CATTANACH,
J.:—This
is
an
appeal
from
a
decision
of
the
Tax
Appeal
Board
(
(1959),
23
Tax
A.B.C.
33)
dated
October
6,
1959,
whereby
the
appellant’s
appeals
against
his
assessments
to
income
tax
for
his
1949,
1950
and
1951
taxation
years
were
dismissed.
At
the
commencement
of
this
trial,
a
Notice
of
Admission
was
filed
on
behalf
of
the
Minister
which
had
the
effect
of
correcting
certain
errors
in
the
assessments.
The
following
is
a
corrected
statement.
of
the
assessments
of
revised
taxable
income
together
with
the
tax
to
be
levied
in
respect
to
each
of
the
years
under
appeal:
Year
|
Revised
Taxable
Income
Tax
Levied
|
1949
|
$
77,064.33
|
$37,398.72
|
1950
|
74,891.99
|
36,095.19
|
1951
|
160,871.31
|
93,019.91
|
1949
The
assessment
for
the
1949
taxation
year
involves
two
items
:
|
Amount
added
|
|
to
Income
|
(a)
|
Sale
|
of
|
forty
|
(40)
|
units
|
of
|
Sun
Alta
|
Gross
|
|
Royalty
|
Trust
|
(hereinafter
called
“Sun
|
Alta
|
|
#1”)
|
|
$
3,000.00
|
(b)
|
Profit
|
from
|
the
|
sale
|
of
|
shares
|
of
|
Redwater
|
|
Leaseholds
|
Ltd.
|
(hereinafter
|
called
|
“Red
|
|
water”)
|
|
61,831.80
|
|
Total
|
|
$64,831.80
|
|
Taxable
income
previously
assessed
|
|
$12,232.73
|
|
Revised
taxable
income
|
|
$77,064.53
|
No
adjustments
have
been
made
in
the
above
amounts
since
the
original
assessment.
1950
The
assessment
for
the
1950
taxation
year
involves
the
following
items:
|
Amount
added
|
|
to
Income
|
(a)
|
Profit
on
oil
rights
|
$
8,942.50
|
(b)
|
Profit
on
sale
of
shares
of
Redwater
|
31,284.27
|
(c)
|
Profit
on
sale
of
shares
of
Roxboro
Oils
Ltd.
|
|
|
(hereinafter
called
“Roxboro”)
|
15,365.18
|
|
Total
|
$55,591.95
|
As
a
result
of
the
adjustments
made
by
the
Minister
since
the
original
assessment,
the
above
amounts
for
1950
have
been
changed
as
follows
:
|
Amount
added
|
|
|
to
Income
|
Change
Change
|
(a)
|
Profit
on
oil
rights
....
|
$
4,762.50
|
$
4,180.00
|
(decrease)
|
(b)
|
Profit
on
sale
of
Red-
|
|
|
water
shares
|
42,761.78
|
11,477.51
|
(increase)
|
(c)
|
Profit
on
sale
of
Rox
|
|
|
boro
shares
|
15,365.18
|
|
(none)
|
|
Total
|
$62,889.46
|
7,297.51
|
(increase)
|
Taxable
income
previously
|
|
assessed
|
$12,002.53
|
Revised
taxable
income
|
$74,891.99
|
1951
The
assessment
for
the
1951
taxation
year
involves
the
following
items:
Amount
added
to
Income
(a)
Profit
on
oil
rights
|
,
|
$12,152.95
|
(b)
Profit
on
sale
of
Redwater
shares
|
57,326.92
|
(c)
Profit
on
sale
of
Roxboro
shares
|
87,122.35
|
(d)
Profit
on
sale
of
Trans-Empire
Oils
Ltd.
