JACKETT,
P.
:—These
appeals
from
decisions
of
the
Tax
Appeal
Board
dismissing
appeals
from
the
appellants’
assessments
under
Part
I
of
the
Income
Tax
Act
for
the
1958
taxation
year
were
heard
together
in
Montreal
on
January
24
and
25,
1968.
In
each
case,
the
respondent
had
assessed
the
appellant
on
the
basis
that
his
share
of
the
profits
from
certain
transactions
relating
to
the
acquisition
and
disposition
of
lands
at
Fabreville,
Quebec,
was
$75,382.60,
and
not
merely
the
lesser
amount
of
$5,642.50
shown
by
the
appellant
in
his
income
tax
return
for
the
taxation
year.
The
questions
raised,
in
each
case,
by
the
Notice
of
Objection
to
the
assessment
and
by
the
Notice
of
Appeal
to
the
Tax
Appeal
Board
were
(a)
whether
the
appellants’
profit
from
such
transactions
was
$5,642.50
as
contended
by
the
appellant
or
$75,382.60,
as
found
by
the
respondent,
and
(b)
whether
the
profit
was,
in
either
case,
subject
to
income
tax.
(There
has
never
been
any
question
raised
as
to
the
correctness
of
the
amounts
assuming
taxability
on
one
basis
or
another.)
The
appellant’s
position,
in
each
case,
at
each
of
those
stages,
was
that
the
two
appellants
and
one
Fortin
had,
in
1956,
acquired
certain
options
to
buy
land
at
Fabreville,
and
that
each
of
the
appellants
had,
in
1958,
transferred
his
share
in
the
options
to
a
company
for
a
consideration
of
$15,000,
which,
after
deduction
of
his
expenses,
had
yielded
him
a
profit
on
the
transaction
of
$5,642.50,
the
amount
reported
by
him
as
income.
What
the
respondent
had
learned
before
the
assessments
appealed
from
is
that
the
appellants
had
(after
acqiring
Fortin’s
interest
in
the
options)
not
only
entered
into
the.
transactions
during
the
latter
part
of
1958
under
which
they
had
each
received
a
gross
amount
of
$15,000,
but
they
had,
during
the
same
period,
caused
companies
under
their
control*
to
enter
into
transactions
relating
to
the
land
at
Fabreville
as
a
result
of
which
the
total
not
profit
accruing
to
the
appellants
and
companies
under
their
control
as
a
result
of
the
acquisition
and
disposal
of
the
Fabreville
lands
was
$150,765.20.
It
was
apparent
that
all
the
actual
bargains
involved
(that
1s,
bargains
between
the
appellants
or
companies
under
their
control
on
the
one
hand
and
persons
with
whom
they
were
dealing
at
arm’s
length
on
the
other)
were
negotiated
by
the
appellants
with
the
persons
with
whom
they
were
dealing
at
arm’s
length,
and
that
the
appellants
subsequently
arranged
for
the
various
intervening
conveyances
under
which
a
large
part
of
the
profits
arising
from
the
dispositions
were
made
to
appear
as
having
accrued
to
companies
under
the
control
of
the
appellants
and
not
to
the
appellants.
In
these
circumstances,
it
seems,
although
he
did
not
express
himself
as
clearly
as
he
might
have
done,
that
the
respondent
took
the
position
in
making
the
assessments
appealed
from
that
the
transactions
giving
rise
to
the
profit
of
$150,765.20
were
either
(a)
exclusively
those
of
the
appellants
on
their
own
account
(the
companies
under
their
control
having
been
used
merely
as
instrumentalities
through
which
implementing
conveyances
and
other
operations
were
carried
out*),
or
(b)
in
part
those
of
the
appellants
and
in
part
transactions
associated
with
other
transactions
that
brought
into
play
Section
16(1),
Section
17(2),
or
Section
187
of
the
Income
Tax
Act.
On:the
first
alternative,
if
it
were
correct,
each
of
the
appellants
‘was,
of
course,
properly
taxed
on
his
share
of
the
total
profit
(assuming
it
was
a
profit
from
a
‘‘business’’
within
the
meaning
of
the
Income
Tax
Act)
just
as
any
trader
would
be
if,
for
some
reason,
his
trading
transactions
were
carried
out
through,
and
in
the
name
of,
a
trust
company,
bank
or
other
nominee
acting
as
his
agent
or
trustee.
