GIBSON,
J.:—These
four
appeals
against
re-assessments,
all
dated
April
28,
1965,
for
income
tax
of
the
appellant
for
the
taxation
years
1959,
1960,
1961
and
1962,
were
tried
together.
In
other
proceedings
before
the
Tax
Appeal
Board
and
before
this
Court
a
gain
of
$138,150
made
by
the
appellant
in
1958
on
the
sale
of
$176,000
of
certain
real
estate
in
the
New
Westminster
District
of
British
Columbia
was
characterized
as
income
and
not
as
a
capital
gain.
An
appeal
from
the
decision
of
this
Court
in
respect
thereto
to
the
Supreme
Court
of
Canada
is
pending.
The
said
sale
consideration
of
$176,000
by
the
provisions
of
the
sale
contract
was
payable
and
paid
over
a
five-year
period
in
the
following
amounts:
1958
|
$
36,000
|
1959
|
35,000
|
1960
|
35,000
|
1961
|
39,000
|
1962
|
35,000
|
|
making
a
total
of
$176,000.
|
In
each
of
the
respective
years
1958
to
1962
inclusive
the
appellant
in
fact
received
the
above
amounts
as
provided
in
the
sale
contract.
In
assessing
the
appellant’s
income
for
the
taxation
year
1958
the
Minister
assessed
tax
on
the
entire
gain
of
$138,150,
notwithstanding,
as
noted,
that
approximately
four-fifths
of
it
was
a
receivable
at
that
time.
In
the
pleadings
before
this
Court
in
respect
to
the
appeal
proceedings
in
relation
to
the
appellant’s
1958
income
tax
the
Minister
pleaded
that
he
assessed
tax
on
the
entire
profit
of
$138,150
in
the
appellant’s
1958
taxation
year,
‘‘but
he
is
now
prepared
to
assess
tax
on
the
profit
as
it
was
in
fact
received
by
the
appellant,
or
he
will
deduct
an
amount
as
a
reserve
for
1958
pursuant
to
the
provisions
of
Section
85B(l)(d)*
of
the
Income
Tax
Act’’.
By
the
said
re-assessments
dated
April
28,
1965
for
the
taxation
years
1959
to
1962
inclusive
the
respondent
did
not
re-assess
tax
on
the
appellant’s
income
for
any
of
these
years
on
an
accrual
or
receivable
method
and
pursuant
to
such
method
deduct
any
amounts
as
receivable
pursuant
to
the
provisions
of
Section
85B(1)(d)
of
the
Income
Tax
Act;
instead
the
respondent
assessed
on
a
cash
or
received
basis
and
in
the
words
of
the
agreement
as
to
facts
of
the
parties
in
this
action
‘‘included
in
the
appellant’s
income
the
portion
of
the
sale
price
which
was
in
fact
received
in
each
of
the
respective
years,
and
the
respondent
deducted
a
portion
of
the
cost
of
sale
as
appears
in
the
following
table:
Net
Amount
|
Portion
of
Sale
|
|
Added
to
|
|
Price
in
Fact
|
Portion
of
|
Appellant’s
|
|
Received
|
Cost
|
Income
|
1959
|
$35,000.00
|
$7,570.00
|
$27,430.00
|
1960
|
35,000.00
|
7,570.00
|
27,430.00
|
1961
|
35,000.00
|
7,570.00
|
27,430.00
|
1962
|
35,000.00
|
7,570.00
|
27,430.00
|
In
the
said
agreement
as
to
facts
the
parties
also
say:
The
Appellant
had
not
adopted,
during
any
of
the
said
fiscal
periods,
a
method
for
computing
income
from
its
business
or
businesses
which
did
not
require
it
to
include
any
amount
receivable
in
computing
its
income
for
a
taxation
year
unless
it
had
been
received
in
the
year.
and
.
.
.
The
appellant
has
not
claimed
or
deducted
any
other
amount
in
respect
of
a
reserve
pursuant
to
the
said
provisions
of
Section
85B.