(here-
|
|
inafter
called
“Trans-Empire”)
|
24,479.43
|
Total
|
$181,081.65
|
As
a
result
of
adjustments
made
by
the
Minister
since
the
original
assessment
the
above
amounts
for
1951
have
now
been
changed
as
follows:
|
Amount
added
|
|
|
to
Income
|
|
Change
|
(a)
|
Profit
on
oil
rights
....6
|
12,146.23
|
$
|
6.72
|
(decrease)
|
(b)
|
Profit
on
sale
of
Red-
|
|
|
water
shares
|
|
47,508.33
|
|
9,818.59
|
(decrease)
|
(c)
|
Profit
on
sale
of
Rox-
|
|
|
boro
shares
|
|
87,122.35
|
|
(none)
|
(d)
|
Profit
on
sale
of
Trans-
|
|
|
Empire
shares
|
|
862.50
|
23,616.93
|
(decrease)
|
|
Total
|
|
$147,639.41
|
$33,442.24
|
(decrease)
|
|
Deduct
Bank
interest
|
|
|
and
|
Promotional
|
ex-
|
|
|
penses
|
|
2,010.24
|
|
|
$145,629.17
|
|
|
Taxable
|
income
|
pre
|
|
|
viously
|
assessed
|
|
15,242.14
|
|
Revised
taxable
income
|
$160,871.31
|
|
It
follows
that
as
a
result
of
the
foregoing
adjustments
that
the
appeal
must
be
allowed
and
referred
back
to
the
Minister
in
order
that
he
might
make
the
necessary
modifications
to
the
assessments
regardless
of
the
ultimate
disposition
of
the
matters
in
controversy.
The
principal
question
for
determination
is
whether
profits
realized
upon
transactions
in
the
shares
of
Redwater,
Roxboro,
and
Trans-Empire
were
profits
of
the
appellant
and
whether
profits
realized
upon
transactions
involving
certain
securities
in
the
form
of
royalty
trust
units
or
in
the
form
of
royalty
and
leasehold
interests
in
petroleum
and
natural
gas
lands
were
profits
of
the
appellant.
The
appellant’s
contention
is
set
out
in
his
Notices
of
Appeal.
For
purposes
of
convenience
and
to
avoid
repetition,
I
shall
reproduce
only
once
those
paragraphs
from
Heading
“B”
entitled
‘‘Statutory
Provisions
upon
which
the
Appellant
Relies
and
the
reasons
which
he
intends
to
Submit’’
of
the
Notices
of
Appeal
which
are
common
to
all
three
Notices
and
I
shall
combine
the
references
to
the
shares
of
Redwater
and
Roxboro.
1.
The
Appellant
submits
that
throughout
the
years
1949,
1950
and
1951
the
market
support
transactions
in
the
shares
of
Redwater
Leaseholds
Ltd.,
(and
Roxboro
Oils
Ltd.)
the
profits
of
which
have
been
assessed
to
him
by
the
Minister,
were
the
transactions
of
Leveque
Investments
Ltd.
and
not
those
of
the
Appellant.
Furthermore,
all
of
the
trading
profits
were
reflected
directly
or
indirectly
in
the
accounts
of
Leveque
Investments
Ltd.,
where
they
were
taxed.
(Common
to
the
1949,
1950
and
1951
Notices
of
Appeal.
By
inserting
the
words
“and
Roxboro
Oils
Ltd.”,
I
have
combined
paragraphs
1
and
5
of
1950
and
1951
notices
with
paragraph
1
of
the
1949
notice.)
2.
The
Appellant
submits
that
throughout
the
years
1949,
1950
and
1951
Leveque
Investments
Ltd.
repeatedly
borrowed
from
him
and
returned
to
him
shares
of
Redwater
Leaseholds
Ltd.,
(and
Roxboro
Oils
Ltd.)
and
the
Appellant
derived
no
benefit
or
profit
whatsoever
from
such
transactions.
(By
inserting
the
words
“and
Roxboro
Oils
Ltd.”
I
have
combined
with
paragraph
2
of
the
1949
notice,
paragraphs
2
and
6
of
the
1950
and
1951
notices.)
3.
At
the
end
of
each
tax
period
the
Appellant
held,
or
was
owed
by
Leveque
Investments
Ltd.,
the
same
aggregate
number
of
shares
of
Redwater
Leaseholds
Ltd.
(and
Roxboro
Oils
Ltd.)
as
he
had
held
at
the
commencement
of
such
period.