Apparently,
after
hearing
the
evidence
adduced
before
him,
Mr.
Boisvert,
the
member
of
the
Tax
Appeal
Board
by
whom
the
appeal
was
heard,
took
that
view
of
the
transactions
because
he
said:
Les
faits,
à
première
vue,
semblent
bien
enchevêtrés.
A
les
examiner
de
près,
il
est
facile
de
se
rendre
compte
qu’ils
ont
été
agencés
de
façon
à
constituer
un
trompe-l’oeil
pour
le
répartiteur
pensant
sans
doute
qu’il
était
atteint
de
myopie,
ce
qui
n’était
pas
le
cas
Whether
or
not
the
appellants
thought
that
the
assessor
‘
était
atteint
de
myopie’’,
the
basis
upon
which
the
appeal
to
the
Tax
Appeal
Board
was
launched
appears
to
have
been
a
view
that
a
trader
may
reduce
the
profits
from
his
trading
transactions
(at
least
for
purposes
of
income
tax)
by
merely
substituting
for
a
straightforward
conveyance
between
himself
and
the
person
with
whom
he
has
negotiated
a
transaction
a
complicated
series
of
conveyances
involving
companies
under
his
control,
even
though
such
conveyances
do
not
represent
bona
fide
business
transactions.
This
seems
clear
from
the
fact
that,
while
the
assessments
appealed
from
were
obviously
based
on
transactions
in
the
names
of
companies
under
the
control
of
the
appellants,
the
appellants
did
not
consider
it
necessary
for
their
case,
that
they,
by
the
various
documents
in
which
they
were
required
to
state
the
material
facts
or
by
the
evidence
before
the
Board,
inform
the
Minister
or
the
Board
of
the
various
transactions
and
establish
that
each
of
them
was
an
actual
bona
fide
contract
that
was
in
fact
negotiated,
by
or
on
behalf
of
the
persons
named
as
parties,
at
the
time
of
the
negotiation
of
the
business
bargain.
(Indeed,
there
is
no
suggestion
any
where
in
the
documents
or
the
evidence
before
the
Board
or
in
this
Court*
that
either
of
the
controlled
companies
in
question—E.
&
G.
Lagacé
Inc.
and
Adrien
Lagacé
Inc.
—
was
engaged
at
the
relevant
time
in
a
business
of
trading
in
land
or
that
the
appellants,
in
negotiating
the
various
acquisition
and
disposition
transactions
with
the
third
parties,
were
doing
so
as
agents
or
employees
of
one
or
other
of
the
companies
controlled
by
them.
)
The
view
to
which
I
have
referred,
upon
which
the
appeal
appears
to
have
been
launched
to
the
Tax
Appeal
Board,
appears
to
me
to
be
so
clearly
wrong
that
there
is
no
need
to
give
any
reasons
for
so
holding.
As
will
appear
subsequently,
the
appellants,
in
attempting
to
support
their
position,
brought
in
additional
evidence
before
the
Tax
Appeal
Board
on
the.
basis
of
which
the
Board
held,
in
a
judgment
with
which
I
agree,
that
the
profits
in
question
were
in
fact
profits
from
the
appellants’
own
business
transactions
and
that
they
had,
in
effect,
received
them
and
used
them
for
their
own
purposes.
(The
alternative
position,
to
be
found
in
the
Notice
of
Objection
and
in
the
Notice
of
Appeal
to
the
Tax
Appeal
Board,
that
the
transactions
in
question
were
not
trading
transactions
and
that
the
appellants
are
even
entitled
to
a
return
of
the
tax
paid
on
the
lesser
amounts
shown
in
their
tax
returns,
was
not
pressed
before
the
Tax
Appeal
Board
and
was
expressly
dropped
before
me
by
counsel
for
the
appellants.)
However,
according
to
counsel
for
the
appellants,
a
new
element
in
the
story
appeared
for
the
first
time
in.
evidence
presented
to
the
Tax
Appeal
Board.
