CATTANACH,
J.:—These
are
appeals
from
a
decision
of
the
Tax
Appeal
Board,
[1968]
Tax
A.B.C.
700,
whereby
the
appeals
of
the
eleven
respondents
named
in
the
above
styles
of
cause
with
respect
to
their
respective
assessments
to
income
tax
for
their
1964
taxation
years
were
allowed.
The
assessments
in
question
resulted
from
the
same
transaction
in
which
all
eleven
respondents
participated
and
realized
a
profit
which
the
Minister
added
to
their
respective
incomes
as
profit
from
a
business
or
an
adventure
in
the
nature
of
trade
within
the
meaning
of
Sections
3
and
4
of
Section
139(1)
(e)
of
the
Income
Tax
Act,*
R.S.C.
1952,
c.
148.
By
agreement
four
witnesses
were
called
by
counsel
for
the
respondents
whose
evidence
was
common
to
and
forms
part
of
the
evidence
in
all
eleven
appeals.
Evidence
was
then
given
in
respect
of
his
individual
appeal
by
each
respondent
except
the
respondent
Angus
G.
MacDonald,
who
did
not
give
evidence
by
reason
of
circumstances
peculiar
to
his
appeal
and
that
of
his
wife,
Lois
MacDonald,
upon
which
I
shall
comment
later.
The
facts
which
gave
rise
to
this
litigation
are
as
follows:
One
Lloyd
Moss,
of
the
City
of
Edmonton,
a
real
estate
salesman,
was
requested
by
a
client,
Bruce
MacLean,
who
was
living
in
British
Columbia,
to
obtain
for
him
a
parcel
of
land
bordering
upon
the
Bow
River
in
the
immediate
vicinity
of
the
City
of
Calgary.
Moss
located
such
a
parcel
of
land
consisting
of
approximately
three-quarters
of
a
section
or
396.5
acres.
At
the
hearing
of
the
appeals,
Moss
testified
that
his
client
wanted
the
land
for
development
purposes
but
what
type
of
development
the
client
had
in
mind
was
not
disclosed
either
to
Mr.
Moss
or
by
any
other
evidence.
On
March
19,
1957
Moss
entered
into
an
option
agreement
in
his
own
name
with
the
owner
of
the
land
so
located,
Cirele
“
J”
Ranches
Limited.
The
total
price
fixed
by
the
option
agreement
was
$117,000
payable
$15,000
in
90
days,
$15,000
in
a
further
90
days
and
$20,000
in
each
year
beginning
June
21,
1958
with
interest
at
5%.
It
was
a
term
of
the
option
agreement
that,
after
$40,000
had
been
paid,
the
option
agreement
could
be
turned
into
an
agreement
for
sale.
The
land
was
subject
to
a
caveat
dated
December
8,
1950
in
favour
of
Standard
Gravel
and
Surfacing
of
Canada
Limited
warning
of
its
right
under
an
agreement
with
the
owner
to
work
gravel
deposits.
The
existence
of
this
caveat
apparently
deterred
Mr.
Moss’s
client
from
accepting
the
deal
with
the
result
that
Moss
was
left
with
an
option
and
no
prospect
of
collecting
his
commission
of
$6,000
unless
he
could
dispose
of
the
option
to
other
parties.
With
this
object
in
view
Mr.
Moss
called
upon
Douglas
KR.
Matheson,
a
barrister
and
solicitor
practising
in
the
City
of
Edmonton.
He
extolled
the
vast
potentialities
of
the
land.
Particularly
he
pointed
out
the
extensive
gravel
deposits
in
the
land
which
he
described
as
‘‘a
veritable
gold
mine’’
in
view
of
the
construction
going
on
in
the
City
of
Calgary
and
the
consequent
demand
for
gravel.
He
also
pointed
out
that
there
was
a
great
quantity
of
high
quality
black
topsoil
for
which
there
was
also
great
demand
because
of
housing
developments
in
Calgary.
He
also
mentioned
that
there
was
a
source
of
revenue
from
crop
rental
from
the
present
owner
who
also
grazed
cattle
on
the
land.
Mr.
Matheson
was
impressed
but
not
so
impressed
that
he
did
not
realize
Mr.
Moss
was
a
promoter
and
salesman
and
he
therefore
undertook
his
own
investigation
of
the
property.
Mr.
Matheson
was
a
friend
and
classmate
of
the
solicitor
for
Standard
Gravel
and
Surfacing
Canada
Limited,
P.
M.
Mahoney,
who
provided
him
with
gravel
profiles
which
confirmed
the
vast
gravel
deposits.
It
was
also
explained
that
Standard
Gravel
and
Surfacing
Canada
Limited
did
not
intend
to
exploit
the
very
favourable
lease
that
it
held
because
its
then
construction
work
was
remote
from
that
source
of
supply
and
other
sources
were
more
readily
available.
The
likelihood
of
its
working
the
gravel
deposits
in
accordance
with
the
minimum
requirements
of
the
terms
of
the
lease
thereby
keeping
the
lease
in
effect,
was
remote
and
the
lease
would
expire
shortly.
In
addition,
Mr.
Matheson
foresaw
possibilities
of
further
revenue
from
the
sale
of
topsoil,
for
which
he
confirmed
that
there
was
a
constant
demand,
and
from
a
crop
sharing
and
grazing
arrangement
with
the
owner
of
the
land.
He
became
convinced
that
the
land
would
produce
a
substantial
revenue
particularly
from
the
apparently
inexhaustible
supply
of
gravel
and
that
that
revenue
would
increase
in
the
future.
He
was
also
convinced
that
in
the
meantime
the
income
from
the
sale
of
topsoil,
share
crop
rental
and
grazing
rights
would
yield
further
income
and
carry
the
land.
He
knew
that
the
land
was
situated
in
a
farming
and
grazing
district
seven
miles
from
the
centre
of
the
City
of
Calgary
and
that
there
was
no
likelihood
of
development
for
residential
purposes
because
of
lack
of
access
and
service
facilities.
Further
he
knew
from
his
personal
inspection
of
the
land
that
on
adjacent
land
there
was
an
explosive
plant
owned
and
operated
by
Canadian
Industries
Limited
which
was
subject
to
the
provisions
of
the
Explosives
Act
and
regulations
thereunder
for
the
safety
of
the
public
in
the
immediate
area.
He
also
knew
that
there
was
an
oil
refinery
in
close
proximity
to
the
land.
He
was
convinced
that
the
statement
of
Mr.
Moss
that
there
was
no
prospect
of
a
quick
sale
of
the
land,
but
rather
that
the
huge
deposits
of
gravel
would
provide
a
substantial
income
over
the
years,
had
substance
in
fact.
Prior
to
discussing
the
matter
with
Mr.
Matheson,
Mr.
Moss
had
raised
monies
to
pay
the
initial
payment
of
$15,000
under
the
option
agreement
thereby
extending
the
option
by
90
days.
This
he
did
by
applying
thereto
his
commission
of
$6,000
from
the
owner
of
the
land
and
$9,000
which
was
put
up
by
E.
Gaudet,
another
real
estate
salesman.
However
upon
the
expiry
of
the
90-day
period
a
further
payment
of
$15,000
would
be
due
to
keep
the
option
in
effect.
This
amount
Mr.
Moss
did
not
have.
His
purpose
was
to
interest
a
number
of
persons
each
of
whom
would
contribute
a
modest
amount
and
who,
together,
would
constitute
a
syndicate.
This
was
the
object
of
his
visit
to
Mr.
Matheson.
As
intimated
above
Mr.
Matheson
became
enthusiastic
about
the
prospects
inherent
in
the
land
and
he
and
two
other
members
of
his
firm,
Ian
D.
Dickens
and
Angus
MacDonald
contributed
$3,000,
the
equivalent
of
one
unit
in
the
syndicate
later
formed.
Because
there
was
an
annual
payment
of
$20,000
to
be
met
and
their
law
firm
was
in
its
struggling
formative
stages,
one-third
of
the
unit
subscribed
by
the
firm
was
sold
to
Grant
H.
Smith
so
as
to
reduce
the
payments
to
an
amount
that
the
firm
could
comfortably
meet,
with
the
results
that
Douglas
Matheson,
Ian
Dickens
and
Angus
MacDonald
each
became
the
owner
of
2/9
of
a
unit
and
Grant
H.
Smith
became
the
owner
of
3/9
of
a
unit.
Mr.
Matheson
also
spoke
to
Dr.
Joichi
G.
Kato,
his
personal
physician
who
occupied
the
adjoining
office.
Dr.
Kato
after
giving
the
matter
serious
consideration
and
relying
on
the
advice
and
description
of
the
land
given
him
by
Mr.
Matheson
was
like-
wise
impressed
with
the
potentialities
of
the
land
and
agreed
to
subscribe
for
one
unit
in
the
syndicate
to
be
formed.
In
turn
Dr.
Kato
broached
the
subject
to
several
of
his
fellow
doctors
at
the
hospital.
Mr.
Moss
also
brought
up
his
persuasive
powers
to
bear
on
Dr.
Rupert
M.
Clare
to
whom
Dr.
Kato
had
spoken.
In
the
result
Dr.
Clare,
Dr.
Lefebvre,
Dr.
Sereda,
Dr.
War-
shawski
and
Dr.
Allard,
through
Crosstown
Investment
Ltd.
each
subscribed
for
one
unit
of
the
syndicate
to
be
formed.
In
the
meantime
Lloyd
Moss,
who
was
in
need
of
money,
transferred
one
unit
to
James
Gibson.
On
April
22,
1957
Lloyd
Moss
assigned
his
interest
in
the
option
agreement
to
Ian
D.
Dickens
as
trustee
for
an
association
of
persons
to
be
known
as
Cowtown
Syndicate.
A
syndicate
agreement
was
drafted
and
executed
in
1957
and
the
following
persons
agreed
to
become
members
and
subscribed
the
following
amounts:
E.
Gaudet
(3
units)
paid
in
|
$9,000.00
|
$
9,000.00
|
James
|
Gibson
|
(1
unit)
paid
in
|
3,000.00
|
3,000.00
|
(transfer
from
Lloyd
Moss)
|
|
Crosstown
Investment
Ltd.
(1
unit)
paid
in
|
3,000.00
|
3,000.00
|
Matheson,
Dickens
&
MacDonald
|
|
(24
|
of
one
unit)
paid
in
|
2,000.00
|
2,000.00
|
Grant
H.
Smith
(134
of
unit)
paid
in
|
1,000.00
|
1,000.00
|
Dr.
J.
G.
Kato
(1
unit)
paid
in
|
3,000.00
|
3,000.00
|
Dr.
Charles
Lefebvre
(1
unit)
paid
in
|
3,000.00
|
3,000.00
|
Dr.
Rupert
M.
Clare
|
(1
unit)
paid
in
|
3,000.00
|
3,000.00
|
Dr.
Metro
M.
Sereda
|
(1
unit)
paid
in
|
3,000.00
|
3,000.00
|
Dr.
Stanley
Warshawski
|
(1
unit)
paid
in
....
|
3,000.00
|
3,000.00
|
Lloyd
O.
Moss
|
(1
unit)
paid
in
|
6,000.00
|
|
(less
transfer
to
James
Gibson)
|
3,000.00
|
3,000.00
|
|
Total
12
units,
paid
in
|
|
$36,000.00
|
One
of
the
stated
purpose
of
the
Syndicate
was
‘*.
.
.
to
develop
and
subdivide
the
said
lands
and
premises
and
to
effect
the
sale
or
sales
thereof
at
a
profit.
’
’
On
June
30,
1958
Ian
G.
Dickens,
as
trustee
for
Cowtown
Syndicate,
agreed
to
purchase
the
land
from
Circle
“J”
Ranches
Limited
for
the
option
price
of
$117,000,
in
addition
to
Moss’s
commission
of
$6,000.
Prior
to
the
execution
of
the
Syndicate
agreement
HK.
Gaudet
had
become
disenchanted
with
the
transaction
and
was
in
need
of
the
money
which
he
had
advanced
as
an
accommodation
to
Moss.
Moss
felt
an
obligation
to
his
friend
Gaudet
and
managed
to
extricate
him
by
disposing
of
his
units,
I
believe
at
a
slight
profit.
