gravel
as
so
estimated
but
none
was
claimed
on
the
residual
land.
4.
Avril
then
sold
its
residual
land
to
Clover
Bar
Land
Co.
Ltd.
Clover
Bar
Land
Co.
Ltd.
had
no
money
and
would
not
have
for
a
number
of
years
until
money
was
realized
from
their
lands,
and
the
agreement
for
sale
of
the
land
provided
for
the
price
to
be
paid
according
to
a
schedule
contained
in
a
series
of
debentures
to
be
given
by
Clover
Bar
Land
Co.
Ltd.
The
Schedule
provided
that
the
debentures
would
bear
interest
at
3%
per
annum
from
five
years
from
issue
and
principal
payment
would
begin
six
years
from
issue
with
a
payment
of
2%
of
the
original
principal
sum,
and
similar
payments
of
2%
for
the
next
four
years,
5%
for
each
of
the
next
10
years
and
8%
of
the
principal
sum
for
the
last
five
years.
5.
The
Minister
issued
Notice
of
Re-Assessment
to
Avril
for
the
year
ended
March
31,
1962,
adding
to
its
reported
profit
$222,320.70,
stated
to
be
a
portion
of
the
price
of
the
land
constituting
recovery
of
capital
cost
or
depletion
allowances
previously
claimed.
Notice
of
Objection
was
filed
by
Avril,
and
on
August
15,
1966,
the
Minister
gave
notice
confirming
the
re-assessment.
Notice
of
Appeal
was
filed
by
4
Avril,
and
on
April
18,
1968,
the
Appeal
was
dismissed.
In
its
Notice
of
Appeal
the
appellant
also
stated
that
the
statutory
provisions
upon
which
it
relies
and
the
reasons
which
it
intended
to
submit
are
as
follows:
1.
(a)
Avril
sold
sand
and
gravel
for
the
undepreciated
capital
cost
to
Twin
Bridges
Sand
and
Gravel
(1960)
Ltd.
Avril
sold
its
land
to
Clover
Bar
Land
Co.
Ltd.
for
a
value
greater
than
its
original
residual
value.
(b)
The
sale
of
sand
and
gravel
attracted
no
tax
as
there
was
no
recapture
of
any
capital
cost
allowance.
(c)
Section
20(1)
provides
for
“recapture”
of
capital
cost
allowance
only
where
“depreciable
property
.
.
.
of
a
prescribed
class
.
.
.”
is
disposed
of
and
the
proceeds
exceed
the
“undepreciated
capital
cost”
of
“depreciable
property
of
that
class’.
(d)
Depreciable
property
is
defined
in
Section
20(5)
to
include
only
property
in
respect
of
which
the
taxpayer
“has
been
allowed”
or
“is
entitled
to”
a
deduction
under
Section
11(1)(a)
and
regulation
1100(1)(g).
Further
Schedule
E
specifically
provides
that
in
computing
the
allowance
in
respect
of
an
industrial
mineral
mine
the
“residual
value”
of
the
land
must
be
excluded.
(e)
Avril’s
tax
returns
and
its
correspondence
with
the
Minister
indicate
that
Avril
was
not
allowed
to
and
did
not
claim
capital
cost
allowance
in
respect
of
the
residual
value
of
its
land,
and
this
residual
value
was
deducted
in
computing
the
capital
cost
allowance
on
sand
and
gravel.
(f)
In
the
result,
the
land
was
not
“depreciable
property”,
but
instead
was
property
on
which
Avril
did
not
and
could
not
claim
capital
cost
allowance.
Thus
there
was
no
disposition
by
Avril
of
‘‘depreciable
property”
and
Section
20(1)
could
not
have
operated
in
this
case.
2..
In
the
alternative,
if
there
was
any
disposition
of
depreciable
property,
no
“proceeds
of
disposition”
of
such
property
were
received
or
receivable
in
1962.
Avril
agreed
that
it
would
be
paid
over
a
period
of
25
years,
and
received
security
for
such
payment.
Section
24(1)
provides
that
receipt
of
a
security
for
an
indebtedness
constitutes
payment
if
the
debt
was
“then
payable”.
In
this
case
the
debt
was
not
then
payable”
but
was
payable
periodically
in
the
future.
.