On
that
occasion,
for
the
first
time,
the
appellants
put
forward
a
contract
that
they
had
made
with
Fortin
in
December
1957,
which,
they
said,
explained
why
one
of
the
companies
controlled
by
the
appellants
had
been
introduced
into
the
transactions
in
question.
To
understand
the
contract
of
December
1957,
it
becomes
necessary
to
refer
to
some
facts
that
were
not
otherwise
material.
The
appellants,
who
are
brothers,
had
three
other
brothers
who,
prior
to
1958,
owned
the
shares
in
the
company
known
as
Adrien
Lagacé
Inc.,
which
company
had
carried
on
a
substantial
housebuilding
business
at
Beaconsfield,
Quebec.
Early
in
1957,
Adrien
Lagacé
Inc.
having
got
into
financial
difficulties.
Fortin
(the
man
who
had
joined
with
the
appellants
in
acquiring
the
Fabreville
options)
had
guaranteed
that
company’s
indebtedness
at
the
Bank
up
to
an
amount
of
$136,000.
Shortly
thereafter,
Fortin
took
a
conveyance
of
substantially
all
the
assets
of
Adrien
Lagacé
Inc.,
which
were
at
Beaconsfield,
and
undertook
the
task
of
liquidating
them
and
using
the
proceeds
to
pay
the
company’s
creditors,
who,
of
course,
included
the
Bank.
When
he
entered
into
this
affair,
Fortin
seems
to
have
thought
that
the
company’s
problem
was
a
temporary
shortage
of
ready
cash
and
there
is
no
suggestion
that
he
had
any
idea,
at
the
commencement
of
his
involvement
in
the
affair,
that
the
company’s
assets
were
not
sufficient
to
pay
all
of
its
debts.*
However,
after
working
at
the
task
for
several
months,
Fortin
found
that
it
was
taking
longer,
and
involved
more
work,
than
he
had
expected.
(He
probably
began
to
be
concerned
as
to
whether
the
proceeds
of
liquidation
would
be
sufficient.)
Having
regard
to
his
age
and
other
responsibilities,
he
decided
to
try
to
get
free
of
the
matter.
It
was
in
these
circumstances
that
he
negotiated
the
contract
of
December
1957
with
the
appellants.
That
contract
reads
as
follows:
Entente
entre
Georges
&
Eugène
Lagacé
et
J.
M.
E.
Fortin
tous
de
Dorval.
Il
est
convenu
entre
les
trois
parties,
ci-haut
men-
tioné,
que
J.
M.
E.
Fortin
consent
4
céder
tous
ces
droits
dans
huit
options
d’achat
de
terres
situé
à
Fabreville,
paroisse
de
Ste-Rose
pour
le
prix
de
1.00
dollar
aux
conditions
suivantes.
Etant
donné
que
J.
M.
E.
Fortin
est
engagé
envers
la
Banque
Canadienne
Nationale
à
Pointe
Claire
pour
la
Co
Adrien
Lagacé
Inc.
Il
est
explicite
que
les
dite
options,
lorsqu’ils
seront
exercer
soit
acheter
en
faveur
d’Adrien
Lagacé
Inc.
de
manière
à
libérer
totalement
J.
M.
E.
Fortin
de
la
Co
Adrien
Lagacé
Inc.
que
ce
soit
la
banque
ou
toute
autres
créditeurs
de
la
dite
Co.
Il
est
entendu
que
la
balance
des
terrains
de
Beaconsfield
appartenant
à
J.
M.
E.
Fortin
pour
cause
d’endossement
envers
Adrien
Lagacé
Inc.
soit
transférer
par
contrat
notarié
à
Eugène
ou
Georges
Lagacé
ou
tout
autre
Co
désigné
par
eux.
Cette
entente
deviendra
nul
et
sans
effet
si
les
obligations
ci-haut
mentionés
ne
sont
pas
respectées
dans
les
douze
mois
de
cette
date.