Subsequent
to
the
execution
of
the
Syndicate
agreement
Lloyd
Moss
sought
to
change
his
occupation
by
taking
social
welfare
classes
which
required
all
his
available
funds
and
resources.
He,
too,
disposed
of
his
syndicate
units
From
1960
to
1961
the
Syndicate
paid
no
returns
to
the
members,
but
there
was
sufficient
income
to
prevent
carrying
the
agreement
for
sale
become
an
undue
burden.
On
July
31,
1960
the
lease
to
Standard
Gravel
and
Surfacing
Canada
Limited
expired.
It
was
replaced
by
a
lease
the
terms
of
which
were
much
more
favourable
to
the
Syndicate.
The
first
gravel
lease
covered
the
entire
area
of
the
land.
The
contractor
had
agreed
to
pay
100
per
cubic
yard
for
every
cubic
yard
of
gravel
removed
but
was
not
required
to
remove
any
minimum
amount
within
any
specified
time.
If
during
the
term
of
the
agreement
the
contractor
had
removed
250,000
cubic
yards
of
sand
and
gravel
then
the
contractor
could
renew
the
agreement
for
a
further
term
of
5
years
from
July
31,
1960.
This
was
not
done.
The
former
agreement
was
replaced
by
an
agreement
dated
September
30,
1960
for
a
term
ending
March
30,
1971.
The
contractor
agreed
to
pay
100
cubic
yard
for
gravel
removed
and
to
account
therefor
monthly.
The
contractor
agreed
to
pay
a
minimum
of
$12,500
annually
and
a
minimum
of
$20,000
over
the
term
of
the
lease
and
the
rights
to
exploit
the
gravel
resources
only
covered
approximately
70
acres
of
the
total
area
of
390
acres.
Standard
Gravel
and
Surfacing
of
Canada
Limited
built
access
roads
and
a
bridge
over
the
Bow
River
to
give
direct
access
to
the
southern
portion
of
the
City
of
Calgary.
On
November
17,
1960
the
members
of
the
Syndicate
were
incorporated
under
the
name
of
Cowtown
Holdings
Limited
pursuant
to
the
laws
of
the
Province
of
Alberta
despite
paragraph
12
of
the
Syndicate
agreement
which
provided
that
‘‘The
syndicate
shall
not
be
incorporated”.
Obviously
all
members
waived
that
provision.
The
purpose
of
incorporation,
on
the
advice
of
the
Syndicate’s
solicitors
and
accountant,
because
with
the
new
gravel
agreement
the
land
was
now
producing
good
revenue
from
its
use,
was
that
it
became
preferrable
for
income
tax
liability
to
be
shareholders
in
a
corporation
rather
than
members
of
a
syndicate
as
well
as
those
benefits
which
are
incidental
to
incorporation
such
as
limited
liability
and
the
like.
Further
the
Com-
pany
was
a
private
one
with
a
restriction
on
the
transfer
of
shares.
Some
members
of
the
Syndicate
had
been
dilatory
in
meeting
their
annual
assessments
and
the
corporate
form
would
permit
the
Company
making
the
payments
which
could
be
more
readily
adjusted
without
the
agreement
for
sale
falling
into
default.
On
January
4,
1961
the
land
was
transferred
by
Ian
G.
Dickens,
as
trustee
for
the
Syndicate
to
Cowtown
Holdings
Limited
at
a
purchase
price
fixed
at
$133,369.69.
No
gain
accrued
to
the
members
of
the
Syndicate
by
reason
of
this
transaction.
The
members
of
the
Syndicate
who
became
and
remained
shareholders
in
the
Company
were
as
follows:
Bruce
McLean
|
45
shares
|
James
Gibson
|
18
shares
|
Joichi
G.
Kato
|
18
shares
|
Charles
Lefebvre
|
18
shares
|
Rupert
M.
Clare
|
18
shares
|
Metro
M.
Sereda
|
18
shares
|
Stanley
Warshawski
|
18
shares
|
Grant
H.
Smith
|
6
shares
|
Lois
MacDonald
|
4
shares
|
Jan
D.
Dickens
|
4
shares
|
Douglas
R.
Matheson
|
4
shares
|
Standard
Holdings
Ltd.
|
45
shares
|
|
216
shares
|
Of
the
foregoing
shareholders
only
Bruce
McLean
and
Standard
Holdings
Ltd.
are
not
respondents
in
these
appeals
and
Angus
MacDonald,
who
is
not
a
shareholder,
is
a
respondent.
On
December
31,
1958
Gaudet
had
transferred
one-half
of
one
unit
in
the
Syndicate
to
Moss.
In
the
memorandum
of
Association
of
Cowtown
Holdings
Ltd.
the
objects
are
set
forth
as
follows
:
8.
The
objects
for
which
the
company
is
established
are:
To
acquire
by
purchase,
lease,
exchange,
concession
or
otherwise
city
lots,
farm
lands,
mining
or
fruit
lands,
town
sites,
grazing
and
timber
lands,
and
any
description
of
real
estate
and
real
property,
or
any
interest
and
rights
therein
legal
or
equitable
or
otherwise
howsoever;
to
take,
build
upon,
hold,
own,
maintain,
work,
develop,
sell,
lease,
exchange,
improve
or
otherwise
deal
in
and
dispose
of
such
lots,
lands,
sites,
real
estate
and
real
property
or
any
interest
therein,
to
deal
with
any
portion
of
the
lands
and
property
so
acquired,
subdividing
the
same
into
building
lots,
and
generally
laying
the
same
out
into
lots,
street
and
building
sites
for
residential
purposes
or
otherwise,
and
with
power
to
construct
streets
thereon,
neces-
sary
sewerage
and
drainage
system,
to
build
upon
same
for
residential
purposes
or
otherwise,
to
supply
buildings
so
erected
with
electric
light,
heat,
gas,
water
or
other
requisites.
To
act
as
brokers
and
general
agents
for
employment,
and
also
for
the
sale
and
purchase
of
real
estate
and
all
interests
therein,
and
for
reward
to
procure
real
estate
investments
for
any
person;
to
act
as
selling
agents
for
the
owners
of
any
real
estate,
subdivision,
building
sites,
town
sites
or
lands
of
any
kind,
or
any
interest
therein
and
to
take
over
and
acquire
from
any
person
or
corporation
any
agency
exclusive
or
otherwise
for
the
sale
of
any
such
lands,
sites
or
interest
therein,
and
to
accept
an
assignment
of
and
perform
any
contracts
made
by
any
such
person
with
any
other
person
or
corporation
for
the
sale
of
any
such
lands,
sites
or
interests
therein
as
agents
or
otherwise,
and
generally
to
act
as
real
estate,
house
and
rental
agents,
and
as
incidental
thereto
to
carry
on
the
business
of
fire
insurance
agents.
To
buy,
sell,
exchange,
lease
or
otherwise
deal
in,
real
estate
and
immovable
property,
and
to
negotiate
for
the
purchase,
sale,
exchange
or
lease
of
real
estate
and
immovable
property,
and
generally
to
carry
on
the
business
of
real
estate
agents
in
all
its
branches.
To
carry
on
any
other
trade
or
business
which
may
seem
to
the
company
capable
of
being
conveniently
carried
on
in
connection
with
the
above
or
calculated
directly
or
indirectly
to
enhance
the
value
of
or
render
profitable
any
of
the
company’s
property
or
rights.
Angus
MacDonald
had
transferred
his
interest
to
his
wife
Lois
MacDonald.
On
November
30,
1960
Matheson
transferred
to
Grant
Smith
2/9
of
one
unit
and
Ian
D.
Dickens
transferred
to
Grant
Smith
2/9
of
one
unit
and
Lois
MacDonald
transferred
to
Grant
Smith
2/9
of
one
unit.
On
December
31,
1961
Moss
transferred
his
27
shares
in
the
Company
to
Standard
Holdings
Limited.
On
December
31,
1962
Crosstown
Investments
Ltd.
transferred
its
18
shares
in
the
Company
to
Standard
Holdings
Ltd.
The
transfers
of
units
in
the
Syndicate
and
shares
in
the
Company
results
in
the
shareholders
in
the
Company
being
as
I
have
listed
them
above.
Shortly
before
May
19,
1964,
the
date
upon
which
an
annual
meeting
of
Cowtown
Holdings
Limited
had
been
called,
the
Company
was
offered
$625,000
for
its
land
by
a
representative
of
Knowlton
Realty
Ltd.,
real
estate
brokers
in
Edmonton,
on
behalf
of
an
undisclosed
principal.
An
immediate
decision
on
the
offer
was
requested.
Mr.
Matheson,
to
whom
the
approach
was
made,
wished
to
bring
this
unsolicited
offer
which
he
described
as
being
a
“bolt
from
the
blue’’
to
the
attention
of
all
the
shareholders
convened
in
the
annual
meeting
and
for
that
purpose
requested
and
was
granted
an
extension
of
time.
At
the
annual
meeting
the
offer
for
the
land
from
Knowlton
Realty
Ltd.
excited
great
discussion
among
the
shareholders.
Shortly
before
the
annual
meeting
Drs.
Warshawski
and
Lefebvre
visited
Calgary
and
had
the
opportunity
to
visit
the
land.
Dr.
Warshawski,
whom
I
believe
to
have
been
raised
on
a
farm,
became
extremely
enthusiastic
about
the
prospect
of
increasing
the
sale
of
topsoil
and
thereby
further
increasing
the
revenue
from
the
land.
In
fact
he
and
Dr.
Lefebvre
contemplated
buying
the
shares
of
the
other
shareholders
if
they
could
raise
the
money
to
do
so.
Drs.
Kato
and
Clare,
accompanied
by
Mr.
Matheson
had
visited
the
land
earlier
and
all
three
were
confirmed
in
their
conviction
that
the
land
afforded
a
substantial
source
of
revenue
for
many
future
years.
Dr.
Sereda
was
the
prime
motivator
of
the
acceptance
of
the
offer
for
the
land
for
cogent
reasons.
First
he
thought
the
offer
a
very
good
one
and
that
such
an
offer
might
not
be
repeated.
Further
he
felt
that
the
Company
was
not
exploiting
its
business
undertaking
and
possibilities
to
the
full.
The
accounting
for
sales
of
topsoil
was
left
to
the
owner
of
Circle
‘
‘
J
’
’
Ranches
Ltd.
and
difficulties
were
experienced
in
obtaining
satisfactory
accounts
and
credits.
It
was
only
after
the
threat
of
a
suit
for
an
accounting
that
a
satisfactory
settlement
was
obtained.
The
Alberta
Department
of
Highways
had
stockpiled
a
large
amount
of
gravel
excavated
from
the
pits
on
the
land
and
no
satisfactory
lease
arrangement
had
been
made
in
this
respect.
This
was
eventually
done
and
constituted
a
further
modest
income
to
the
Company.
It
was
known
that
the
owner
of
Circle
“
J
’
’
was
growing
crops
on
the
land
and
grazing
cattle
thereon
without
any
lease
arrangements
thereby
denying
the
Company
its
legitimate
income.
He
also
felt
that
there
was
a
conflict
of
interest
in
Standard
Holdings
Ltd.
being
a
shareholder
in
the
Company
while
its
parent
or
related
company
held
a
gravel
lease
on
part
of
the
land
and
that
the
Company
had
to
rely
on
the
monthly
returns
of
Standard
Gravel
for
the
accuracy
of
the
Company’s
compensation.
Furthermore
he
felt
that
the
gravel
deposits
not
covered
by
Standard
Gravel
lease
agreement
were
not
being
exploited
at
all.
The
shareholders
were
all
resident
in
Edmonton,
with
the
exception
of
Bruce
McLean
and
Standard
Holdings
Ltd.,
practising
their
professions
or
business
callings
there
and
were
unable
to
devote
sufficient
time
to
the
affairs
of
the
Company.
These
difficulties
are
those
normally
associated
with
absentee
ownership.
On
the
other
hand,
Mr.
Matheson
testified
that
the
property
was
returning
a
satisfactory
income
to
the
Company
with
a
minimum
of
effort
by
its
officers
and
shareholders
and
that
it
would
be
uneconomic
to
employ
a
resident
manager
who
would
not
be
more
effective
in
achieving
better
results
than
those
obtained
by
relying
on
the
integrity
of
the
owner
of
Circle
J
’
and
Standard
Gravel.