In
the
further
alternative,
if
the
debentures
were
“proceeds
of
disposition”
within
the
meaning
of
Section
20(1),
the
evidence
does
not
indicate
that
any
debentures
were
in
fact
delivered
in
1962.
If
and
when
the
debentures
were
delivered,
the
only
amount
which
would
constitute
“proceeds
of
disposition”
would
be
their
actual
market
value
at
the
time,
and
at
that
time,
they
had
no
market
value.
4.
In
the
further
alternative,
Section
85B(1)
(d)
(ii)
clearly
applies
and
the
Minister
should
have
allowed
a
reserve
thereunder.
Capital
cost
allowance,
as
an
allowed
deduction
from
income,
must
be
of
the
nature
of
income
when
recaptured,
so
that
the
word
“profit”
in
this
section
includes
recaptured
capital
cost
allowance.
While
Avril’s
business
had
changed
in
character,
it
was
still
in
existence
and
the
transaction
was
therefore
in
the
course
of
business.
At
the
hearing
of
the
appeal
the
submission
of
counsel
for
the
appellant
was
to
much
the
same
effect,
except
that
argument
was
not
pressed
for
a
reserve
under
Section
85B
of
the
Act.
The
Minister’s
Reply
to
the
Notice
of
Appeal
contains
the
following
paragraphs,
which
set
forth
the
position
taken
by
him
on
this
appeal
:
3.
In
assessing
tax
on
April
24th,
1963,
the
Respondent
acted,
inter
alia,
upon
the
following
assumptions:
(a)
at
the
commencement
of
its
1962
taxation
year
the
Appellant
owned
in
fee
simple
five
gravel
pits
known
as
Pit
No.
1
East
Side
lands,
Pits
No.
3,
4
and
7
Clover
Bar
lands
and
Pit
No.
5
Entwistle
lands;
(b)
each
of
the
parcels
of
land
upon
which
the
gravel
pits
were
situate
was
an
industrial
mineral
mine
and
was
depreciable
property
in
respect
of
which
the
Appellant
had
been
allowed
and
was
entitled
to
deductions
in
computing
its
income
under
Section
1100(1)
(g)
of
the
Income
Tax
Regulations
and
Schedule
E
thereto:
(c)
the
Appellant
in
its
1962
taxation
year
disposed
of
the
five
industrial
mineral
mines
by
sale,
and
in
so
doing
entered
into
two
Agreements
as
follows:
(i)
an
Agreement
in
writing
dated
December
20th,
1961,
with
Twin
Bridges
Sand
&
Gravel
(1960),
Ltd.;
(ii)
an
Agreement
in
writing
dated
February
2nd,
1962,
with
Clover
Bar
Co.
Ltd.;
(d)
the
proceeds
of
disposition
of
the
industrial
mineral
mines
includes
the
following
sums
which
were
the
sale
prices
stipulated
in
the
Agreements
referred
to
above:
Twin
Bridges
Pit
#1.
|
Pit
#3
|
Pit
#4
|
Pit
#7
|
Pti
#5
|
East
Side
|
|
Entwistle
|
Lands
|
|
Clover
Bar
Lands
|
|
Lands
|
Sand
&
Gravel
(1960)
Ltd.
|
—
|
$19,888.61
$
67,538.48
$107,289.82
|
—
|
Clover
Bar
|
|
Land
Co.
|
|
Ltd.
|
$1,591.00
$80,000.00
$468,020.00
$182,230.00
$30,000.00
|
(e)
the
proceeds
of
disposition
of
each
industrial
mineral
mine
exceeded
the
undepreciated
capital
cost
to
the
Appellant
of
the
mine
immediately
prior
to
the
disposition
and
accordingly
the
computation
attached
hereto
and
marked
Schedule
I
correctly
reflects
the
amounts
required
by
the
provisions
of
Sectioon
20(1)
of
the
Income
Tax
Act
to
be
included
in
computing
the
Appellant’s
income
for
1962.
B.
STATUTORY
PROVISIONS
UPON
WHICH
THE
RESPONDENT
RELIES
AND
THE
REASONS
WHICH
HE
INTENDS
TO
SUBMIT
4.