In
summary,
the
Minister
in
assessing
the
income
of
the
appellant
for
the
taxation
year
1958
brought
into
income
for
that
year
the
whole
of
the
gain
(of
which
approximately
four-fifths
was
a
receivable,
at
that
time),
pursuant
to
the
provisions
of
Section
85B(1)
(b)*
of
the
Income
Tax
Act,
and
did
not
allow
the
appellant
a
reserve
under
Section
85B(l)(d)
of
the
Act.
(The
respondent
since
has
agreed
to
do
so,
but
has
not
done
so
as
yet,
pending
the
disposition
of
the
said
appeal
before
the
Supreme
Court
of
Canada
respecting
the
1958
re-assessment.
)
The
taxpayer
in
filing
its
returns
of
income
for
each
of
the
years
1959
to
1962
did
not
adopt
a
cash
or
received
basis
of
computing
and
filing
for
tax
purposes
its
income
from
this
said
gain.
In
other
words,
it
did
not
in
any
of
the
said
years,
in
the
words
of
Section
85B(1)(b)
of
the
Income
Tax
Act
adopt
a
method
‘‘for
computing
income
from
the
business
and
accepted”
by
the
Minister
which
did
‘‘not
require
.
.
.
(it)
to
include
any
amount
receivable
in
computing
.
.
.
(its)
income
for
a
taxation
year
unless
it
has
been
received
in
the
year’’.
The
Minister,
however,
and
notwithstanding
these
re-assess-
ments
of
income
for
the
taxation
years
1959
to
1962
of
the
appellant,
re-assessed
on
the
premise
that
the
appellant
had
filed
its
returns
of
income
in
each
of
those
years
in
respect
of
the
said
gain
on
a
cash
or
received
basis
and
not
on
a
receivable
or
accrual
basis.
In
my
view,
the
Minister
had
no
right
to
so
re-assess
on
a
cash
or
received
basis,
and
predicated
on
the
pleadings
and
the
evidence
in
this
case
there
is
no
power
in
this
Court
to
refer
these
re-assessments
back
to
the
Minister
for
further
re-assessment
on
a
receivable
or
accrual
basis
to
tie
in
with
the
way
that
the
Minister
may
assess
this
gain
in
the
taxation
year
1958
of
the
appellant,
in
the
event
the
appellant’s
said
appeal
to
the
Supreme
Court
of
Canada
is
not
successful.
Also
to
do
so
in
effect
would
be
to
allow
an
appeal
to
the
Minister
from
his
own
re-assessments,
on
these
appeals
therefrom
by
the
appellant
taxpayer.
In
the
result,
therefore,
for
the
reasons
stated,
I
am
of
the
opinion
that
the
appellant
has
established
that
there
is
no
basis
in
fact
or
in
law
for
any
of
the
re-assessments
for
the
years
1959
to
1962.
In
addition,
as
to
the
re-assessment
for
the
taxation
year
1959,
there
is
another
reason
why
it
has
no
validity.
This
reason
is
that
the
Minister
had
no
power
to
issue
the
said
re-assessment
dated
April
28,
1965
since
more
than
four
years
had
elapsed
from
the
date
of
the
original
assessment
for
income
of
the
appellant’s
1959
taxation
year
and
the
Minister
at
this
trial
did
not
adduce
any
evidence,
as
he
had
the
onus
to
do,
that
the
appellant
“at
any
time
.
.
.”
‘‘made
any
misrepresentation
or
committed
any
fraud
in
filing
.
.
.
(its)
return
or
in
supplying
any
information
under
this
Act’’
within
the
meaning
of
Section
46(4)
of
the
Income
Tax
Act.
The
appeals
are
therefore
allowed
with
respect
to
all
of
the
taxation
years,
namely,
1959
to
1962,
and
are
referred
back
to
the
respondent
for
the
purpose
of
deleting
from
the
appellant’s
income
for
the
said
years
1959
to
1962
inclusive
any
amount
in
respect
of
the
said
gain
of
$138,150.
The
appellant
is
entitled
to
costs.