Because
of
the
wide
divergence
of
opinion
expressed
by
the
shareholders
as
to
the
rejection
or
acceptance
of
the
offer
for
the
land
by
Knowlton
Realty
Ltd.
the
chairman,
Dr.
Clare,
put
the
question
to
a
ballot
vote
which
was
in
favour
of
the
rejection
of
the
offer.
Knowlton
Realty
Ltd.
was
advised
forthwith
of
this
rejection
of
their
offer
by
the
shareholders.
Mr.
Thompson,
the
auditor
of
the
Company
testified
that
in
1961
there
was
a
net
return
to
the
Company
of
$7,825,
in
1962
a
net
return
of
$15,140,
in
1963
a
net
return
of
$14,790
and
to
May
26,
1964
a
net
return
of
$4,525.
Dr.
Sereda,
despite
the
vote
contrary
to
his
view,
was
convinced
that
acceptance
of
the
offer
to
buy
the
land
was
the
correct
decision
in
the
circumstances.
The
next
day,
May
20,
1964,
he
indicated
to
some
of
the
other
shareholders
that
he
was
desirous
of
selling
his
interest
in
the
Company
and
telephoned
the
representative
of
Knowlton
Realty
Ltd.
to
ascertain
if
its
principal
would
be
interested
in
acquiring
his
shares.
The
answer
was
that
the
principal
was
not
interested
in
acquiring
the
shares
of
an
individual
shareholder
but
would
be
interested
in
acquiring
all
of
the
outstanding
shares
and
that
the
price
for
all
such
shares
would
be
less
than
the
price
of
$625,000
offered
for
the
land.
Dr.
Sereda
telephoned
some
of
the
shareholders
and
wrote
to
every
Shareholder
arranging
a
meeting
of
the
shareholders
in
their
individual
capacities
on
May
22,
1964.
A
lengthly
discussion
took
place.
Dr.
Sereda
in
evidence
described
the
tactics
he
used
to
achieve
the
end
he
desired.
The
majority
were
opposed
to
the
sale
of
their
shares.
However
by
bringing
to
bear
all
his
persuasive
ability
on
those
shareholders
he
considered
to
be
waivering,
he
succeeded
in
obtaining
a
majority
agreeing
with
his
view
that
it
was
desirable
to
sell
their
shares.
At
last
he
succeeded
in
isolating
the
opposition
to
Dr.
Warshawski,
Ian
Dickens
and
Douglas
Matheson.
Mr.
Matheson
succumbed
on
the
assumption
that
the
purchaser
might
purchase
a
controlling
number
of
shares
and
the
dissenters
would
be
left
holding
a
minority
interest
in
a
company
controlled
by
a
stranger
rather
than
a
harmonious
group
of
friends
well
known
to
each
other.
Dickens,
while
opposed
to
the
sale
of
his
shares
and
after
speaking
to
that
effect,
agreed
to
sell
because
of
the
small
interest
he
held.
Dr.
Warshawski,
whom
I
believe
to
have
been
the
strongest
opponent
of
selling
out,
was
placed
in
the
invidious
position
of
being
the
last
holdout
and,
if
he
persisted,
he
would
stultify
the
wishes
of
all
of
the
other
shareholders.
Therefore
he
too
agreed
to
sell
his
shares.
Dr.
Sereda
and
P.
M.
Mahoney,
the
solicitor
for
Standard
Holdings
Ltd.
were
appointed
trustees
for
the
shareholders
and
advised
Knowlton
Realty
Ltd.
that
the
shareholders
were
unanimously
agreed
to
sell
all
their
issued
and
outstanding
216
shares
in
the
Company
for
$2,850
per
share
and
the
payment
of
shareholders’
loans
to
the
Company
aggregating
$104,863.24.
This
amount
of
$104,863.24
represents
the
amounts
advanced
by
the
members
of
the
Syndicate
to
meet
payments
under
the
option
agreement
and
later
by
them
as
shareholders
to
meet
payments
under
the
agreement
for
sale
which
replaced
the
option
agreement.
This
offer
was
refused
by
Knowlton
Realty
Ltd.
on
behalf
of
its
undisclosed
principal
but
a
counter
offer
was
made
being
$2,000
per
share
and
payment
of
$104,863.24
in
shareholders’
loans.
Another
meeting
of
individual
shareholders
was
convened
by
Dr.
Sereda
at
which
this
counter
offer
was
accepted
by
all
shareholders
and
the
deal
was
closed
accordingly.
To
summarize
the
transaction
and
chain
of
events,
farm
land
was
purchased
in
1957
from
Circle
‘‘J’’
Ranches
Ltd.
for
$123,000
by
the
members
of
Cowtown
Syndicate
and
was
then
transferred
from
the
Syndicate
to
Cowtown
Holdings
Ltd.,
a
company
formed
by
the
members
of
the
Syndicate
at
no
advance
in
the
purchase
price.
The
full
purchase
price
was
paid
in
part
by
the
members
of
the
Syndicate
and
in
part
by
the
Company
with
money
borrowed
from
its
shareholders.
The
shares
were
sold
to
an
undisclosed
purchaser
for
$2,000
per
share
and
$104,863.24
being
the
amount
of
the
shareholders’
loans
to
the
Company.
The
shares
were
sold
for
a
total
sum
of
$536,863.24.
When
the
original
purchase
price
of
$123,000
is
deducted
from
that
amount
the
resultant
gain
was
$413,863.24.
The
amount
of
this
gain
was
distributed
to
the
shareholders
in
proportion
to
their
shareholdings.
Each
of
the
respondents
was
assessed
by
the
Minister
on
the
profit
so
derived.
In
assessing
the
respondents
as
he
did,
the
Minister
did
so
on
the
assumptions
that:
(1)
the
Cowtown
Syndicate
acquired
the
land
with
a
view
to
trading,
dealing
or
otherwise
turning
it
to
account
for
profit
;
(2)
the
transfer
of
the
land
from
Cowtown
Syndicate
to
Cowtown
Holdings
Ltd.,
and
the
subsequent
sale
of
shares
in
Cowtown
Holdings,
Ltd.,
was
merely
an
alternative
method
adopted
by
the
respondents
for
trading
in
or
dealing
with
the
land;
and
(3)
any
profit
realized
by
the
respondents
on
the
sale
of
their
shares
in
Cowtown
Holdings
Ltd.
was
income
from
a
business
within
the
meaning
of
Sections
3,
4
and
139(1)
(e)
of
the
Income
Tax
Act.
Obviously
the
basic
premise
underlying
the
Minister’s
assumptions
and
consequent
assessments
was
that
the
property
was
not
acquired
for
revenue
producing
purposes
but
was
acquired
for
the
purpose
of
trading
in
the
land
at
a
profit
so
as
to
constitute
a
venture
in
the
nature
of
trade.
Following
upon
that
premise
it
was
argued
by
counsel
for
the
Minister
that
the
transfer
of
the
land
from
the
Syndicate
to
the
Company
and
the
sale
of
shares
in
the
Company
was
merely
an
alternative
method
adopted
by
the
respondents
to
trade
in
the
land.
For
authority
for
this
argument
counsel
for
the
Minister
relied
upon
the
decision
of
Cameron,
J.
in
Ronald
K.
Fraser
v.
M.N.R.,
[1963]
Ex.
C.R.
334
at
345;
[1963]
C.T.C.
130
at
140,
where
he
said:
Counsel
for
the
appellant
stressed
the
fact
that
the
profits
made
by
the
appellant
were
not
made
by
the
sale
of
the
land
but
by
the
sale
of
shares
received
on
the
transfer
of
the
land
to
the
two
companies.
That
profit,
it
is
said,
is
a
capital
profit.
That
profit,
it
is
said,
is
a
capital
profit.
I
cannot
agree
with
that
submission.
In
my
view,
the
appellant
and
Grisenthwaite,
instead
of
selling
the
land
as
they
might
have
done,
adopted
another
method,
namely,
to
cause
two
companies
to
be
incorporated,
sell
the
land
for
shares
in
these
companies,
and
then
sell
the
shares
so
received.
That
was
the
particular
alternative
method
they
chose
to
adopt
in
their
real
estate
transactions.
The
decision
of
Cameron,
J.
was
unanimously
confirmed
on
appeal
by
the
Supreme
Court
of
Canada,
[1964]
S.C.R.
657:
[1964]
C.T.C.
372.
Judson,
J.
speaking
for
the
Court
said
at
page
661
[p.
376]
:
Some
point
was
made
of
the
fact
that
the
appellant
did
not
in
one
case
sell
a
store
and
in
the
other
case
vacant
land
but
shares
in
two
companies.
I
agree
with
Cameron,
J.
that
this
was
merely
an
alternative
method
that
they
chose
to
adopt
in
putting
through
their
real
estate
transactions.
The
fact
that
they
incorporated
companies
to
hold
the
real
estate
makes
no
difference.
Associated
London
Properties,
Ltd.
v.
Henriksen
(H.M.
Inspector
of
Taxes)
(1944),
26
T.C.
46.
However,
for
the
principles
so
expounded
in
the
Ronald
K.
Fraser
case
(supra)
to
apply
it
must
have
been
found
(1)
that
the
land
was
acquired
for
the
purpose
of
turning
it
to
account
by
sale
at
a
profit,
and
(2)
that
the
respondents
in
forming
the
Syndicate,
transferring
the
land
from
the
Syndicate
to
the
Company,
had
in
mind
the
continuing
thought
that
the
ultimate
disposition
of
the
land
would
be
by
means
of
the
sale
of
shares
in
the
Company.
(See
the
comments
of
Gibson,
J.
on
the
principles
of
the
Fraser
case
(supra)
in
G.
S.
Shipp
et
al.
v.
M.N.R.,
[1967]
C.T.C.
330
at
336.)
It
therefore
seems
to
me
that
the
first
critical
question
to
be
determined
is
whether
the
gain
here
realized
by
the
respondents
was
a
mere
enhancement
of
a
capital
asset
acquired
for
revenue
producing
purposes
or
was
it
a
gain
made
in
an
operation
in
the
nature
of
a
business
in
carrying
out
a
scheme
of
profit
making
by
acquiring
the
land
speculatively
for
the
sale
thereof
at
a
profit.
Counsel
for
the
Minister,
in
support
of
his
contention
that
the
transaction
here
in
question
constituted
a
venture
in
the
nature
of
trade,
emphasized
the
intention
expressed
in
paragraph
2
of
the
Syndicate
agreement
and
in
the
objects
for
which
the
Company
was
incorporated
as
outlined
in
its
memorandum
of
Association,
both
of
which
are
quoted
above.
In
Balstone
Farms
Ltd.
v.
M.N.R.,
[1967]
Ex.
C.R.
217
;
[1966]
C.T.C.
738,
I
commented
on
the
significance
of
the
object
clauses
of
a
company
in
this
context.
I
repeat
those
comments
which
appear
at
page
228
[p.
749]
:
However
one
is
not
entitled
to
infer
from
the
circumstances
that
a
company
has
been
incorporated
for
trading
purposes
that
a
particular
transaction
in
which
it
engages
necessarily
constitutes
a
part
of
the
company’s
trading
operations.
The
fact
that
a
particular
transaction
falls
within
the
objects
contemplated
by
the
Letters
Patent
is
merely
a
prima
facie
indication
that
a
profit
so
derived
is
a
profit
derived
from
the
business
of
the
company;
see
Anderson
Logging
Co.
v.
The
King,
[1925]
S.C.R.
45;
[1926]
A.C.
140;
[1917-27]
C.T.C.
210.
The
question
to
be
determined
is
what
did
the
company
do
and
whether
what
it
did
was
a
business.
Mr.
Dickens,
who
was
the
draftsman
of
the
Syndicate
agreement
and
application
for
incorporation
frankly
acknowledges
his
inexperience
in
these
matters
and
testified
that
he
had
sought
to
express
the
objects
in
as
broad
and
all
inclusive
terms
as
possible,
which
I
think
he
failed
to
do.
There
was
no
attempt
by
the
Syndicate
or
the
Company
to
subdivide
or
sell
the
land.
All
that
was
done
was
to
derive
income
that
could
be
obtained
from
the
land.