The
Respondent
relies,
inter
alia,
upon
Sections
11(1)
(a),
20(1)
and
20(5)
of
the
Income
Tax
Act,
Part
XI
of
the
Regulations
and
particularly
Section
1100(1)
(g)
of
the
Income
Tax
Regulations
and
Schedule
E
thereto.
5.
The
Respondent
states
that
each
industrial
mineral
mine
so
sold
by
the
Appellant
was
depreciable
property;
and
that
the
proceeds
of
disposition
of
the
industrial
mineral
mines
include
the
amounts
agreed
to
be
paid
to
the
Appellant
by
Twin
Bridges
Sand
&
Gravel
(1960)
Ltd.
and
Clover
Bar
Land
Co.
Ltd.
6.
The
Respondent
states
that
by
virtue
of
Section
20(5)
(c)
(i)
of
the
Income
Tax
Act
the
proceeds
of
disposition
of
each
industrial
mineral
mine
include
the
sale
price
of
the
property
as
set
forth
in
the
Agreement
dated
February
2nd,
1962,
between
the
Appellant
and
Clover
Bar
Land
Co.
Ltd.
7.
The
Respondent
states
that
Section
85B
of
the
Income
Tax
Act
does
not
apply
to
an
amount
which
is
included
in
computing
income
pursuant
to
Section
20(1)
of
the
Income
Tax
Act.
The
Appellant
is
not
entitled
to
deduct
as
a
reserve
under
Section
85B
(1)
(d)
of
the
Income
Tax
Act
any
portion
of
the
sale
price
of
the
property
as
set
forth
in
the
Agreement
dated
February
2nd,
1962,
between
the
Appellant
and
Clover
Bar
Land
Co.
Ltd.
because:
(i)
such
sale
price
has
not
been
included
in
computing
the
Appellant’s
income
from
the
business
for.
the
year
or
for
a
previous
year
in
respect
of
property
sold
in
the
course
of
the
business
within
the
meaning
of
Section
85B(1)
(d)
of
the
Income
Tax
Act;
and
(ii)
the
reserve
contemplated
by
Section:
85B(l)(d)
is
in
respect
of
profit
upon
the
sale
of
property,
while
the
amount
included
in
computing
income
pursuant
to
Section
20(1)
of
the
Income
Tax
Act
is
not
profit
on
the
sale
of
property
but
“recaptured
depreciation”
(i.e.
the
difference
between
cost
and
undepreciated
capital
cost)
in
respect
of
the
sale
of
such
property.
Schedule
I,
referred
to
in
paragraph
8(e)
of
the
Minister’s
Reply
to
the
Notice
of
Appeal
is
as
follows:
There
is
no
dispute
as
to
the
amounts
of
the
capital
cost
of
the
lands,
which
were
acquired
in
fee
simple
by
the
appellant
as
a
capital
asset
to
secure
a
supply
of
sand
and
gravel
to
be
used
in
earning
its
income;
or
as
to
the
amounts
claimed
and
allowed
as
capital
cost
allowances
or
that
in
claiming
such
allowances
the
appellant
used
as
a
basis
the
capital
cost
of
the
lands
less
amounts
attributed
to
the
‘‘residual
value”
of
the
respective
lands;
or
as
to
the
sale
prices
involved
in
the
various
transactions
by
which
the
land
and
sand
and
gravel
were
sold.
The
relevant
provisions
of
the
Act
and
Regulations
chiefly
concerned
in
this
appeal
are
:
Income
Tax
Act
11.
(1)
Notwithstanding
paragraphs
(a),
(b)
and
(h)
of
subsection
(1)
of
section
12,
the
following
amounts
may
be
deducted
in
computing
the
income
of
a
taxpayer
for
a
taxation
year:
(a)
such
part
of
the
capital
cost
to
the
taxpayer
of
property,
or
such
amount
in
respect
of
the
capital
cost
to
the
taxpayer
of
property,
if
any,
as
is
allowed
by
regulation;
(b)
such
amount
as
an
allowance
in
respect
of
an
oil
or
gas
well,
mine
or
timber
limit,
if
any,
as
is
allowed
to
the
taxpayer
by
regulation;
12.