By
the
contract
of
December
1957,
between
Fortin
and
the
appellants,
as
I
understand
it,
Fortin
agreed
(a)
to
turn
over
to
the
appellants
or
their
nominee
the
company’s
Beaconsfield
assets,
which
were,
of
course,
dedicated
to
payment
of
the
debts
of
Adrien
Lagacé
Inc.,*
and
(b)
to
transfer
to
the
appellants
his
one-third
interest
in
the
Fabreville
optionst
on
terms
that
the
options
should
be
taken
up
in
the
name
of
Adrien
Lagacé
Inc.
to
the
extent
necessary
to
vest
in
that
company
such
part
of
the
profits
arising
from
turning
the
options
to
account
as
might
be
necessary
to
enable
it
to
pay
any
part
of
its
debt
to
the
Bank
that
would
not
otherwise
be
paid
and
which,
if
not
paid
otherwise,
would
be
payable
by
Fortin
as
a
result.
of
his
guarantee.
Quite
apart
from
the
very
substantial
consideration
(Fortin’s
one-third
interest),
the
appellants
were
motivated
to
some
extent
in
entering
into
the
agreement
by
the
fact
that,
while
they
profess
to
have
had
no
legal
obligation
to
stand
behind
their
brother’s
company,
and
while
Fortin
was
legally
liable
to
do
so,
they
recognized
some
moral
responsibility
because
the
company
was
their
brother’s
company.
As
I
have
already
indicated,
as
I
view
the
contract
of
December
1957,
Fortin
agreed
to
turn
over
to
the
appellants
his
share
in
the
Fabreville
options
(which,
as
is
conceded
in
this
Court,
had
been
acquired
for
the
purpose
of
turning
them
to
account
at
a
profit
in
one
way
or
another
and
which
had
substantially
increased
in
value
between
the
time
of
their
acquisition
in
1956
and
December
1957)
in
return
for
a
covenant
by
the
appellants
that
they.
would:
utilize
such
part
of
the
profits
to
be
realized
from:
the
options
as
might
be
necessary
to
ensure
that
the
company’s
debt
to
the
Bank
would
be
paid
without
Fortin
being
liable
on
his
guarantee.
(This
might
be
an
appropriate
place
to
interject
that,
as
it
appears
to
me,
the
covenant
to
have
the
options
taken
up
in
the
name
of
the
company
was
merely
the
method
adopted
to
carry
out
the
obligation
of
turning
over
some
part
of
the
profits
to
the
company.)
About
the
end
of
1957,
and
before
any
steps
were
taken
to
turn
the
options
to
account,
the
three
Lagacé
brothers
who
had
owned
the
shares
in
Adrien
Lagacé
Inc.
transferred
such
shares
to
the
two
appellants
and
their
wives
or
to
one
or
more
of
them.*
The
result
was
that,
while
the
company
had
been
controlled
up
to
December,
1957
by
the
three
Lagacé
brothers
who
are
strangers
to
these
appeals,
it
was,
during
the
course
of
the
1958
transactions
that
gave
rise
to
the
profits
that
are
the
subject
of
these
appeals,
a
company
all
the
shares
of
which
belonged
to
one
or
other
of
the
appellants
or
their
wives.
In
this
Court,
in
the
light
of
the
December,
1957
contract,
it
was
contended
on
behalf
of
the
appellants,
in
effect,
as
I
understand
it,
that
the
profits
in
dispute
were
not
the
appellants’
profits
because
the
appellants
were
required
by
that
agreement
so
to
arrange
the
transactions
that
the
profits
would
vest
in
Adrien
Lagacé
Inc.
and
that
they
had
in
fact
done
so
with
the
result
that
the
profits
vested
in
the
company
and
not
in
the
appellants.
I
reject
this
contention
for
two
reasons,
viz
:
(a)
the
onus
was
on
the
appellants
to
establish,
as
a
factual
basis
for
this
contention,
that
the
profits
in
dispute
had,
in
fact,
been
used,
as
contemplated
by
the
agreement,
to
pay
such.
part
of
the
debt
of
Adrien
Lagacé
Inc.
to
the
Bank
as
could
not
be
paid
out
of
the
company’s
own
assets
(the
Beaconsfield
assets)
and
the
appellants
have
completely
failed
to
prove
that
any
part
of
such
assets
were
so
used,
and
(b)
even
if
the
whole
of
the
profits
in
dispute
had
been
so
used,
that
would
not
change
their
character
as
profits
arising
directly
from
the
appellants’
business
operations.