Each
and
every
respondent
testified
that
in
contributing
to
the
purchase
of
the
land,
it
was
their
respective
intentions
to
acquire
revenue
therefrom
by
the
sale
of
sand
and
gravel,
topsoil,
and
crop
and
grazing
rentals
and
this,
despite
the
fact
that
they
were
signatories
to
the
Syndicate
agreement
and
became
shareholders
in
the
Company.
One
of
the
medical
respondents
drew
an
apt
analogy.
He
said
that
when
a
patient’s
ailment
had
been
diagnosed
and
an
operation
decided
upon,
the
techniques
of
the
operation
was
left
to
the
skill
of
the
surgeon
and
that
this
was
what
was
done
with
the
preparation
of
the
legal
documents
here.
It
is
significant
to
note
that
no
profit
was
realized
upon
the
transfer
of
the
land
from
the
Syndicate
to
the
Company
and
that
the
Company
did
not
sell
the
land
pursuant
to
its
objects,
but
that
its
shares
were
sold
by
the
holders
thereof.
The
Company,
under
different
share
ownership,
continued
in
possession
of
the
land.
The
prospect
of
the
subdivision
of
the
land
into
lots
for
sale
was
remote
and
most
unlikely
because
of
the
distance
from
the
City
of
Calgary,
the
lack
of
services
and
the
proximity
of
the
explosives
plant.
Several
of
the
respondents,
including
Mr.
Matheson,
Dr.
Clare,
Dr.
Kato,
Dr.
Lefebvre
and
Dr.
Warshawski,
made
physical
inspections
of
the
land
and
were
confirmed
in
their
views
formed
upon
the
advice
previously
given
to
them
that
substantial
revenue
might
be
expected
from
the
exploitation
of
the
land’s
resources.
The
other
respondents
who
did
not
visit
the
land,
relied
on
the
opinions
expressed
to
them
by
the
other
respondents
and
participants
who
had.
While
it
is
true
that,
during
the
currency
of
the
Syndicate
agreement
particularly
and
while
the
respondents
were
shareholders
of
the
Company,
the
returns
from
the
land
did
not
actually
put
money
in
the
pockets
of
the
respondents,
nevertheless,
those
returns
did
save
the
respondents’
pockets
in
that
the
payments
under
the
agreement
for
sale
were
reduced
accordingly
and
in
one
year
there
was
a
reduction
in
the
shareholders’
loan
account.
I
am
satisfied
that
each
and
every
respondent,
when
contributing
to
the
purchase
of
land,
did
so
with
the
intention
of
realizing
income
therefrom
by
exploitation
of
the
land’s
natural
resources
to
the
exclusion
of
a
profit
from
the
sale
of
the
land.
In
this
respect
I
accept
the
testimony
of
the
respondents
each
of
whom
testified
to
that
effect.
Furthermore,
I
am
confirmed
in
this
conclusion
by
the
facts
that
all
of
the
respondents,
with
the
exception
of
James
Gibson,
who
was
a
retired
merchant
but
engaged
himself
as
a
part
time
real
estate
salesman,
and
Lois
MacDonald
who
is
a
housewife,
are
members
of
the
legal
and
medical
professions
actively
engaged
therein
to
the
exclusion
of
other
occupations
and
that
none
of
the
respondents
had
a
history
of
engaging
in
real
estate
speculation.
No
efforts
were
made
to
sell
the
land
or
advertise
it
for
sale.
The
substantial
offer
received
for
the
purchase
of
the
land
was
unsolicited
and
completely
unexpected.
There
was
divergence
of
the
opinion
among
the
shareholders
as
to
whether
that
offer
should
be
accepted.
In
the
first
instance
the
majority
of
the
shareholders
of
the
Company
rejected
the
offer
because
they
foresaw
better
prospects
in
the
continuing
return
from
the
land
by
reason
of
the
lucrative
sand
and
gravel
agreement.
It
was
certain
that
their
money
would
be
doubled
or
better
over
the
currency
of
that
agreement.
On
the
other
hand,
Dr.
Sereda,
and
those
minority
shareholders
who
shared
his
view,
was
concerned
about
the
failure
to
efficiently
manage
the
land
to
the
utmost
advantage
and
about
the
other
difficulties
which
follow
from
absentee
ownership.
He
considered
that
the
offer
receiver
was
a
good
one,
that
it
would
not
likely
be
repeated
and
he
was
convinced
that
no
reasonable
owner
should
refuse
it.
The
views
of
Dr.
Sereda
eventually
prevailed
in
the
circumstances
as
above
outlined.
I
am
certain
that
the
evidence
adduced
and
the
arguments
advanced
before
the
Tax
Appeal
Board
were,
in
substance,
the
same
as
the
evidence
adduced
before
me
and
the
arguments
presented
to
me.
I
agree
with
the
learned
member
of
the
Tax
Appeal
Board
that
the
normal
‘‘badges
of
trade’’
are
not
present
in
the
circumstances
of
the
present
appeals.
While
I
have
expressed
my
reasons
in
my
own
words,
I
am
in
agreement
with
the
conclusion
reached
by
the
learned
member
of
the
Tax
Appeal
Board
and
I
am
in
substantial
agreement
with
the
reasons
by
which
he
reached
that
conclusion.
Accordingly
I
do
not
accept
the
basic
premise
advanced
by
counsel
for
the
Minister
that
the
land
was
acquired
with
a
view
to
trading
therein.
As
I
mentioned
at
the
outset,
the
appeal
against
the
assessment
of
Angus
MacDonald
is
on
a
somewhat
different
footing
than
those
of
the
other
respondents.
Mr.
MacDonald
was
a
member
of
the
legal
firm
which
included
Mr.
Matheson
and
Mr.
Dickens
and
as
such
he
became
a
member
of
the
Syndicate.
The
respondent,
Lois
MacDonald,
is
his
wife
who
came
into
funds
in
her
own
right
which
she
wished
to
invest.
On
the
her
husband’s
advice
she
purchased
from
him
his
interest
in
the
Syn-
dicate.
In
preparing
his
income
tax
return
he
claimed
a
deduction
as
a
married
person
whose
spouse
had
no
income.
Therefore
if
the
amount
which
Lois
MacDonald
gained
should
be
found
to
be
taxable
income,
then
her
husband’s
claim
for
a
deduction
should
be
disallowed
and
he
should
be
re-assessed
accordingly.
The
success
or
failure
of
the
appeal
against
the
respondent,
Angus
MacDonald
therefore
follows
the
success
or
failure
of
the
assessment
against
his
wife,
the
respondent
Lois
MacDonald.
As
I
understand
the
submissions
of
counsel
for
the
respondents
they
were
fourfold.
(1)
The
transfer
of
the
land
by
the
Syndicate
to
the
Company
was
not
a
transfer
of
land
by
the
members
of
the
Syndicate
of
an
interest
in
land
but
a
transfer
of
their
Syndicate
units
and
this
follows
from
the
law
of
property
and
the
equitable
doctrine
of
conversion
that
what
was
held
and
transferred
by
the
members
of
the
Syndicate
was
not
an
interest
in
land
but
a
Syndicate
interest.
(2)
The
subsequent
sale
of
shares
in
the
Company
by
the
respondents
was
not
a
sale
of
the
land
and
that
the
law
of
taxation
precludes
ignoring
the
legal
structure.
(3)
The
transaction
in
question,
shorn
of
the
legal
implications
of
his
first
two
submissions
was,
on
the
facts,
a
clear
case
of
an
enhanced
value
realized
upon
the
sale
of
a
capital
asset.
(4)
Finally
that
the
tax
consequences
here
sought
to
be
imposed
were
not
within
the
contemplation
of
the
Income
Tax
Act,
it
being
tantamount
to
a
tax
on
distribution
of
assets
when
in
fact
the
assets
remained
with
the
Company.
In
view
of
the
conclusion
I
have
reached
it
is
unnecessary
for
me
to
comment
upon
the
first,
second
and
fourth
submissions
of
counsel
for
the
respondents.
The
appeals
are
dismissed
with
costs
to
the
respondents.
CITY
PARKING
PROPERTIES
AND
DEVELOPMENT
LIMITED,
Appellant,
and
MINISTER
OF
NATIONAL
REVENUE,
Respondent.
Exchequer
Court
of
Canada
(Kerr,
J.),
August
22,
1969,
on
appeal
from
an
assessment
of
the
Minister
of
National
Revenue.
Income
tax—Federal—Income
Tax
Act,
R.S.C.
1952,
c.
148—Section
20(6)(g)—Capital
cost
allowance—Apportionment
of
purchase
price
of
land
and
building
as
between
land
and
building.
In
1962
the
appellant
purchased
a
large
parcel
of
improved
real
estate
in
downtown
Toronto
for
$1,850,000
and
apportioned
$952,733
thereof
to
the
building
for
capital
cost
allowance
purposes.
The
property
was
on
the
fringe
of
the
prime
area
for
office
buildings
and
was
and
remained
partly
vacant.
Six
years
later
it
was
demolished
and
the
site
used
for
a
parking
lot.
In
the
Minister’s
view
the
amount
of
the
price
reasonably
attributable
to
the
building
for
the
purpose
of
Section
20(6)
(g)
was
only
$420,387.
An
appraiser
called
as
a
witness
for
the
appellant
placed
a
value
of
$690,000
on
the
building
and
an
appraiser
called
by
the
Minister
placed
values
of
$200,000
and
$392,000
on
it,
using
two
different
approaches
in
his
calculations.
HELD:
The
balance
of
probability
was
that
the
portion
of
the
purchase
price
that
should
be
attributed
to
the
building
for
the
purposes
of
Section
20(6)
(g)
was
approximately,
and
not
less
than,
$510,000,
which
value
could
be
supported
both
on
income
yield
calculations
and
by
the
municipal
assessment
ratio.
Appeal
allowed
and
the
assessment
referred
back
to
the
Minister
for
re-assessment
accordingly.
W.
D.
Goodman,
Q.C.,
and
Franklyn
Cappell,
for
the
Appellant.
N.
A.
Chalmers,
Q.C.,
and
David
G.
Algie,
for
the
Respondent.
KERR,
J.:—This
is
an
appeal
from
an
assessment
of
income
tax
for
the
appellant’s
1965
taxation
year.
The
question
for
determination
is
what
part
of
the
cost
of
certain
property
in
Toronto,
consisting
of
land
and
an
office
building,
purchased
by
the
appellant,
can
reasonably
be
regarded
as
being
the
‘
consideration
’
’
for
‘
disposition”
of
the
building
for
the
purposes
of
Section
20(6)
(g)
of
the
Income
Tax
Act.
In
April
1962
the
appellant
purchased
the
property
from
The
Toronto
Stock
Exchange
Building
Company
Limited
at
a
price
of
$1,850,000.
Incidental
legal
fees
of
$5,322.60
brought
the
total
cost
up
to
$1,855,322.60.
In
its
tax
returns
for
1962,
1963,
1964
and
1965
the
appellant
allocated
$952,733.71
(out
of
the
total
cost
of
$1,855,322.60)
to
the
building
as
the
amount
reasonably
attributable
thereto,
and
claimed
capital
cost
allowances
accordingly.
In
the
Reply
to
the
Notice
of
Appeal
the
respondent
said
that
in
re-assessing
for
the
appellant’s
1965
taxation
year
he
acted
upon
the
following
assumptions,
inter
alia
:
—
that
the
part
of
the
said
amount
of
$1,850,000
that
could
reasonably
be
regarded
as
being
the
consideration
for
the
disposition
of
the
building
was
an
amount
not
exceeding
$419,647.
Para.
5(c)
;
—
that
as
an
incident
of
the
purchase
of
the
property
the
appellant
incurred
legal
fees
of
$5,322.60,
of
which
the
respondent
attributed
$731.77
to
the
cost
of
acquiring
the
building,
with
the
result
that
the
appellant
was
deemed
to
have
acquired
the
building
at
a
total
capital
cost
to
it
of
$420,387.77*.
Para.
6.
Section
20(6)
(g)
of
the
Act
reads
as
follows:
20.