(1)
In
computing
income,
no
deduction
shall
be
made
in
respect
of
(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,
20.(1)
Where
depreciable
property
of
a
taxpayer
of
a
prescribed
class
has,
in
a
taxation
year,
been
disposed
of
and
the
proceeds
of
disposition
exceed
the
undepreciated
capital
cost
to
him
of
depreciable
property
of
that
class
immediately
before
the
disposition,
the
lesser
of
(a)
the
amount
of
the
excess,
or
(b)
the
amount
that
the
excess
would
be
if
the
property
had
been
disposed
of
for
the
capital
cost
thereof
to
the
taxpayer,
shall
be
included
in
computing
his
income
for
the
year.
(5)
In
this
section
and
regulations
made
under
paragraph
(a)
of
subsection
(1)
of
section
11,
(a)
“depreciable
property”
of
a
taxpayer
as
of
any
time
in
a
taxation
year
means
property
in
respect
of
which
the
taxpayer
has
been
allowed,
or
is
entitled
to,
a
deduction
under
regulations
made
under
paragraph
(a)
of
subsection
(1)
of
section
11
in
computing
income
for
that
or
a
previous
taxation
year;
(b)
“disposition
of
property”
includes
any
transaction
or
event
entitling
a
taxpayer
to
proceeds
of
disposition
of
property;
(c)
“proceeds
of
disposition”
of
property.
include
(i)
the
sale
price
of
property
that
has
been
sold,
(d)
“total
depreciation”
allowed
to
a
taxpayer
before
any
time
for
property
of
a
prescribed
class
means
the
aggregate
of
all
amounts
allowed
to
the
taxpayer
in
respect
of
property
of
that
class
under
regulations
made
under
paragraph
(a)
of
subsection
(1)
of
section
11
in
computing
income
for
taxation
years
before
that
time;
and
(e)
“undepreciated
capital
cost”
to
a
taxpayer
of
depreciable
property
of
a
prescribed
class
as
of
any
time
means
the
capital
cost
to
the
taxpayer
of
depreciable
property
of
that
class
acquired
before
that
time
minus
the
aggregate
of
(i)
the
total
depreciation
allowed
to
the
taxpayer
for
property
of
that
class
before
that
time,
(ii)
for
each
disposition
before
that
time
of
property
of
the
taxpayer
of
that
class,
the
least
of
(A)
the
proceeds
of
disposition
thereof,
(B)
the
capital
cost
to
him
thereof,
or
(C)
the
undepreciated
capital
cost
to
him
of
property
of
that
class
immediately
before
the
disposition,
and
(iii)
each
amount
by
which
the
undepreciated
capital
cost
to
the
taxpayer
of
depreciable
property
of
that
class
as
of
the
end
of
a
previous
year
was
reduced
by
virtue
of
subsection
(2).
Regulations,
Part
XT
1100.
(1)
Under
paragraph
(a)
of
subsection
(1)
of
section
11
of
the
Act,
there
is
hereby
allowed
to
a
taxpayer,
in
computing
his
income
from
a
business
or
property,
as
the
case
may
be,
deductions
for
each
taxation
year
equal
to
(g)
such
amount
as
he
may
claim
not
exceeding
the
amount
calculated
in
accordance
with
Schedule
E
in
respect
of
the
capital
cost
to
him
of
an
industrial
mineral
mine,
other
than
a
coal
mine
or
a
resource
described
in
paragraph
(a)
of
subsection
(1)
of
section
1201:
1101.
(4)
For
the
purpose
of
this
Part
and
for
the
purpose
of
Schedule
E,
where
a
taxpayer
has
an
industrial
mineral
mine
or
more
than
one
industrial
mineral
mine
in
respect
of
which
he
may
claim
an
allowance
by
virtue
of
paragraph
(g)
of
subsection
(1)
of
section
1100,
each
such
mine
shall
be
deemed
to
be
a
separate
class
of
property.
Schedule
E
1.
For
the
purpose
of
paragraph
(g)
of
subsection
(1)
of
section
1100,
the
amount
that
may
be
deducted
in
computing
the
income
of
a
taxpayer
for
a
taxation
year
in
respect
of
an
industrial
mineral
mine
described
in
paragraph
(g)
of
subsection
(1)
of
section
1100
is
the
lesser
of
(a)
an
amount
computed
on
the
basis
of
a
rate
(computed
under
section
2
of
this
Schedule)
per
unit
of
mineral
mined
in
the
taxation
year,
or
(b)
the
undepreciated
capital
cost
to
the
taxpayer
as
of
the
end
of
the
taxation
year
(before
making
any
deduction
under
section
1100)
of
the
mine.