I
shall
deal
first
with
the
appellants’
failure
to
establish
the
factual
basis
for
their
contention.
In
that
connection
it
is
important
to
consider
first
what
had
to
be
proved.
As
I
understand
the
December
1957
contract,
Fortin
agreed
to
turn
over
to
the
appellants
or
to
their
nominee
the
balance
of
the
Beaconsfield
assets
of
the
company
that
he
had
been
in
the
process
of
liquidating
so
that
he
might
use
the
proceeds
to
pay
the
company’s
debts.*
Obviously,
under
the
arrangement,
the
appellants
were
to
continue
this
process
and
they
were
only
bound
by
the
contract
to
use
the
profits
from
the
Fabreville
options
to
pay
the
company’s
debts
if,
and
to
the
extent
that,
the
proceeds
of
the
Beaconsfield
properties
were
inadequate
for
the
purpose.
What
the
appellants
had
to
prove,
therefore,
was
(a)
that
the
proceeds
of
disposition
of
the
Beaconsfield
property
had
been
insufficient
to
pay
some
part
of
the
company’s
debt
to
the
Bank,
(b)
the
amount
that
had
been
left
owing
to
the
Bank
after
all
the
monies
available
from
the
Beaconsfield
assets
of
the
company
had
been
paid
to
the
Bank,
and
(c)
that
that
amount
had
been
paid
to
the
Bank
out
of
the
Fabreville
profits.
Having
regard
to
the
manner
in
which
the
question
arises
and
the
substantial
amounts
involved,
it
was
not
in
my
view
sufficient
for
the
appellants
to
testify
simply
that
they
knew
that
all
the
Fabreville
profits
had
been
used
to
pay
off
the
company’s
debt
at
the
Bank
and
that
there
had
been
a
loss
on
the
liquidation
of
the
Beaconsfield
assets,
but
that
they
really
had
no
knowledge
of
just
what
was
done
in
respect
of
either
matter,
or
who
did
it
or
how
it
was
done.
That,
however,
is
in
reality
the
gist
of
their
evidence.
Indeed,
in
the
first
place,
no
evidence
was
put
forth
on
behalf
of
the
appellants
on
either
matter
;
and,
when
asked
about
some
aspects
of
the
matters
on
cross-examination,
they
indicated
a
lack
of
any
knowledge
of
what
had
really
happened.
The
very
simple
position
put
forward
on
behalf
of
the
appellants
during
the
hearing
in
this
Court
was
that
there
was,
at
the
relevant
time,
$136,000
owing
to
the
Bank,
that
there
was
approximately
the
same
amount
of
profits
from
the
Fabreville
transactions
(apart
from
the
amounts
that
they
showed
as
having
been
received
by
them
personally),
and
that,
while
there
was
no
direct
evidence
as
to
what
had
actually
happened,
it
should
be
inferred
that
such
profits
were
used
to
pay
the
debt
to
the
Bank.
Even
if
such
an
inference
would
be
a
fair
inference
to
draw
from
those
facts
if
they
had
been
established
and
everything
else
had
been
left
untold,
that
is
not
the
state
of
the
record.
It
is
quite
clear
from
the
evidence
that,
while
the
Bank
debt
had
been
$136,000
on
February
8,
1957
(paragraph
2(d)
of
the
agreement
of
facts),
it
was,
according
to
the
Bank
statements
that
were
put
in
evidence,
reduced
to
$109,000
by
March
1958,
which
was
long
before
the
transactions
giving
rise
to
the
profits
in
question.
Apart
entirely
from
this
substantial
difference
between
the
facts
on
which
the
appellants’
contention
is
based
and
the
evidence,
where
there
is
evidence,
a
comparison
of
the
payments
to
the
Bank,
as
shown
by
the
Bank
statement,
with
the
payments
to
the
companies
controlled
by
the
appellants
as
shown
by
the
various
conveyances,
which
show
the
payments
very
precisely
indeed,
not
only
fails
to
lend
any
support
for
the
appellants’
contention,
but
suggests
strongly
that
a
large
part
of
the
monies
from
the
Fabreville
transactions
did
not
go
directly
to
the
Bank
and
that
the
monies
that
were
used
to
pay
the
Bank
must
have
come,
immediately
at
least,
from
somewhere
else.