(By
inserting
the
words
“and
Roxboro
Oils
Ltd.”
I
have
combined
with
paragraph
3
of
the
1949
notice
paragraphs
3
and
7
of
the
1950
and
1951
notices.)
4,
In
the
alternative,
the
value
of
the
shares
of
Redwater
Leaseholds
Ltd.
(and
Roxboro
Oils
Ltd.)
held
by
the
Appellant
at
the
end
of
any
year
should
be
determined
at
the
lower
of
cost
or
market
which
figure,
for
the
shares
involved,
did
not
change
from
year
to
year
but
remained
constant.
The
Appellant
will
rely
upon
Section
14
of
the
Income
Tax
Act
and
upon
regulations
enacted
thereunder.
(Again
I
have
inserted
the
words
“and
Roxboro
Oils
Ltd.”
thereby
combining
with
paragraph
4
of
the
1949
notice
paragraphs
4
and
8
of
the
1950
and
1951
notices.)
5.
The
Appellant
submits
that
the
sum
of
$3,000.00
assessed
to
him
as
income
by
the
Minister
in
the
year
1949
being
profits
on
the
sale
of
Sun
Alta.
No.
1
Gross
royalty
trust
has
already
been
reflected
directly
or
indirectly
in
the
accounts
of
Leveque
Investments
Ltd.,
and
there
taxed.
6.
The
Appellant
submits
that
the
sum
of
$8,942.50,
being
profits
on
royalty
and
lease
interests
sold,
assessed
to
him
as
income
in
the
year
1950
has
already
been
reflected
directly
or
indirectly
in
the
accounts
of
Leveque
Investments
Ltd.
where
they
were
taxed.
(The
Minister
has
agreed
that
the
amount
of
$8,942.50
which
has
been
added
to
the
appellant’s
income
should
be
reduced
to
$4,762.50.)
The
Notice
of
Appeal
with
respect
to
the
1951
taxation
year
makes
no
submission
as
to
any
profit
on
the
sale
of
oil
properties,
nor
does
this
notice
make
any
submission
in
regard
to
profit
arising
from
transactions
in
Trans-Empire
shares
with
respect
to
which
the
Minister
added
to
the
appellant’s
income
$24,479,43
and
reduced
that
amount
to
$862.50
at
the
outset
of
the
trial.
In
assessing
the
appellant
as
he
did,
the
Minister
acted
upon
the
assumptions
set
out
in
his
three
Replies
to
the
Notices
of
Appeal
which
are
combined
and
summarized
as
follows:
(a)
that
during
the
1949,
1950
and
1951
taxation
years
the
appellant
acquired
by
purchase
or
otherwise
shares
in
Redwater,
Roxboro
and
Trans-Empire
and
through
a
series
of
transactions
sold
all
or
part
of
such
shares
realizing
therefrom
a
profit
of
$61,831.80
in
the
1949
taxation
year,
$46,649.45
in
the
1950
taxation
year
(which
amount
was
subsequently
increased
to
$58,126.96)
and
$168,928.70
in
the
1951
taxation
year
(which
amount
was
subsequently
decreased
to
$133,482.94).
(b)
that
profits
in
the
amount
of
$3,000
realized
upon
the
sale
of
Sun
Alta
#1
in
the
1949
taxation
year
and
in
the
amount
of
$8,942.50
(later
reduced
to
$4,762.50)
in
the
1950
taxation
year
on
the
sale
of
royalty
and
lease
in
interests
were
income
in
the
appellant’s
hands
and
not
in
the
hands
of
Leveque
Investments
Ltd.
From
a
Notice
to
Admit
Facts
dated
October
3,
1967
served
on
the
appellant
by
the
Minister
on
that
same
day
and
from
the
appellant’s
reply
thereto
dated
October
20,
1967
the
following
facts
relating
to
the
business
of
the
appellant,
R.
P.
Leveque
Investments
Ltd.,
and
Edmonton
Leaseholds
Limited
are
established.
The
appellant
has
been
engaged
in
the
business
of
selling
securities
in
some
form
or
other
since
1935.