2.
The
rate
for
a
taxation
year
is
(a)
if
the
taxpayer
has
not
been
granted
an
allowance
in
respect
of
the
mine
for
any
previous
year,
an
amount
determined
by
dividing
the
capital
cost
to
the
taxpayer
minus
the
residual
value
by
the
total
number
of
units
of
commercially
mineable
material
estimated
as
being
in
the
property,
and
(b)
if
the
taxpayer
has
been
granted
or
is
deemed
to
have
been
granted
an
allowance
in
respect
of
the
mine
for
a
previous
year,
(i)
if
no
rate
has
been
determined
under
subparagraph
(ii),
the
rate
employed
to
determine
the
allowance
for
the
most
recent
year
for
which
an
allowance
was
granted,
or
(ii)
where
it
has
been
shown
to
the
satisfaction
of
the
Minister
before
the
taxation
year
that
the
quantity
commercially
mineable
material
is,
in
fact,
a
different
quantity
from
that
employed
in
determining
the
rate
for
the
previous
year,
a
rate
determined
by
dividing
the
capital
cost
minus
the
residual
value
by
the
quantity
so
shown.
3.
In
lieu
of
the
deduction
otherwise
determined
under
this
Schedule,
a
taxpayer
may
elect
that
the
deduction
for
a
taxation
year
be
the
lesser
of
(a)
$100,
or
(b)
the
amount
received
by
him
in
the
taxation
year
from
the
sale
of
mineral.
4.
In
this
Schedule,
“residual
value”
means
the
estimated
value
of
the
property
if
all
commercially
mineable
material
were
removed.
In
this
appeal
it
is
first
necessary
to
determine
whether
the
land
sold
by
the
appellant
to
Clover
Bar
Land
Co.
Ltd.
was
‘‘depreciable
property’’,
within
the
meaning
of
that
expression
in
Section
20
of
the
Act.
The
appellant
submits
that
the
land
was
not
‘‘depreciable
property’’.
The
respondent
says
that
it
was.
The
Tax
Appeal
Board
held
that
there
was
a
disposition
of
a
depreciable
property
involved
in
the
transactions
and,
therefore,
the
appellant
received
a
consideration
which
is
subject
to
recapture.
In
that
respect,
the
Board
said,
in
part,
as
follows:
When
the
legislator
in
Section
20(1)
says:
“Where
depreciable
property
of
a
taxpayer
of
a
prescribed
class
has,
in
a
taxation
year,
been
disposed
of
.
.
.”
it
must
be
construed
as
meaning
any
property
described
in
Section
139(1)
(ag)
of
the
Act:
‘property’
means
property
of
any
kind
whatsoever
whether
real
or
personal
or
corporeal
or
incorporeal
and,
without
restricting
the
generality
of
the
foregoing,
includes
a
right
of
any
kind
whatsoever,
a
share
or
a
chose
in
action;”
Therefore
“land”
may
become
depreciable
property
and
cannot
be
separated
from
sand
and
gravel
deposits
to
be
found
in
beds
in
various
locations.
It
is
not
so
much
the
nature
of
the
property
which
is
taken
into
consideration
but
the
fact
that
the
property
is
giving
rise
to
capital
cost
allowance.
The
taxpayer
did
not
purchase
the
deposits
of
sand
and
gravel.
It
purchased
a
land
containing
such
deposits
of
sand
and
gravel
and
as
owner
of
the
land
it
had
the
advantage
of
a
capital
cost
allowance
which
was
claimed
for
each
taxation
year
to
take
care
of
depletion
of
the
land
by
way
of
exploitation
of
sand
and
gravel
deposits.
“Capital
cost
allowance”
means
an
amount
deductible
to
cover
depreciation
of
some
capital
assets
as
well
as
depletion
of
other
capital
assets.
Montgomery’s
Auditing,
8th
edition,
this
this
to
say,
at
page
267
:
“This
chapter
deals
principally
with
the
methods
of
computing
provisions
for
depreciation
and
depletion
in
accordance
with
generally
accepted
accounting
principles.