(6)
For
the
purpose
of
this
section
and
regulations
made
under
paragraph
(a)
of
subsection
(1)
of
section
11,
the
following
rules
apply:
(g)
where
an
amount
can
reasonably
be
regarded
as
being
in
part
the
consideration
for
disposition
of
depreciable
property
of
a
taxpayer
of
a
prescribed
class
and
as
being
in
part
consideration
for
something
else,
the
part
of
the
amount
that
can
reasonably
be
regarded
as
being
the
consideration
for
such
disposition
shall
be
deemed
to
be
the
proceeds
of
disposition
of
depreciable
property
of
that
class
irrespective
of
the
form
or
legal
effect
of
the
contract
or
agreement;
and
the
person
to
whom
the
depreciable
property
was
disposed
of
shall
be
deemed
to
have
acquired
the
property
at
a
capital
cost
to
him
equal
to
the
same
part
of
that
amount;
At
the
date
of
its
purchase
the
property
consisted
of
a
main
block
of
land
containing
about
56,000
sq.
feet,
being
the
entire
city
block
bounded
by
King,
Court,
Toronto
and
Church
streets;
and
an
adjacent
smaller
parcel
of
land,
about
2773
sq.
feet
in
area,
at
the
northwest
corner
of
Court
and
Church
streets,
used
as
a
parking
lot.
The
building
concerned
was
on
part
of
the
main
block
of
land.
It
was
an
8-storey
office
building
which
for
many
years
up
until
1958
was
the
Head
Office
of
Imperial
Oil
Limited.
The
remainder
of
the
main
block
was
used
as
a
parking
lot.
The
building
was
torn
down
early
in
1968
and
ever
since
then
the
entire
land
area
has
been
used
as
a
parking
lot.
The
property
and
its
neighbourhood
was
described
by
Robert
A.
Davis
and
James
E.
Farr,
who
were
called
as
expert
witnesses.
They
are
competent
and
experienced
real
estate
appraisers.
Their
descriptions
do
not
differ
materially
and
I
shall
repeat,
verbatim,
portions
of
the
description
given
in
F'arr’s
appraisal
Report,
for
convenience
and
because
it
has
more
detail
than
there
is
in
the
affidavit
of
Davis.
DESCRIPTION
OF
LANDS
(1)
SITE
OF
92
KING
STREET
EAST
OR
NO.
56
CHURCH
STREET
This
site
formed
part
of
a
larger
ownership
unit
which
is
more
particularly
described
below
under
item
(2).
The
lot
size
which
was
assessed
to
the
building
for
municipal
taxation
purposes
was
as
follows:
(a)
King
Street
East
|
55
ft.
by
155
ft.
6
ins.
or
8,553
sq.
ft.
|
(b)
Court
Street
|
82
ft.
by
75
ft.
7
ins.
or
6,197
sq.
ft.
|
Total
Court
Street
|
|
Frontage
|
137
ft.
|
Total
Area
|
14,750
sq.
ft.
|
These
dimensions
coincide
more
or
less
with
the
actual
building
frontage
on
King
Street
East
and
Church
Street
but
include
an
L-shaped
laneway
running
southerly
from
the
Court
Street
for
57
ft.
8%
ins.
and
then
easterly
to
the
subject
building.
The
assessed
lot
has
been
adopted
as
the
appropriate
curtilage
for
the
building.
(2)
TOTAL
AREA
OWNED
AT
THE
LOCATION
PARCEL
1—358
feet
8^
ins.
frontage
on
the
north
side
of
King
Street
East,
155
feet
seven
inches
on
the
west
side
of
Church
Street,
358
feet
7
inches
on
the
south
side
of
Court
Street
and
156
feet
6%
ins.
on
the
east
side
of
Toronto
Street.
The
computed
area
is
56,162
square
feet.
PARCEL
2—27
feet
8%
inches
frontage
on
the
west
side
of
Church
Sreet,
by
a
flankage
on
the
north
side
of
Court
Street
of
100
feet,
and
a
computed
area
of
2,773
square
feet.
Total
Area
of
ownership—58,935
sq.
ft.
IMPROVEMENTS
Erected
on
the
site
of
No.
92
King
Street
East,
was
a
steel
framed,
masonry
clad,
eight-storey
plus
basement
office
building
with
a
tar
felt
and
gravel
roof.
Heat
was
supplied
by
oil
fired
steam
boilers
located
in
the
basement.
There
were
three
manual
passenger
elevators
and
two
runs
of
steel
stairs;
one
on
either
side
of
the
elevator
wells.
There
were
two
main
entrances;
one
from
Church
Street
and
the
other
from
King
Street.
The
main
lobby
had
a
terrazzo
floor,
commercial
marble
walls
and
decorated
plaster
ceilings.
A
section
of
the
northerly
part
of
the
building
was
used
for
bank
purposes.
The
Second
to
the
Seventh
Floors
were
laid
out
according
to
a
typical
floor
plan,
with
partitions
chiefly
of
masonry,
but
some
others
of
frame
and
glass
with
some
flex
board.
All
floors
were
served
by
the
three
passenger
elevators
and
stairs.
Lobbies
had
terrazzo
floors
with
marble
wainscotting,
corridor
and
office
floors
were
covered
with
linoleum,
and
walls
and
ceilings
were
plastered
and
painted.
Some
offices
had
been
treated
with
acoustic
ceilings.
Windows
on
street
frontages
had
bronze
covered
wood
sash,
others
were
steel
sash
with
wired
glass.
Washrooms
for
both
sexes
were
located
on
various
floors.
The
eighth
floor
was
originally
equipped
as
executive
offices
with
special
plumbing.
Various
offices
were
wood
panelled;
a
former
board
room
was
located
on
this
floor.
Floor
areas
were
computed
as
follows:
|
Gross
Floor
|
Full
Floor
|
Net
Rentable
|
|
Area
|
Rentable
Area
|
Floor
Area
|
|
sq.
ft.
|
sq.
ft.
|
sq.
ft.
|
Ground
|
12,265
|
7,330
|
7,330
|
Second
|
12,023
|
6,975
|
5,500
|
Third
|
11,783
|
9,670
|
8,193
|
Fourth
|
11,783
|
9,670
|
8,193
|
Fifth
|
11,783
|
9,670
|
8,193
|
Sixth
|
11,783
|
9,670
|
8,193
|
Seventh
|
11,783
|
9,670
|
8,193
|
Eighth
|
11,783
|
9,670
|
8,193
|
Total
above
grade
|
94,986
|
72,325
|
61,988
|
Basement
|
12,265
|
7,140
|
7,140
|
Total
|
107,251
|
79,465
|
69,128
|
|
NEIGHBOURHOOD
|
|
The
subject
property
is
located
in
the
easterly
part
of
downtown
Toronto.
The
area
is
commercial
in
character
and
the
permitted
uses
under
the
prevailing
land
use
controls
are
for
this
use.
The
ownership,
with
the
exception
of
a
small
land
parcel
at
the
northeast
corner
of
Church
and
Court
Street,
comprises
the
city
block
bounded
on
the
south
by
King
Street
East,
on
the
east
by
Church
Street,
on
the
north
by
Court
Street
and
on
the
west
by
Toronto
Street.
King
Street
is
an
important
east-west
traffic
artery
and
the
heart
of
the
financial
district,
at
King
and
Bay
Streets,
lies
three
city
blocks
to
the
west.
Church
Street
is
a
main
north-south
traffic
artery.
The
King
Street
Station
of
the
Yonge
Street
Subway
lies
two
blocks
to
the
west,
at
the
junction
of
King
and
Yonge
Streets,
and
there
is
a
streetcar
service
on
King
Street.
One
block
to
the
north
of
King
Street
and
parallel
to
it
lies
Adelaide
Street,
an
important
one-way
traffic
artery
leading
to
the
Don
Valley
Parkway.
The
lands
to
the
east
of
the
property,
fronting
the
east
side
of
Church
Street,
comprise
the
site
of
St.
James’
Cathedral
complex.
The
west
side
of
Church
Street,
immediately
to
the
north
of
that
part
of
the
ownership,
which
comprises
a
vacant
land
parcel
at
the
northwest
corner
of
Court
and
Church
Streets,
is
occupied
by
No.
66
Church
Street,
which
is
a
four-storey
older
brick
commercial
structure.
To
the
west
of
the
aforementioned
vacant
parcel,
at
the
corner
of
Church
and
Court
Streets,
lies
a
parking
lot
fronting
the
north
side
of
Court
Street.
To
the
west
of
this
lot,
at
the
northeast
corner
of
Court
and
Toronto
Street,
is
No.
15
Toronto
Street
(The
Hiram
Walker-Gooderham
Worts
Building),
which
is
a
modern
eleven-storey
office
building
completed
in
late
1961.
North
of
No.
15
Toronto
Street
lies
the
premises
of
the
Consumers’
Gas
Co.
which
are
of
some
age
and
flank
the
south
side
of
Adelaide
Street.
The
north
frontage
of
Adelaide
Street
East,
opposite
the
north
end
of
Toronto
Street,
forms
the
site
of
the
new
Dominion
Government
office
complex,
known
as
the
Mackenzie
Building.
On
the
west
side
of
Toronto
Street,
at
the
southwest
corner
of
Adelaide
Street,
is
No.
36
Toronto
Street,
which
is
the
older
ten-
storey
office
building
of
the
Excelsior
Life
Insurance
Company.
South
of
this
structure,
on
the
west
side
of
Toronto
Street
and
opposite
the
Hiram
Walker
Building,
lay
the
Shaw
&
Begg
Building,
which
was
an
older
five-storey
office
structure.
This
building
was
purchased
in
February
1962
by
the
Excelsior
Life
Insurance
Company
and
was
wrecked
and
is
now
the
site
of
No.
20
Toronto
Street,
a
modern
fourteen-storey
office
building
known
as
the
New
Excelsior
Life
Building;
this
was
completed
in
1965.
South
of
No.
20
Toronto
Street
is
the
historic
original
two-storey
post
office
structure
(restored
as
the
headquarters
of
the
Argus
Corporation),
and
south
of
that,
at
the
northwest
corner
of
King
and
Toronto
Streets,
is
an
older
five-storey
structure
housing
the
Letros
Tavern.
West
of
this
structure
and
fronting
the
north
side
of
King
Street
East
lies
the
new
offices
of
International
Business
Machines,
and
west
of
this
at
the
northeast
corner
of
King
and
Victoria
Streets
is
the
modern
Fidelity
Insurance
Company
building.
The
three
to
five
storey
buildings
at
the
northwest
corner
of
King
and
Victoria
Streets
housed
the
National
Trust
Company
but
this
Corporation
agreed
to
lease
space
in
1961
in
a
projected
new
building
at
No.
21
King
Street
East,
on
the
opposite
side
of
the
street
from
their
former
premises.
This
modern
twenty-one
storey
office
structure
has
a
rentable
area
of
about
300,000
sq.
ft.
and
stands
at
the
southwest
corner
of
King
and
Melinda
Streets.
The
former
National
Trust
property
has
been
sold
and
is
now
the
site
of
a
new
high
rise
office
building.
The
southeast
corner
of
this
junction
is
occupied
by
the
King
Edward
Sheraton
Hotel
which
extends
easterly
along
the
south
side
of
King
Street
East
to
its
intersection
with
Leader
Lane.
The
southeast
corner
of
Leader
Lane
is
given
over
to
a
car
park
and
east
of
this
are
three
older
three-storey
masonry
commercial
structures
with
ground
floor
retail
and
service
stores.
To
the
east
of
this
is
a
somewhat
similar
four-storey
brick
building.
East
of
this,
at
No.
91
King
Street
East,
is
the
four-storey
masonry
constructed
Albany
Club,
and
then
a
five-storey
brick
commercial
structure
being
No.
95
King
Street
East.
The
next
property
to
the
east
is
located
at
the
southwest
corner
of
the
junction
of
King
and
Church
Streets
and
consists
of
a
car
parking
lot.
The
southeast
corner
of
Church
and
King
Streets
is
the
site
of
an
old
four-storey
brick
building
which
is
leased
by
Darrigo
Brothers
Fruit
Company
from
the
City
of
Toronto.
East
of
this
property
are
three
older
three-storey
brick
structures
each
given
over
to
retail
or
showroom
premises
on
the
ground
floor.
The
ground
floor
area
of
the
building
was
estimated
at
12,130
and
12,265
sq.
feet
by
Davis
and
Farr,
respectively.
The
appellant
is
a
company
incorporated
under
the
laws
of
the
Province
of
Ontario.
Evidence
in
respect
of
the
purchase
and
use
of
the
subject
property
was
given
by
W.