From
1935
to
1939
he
acted
as
a
broker’s
salesman.
From
1939
to
1942
he
operated
as
a
broker.
From
1942
to
1948
he
returned
to
working
as
a
security
salesman.
In
1948
the
appellant
again
began
to
operate
as
a
broker.
He
became
the
sole
proprietor
of
a
securities
business
known
as
R.
P.
Leveque
Investments
with
an
office
in
Edmonton,
Alberta,
opened
in
early
October
1948.
An
office
was
opened
in
Calgary,
Alberta
in
March
1949.
The
appellant
obtained
a
seat
on
the
Calgary
Stock
Exchange
in
his
personal
name
and
has
retained
that
seat
to
date.
The
sole
proprietorship
was
operated
from
1948
until
the
period
July-September
1949.
In
October
1948
the
appellant
instructed
his
solicitors
to
incorporate
a
limited
joint
stock
company
to
carry
on
the
securities
brokerage
business.
This
company
was
incorporated
on
June
21,
1949
under
the
name
of
‘‘R.
P.
Leveque
Investments,
Ltd.’’
(hereinafter
sometimes
referred
to
as
the
‘‘Company’’).
This
Company
took
over
the
appellant’s
proprietorship
business
in
several
stages
beginning
on
July
1,
1949.
The
appellant
owned
all
the
shares
in
the
Company,
excepting
qualifying
shares
and
became
its
president
and
managing
director.
Throughout
the
period
under
review
the
Company
carried
on
a
securities
brokerage
business
with
offices
in
both
Edmonton
and
Calgary.
There
was
an
agreement
of
sale
between
the
appellant
and
the
Company
dated
June
30,
1949
whereby
the
assets
of
the
appellant’s
proprietorship
were
acquired
by
the
Company.
In
order
to
close
out
the
proprietorship
books
and
to
establish
the
amount
which
should
be
credited
to
the
appellant
as
a
result
of
the
assumption
of
the
liabilities
of
and
the
purchase
of
assets
from
him
by
the
Company
a
series
of
journal
entries
were
made
in
the
books
of
the
appellant’s
brokerage
business.
These
steps
were
taken
by
the
auditors
until
as
late
as
November
30,
1950.
After
taking
into
account
certain
adjustments,
the
excess
of
the
value
of
the
assets
over
liabilities
was
$13,137.96.
Journal
entries
in
an
account
in
the
books
of
the
Company
entitled
“Shareholder’s
Loan
Account
—
KR.
P.
Leveque’’
resulted
in
a
net
credit
of
$13,137.96.
Entries
were
made
as
at
September
30,
1949
in
the
books
of
the
Company
to
reflect
the
assumption
of
liabilities
and
the
purchase
of
assets
by
the
Company
from
the
appellant.
By
virtue
of
entries
in
the
General
Ledger
(Exhibit
II)
of
the
Company
dated
September
30,
1949
the
transfer
of
clients
accounts
(either
as
assets
or
liabilities
of
the
proprietorship)
is
recorded.
An
examination
of
the
clients
ledger
of
the
Company
indicates
that
the
clients
ledger
of
the
proprietorship
continued
in
use
as
part
of
the
records
of
the
Company
without
closing
or
opening
entries
being
made
in
the
individual
clients’
accounts.
However,
a
new
account
in
the
name
of
the
appellant
in
the
clients
ledger
of
the
Company
was
opened
on
July
8,
1949
(see
Exhibit
10,
page
13)
but
the
recording
of
the
transfer
was
not
made
until
September
30,
1949
as
mentioned
above.
Further
the
account
in
the
name
of
the
appellant
which
had
been
opened
in
the
clients
ledger
of
the
proprietorship
continued
in
use
as
another
part
of
the
records
of
the
Company
(see
Exhibit
10,
pages
6
and
7).
The
appellant
had
maintained
offices
of
his
sole
proprietorship
in
both
Edmonton
and
Calgary
and
transactions
took
place
between
those
offices.
The
Company,
after
its
incorporation,
also
maintained
offices
in
Calgary
and
Edmonton.