Such
methods
do
not
necessarily
coincide
with
methods
acceptable
for
federal
income
tax
purposes.”
And
at
page
278:
“Depletion
represents
the
absorption
of
investment
in
natural
resources
through
amortization
of
its
cost
by
charges
to
operations
over
the
period
during
which
the
quantities
or
units
of
such
resources
are
extracted
or
exhausted.
An
allowance
for
depreciation
is
identified
with
the
amortization
of
cost
of
productive
facilities,
but
an
allowance
for
depletion
is
identified
with
the
amortization
of
cost
of
natural
resources.
Enterprises
exploiting
depletable
assets
generally
employ
both
depreciable
and
depletable
assets.
When
plant
and
equipment
remain
idle,
depreciation
not
only
continues,
but
may
be
accelerated.
Cessation
of
operations
does
not
ordinarily
affect
the
units
of
natural
resources
since
they
remain
to
be
extracted
in
the
future.”
Having
this
in
view,
in
tying
together
capital
cost
allowances
under
paragraphs
(a)
and
(b)
of
subsection
(1)
of
section
11
the
legislator
intended
to
treat
both
depreciation
and
depletion
on
the
same
level
in
making
no
difference
as
to
the
application
of
the
Act.
Land
was
made
“depreciable”
by
exception
under
paragraph
(b)
of
section
11(1).
The
reason
is
that
oil,
gas,
mines
are
natural
resources
to
be
exploited
from
deposits
in
depth
and
for
the
same
purpose
timber
limits
growing
on
land
are’treated
alike.
Mines
and
timber
limits,
for
income
tax
purposes,
cannot
in
any
way
be
distinguished
one
from
the
other.
When
it
is
said
in
paragraph
(b)
of
Section
11(1)
“as
is
allowed
to
the
taxpayer
by
regulation”
it
is
meant
that
allowances
under
(a)
and
(b)
would
receive
the
same
treatment.
Under
Section
1100(1)
(g)
of
the
Income
Tax
Regulations
sand
and
gravel
pits
come
under
the
designation
“industrial
mineral
mine”.
Section
1100(1)
of
the
Regulations
reads:
“1100.
(1)
Under
paragraph
(a)
of
subsection
(1)
of
section
11
of
the
Act,
there
is
hereby
allowed
to
a
taxpayer,
in
computing
his
income
from
a
business
or
property,
as
the
case
may
be,
deductions
for
each
taxation
year
equal
to
.
.
.”
and
1100(1)(g):
“such
amount,
not
exceeding
the
amount
calculated
in
accordance
with
Schedule
E,
as
he
may
claim
in
respect
of
the
capital
cost
to
him
of
a
property
that
is
an
industrial
mineral
mine
or
a
right
to
remove
industrial
minerals
from
an
industrial
mineral
mine
where
the
mine
is
not
a
coal
mine
or
a
resource
described
in
paragraph
(a)
of
subsection
(1)
of
section
1201;”
It
is
obvious
that
an
industrial
mineral
mine
comprises
the
land
which
is
a
real
property.
Both
the
property
(land)
and
the
property
(right
to
remove)
have
the
same
taxation
advantage,
i.e.
the
benefit
of
a
capital
cost
allowance.
On
the
evidence
in
this
appeal
I
am
satisfied
that
the
lands
concerned
were
purchased
by
the
appellant
because
of
their
sand
and
gravel
content
and
with
the
object
of
extracting
the
sand
and
gravel.
The
sand
and
gravel
in
situ
was
part
and
parcel
of
the
land.
What
was
being
extracted
was
part
of
the
land.
The
lands
were
used
and
worked
by
the
appellant
solely
as
sand
and
gravel
pits.
As
so
worked,
each
of
the
parcels
of
land
was
an
industrial
mineral
mine
within
the
meaning
of
Section
1100
(1)
(g)
of
the
Regulations
and
Schedule
E.
The
mine
was
not
merely
the
sand
and
gravel.
The
appellant
claimed
and
was
allowed
deductions
in
respect
of
each
mine
under
Section
1100
(1)
(g)
calculated
in
accordance
with
Schedule
EK.