When
one
turns
to
consider
what
happened
in
connection
with
the
liquidation
of
the
company’s
own
assets
at
Beaconsfield,
there
is
simply
no
information
except
bald
assertions
that
they
gave
rise
to
a
loss.
I
find
it
impossible
to
accept
these
assertions
without
something
more
specific
by
way
of
explanation.
A
comparison
of
the
figures
in
the
conveyance
of
these
properties
from
the
company
to
Fortin
with
the
figures
in
the
conveyance
from
Fortin
to
the
company
controlled
by
the
appellants,
as
well
as
an
examination
of
the
record
of
payments
to
the
Bank
would
suggest
that
liquidation
of
the
company’s
own
assets
had
been
resulting,
during
Fortin’s
administration
and
during
the
administration
by
the
appellants
prior
to
the
realization
of
the
Fabreville
profits,
in
substantial
payments
on
the
company’s
debts.
I
know
of
no
reason
to
think
that
the
process
of
liquidation
had
been
completed
before
the
Fabreville
transactions
and
I
am
not
prepared
to
make
a
finding
on
the
evidence
before
me
that
it
had
ceased
to
yield
anything
for
payment
of
debts
some
time
in
the
early
part
of
1958.
If
that
had
been
so,
I
should
have
thought
that
the
appellants
could
have
shown,
by
evidence
in
the
Tax
Appeal
Board
or
in
this
Court,
what
actually
happened.
I
am,
therefore,
not
able
to
make
a
finding
that
any
part
or
all
of
the
profits
arising
from
the
Fabreville
properties
were
used
to
pay
the
debt
to
the
Bank
in
accordance
with
the
terms
of
the
agreement
of
December,
1957.
Before
parting
with
this
branch
of
the
case,
I
might
make
the
comment
that,
where
the
onus
is
on
a
party
to
prove
something
within
his
knowledge
or
concerning
his
own
business
affairs,
it
is
incumbent
on
him
either
to
put
a
reasonably
complete,
and
completely
documented,
story
before
the
Court,
so
that
it
may
be
tested
by
cross-examination,
or
to
explain
to
the
Court
why
such
evidence
is
not
available.
The
failure
to
take
one
or
other
of
those
steps
must
always
weight
heavily
in
the
balance
against
such
a
party
when
the
party
contents
himself,
as
the
appellants
did
here,
with
a
submission
that
an
inference
should
be
drawn
from
certain
very
sketchy
facts
as
to
what
the
party
himself
actually
did.
Here,
of
course,
I
have
held
that
the
facts
on
the
basis
of
which
I
was
asked
to
draw
the
inferences
have
not
been
established.
However,
even
if
they
were
established,
I
should
have
had
to
consider
where
the
balance
of
probability
lay
when
the
parties
had
seen
fit
not
to
give
the
full
story
with
appropriate
documentation
or
to
show
that
they
could
not
do
so.*
I
am
inclined
to
think
that,
ordinarily,
my
conclusion
would
be
that
the
full
story
was
withheld
because
it
was
unfavourable
to
the
party
who
withheld
it.
I
turn
now
to
my
second
reason
for
rejecting
the
contention
put
forward
on
behalf
of
the
appellants,
which
I
repeat
here
for
convenience.
It
is
that,
even
if
the
whole
of
the
profits
in
dispute
had
been
used
to
pay
the
debt
of
Adrien
Lagacé
Ine.
to
the
Bank
because
the
appellants
were
required
by
their
agreement
with
Fortin
so
to
use
them,
that
would
not
change
their
character
as
profits
from
the
appellants’
business
operations.
The
most
significant
feature
of
the
appellants’
contention
in
this
Court,
as
it
strikes
me,
is
that
it
is
inherent
in
the
contention
that
profits
that
would
otherwise
have
accrued
to
the
appellants
have
ended
up
in
the
name
of
a
company
controlled
by
them,
not
because
of
bona
fide
business
transactions
between
the
appellants
and
such
company,
but
because
of
transactions
that
have
been
arranged
between
them
to
implement
a
contract
between
the
appellants
and
a
third
person
to
accomplish
objects
desired
by
the
third
person.