Since
the
accounting
to
reflect
the
taking
over
of
the
appellant’s
brokerage
business
(the
proprietorship)
was
not
completed
until
September
30,
1949
(with
some
subsequent
adjusting
entries)
transactions
took
place
between
(1)
the
Company’s
various
offices,
(2)
the
appellant’s
brokerage
business
various
offices
and
(3)
the
appellant’s
brokerage
business
various
offices
and
the
Company’s
various
offices.
As
at
September
30,
1949
the
accounts
as
between
the
appellant’s
offices
and
the
Company’s
offices
in
their
various
relationships
should
have
offset
and
no
entries
should
have
been
necessary
to
close
out
such
accounts.
However
the
accounts
did
not,
in
fact,
offset
due
to
the
improper
recording
of
certain
transactions.
Journal
entries
were
later
made
in
an
attempt
to
close
out
the
proprietorship
account
and
to
correct
the
discrepencies
in
the
Company’s
account.
There
is
substantial
agreement
between
the
parties
as
to
these
particular
entries
which
I
do
not
propose
to
outline
in
detail.
The
appellant
also
caused
to
be
incorporated
a
company
under
the
name
of
Edmonton
Leasehold
Limited
of
which
he
became
the
principal
shareholder,
president
and
managing
director.
This
company
traded
in
oil
equities,
royalties,
leases
and
stock
and
was
involved
in
certain
of
the
transactions
here
under
review.
As
indicated
above
the
appellant
had
been
engaged
in
the
securities
business
as
a
salesman
from
1942
to
1948.
In
1948,
because
of
the
great
activity
in
oil
and
gas,
he
saw
the
opportunity
to
and
decided
to
participate
in
that
activity
on
his
own
behalf
as
a
broker.
To
do
so
he
had
to
have
something
to
sell
and
accordingly
he
acquired
and
assembled
a
number
of
oil
and
gas
properties
from
various
sources.
Amongst
the
properties
so
acquired
by
the
appellant
were
40
units
of
Sun-Alta
#1.
As
indicated,
the
Minister
added
to
the
appellant’s
income
for
the
year
1949
an
amount
of
$3,000
as
taxable
profit
as
a
result
of
transactions
in
this
property.
The
entries
in
the
records
of
the
proprietorship
clearly
have
the
effect
of
showing
and
recording
a
purchase
of
40
units
of
Sun-Alta
#1
by
the
proprietorship
(R.
P.
Leveque
Investments)
from
the
proprietor
(R.
P.
Levesque)
as
owner
and
vendor,
in
1949.
The
Minister’s
position
is
that
this
purchase
had
the
effect
of
inflating
the
cost
of
sales
of
the
proprietorship
by
$3,000
and
reducing
the
appellant’s
income
for
the
1949
taxation
year
by
a
like
amount.
The
assessment
is
based
on
adding
back
that
amount
to
the
appellant’s
income
for
that
year.
The
appellant’s
explanation
and
position
is
that
the
Calgary
office
of
the
proprietorship
was
short
40
units
of
Sun-Alta
#1
for
delivery
to
customers
in
Calgary
and
obtained
the
required
units
from
the
Edmonton
office.
For
the
purpose
of
recording
the
receipt
of
the
units
in
the
Calgary
office
it
was
entered
as
a
sale.
The
appellant
contends
that
he
never
received
the
$3,000
and
that
by
reason
of
adjusting
entries
made
by
the
auditors
on
October
31,
1949
there
was
an
overstatement
of
profit
in
the
books
of
the
limited
company
(R.
P.
Leveque
Investments
Ltd.).
It
is
contended
that
the
net
effect
is
that
the
$3.000
was
in
fact
taxed
in
the
hands
of
the
limited
company
and
therefore
should
not
be
taxed
in
the
appellant’s
hands.
With
respect
to
the
acquisition
and
sale
of
properties
in
1950
which
may
be
referred
to
as
Sun-Alta
#2
the
properties,
the
purchase
prices
(one
of
which
was
revised)
and
the
sale
prices
are
all
admitted
and
the
resultant
profit
of
$4,762.50
(as
revised)
is
also
admitted.