Reading
Sections
11(1)
(a)
and
(b)
of
the
Act
and
Section
1100(1)
(g)
of
the
Regulations
with
Schedule
E,
it
appears
to
me
that
the
amount
of
the
deductions
allowable
in
a
taxation
year
pursuant
to
Schedule
E
is
computed
on
the
basis
of
a
rate
per
unit
of
mineral
mined
in
that
year,
but
that
the
allowance
is
nevertheless
in
respect
of
the
capital
cost
of
the
mine
to
the
taxpayer.
The
residual
value’’,
as
defined
in
Section
4
of
Schedule
E,
which
is
an
estimated
value
only,
is
one
of
the
factors
used
in
determining
the
rate
per
unit
to
be
applied
to
mineral
mined
and
it
is
deducted
from
the
capital
cost
of
the
property
for
the
purpose
of
arriving
at
that
rate,
but
the
fact
that
such
residual
value
is
thus
used
does
not
cause
the
deduction
to
be
a
deduction
in
respect
of
the
minerals
only
rather
than
a
deduction
in
respect
of
the
capital
cost
of
the
mine.
The
words
‘mine”
and
‘‘timber
limit’’
are
found
side
by
side
in
Section
11(1)
(b)
of
the
Act,
and
the
provisions
respecting
capital
cost
allowances
for
timber
limits
and
industrial
mineral
mines
are
so
similar
that
the
jurisprudence
in
cases
involving
timber
limits
is
relevant
in
dealing
with
the
present
case.
In
the
case
of
timber
limits,
similarly
to
the
case
of
industrial
mineral
mines,
the
‘
residual
value
’
’
of
the
property
is
deducted
from
the
capital
cost
of
the
limit
in
fixing
the
rate
basis
for
the
amount
of
deductible
capital
cost
allowances.
The
words
“depreciable
property’’,
as
they
appeared
in
Section
20(2)
of
the
Act,
as
amended
by
chapter
25,
Section
7,
of
the
Statutes
of
1949,
were
held
by
the
Supreme
Court
of
Canada
to
refer
to
property
such
as
a
timber
limit,
the
value
of
which
depreciates
as
the
timber
is
cut,
Caine
Lumber
Co.
Ltd.
v.
M.N.R.,
[1959]
S.C.R.
556
at
561;
[1959]
C.T.C.
221
at
226.
In
that
judgment
the
court
also
outlined
the
scheme
of
the
Act
and
Regulations
which
affords
a
means
of
properly
ascertaining
the
trading
profit
of
persons
engaged
in
such
businesses
as
mining
and
lumbering,
where
capital
assets
are
depleted
by
the
operations.
In
the
judgment
delivered
by
Cartwright,
J.,
as
he
then
was,
in
Highway
Sawmills
Ltd.
v.
M.N.R.,
[1966]
S.C.R.
387
;
[1966]
C.T.C.
150,
it
was
said
that
the
phrase
“timber
limits”
describes
a
parcel
of
land
with
merchantable
timber
standing
upon
it,
that
under
the
scheme
of
the
relevant
sections
of
the
Act
and
the
Regulations
a
timber
limit
is
treated
as
a
class
of
depreciable
property,
an
asset
the
total
capital
cost
of
which
the
owner
is
entitled
to
deduct
in
calculating
his
taxable
income,
and
it
was
held
that
an
amount
received
by
the
taxpayer
for
timber
limit
land
from
which
the
merchantable
timber
had
been
removed
was
the
proceeds
of
disposition
of
depreciable
property
within
the
meaning
of
the
applicable
sections
of
the
Act
and
Regulations,
including
Section
20(1)
of
the
Act.
In
my
opinion,
each
of
the
parcels
of
land
in
question
in
the
present
case
was
an
industrial
mineral
mine
when
it
was
owned
and
disposed
of
by
the
appellant
and,
as
such,
was
“depreciable
property’’
within
the
terms
of
Section
20(1)
and
(5)
of
the
Act,
1.e.,
property
in
respect
of
which
the
appellant
was
allowed
and
was
entitled
to
deductions
under
Section
1100(1)
(g)
of
the
Regulations,
and,
consequently,
the
proceeds
of
the
disposition
of
each
of
those
parcels
fall
within
the
provisions
of
those
sections.
The
next
question,
also
related
principally
to
the
sale
of
lands
by
the
appellant
to
Clover
Bar
Land
Co.