In
other
words,
the
contention
is
based
on
the
assumption
that
profits
of
the
appellants’
business
operations
were
put
into
the
hands
of
the
company
by
a
device
and
that
the
profits
were
not
the
result
of
the
company
having
embarked
on
business
transactions.
In
my
view,
therefore,
the
short
answer
to
the
contention,
even
assuming
the
facts
to
have
been
established,
is
that,
for
purposes
of
Part
I
of
the
Income
Tax
Act,
profits
from
a
business
are
income
of
the
person
who
carries
on
the
business
and
are
not,
as
such,
income
of
a
third
person
into
whose
hands
they
may
come.
This
to
me
is
the
obvious
import
of
Sections
3
and
4
of
the
Income
Tax
Act
and
is
in
accord
with
my
understanding
of
the
relevant
judicial
decisions.
Having
regard
to
my
conclusion,
as
indicated
above,
that
there
were
no
bona
fide
business
transactions
between
the
appellants
and
the
companies
controled
by
them,
there
is
no
occasion
to
deal
with
the
respondent’s
alternative
arguments
based
on
Sections
16,
17
and
137
of
the
Income
Tax
Act.
Another
argument
was
made
before
me
on
behalf
of
the
appellants
to
which
I
should
make
reference.
It
was
argued
that,
even
if
the
profits
in
question
were
income
of
the
appellants,
the
amounts
of
the
assessments
are
excessive
in
that
no
allowance
has
been
made
in
their
computation
for
the
cost
to
the
appellants
of
acquiring
Fortin’s
share
in
the
options.
Superficially,
there
would
appear
to
be
merit
in
the
contention.
I
cannot,
however,
find
that
the
appellants
put
forward
any
evidence
on
the
basis
of
which
any
such
allowance
can
be
made.
On
the
one
hand,
such
allowance
might
have
been
an
amount
equal
to
all
or
one-third
(I
need
not
decide
which)
of
the
amount
paid
out
of
the
profits
in
question
to
the
Bank
under
the
December
1957
agreement
but,
as
I
have
decided,
the
appellants
have
failed
to
prove
that
there
was
any
such
amount.
On
the
other
hand,
if
one
could
put
a
value
on
the
consideration
passing
from
the
appellants
to
Fortin
for
his
interest
in
the
options,
that
amount
might
be
allowed.
There
is,
however,
no
evidence
before
me
on
which
such
value
can
be
determined
and
I
doubt
whether
it
would
be
commercially
practical
to
evaluate
such
a
consideration.
That
being
so,
I
am
inclined
to
the
view
that
the
only
allowance
that
could
be
made
is
the
actual
disbursements
made
as
a
result
of
the
agreement.*
The
appellants
have,
as
it
seems
to
me,
had
full
opportunity
to
establish
such
amounts
and
have
chosen
not
to
do
so
.
One
other
point
taken
by
the
appellants
throughout
the
proceedings
may
also
call
for
some
mention.
That
is
the
suggestion
that
the
appellants
should
not.
be
required
to
pay
income
tax
on
the
profits
from
the
Fabreville
transactions
of
1958
because
Fortin
had
not
been
assessed
in
respect
of
any
part
of
them.
There
is,
in
my
view,
no
substance
in
the
point.
Even
if
there
were
an
omission
by
the
respondent
to
assess
a
third
party
for
income
tax
on
his
profits
arising
from
the
same
facts,
that
is
no
ground
for
invalidating
an
assessment
that
is
otherwise
valid.
Here,
of
course,
Fortin
was
no
party
to
the
transactions
of
1958
giving
rise
to
the
profits
in
question
as
he
had
parted
with
all
his
interest
in
the
options
in
1957.
Whether
or
not
he
made
a
profit
in
respect
of
which
he
should
have
been
taxed
by
reason
of
his
acquisition
in
1956
and
disposition
in
1957
is
a
completely
different
question.
I
have
not
overlooked
the
argument
based
on
Section
85B
of
the
Income
Tax
Act.