However
the
appellant
contends
that
these
particular
properties
were
gathered
by
him
for
and
on
behalf
of
Edmonton
Leaseholds
Limited
and
that
the
profit
of
$4,762.50
was
that
of
Edmonton
Leaseholds
Limited
and
R.
P.
Leveque
Investments
Ltd.,
and
not
his
personal
profit.
I
might
mention
that
the
foregoing
contention
is
somewhat
at
variance
with
that
set
forth
in
the
appellant’s
Notice
of
Appeal
which
was
to
the
effect
that
the
profit
realized
had
already
been
reflected
directly
or
indirectly
in
the
accounts
of
KR.
P.
Leveque
Investments
Ltd.
where
they
were
taxed
rather
than
that
the
profit
was
that
of
Edmonton
Leaseholds
Limited
and
R.
P.
Leveque
Investments
Ltd.
The
property
involved
in
the
1951
assessment
is
a
7%
interest
in
River
lots
2,
10,
11
and
A
in
St.
Albert
Settlement.
The
total
acreage
purchased
by
the
appellant
from
the
vendor,
Pacific
Petroleum,
was
in
fact
424
acres
rather
than
425
acres
as
was
the
Minister’s
first
information.
The
purchase
price
from
Pacific
Petroleum
was
$27,500.
The
assessment
was
based
on
a
profit
from
the
sale
of
lots
10
and
11,
being
44
acres
out
of
a
total
of
424
acres,
from
the
appellant
to
Edmonton
Leaseholds
Limited
at
$15,000.
The
Minister
calculated
the
cost
of
lots
10
and
11
at
44/424
of
$27,500
being
$2,853.77.
By
deducting
that
amount
from
the
sale
price
of
$15,000
he
arrived
at
a
profit
of
$12,146.23
which
was
added
to
the
appellant’s
income
for
the
1951
taxation
year.
Here
the
appellant
again
takes
the
position
that
he
was
acting
for
and
on
behalf
of
his
companies
and
that
any
profit
realized
was
not
a
personal
profit
but
that
of
his
companies.
The
remaining
items
of
the
assessments
are
based
on
profits
alleged
to
have
been
realized
by
the
appellant
from
the
sale
or
disposition
of
shares
of
Redwater
and
Roxboro
received
by
him
in
exchange
for
leasehold
interests
or
other
interests
in
petroleum
and
natural
gas
lands
together
with
profits
alleged
to
have
been
realized
by
him
from
trading
in
shares
of
Redwater,
Roxboro
and
Trans-Empire.
The
appellant
had
acquired
oil
properties
and
interests
prior
to
1948
and
on
January
15,
1949
at
a
total
cost
of
$7,375.00
as
well
as
other
properties
at
no
cost.
There
is
no
dispute
between
the
parties
in
these
respects.
The
appellant
transferred
the
foregoing
properties
to
Redwater
Leaseholds
Ltd.
a
publie
company
which
has
was
instrumental
in
having
incorporated
on
January
6,
1949.
The
consideration
received
therefor
by
the
appellant
was
1,200,000
fully
paid
up
and
non-assessable
shares
of
Redwater
without
nominal
or
par
value
which
were
held
in
escrow
and
of
which
200,000
were
released
from
escrow
on
June
22,
1949,
600,000
on
August
10,
1949,
175,450
on
December
6,
1949
and
224,550
on
May
2,
1950.
The
underwriting
of
these
1,200,000
shares
of
Redwater
was
undertaken
by
R.
P.
Leveque
Investments
(the
proprietorship)
to
the
extent
of
600,000
shares
to
be
sold
in
the
Province
of
Alberta.
The
proprietorship’s
underwriting
obligation
was
assumed
by
R.
P.
Leveque
Investments
Ltd.
(the
Company)
upon
its
incorporation.
Clifton
C.
Cross
&
Company
Limited
underwrote
the
sale
of
the
remaining
600,000
shares
to
be
sold
outside
the
Province.