Bernard
Herman,
president
of
the
company.
For
the
past
30
years
he
had
also
been
chief
executive
officer
of
an
affiliated
company,
City
Parking
Limited,
which
operates
and
manages
some
150
parking
facilities
in
various
places
in
Canada,
and
he
is
and
has
been
primarily
responsible
for
acquiring
properties
for
the
several
affiliated
companies,
having
made
numerous
purchases
each
year.
The
purchase
of
this
property
was
negotiated
under
his
direction
and
approved
by
him.
There
were
communications
and
negotiations
between
City
Parking
Limited
and
Wood,
Fleming
&
Company
Limited,
who
were
real
estate
brokers
and
agents
for
the
owner,
The
Toronto
Stock
Exchange
Building
Company
Limited,
commencing
in
September
1961,
pertaining
to
the
property,
its
use,
revenues,
expenses,
taxes,
etc.,
which
culminated
in
an
Agreement
of
Purchase
and
Sale,
dated
February
1,
1962,
taken
in
the
name
of
City
Parking
Limited,
and
a
subsequent
Deed,
Exhibit
B,
to
the
appellant,
dated
April
2,
1962,
for
a
consideration
of
$1,850,000,
of
which
$500,000
was
paid
in
cash
and
the
remaining
$1,350,000
was
secured
by
a
mortgage,
Exhibit
C,
of
the
property
to
the
vendor.
At
the
date
of
the
sale
there
were
leases
and
lease
commitments
of
various
parts
of
the
property,
as
shown
in
Appendix
“B”
to
the
Agreement
of
Purchase
and
Sale,
including
a
lease
of
portions
of
the
building
to
the
Municipality
of
Metropolitan
Toronto,
at
approximately
$7,000
per
month,
expiring
on
September
30,
1965,
with
an
option
to
renew
for
an
additional
year
if
the
lessor
did
not
require
the
premises
for
its
own
use,
and
a
lease
to
the
Royal
Bank
of
Canada,
at
$1,640
per
month,
expiring
on
September
30,
1965.
The
western
part
of
the
main
block
of
land
was
leased
to
the
Parking
Authority
of
Toronto
on
a
rental
basis
of
50%
of
the
gross
revenues,
with
a
minimum
guarantee
of
$80,000
for
12
months,
the
lessor
paying
the
realty
taxes.
Figures
were
given
showing
that
the
gross
revenues
from
the
parking
lot
were
$110,986.42
in
1960
and
$85,153.79
for
the
period
January
to
September,
inclusive,
in
1961,
and,
consequently,
the
guaranteed
$80,000
was
payable
in
each
of
those
years.
When
the
property
was
purchased
the
building
was
not
fully
rented,
2
full
floors
and
portions
of
other
floors
were
vacant,
and,
except
for
the
2
years
1966
and
1967
during
which
the
building
was
rented
to
Eaton
Centre
Limited,
it
was
not
found
possible
to
rent
it
completely.
The
Eaton
lease
was
for
1966
and
was
renewed
for
1967,
on
what
was
described
as
a
‘‘net,
net’’
basis,
with
the
lessee
paying
all
operating
expenses
and
realty
taxes
and
$120,000
per
year
rent.
An
operating
statement,
Exhibit
17,
shows
revenues,
expenses
and
net
profit
(without
provision
for
mortgage
and
interest
expense
and
depreciation)
of
the
appellant
for
the
years
1962
to
1967,
inclusive,
in
respect
of
the
office
building
and
the
parking
lots.
The
following
figures
are
extracted
therefrom
:
In
re
the
building:
|
Revenue
|
Expenses
|
Net
Profit
|
1962
|
(April-December)
........
|
$116,391.02
|
$
89,294.47
|
$
27,096.55
|
1963
|
........................................
|
170,335.32
|
128,744.87
|
41,590.45
|
1964
|
........................................
|
176,614.70
|
134,001.22
|
42,613.48
|
1965
|
........................................
|
175,506.60
|
134,224.42
|
41,282.18
|
1966
|
........................................
|
121,000.00
|
2,126.51
|
118,873.49
|
1967
|
........................................
|
121,000.00
|
824.09
|
120,175.91
|
In
re
the
parking
lots:
|
|
|
Revenue
|
Expenses
|
Net
Profit
|
1962
|
(April-December)
|
$
86,443.40
|
$
27,006.18
|
$
59,437.27
|
1963
|
........................................
|
115,272.00
|
38,092.86
|
77,179.14
|
1964
|
........................................
|
127,272.00
|
44,899.74
|
82,372.26
|
1965
|
|
131,047.65
|
48,114.04
|
82,933.61
|
1966
|
|
134,453.74
|
52,611.53
|
81,842.21
|
1967
|
........................................
|
137,888.45
|
57,434.37
|
80,454.08
|
That
same
exhibit
similarly
shows
revenues,
expenses
and
net
profit
(or
loss)
for
those
years
of
Empire
Parking
Limited,
an
affiliated
company
which
operated
the
large
parking
lot
in
1962
and
1963,
and
of
Empire
Parking
Limited
and
City
Parking
Canada
Limited,
another
affiliate,
which
operated
the
lot
in
1964
and
1965-1967,
respectively.
The
following
figures
are
extracted:
|
Expenses
|
|
|
(including
rent
|
|
|
Parking
|
paid
to
appellant
|
Net
Profit
|
|
Revenue
|
for
main
parking
|
(or
loss)
|
|
lot)
|
|
1962
|
(April-December)
|
$107,584.78
|
$111,492.34
|
($3,907.56)
|
|
($85,500)
|
|
1963
|
|
98,093.28
|
140,718.41
|
(42,625.13)
|
|
(114,000)
|
|
1964
|
........................................
|
154,498.53
|
158,619.31
|
(4,120.78)
|
|
(126,000)
|
|
1965
|
|
168,539.80
|
165,878.74
|
2,661.06
|
|
(129,775.65)
|
|
1966
|
........................................
|
172,845.00
|
161,969.02
|
10,875.98
|
|
(134,453.74)
|
|
1967
|
........................................
|
180,086.00
|
170,993.56
|
9,092.44
|
|
(137,888.45)
|
|
A
steel
and
reinforced
concrete
parking
deck
having
100
car
spaces
was
erected
in
1963
at
a
cost
of
$200,000,
and
parking
revenues
increased
thereafter.
Herman
said
that
to
make
the
deck
economical
it
would
have
to
be
kept
for
12
to
15
years.
The
building
was
demolished
immediately
after
the
Eaton
tenancy
ended.
Herman
said
that
up
until
the
decision
to
demolish
was
taken
the
company
was
seeking
a
major
tenant
for
a
10-year
lease
and
was
negotiating
with
several
prospective
tenants,
one
of
which
was
Ryerson
Institute,
but
the
situation
then
was
that
the
large
new
Toronto-Dominion
and
Richmond-
Adelaide
Centres
were
attracting
tenants,
other
office
space
in
the
downtown
business
district
was
being
thrown
on
the
market,
and
a
major
tenant
for
the
building
could
not
be
found.
The
choices
open
to
the
appellant
were
to
rent
the
building
piecemeal,
remodel
it
or
demolish
it.
The
company
chose
to
demolish
it
and
make
use
of
the
entire
land
as
a
parking
lot.
The
possibility
of
demolishing
the
building
has
been
considered
at
earlier
times,
for
in
a
memorandum,
Exhibit
E,
dated
December
21,
1961,
to
Herman
from
John
Walker,
who
at
that
time
was
comptroller
of
the
appellant
company,
demolition
of
the
building
after
4
years
to
give
80
additional
parking
spaces
was
set
forth
as
an
option,
but
Herman
said
that
it
was
rejected;
and
in
the
mortgage
that
was
entered
into
at
the
time
of
the
purchase
of
the
property
the
appellant,
as
mortgagor,
was
given
the
right,
on
making
an
additional
payment
of
$100,000
on
account
of
the
principal
sum,
to
demolish
the
building
without
being
deemed
to
have
thereby
committed
waste.
Herman
said
that
the
actual
demolition
early
in
1968
was
not
pursuant
to
any
plan
or
intention
when
the
property
was
purchased
in
1962.
Exhibit
18
is
a
schedule
of
municipal
assessments
and
realty
taxes,
which
shows,
inter
alia,
that
in
each
of
the
years
1962
to
1967,
inclusive,
the
land
at
92
King
Street
East
was
assessed
at
$177,900,
the
office
building
at
$378,000,
and
the
main
parking
lot
(not
including
the
deck
erected
in
1963)
at
$494,000,
except
for
an
increase
to
$519,250
in
1966
and
1967
;
and
that
in
those
years
the
realty
taxes
progressively
increased
to
$54,404
from
approximately
$36,400*
on
the
building
and
its
land,
and
to
$56,371
from
about
$33,630
on
the
main
parking
lot.
Davis
said
that
the
ratio
of
assessment
to
market
value
of
commercial
properties
was
40
to
50
per
cent.
Herman
made
a
valuation
of
the
building,
for
the
purpose
of
allocating
capital
cost
in
the
financial
statements
and
tax
returns
of
the
company,
by
a
method
which,
as
I
understand
his
evidence,
may
be
generally
described
as
follows,
using
approximate
figures.
Taking
the
guaranteed
rent
figure
of
$80,000
per
year
which
the
Parking
Authority
of
Toronto
was
paying
for
the
main
parking
lot
when
the
appellant
bought
the
property,
and
deducting
therefrom
realty
taxes
estimated
at
$30,000,
he
calculated
that
the
parking
lot
would
yield
a
net
annual
return
of
$50,000¢.
He
then
capitalized
that
net
sum
on
a
7%
basis
and
arrived
at
the
amount
of
$700,000
as
the
value
of
the
parking
lot.
Deducting
that
sum
from
the
$1,850,000
purchase
price
of
the
property,
there
would
be
left
$1,150,000
for
the
building
and
the
land
upon
which
it
was
situated
or
which
was
used
therewith§.
To
arrive
at
the
value
of
the
building
itself,
he
allowed
$200,000
for
its
land
(based
on
20,000
sq.
feet
at
$10
per
foot)
and
deducting
that
sum
from
$1,150,000
he
attributed
$950,000
to
the
building.
He
felt
that
the
building
could
be
fully
rented
at
$2.50
to
$2.75
per
sq.
foot
and
in
time
even
edged
up
to
$3.00
to
$3.25,
to
give
a
gross
revenue
of
$210,000
to
$240,000
per
year,
against
which
there
would
be
a
total
of
operating
expenses
and
realty
taxes
of
$100,000,
and
a
net
yield,
before
payment
of
interest
on
borrowed
money,
of
$120,000.
This
yield
would
be
the
equivalent
of
close
to
10%
on
$1,150,000,
and
he
thought
it
would
tend
to
confirm
that
amount
as
the
value
of
the
building
and
its
land.
To
recapitulate,
he
allocated
the
purchase
price
of
$1,850,000
as
follows:
parking
lot
land
$700,000;
office
building
$950,000;
land
serving
the
office
building
$200,000.
Herman
said
that
in
the
period
when
acquisition
of
the
property
was
being
considered
he
had
several
opinions
respecting
it
and
in
evaluating
it
for
the
appellant
he
had
regard
for
the
property
as
a
whole
and
its
variegated
use,
and
in
his
opinion
at
the
time
of
purchase
the
use
to
which
it
was
being
put
as
an
office
building
and
parking
lot
was
its
highest
and
best
use
at
that
time.
He
was
called
to
testify
as
an
officer
of
the
appellant
company
who
had
pertinent
knowledge
and
experience
and
who
had
been
responsible
for
advising
the
company
and
evaluating
the
property
at
the
time
of
purchase
and
allocating
the
cost
in
connection
with
its
financial
statements
and
tax
returns.
He
was
not
called
as
an
expert
witness
within
the
context
of
Rule
164B
of
the
Exchequer
Court
Rules.
His
evidence
pertaining
to
the
value
of
the
property
and
its
several
parts
and
to
its
potential
and
highest
and
best
use
was
objected
to
by
counsel
for
the
respondent
on
the
grounds
that
the
witness
was
not
competent
to
give
evidence
of
that
nature
and
that
there
was
a
lack
of
compliance
with
Rule
164B
;
but,
in
my
view,
having
regard
to
Herman’s
position
with
the
appellant
and
affiliated
companies
and
to
the
part
he
played
in
the
acquisition
of
the
property
and
in
the
allocation
of
its
cost
for
the
company’s
purposes,
I
regard
his
evidence
as
relevant,
useful
and
receivable
and
I
have
considered
it
in
determining
the
appeal.