Although
no
reference
is
made
to
a
claim
under
that
section
in
the
Notice
of
Appeal,
and
there
is
no
evidence
before
me
on
which
I
could
direct
an
allowance
under
that
section,
I
would
be
prepared
to
entertain
a
motion
to
amend
the
notice
of
appeal
so
as
to
provide
a
basis
for
a
judgment
referring
the
assessments
back
for
re-assessment
on
this
point.
It
may
be
however
that,
having
regard
to
Section
85B(l)(e),
such
a
motion
should
not
be
allowed.
If
no
such
motion
is
made
within
three
weeks
from
the
date
of
these
reasons,
judgment
will
be
pronounced
dismissing
the
appeals
with
costs.
APPENDIX
So
that
there
may
be
no
misunderstanding
as
to
the
view
upon
which
I
have
acted
in
deciding
this
case,
I
should
like
to
make
it
clear
that,
as
I
see
it,
there
is
a
clear
distinction
in
principle
between
(a)
the
case
where
a
trader
carries
out
business
transactions
of
his
business
in
the
name
of
some
other
person
who
is
agent,
trustee
or
‘‘nominee’’,
in
which
case,
the
profits
from
selling
his
‘‘stock-in-trade’’
are
profits
of
his
business
even
though
the
transactions
are
carried
out
in
the
name
of
somebody
else,
and
(b)
the
case
where
a
trader
takes
stock-in-trade
out
of
his
business
and
uses
it
himself
or
gives
it
to
somebody
else
so
that
there
is
no
sale
of
it
in
the
course
of
the
business
and
can
therefore
be
no
profit
from
a
sale
of
it
in
the
course
of
his
business.
In
this
case,
I
came
to
the
conclusion,
after
examining
with
care
a
very
confused
record,
that
the
business
transactions
giving
rise
to
the
profits
in
question
were
really
those
of
the
appellants.
If
this
had
been
a
case
where
the
stock-in-trade
(the
options)
had
been
taken
out
of
the
appellants’
business
and
given
away
to
somebody
else,
such
cases
as
Sharkey
v.
Wernher,
[1956]
A.C.
58,
Petrotim
Securities,
Ltd.
v.
Ayres
(1964),
41
T.C.
389,
and
Mason
v.
Innes,
[1967]
1
Ch.
1079,
would
have
had
to
be
considered.
If
the
principles
applied
in
such
cases
apply
to
matters
arising
under
the
Canadian
Income
Tax
Act,
it
would
appear,
strangely
enough,
that
the
result
would
depend
on
whether
the
taxpayer
kept
his
accounts
on
a
cash
or
accrual
basis.
If
he
kept
his
accounts
on
a
cash
basis,
he
would
not
bring
in
any
amount
on
the
revenue
side
of
the
accounts
of
the
business
in
respect
of
the
stock-in-trade
removed
from
the
business
even
though
the
cost
of
acquiring
it
was
reflected
in
the
accounts
of
the
business.
If
he
kept
his
accounts
on
an
accrual
basis,
he
would
bring
in,
as
revenue,
the
value
of
the
stock-in-trade
so
removed
as
that
value
was
at
the
time
of
removal.
I
express
no
opinion
as
to
the
principles
applicable
in
similar
cases
under
the
Canadian
statute.
(See
Frankel
Corpn.
Ltd.
v.
M.N.R.,
[1959]
S.C.R.
718;
[1959]
C.T.C.
244,
for
a
limitation
on
the
application
of
the
English
cases.)
I
merely
make
the
comment
that,
if
the
English
cases
apply,
it
would
appear
that,
if
the
appellants,
who
have
been
assessed
without
complaint
on
the
basis
that
they
kept
their
accounts
on
an
accrual
basis,
had
taken
the
options
out
of
their
business
and
given
them
to
Adrien
Lagacé
Inc.,
or
used
them
for
some
purpose
that
had
nothing
to
do
with
their
business
(e.g.,
to
pay
off
the
debt
of
Adrien
Lagacé
Ine.
to
the
Bank
pursuant
to
their
contract
with
Fortin),
they
would
have
had
to
bring
into
their
business
revenues
the
value
of
the
options
as
of
that
time,
which
would
have
been,
I
should
have
thought,
more
or
less
the
amount
of
the
profit
that
was
made
by
the
immediate
turning
of
the
options
to
account.