The
appellant
submits
that
of
these
1,200,000
shares,
525,000
shares
were
disposed
of
for
no
value,
being
bonus
shares
and
the
like,
275,000
were
disposed
of
for
a
total
of
$18,783.30
and
the
remaining
400,000
shares
were
retained
by
the
appellant
throughout
the
period
under
review
and
were
eventually
used
to
exchange
for
Trans-Empire
shares.
Since
the
total
cash
sales
in
1949
amounted
to
$18,783.30
the
cost
of
which
was
$7,375.00
the
appellant
therefore
contends
that
the
profit
to
him
on
the
transactions
in
Redwater
shares
was
$11,008.30
rather
than
an
amount
of
$61,831.80.
The
appellant
contends
that
all
other
transactions
in
Redwater
shares
which
appeared
in
information
available
to
the
Minister
were
in
the
nature
of
market
support
transactions,
loan
transactions
or
errors.
Similarly
the
appellant
contends
that
the
profit
realized
by
him
in
transactions
involving
Redwater
shares
in
his
1950
taxation
year
was
$400.00
rather
than
the
amount
of
$42,761.78
which
the
Minister
added
to
his
income
in
that
year
and
for
like
reasons
as
were
applicable
to
the
transactions
in
Redwater
shares
in
his
1949
taxation
year.
The
assessments
under
appeal
also
include
additions
to
profits
in
the
taxation
years
1950
and
1951
in
respect
to
trading
in
oil
properties
and
interests
therein
and
shares
in
Roxboro.
The
additions
to
profits
were
for
1950,
$15,365.18
and
for
1951,
$87,122.35.
The
appellant
explained
that
in
1948
he
had
negotiated
a
farmout
agreement
with
Imperial
Oil
Limited.
In
order
to
handle
this
farm-out
Redwater
was
incorporated
to
which
company
the
farm-out
agreement
was
transferred.
Wells
were
drilled
on
the
property
which
had
been
transferred
to
Redwater.
The
first
well
drilled
became
a
producing
well.
The
appellant
explained
that
after
this
well
began
producing
the
oil
market
went
into
a
temporary
slump.
The
appellant
made
arrangements
with
Regent
Drilling
Limited
to
take
over
the
obligation
of
Redwater
in
the
Imperial
farm-out.
It
was
agreed
with
Regent
that
Redwater
would
have
the
first
opportunity
to
repurchase
its
interest.
Regent
received
an
offer
of
$200,000
plus
their
drilling
costs
of
$141,000.
The
appellant
therefore
had
to
raise
$341,000
in
a
short
space
of
time
to
meet
this
bid.
He
felt
he
could
not
do
this
with
Redwater
and
accordingly
formed
Roxboro.
The
holdings
of
R.
P.
Leveque
Investments,
Ltd.
were
thus
safeguarded
and
within
the
short
space
of
30
days
sufficient
shares
of
Roxboro
were
sold
to
realize
the
amount
of
$341,000.
Roxboro
Oils
Limited
was
incorporated
in
October,
1950
as
a
public
company.
The
appellant
was
instrumental
in
incorporating
and
promoting
Roxboro
under
the
circumstances
mentioned
above.
As
previously
indicated
the
appellant
had
acquired
an
interest
in
River
lots
in
St.
Albert
Settlement
on
August
28,
1950
and
certain
interests
in
another
oil
property
at
a
cost
of
$25,000
on
October
2,
1950
and
an
obligation
in
respect
to
a
payment
of
$145,000.
This
latter
property
was
transferred
to
Roxboro
and
Roxboro
repaid
the
appellant
$25,000
and
assumed
his
other
obligations
with
respect
to
payment.
The
principal
property
transferred
to
Roxboro
was
River
Lot
A,
a
portion
of
the
St.
Albert
Settlement
properties.
The
Minister
computed
the
proportionate
cost
of
River
Lot
A
out
of
the
total
cost
of
$27,500
to
be
$13,782.35
(i.e.
212/424ths
of
$27,500).
The
transfers
of
the
two
foregoing
properties
took
place
on
October
2,
1950.