Mr.
Davis,
the
appraiser
who
was
called
as
witness
by
the
appellant,
made
a
valuation
of
the
land
as
of
the
purchase
date
on
the
assumption
that
it
was
then
vacant
and
unimproved,
and
he
concluded
that
the
value
of
the
building
was
the
difference
between
the
purchase
price
and
his
estimate
of
the
value
of
the
land.
He
also
concluded
that
the
legal
uses
that
would
yield
the
highest
value,
as
of
the
purchase
date,
would
be
the
continued
use
of
the
building
as
an
office
building
and
the
use
of
most
of
the
land
for
parking
purposes,
until
such
time
as
a
higher
and
better
use
would
become
apparent.
In
order
to
estimate
the
value
of
the
land
as
if
vacant
he
divided
it
into
7
parcels,
giving
as
a
reason
that
land
sales
in
the
neighbourhood
were
of
areas
more
or
less
equivalent
in
size
to
such
parcels
and
there
had
been
no
comparable
sales
of
a
whole
block
prior
to
this
sale.
A
sketch
of
the
divisions
made
by
him,
which
also
indicates
his
valuations
per
square
foot,
was
attached
as
Schedule
“B”
to
his
affidavit
and
I
reproduce
it
next.
Davis
used
20
sales
for
comparative
purposes,
as
set
forth
in
his
affidavit,
and
concluded
that
the
purchase
price
of
$1,850,000
should
be
allocated
$1,160,000
to
the
land
and
$690,000
to
the
building.
Mr.
Farr,
the
appraiser
who
was
called
as
a
witness
by
the
respondent,
placed
a
market
valuation
of
$1,648,843,
rounded
to
$1,650,000
($28
per
sq.
foot),
on
all
of
the
land,
as
if
vacant
at
the
time
of
purchase
;
and
$200,000
($1,850,000
minus
$1,650,000)
on
the
building,
as
its
market
value,
i.
e.,
the
amount
by
which
its
presence
increases
the
value
or
selling
price
of
the
land
portion
of
the
whole
property
in
the
market
place.
In
making
his
valuation
he
divided
the
land
into
6
parcels,
which
are
shown,
with
their
valuations,
as
Item
2
in
Appendix
“C”
to
his
Report,
which
is
reproduced
next.
Parcel
|
|
(1)
|
179'4"
|
X
|
80’
=
|
14,350
sf
|
|
|
at
$2,230.
|
ff
or
$34.80
sf
|
$489,081.
|
|
|
Add:
25%
|
corner
influence
|
$
27,273.
|
$
|
516.354.
|
($36.00
sf)
|
|
on
40’
|
|
(2)
|
179'4"
|
x
|
80’
|
=
|
14,350
sf
|
|
|
at
$2,180.
|
ff
or
$27.27
sf
|
$391,264.
|
|
|
Add:
25%
|
corner
influence
|
$
21,818.
|
$
|
413,082.
|
($28.80
sf)
|
|
on
40'
|
|
(3)
|
76'6%"
|
X
|
100’
=
7,656
sf
|
|
|
at
$1,820.
|
ff
or
$18.18
sf
|
$139,200.
|
|
|
Add:
25%
|
corner
influence
|
$18,181.
|
$
|
157,381.
|
($20.55
sf)
|
|
on
40'
|
|
(4)
158'7"
X
76'6%
|
12,150
sf
|
|
at
$1,045.
ff
or
$13.65
sf
|
$
165,787.
|
($13.64
sf)
|
(5)
76'6%"
X
100’
=
7,656
sf
|
|
at
$2,410.
ff
or
$24.00
sf
$184,440.
|
|
Add:
25%
corner
influence
$
24,091.
$
208,531.
($27.33
sf)
on
40'
|
|
Total
main
block
|
56,162
sf
|
$1,461,135.
|
($26.00
sf)
|
Add:
10%
allowance
for
|
|
plottage
owing
to
|
$
146,113.
|
|
large
assembled
site
|
—
|
|
Total
value
for
main
block
|
$1,607,248.
|
($28.61
sf)
|
(6)
27'8%"
x
100’
=
2,773
sf
|
|
at
$1,500.
ff
or
$15.00
sf
|
$
|
41,595.
|
|
Total
land
area
|
58,935
sf
|
|
and
value
|
|
$1,648,843.
|
($28.00
sf)
|
|
Rounded
—
-
$1,650,000.
|
|
Farr
also
approached
the
problem
by
considering
specifically
the
building
site
(1.e.
the
portion
of
the
land
occupied
by
the
building
or
committed
to
it)
and
disregarding
the
remainder
of
the
land,
and
by
that
method
arrived
at
a
valuation
of
$336,000
for
the
building
site,
averaging
$22.75
per
sq.
foot,
as
shown
in
Item
1
in
Appendix
“
C
’
’
to
his
Report,
as
follows:
Appendix
“C”
BOSLEY
ASSOCIATES
LAND
VALUES
1.
SITE
VALUE
—
NO.
92
KING
STREET
EAST
AS
AT
APRIL
2nd,
1962
Breakdown
for
valuation
purposes:
(a)
55’
X
80°
—
4,400
sq.
ft.
at
$2,182.
fr.
ft.
or
$27.27
sq.
ft.
|
$120,000.
|
Add:
25%
corner
influence
on
40’
|
$
21,820.
$141,820.
|
(b)
75'7"
X
100'
|
7,556
sq.
ft.
at
$1,820.
fr.
ft.
|
|
or
$18.20
sq.
ft.
|
$137,420.
|
Add:
25%
corner
influence
on
40'
|
$
18,200.
$155,620.
|
(c)
37'
X
75'7"
|
2,794
sq.
ft.
at
$1,045.
fr.
ft.
|
|
or
$13.84
sq.
ft.
|
$
38,680.
|
Total
|
14,750
sq.
ft.
|
$336,120.
|
Rounded
(say)
—
$366,000.
(Av.
$22.75
sq.
ft.)
Farr
also
made
a
calculation
of
projected
estimated
gross
revenues
and
expenses
and
net
revenue
of
the
building,
Appendix
“D”
to
his
Report*,
which
shows
potential
gross
rental
revenue
of
$183,837
per
year,
and
a
net
revenue
of
$65,563,
before
depreciation
and
debt
service
;
he
deducted
$23,520
as
income
imputable
to
the
site,
calculated
at
7%
of
the
site
valuation
of
$336,000;
he
thereby
obtained
a
figure
of
$42,048
as
income
attributable
to
the
building;
and
by
giving
a
life
of
20
years
to
the
building
and
capitalizing
that
income
at
9.82%
he
arrived
at
a
value
of
$391,840
for
the
building,
and,
adding
$336,000
for
the
site,
a
rounded
figure
of
$728,000
for
the
building
and
its
site.
Farr
also
made
another
estimate
of
the
site
value
of
the
whole
property,
assuming
that
the
building
existed
and
prevented
the
whole
of
the
land
from
being
available
for
development,
as
shown
in
Item
3
of
his
Appendix
‘‘C’’,
as
follows
:
3.
SITE
VALUE
OF
WHOLE
OWNERSHIP
ASSUMING
PRESENCE
OF
NO.
92
KING
STREET
EAST
BUILDING
AND
THAT
THE
WHOLE
AREA
WAS
NOT
AVAILABLE
FOR
DEVELOPMENT
|
|
Value
of
land
in
ownership
as
in
Item
|
|
No.
2
of
this
Appendix
|
$1,648,843.
($28
s.f.)
|
Deduct
an
allowance
to
reflect
the
non
|
|
availability
of
the
whole
block
for
de
|
|
velopment
as
a
unit
with
a
consequent
|
|
diminution
in
land
value
—
10%
|
$
164,884.
|
Site
value
of
whole
ownership
(58,935
s.f.)
|
|
with
part
committed
to
the
structure
|
$1,483,959.
($25
s.f.)
|
Deduct
value
of
building
site
as
in
Item
|
|
No.
1
of
this
Appendix
|
$
336,000.
($22.75
s.f.)
|
Value
of
actual
vacant
land
(44,185
s.f.)
|
|
reflecting
the
presence
of
the
No.
92
|
|
King
Street
structure
|
$1,147,959.
($26
s.f.)
|
*For
details,
see
said
Appendix
“D”.
|
|
Farr’s
estimates
of
the
value
of
the
building
therefore
varied,
depending
on
the
methods
and
assumptions,
being
a
minimum
of
$200,000
on
the
basis
of
the
whole
of
the
property;
and
a
maximum
of
$392,000
on
the
basis
of
the
building
site
only
and
the
building,
as
a
developed
unit.
In
reaching
the
estimate
of
$1,648,843
for
the
land,
Farr
used
a
figure
of
$1,461,135
($26
per
sq.
ft.)
for
the
main
block
of
land
and
added
10%
to
it
for
plotting
or
assemblage
of
the
whole
block;
and
a
figure
of
$41,595
for
the
small
parking
lot,
at
$15
per
sq.
ft.
He
said
that
by
1962
there
was
a
trend
towards
construction
of
large
buildings
which
required
assemblage
of
correspondingly
large
sites.
His
opinion
was
that
the
highest
and
best
use
of
the
property,
pending
a
comprehensive
re-development,
was
the
use
to
which
it
was
being
put
in
1962.
He
provided
a
list
of
29
land
sales
and
2
office
building
sales
that
assisted
him
in
making
his
valuations.
Reproduced
next
is
a
map
of
the
area,
which
is
part
of
Appendix
‘‘A’’
to
Farr’s
Report.
It
gives
a
good
indication
of
the
subject
property
and
its
neighbourhood,
and
it
shows,
in
circled
numerals,
the
land
sales
listed
by
Farr.
I
have
endeavoured
to
match
Farr’s
sales
with
the
sales
listed
by
Davis
and
it
appears
to
me
that
the
following
sales*
are
included
in
both
lists.
|
Sa.
ft
|
Sale
No.
|
Street
|
|
Size
|
Price
|
Sq.
ft.
|
Davis
|
Farr
|
Location
|
Date
|
Sq.
ft.
|
$
|
$
|
3
16
|
Toronto
|
Oct.
’60
5,635
167,500
29.7
|
5
27(d)
Wellington
|
Nov.
’60
12,445
175,000
14.0
|
8
|
29
|
S.W.
corner
|
|
|
King-Church
|
Oct.
’61
4,591
50,000
11.7
|
9
17
|
Toronto
|
Feb.
’62
10,741
450,000
41.9
|
11
10
|
Adelaide
|
Jul.
’62
7,430
lease
31.4
|
13
27(c)
Wellington
|
Aug.
’62
9,888
150,000
15.1
|
14
13
|
Adelaide
|
May
’63
2,653
105,000
39.5
|
16
26(c)
Colborne
|
Oct.
’63
2,016
40,000
19.8
|
18
26(a)
Colborne
|
Oct.
’63
10,109
327,000
32.3
|
19
|
27(a)
|
N.E.
corner
|
|
|
Wellington-
|
|
|
Scott
|
Jan.
’64
9,482
275,000
29.0
|
22
9
|
Church
|
June
’65
12,243
lease
28.0
|
Davis
also
regarded
as
particularly
comparable
his
Sale
No.
2,
not
on
Farr’s
list,
which
was
a
lease
given
in
October
1960
for
9,417
sq.
ft.
of
land
at
the
N.E.
corner
of
Church
and
Lombard
streets,
for
a
parking
lot,
to
which
he
gave
a.
value
of
$7.58
per
sq.
ft.;
and
on
his
Sale
No.
15,
not
on
Farr’s
list,
in
July
1963,
of
4,632
sq.
ft.
of
land
on
the
S.
side
of
King
Street,
on
which
there
is
a
4-storey
building,
at
a
price
of
$130,000,
about
$28
per
sq.
ft,
without
deducting
anything
for
the
value
of
the
building.
He
thought
the
land
value
would
be
considerably
less
than
$28
per
sq.
ft.
Farr’s
sales,
not
listed
by
Davis,
included
Sale
No.