Ltd.,
is
whether
the
lands
were
“disposed
of’’,
within
the
meaning
of
those
words
in
Section
20
of
the
Act,
in
the
appellant’s
1962
taxation
year.
The
evidence
does
not
show
what
documents
were
executed
and
delivered
to
transfer
the
lands
to
Clover
Bar
Land
Co.
subsequent
to
the
execution
of
the
Agreement
Re
Sale
of
Land
(Exhibit
A-ll),
but
it
appears
to
me
that
from
the
evidence
it
is
reasonable
to
infer
that
the
lands
were
disposed
of
to
Clover
Bar
in
the
appellant’s
1962
taxation
year.
In
that
respect
counsel
for
the
appellant
submitted
that
the
appellant
did
not
in
that
year
receive
any
money
or
proceeds
from
the
land
transaction,
that
no
debentures
were
issued
by
Clover
Bar
Land
Co.
or
received
by
the
appellant
in
that
year,
that
the
appellant
was
not
entitled*
in
that
year
to
the
proceeds
of
disposition
of
the
lands,
that
no
“‘proceeds
of
disposition’’
of
the
lands
were
received
or
receivable
in
that
year,
and,
consequently,
that
there
is
no
case
for
recovery
of
capital
cost
under
Section
20(1)
in
that
year.
There
is
no
doubt
that
the
appellant
received
neither
money
nor
debentures
from
Clover
Bar
Land
Co.
in
that
year
and
that
negotiations
with
Bailey
Farms
Ltd.
as
to
the
terms
of
the
debentures
were
not
concluded
in
that
year.
However,
the
sale
price
of
the
lands
is
stated
in
Exhibit
A-ll
as
$761,841;
Clover
Bar
agreed
to
issue
and
allot
debentures
to
the
appellant
to
that
amount
and
the
appellant
agreed
to
accept
them
as
payment
in
full
for
the
lands;
the
appellant’s
income
tax
return
for
its
1962
taxation
year
shows
disposal
of
the
lands
at
a
selling
price
of
that
amount
and
the
appellant
claimed
a
capital
gain
on
such
dis-
posl;
debentures
in
that
total
amount
are
shown
in
the
assets
column
of
the
appellant’s
March
31,
1962
balance
sheet
submitted
with
its
income
tax
return
for
its
1962
taxation
year;
and
the
debentures
which
were
issued
in
1963
to
a
total
amount.
of
$760,000
had
on
their
face
an
effective
date
of
issue
of
February
2,
1962.
The
appellant
also,
as
of
January
31,
1962,
transferred
all
its
assets
to
Twin
Bridges
Sand
&
Gravel
(1960)
Ltd.
If
the
lands
were
disposed
of
by
the
appellant,
not
in
its
1962
taxation
year
but
subsequent
thereto,
it
should
have
been
a
simple
matter
for
the
appellant
to
have
shown
that
such
was
the
case
in
the
course
of
the
various
steps
taken
in
objecting
to
the
Minister’s
re-assessment
and
in
the
appeals
to
the
Tax
Appeal
Board
and
this
Court.
On
the
evidence
it
is
my
opinion
that
there
was
a
disposition
of
the
lands
by
the
appellant
in
its
1962
taxation
year
and
that
the
proceeds
of
the
disposition
included
the
sale
prices
thereof,
even
if
payment
was
to
be
made
in
whole
or
in
part
in
later
years
or
under
the
terms
of
the
debentures.
There
was
a
sale
price
of
$761,841
for
the
lands
sold
to
Clover
Bar
Land
Co.
Ltd.,
a
sale
price
of
$30,900
for
the
right-of-way
sold
to
Calgary
Power
Ltd.,
and
a
sale
price
of
$194,716.91
for
sand
and
gravel
sold
to
Twin
Bridges
Sand
&
Gravel
(1960)
Ltd.
Those
sale
prices
were
proceeds
of
disposition
of
the
depreciable
property
involved,
by
virtue
of
section
20(5)
(e)*.
I
therefore
find
that
the
amount
of
$222,320.70
was
properly
added
by
the
Minister
in
the
re-assessment
of
the
appellant’s
income
for
its
1962
taxation
year,
as
capital
cost
recovery
on
disposal
of
Schedule
E
assets.
The
appeal
will
be
dismissed,
with
costs
to
be
taxed.