25,
in
December
1967,
of
5,136
sq.
ft.
of
land
on
Colborne
Street,
at
a
price
of
$80,000,
about
$15.5
per
sq.
ft;
and
Sale
No.
24,
in
December
1958,
of
1,707
sq.
ft.
of
land
on
Colborne
Street,
at
a
price
of
$20,000,
about
$11.7
per
sq.
ft.
I
am
satisfied
that
the
purchase
price
of
$1,850,000,
which
was
negotiated
at
arm’s
length,
was
a
fair
and
reasonable
price
and
equivalent
to
the
market
value
of
the
whole
property,
the
land
and
the
building,
at
the
date
of
its
purchase.
The
reasonableness
of
the
purchase
price
is
not
in
issue.
What
the
Court
is
here
primarily
concerned
with
is
the
reasonableness,
or
otherwise,
of
the
amount
regarded
by
the
respondent
as
the
consideration
for
disposition
of
the
building,
within
the
context
of
Section
20(6)
(g)
of
the
Act.
I
accept
Herman’s
evidence
that
the
building
was
acquired
for
the
purpose
of
producing
income,
notwithstanding
that
it
was
demolished
about
6
years
later
and
that
its
demolition
was
one
of
the
options
considered
(and
rejected)
when
its
purchase
was
under
consideration.
I
am
satisfied
that
in
the
negotiations
and
sale
the
purchase
price
was
attributable
in
the
minds
of
the
parties
partly
to
the
land
and
partly,
and
substantially,
to
the
building.
For
convenience,
I
will
re-capitulate
here
the
several
amounts
put
forward
as
attributable
to
the
building,
and
I
will
comment
on
them.
Davis
placed
a
market
valuation
of
$690,000
on
the
building.
Farr
gave
valuations
of
$200,000
on
an
overall
market
value
approach
and
$392,000
on
an
investment
value
approach.
The
appellant
allocated
$952,733
of
the
cost
of
acquisition
as
the
amount
reasonably
attributable
to
the
building
for
income
tax
purposes.
The
respondent
regarded
$419,647
as
the
portion
of
the
purchase
price
of
$1,850,000
that
can
reasonably
be
regarded
as
being
the
consideration
for
the
disposition
of
the
building.
Legal
fees
of
$731.77
were
added,
to
bring
the
aggregate
attributable
to
the
acquisition
of
the
building
by
the
appellant
to
$420,387.
In
respect
of
the
amount
put
forward
by
the
appellant,
I
have
regard
for
Herman’s
extensive
and
practical
experience
in
the
market
as
a
buyer
of
real
estate
and
the
fact
that
the
appellant
invested
and
committed
a
large
sum
to
the
purchase
of
the
property.
The
appellant
also
has
a
more
real
financial
interest,
as
compared
with
the
interest
of
the
appraisers.
However,
Herman
has
an
interest
also
in
endeavouring
to
allocate
a
maximum
amount
to
the
building
for
income
tax
purposes.
In
making
his
apportionment
he
took
the
actual
current
net
revenue
from
the
parking
lot,
and
assumed
no
increase
in
that
revenue,
to
arrive
at
the
parking
lot
valuation;
and,
after
attributing
a
certain
amount
to
all
the
land
and
the
remainder
of
the
purchase
price
to
the
building,
he
used
an
estimate
of
prospective
revenues
from
the
building,
and
assumed
an
increase
in
those
revenues,
in
support
of
his
valuation
of
the
building.
It
seems
to
me
that
he
over-estimated
the
prospective
revenues
from
the
building,
for
the
net
revenue
from
the
building
in
the
year
of
purchase
was
$27,096
for
the
9
months
April-December;
$41,590
in
1963;
$42,618
in
1964;
$41,282
in
1965
;
and
only
in
the
years
1966
and
1967,
when
Eatons
had
a
lease
in
circumstances
peculiar
to
Eatons,
did
the
net
revenue
from
the
building
reach
the
$120,000
mark
which
Herman
used
in
making
his
apportionment.
The
opening
of
the
Toronto-Dominion
Centre
no
doubt
militated
against
full
occupancy
of
the
building
at
the
increased
rents
contemplated
by
Herman,
but
even
before
that
Centre
came
into
being
the
building
was
not
fully
rented
and
the
rents
were
about
$2.50
per
sq.
ft.
He
also
applied
a
value
of
$10
per
sq.
ft.
to
the
building
site*,
which,
in
my
view
is
on
the
low
side
and
not
supported
by
the
evidence
as
a
whole.
The
valuation
made
by
Davis
was
based
largely
on
what
he
considered
to
be
comparable
sales,
coupled
with
the
municipal
assessments
on
the
land
and
building.
He
did
not
apply
a
revenue
approach.
He
said
that
his
Sales
Nos.
2,
3,
8,
9
and
15
offered
the
most
direct
evidence
of
value.
It
seems
to
me
that
his
Sale
No.
2
is
hardly
comparable
with
any
part
of
the
subject
land.
His
Sales
Nos.
3
and
9
on
Toronto
Street,
near
the
N.W.
corner
of
the
building,
are
listed
by
Farr
also.
The
land
in
No.
9
on
the
W.
side
of
Toronto
Street
has
a
higher
value
per
sq.
ft.
than
the
land
in
No.
3
on
the
E.
side.
His
sale
No.
15,
on
the
N.
side
of
King
Street,
opposite
the
subject
land,
has
a
building
on
it
and
no
apportionment
is
made
for
the
building,
which
may
have
a
little
or
a
considerable
value.
His
Sale
No.
8,
on
the
N.
side
of
King
Street,
at
Church
Street,
is
opposite
the
eastern
portion
of
the
subject
property,
and
his
Sale
No.
18
is
on
the
same
side
of
King
Street
opposite
the
western
portion
of
the
property.
The
more
westerly
parcel
shows
a
higher
sq.
ft.
value
than
the
easterly
parcel.
Farr’s
Sale
No.
15
is
between
those
parcels,
as
is
also
a
parcel
of
land
which
Herman
said
was
repeatedly
offered
to
and
refused
by
him
at
about
$12
per
sq.
ft.
As
already
stated,
Farr
used
different
approaches
to
arrive
at
his
valuations
of
the
building,
$200,000
on
an
overall
market
value
approach,
$392,000
on
an
investment
value
approach.
In
1963,
the
first
full
year
of
ownership
by
the
appellant,
the
net
profit
from
the
building
was
$41,590
(Exhibit
17).
In
the
light
of
that
profit
it
seems
to
me
that
Farr’s
valuation
of
$200,000
is
unduly
low.
His
valuation
of
the
land
itself
at
$1,650,000
is
hardly
supported
by
the
income
actually
derived
from
it
when
used
as
a
parking
lot.
Factors
in
his
investment
approach
include
the
value
he
gave
to
the
building
site
and
his
projected
estimate
of
net
revenue
from
the
building.
If
either
of
those
amounts
was
different,
the
estimate
of
the
value
of
the
building
would
be
correspondingly
different.
All
of
the
sales
listed
by
Davis
and
Farr
are
in
respect
of
parcels
considerably
smaller
than
the
subject
property.
They
do
not
show
a
supply
of
or
a
demand
for
blocks
of
land
or
property
comparable
to
the
subject
property,
in
its
vicinity.
It
does
not
appear
to
me
that
any
of
those
sales
is
so
directly
comparable
to
the
subject
property
as
to
provide
a
reliable
yardstick
for
measuring
the
value
of
the
land
or
building
in
question.
They
do,
however,
warrant
a
generalization
that
land
values
are
higher
west
of
Toronto
Street
than
east
thereof,
that
the
most
valuable
street
frontage
of
the
subject
land
is
on
Toronto
Street,
and
that
the
land
value
of
the
most
easterly
portion
of
the
property,
i.e.,
the
building
site
fronting
on
Church
Street,
opposite
the
Cathedral.
is
less
than
the
land
value
of
the
portion
west
thereof,
on
a
sq.
foot
basis.
I
am
reluctant
to
adopt
any
single
approach
to
the
determination
of
the
apportionment
of
the
purchase
price,
as
between
the
land
and
the
building,
or,
to
be
more
exact,
to
the
determination
of
the
amount
that
can
reasonably
be
regarded
as
being
the
consideration
for
the
disposition
of
the
building.
There
is
no
mathematical
formula
or
yardstick
or
method
known
to
me,
the
use
of
which
will
inevitably
lead
to
an
accurate
valuation
or
apportionment
in
the
present
case.
The
appraisers,
Davis
and
Farr,
differed
substantially
in
their
valuations
as
between
themselves.
Their
valuations
necessarily
involved
a
large
measure
of
personal
judgment,
and
their
opinions
—
and
the
opinion
of
Herman
—
as
to
the
value
of
the
land
and
the
building,
are
to
be
weighed
in
the
context
of
the
information
and
suppositions
on
which
they
were
based
and
the
reasoning
applied
by
them.
Having
regard
to
the
evidence
as
to
sales,
the
location,
size
and
nature
of
the
property,
the
uses
to
which
it
was
being
put
at
the
time
of
purchase
and
its
potential
at
that
time
for
use
in
the
future,
the
actual
and
reasonably
prospective
earnings
from
the
several
parts,
and
the
municipal
assessments,
and
applying
my
own
judgment
thereto,
I
think
the
balance
of
probability
is
that
the
portion
of
the
purchase
price
that
should
be
attributed
to
the
building
for
the
purposes
of
Section
20(6)
(g)
of
the
Act
is
$510,000
or
approximately
that
amount,
but
not
less.
My
apportionment
of
$510,000
for
the
building
may
be
tested
in
at
least
two
ways,
(a)
on
an
income
basis,
(b)
on
a
municipal
assessment
ratio
basis.
These
approaches
are
not
infallible
and
they
do
not
provide
governing
tests,
but
I
think
that
they
can
be
considered
to
be
useful
in
looking
to
see
whether
$510,000
for
the
building
is
reasonable
or
manifestly
or
probably
out
of
line.
First,
the
income
approach*.
Taking
Farr’s
figure
of
the
net
rentable
area
of
the
building,
69,128
square
feet,
and
assuming
rent
at
$2.75
per
sq.
ft.
(which
was,
I
think
reasonably
foreseeable
when
the
property
was
purchased),
and
deducting
Farr’s
5%
for
vacancy
and
bad
debts,
we
get
gross
rental
of
$180,597.
Deducting
from
that
amount
Farr’s
5%
of
the
gross
rental
for
management,
$9,029,
and
his
estimate
of
$100,350
for
operating
expenses,
we
get
a
net
revenue
of
$71,218
(as
compared
with
Farr’s
$65,563)
for
the
building
and
its
land.
I
took
14,750
sq.
ft.
as
the
area
of
the
building
sitet.
In
my
opinion
a
fair
valuation
of
the
building
site
would
be
about
$16
per
sq.
ft.
or
$236,000
in
all.
Applying
7%,
which
was
used
by
both
Farr
and
Herman
in
capitalizing
land
revenues,
to
that
$256,000,
there
would
be
income
attributable
to
the
site
of
$16,520,
leaving
$54,698
as
the
building
income.
Applying
to
that
amount
the
percentage
of
9.32
used
by
Farr
gives
a
value
of
$509,785
to
the
building.
The
assessment
ratio
approach.
Municipal
assessment
is
not
a
determining
or
decisive
factor
and,
in
many
situations,
is
not
a
reliable
guide
in
appraising
the
value
of
property,
but
it
is
relevant
and
may
provide
some
assistance
in
the
present
case.
In
1962
the
municipal
assessments,
as
shown
in
Exhibit
18,
were
$177,900
for
the
building
site,
$378,000
for
the
building,
$494,000
for
the
main
parking
lot,
and
$9,800
for
the
small
parking
lot,
a
total
of
$1,059,700.
The
building
amount
is
about
35.6%
of
the
total.
Applying
that
ratio
to
$1,850,000
gives
$519,663
for
the
building.
The
appeal
is,
therefore,
allowed
with
costs,
and
the
assessment
is
referred
back
to
the
respondent
for
re-assessment
on
the
basis
that,
for
the
purpose
of
Section
20(6)
(g)
of
the
Act,
the
portion
of
the
$1,850,000
purchase
price
of
the
property
that
can
reasonably
be
regarded
as
being
the
consideration
for
disposition
of
the
building
is
$510,000.