The
appellant’s
position
is
that
the
value
of
River
Lot
A
when
transferred
to
Roxboro
was
$63,-
095.40.
The
appellant
bases
this
computation
on
a.
sale
of
168
acres
to
Ledue
Consolidated
Oils
Ltd.
on
September
7,
1950
for
$50,000.
On
an
acreage
basis
the
Minister’s
valuation
works
out
to
$64.85
per
acre
and
the
appellant’s
to
$297.60
per
acre.
The
consideration
for
the
transfer
of
the
foregoing
properties
by
the
appellant
to
Roxboro
was
1,400,000
fully
paid
up
and
non-assessable
shares
of
Roxboro
without
nominal
or
par
value.
Again
these
shares
were
held
in
escrow
and
released
to
the
appellant
as
follows,
100,000
shares
on
November
8,
1950
;
700,000
shares
on
January
18,
1951
and
600,000
shares
on
March
12,
1951.
The
appellant
contends
that
of
these
1,400,
000
shares,
670,000
were
disposed
of
for
no
value
by
way
of
bonuses
and
the
like,
530,000
were
disposed
of
for
$61,492.90
in
1951
at
various
prices
ranging
between
114
cents
and
18%
cents
per
share,
and
the
appellant
retained
200,000
shares
which
were
eventually
used
to
exchange
for
Trans-Empire
shares.
The
appellant’s
position
is
that
the
cost
of
the
shares
to
him
was
$63,095.40,
that
he
received
$61,492.90
therefor
and
that,
accordingly,
he
suffered
a
loss
of
$1,602.50
rather
than
a
gain
of
$87,122.35
that
was
added
by
the
Minister
to
the
appellant’s
income
for
his
1951
taxation
year.
Obviously
the
appellant’s
contention
is
that
with
respect
to
his
1950
taxation
year
there
were
no
sales
of
Roxboro
shares
by
him
and
accordingly
the
amount
of
$15,365.18
added
to
his
income
in
respect
of
that
year
by
the
Minister
was
80
added
without
justification.
The
appellant’s
explanation
is
that
all
transactions
in
Roxboro
shares
in
the
taxation
years
1950
and
1951,
(other
than
the
disposition
of
530,000
shares
for
$61,492.90
in
1951)
which
appeared
in
information
available
to
the
Minister
were
in
the
nature
of
either
market
support
transactions,
loan
transactions
or
errors.
The
appellant
advances
an
alternative
contention
with
respect
to
the
cost
of
the
Roxboro
shares
to
him.
If
the
cost
of
those
shares
is
determined
to
have
been
$13,782.35
as
contended
by
the
Minister,
then
the
appellant’s
profit
on
the
sale
of
530,000
of
those
shares
in
1951
for
$61,492.90
would
be
$47,710.55.
The
appellant’s
contention
in
this
respect
is
that
by
an
entry
dated
January
23,
1951
in
the
appellant’s
account
in
the
books
of
the
Company
(R.
P.
Leveque
Investments
Ltd.)
all
share
transactions
in
Roxboro
were
removed
from
that
account.
The
entry
is
recorded
as
a
sale
of
148,098
Roxboro
shares
for
a
credit
to
the
appellant
of
$43,289.05.
Eventually
there
was
a
transfer
of
earnings
of
a
profit
of
$13,785.37
from
a
special
Roxboro
account
in
the
general
ledger
of
the
Company
in
which
Roxboro
transactions
were
recorded
after
January
23,
1951.
It
is,
therefore,
contended
by
the
appellant
that
the
transactions
in
Roxboro
shares
giving
rise
to
a
profit,
end
up
in
the
profits
of
the
Company.
The
Minister
disputes
this
alternative
contention
of
the
appellant
and
contends
that
on
the
accounting
record
any
profits
in
Roxboro
shares
in
transactions
in
them
by
the
appellant
are
not
transferred
to
the
earnings
of
the
Company
(R.
P.
Leveque
Investments
Ltd.).
The
sole
remaining
item
involved
in
this
appeal
is
one
respecting
an
addition
to
the
taxable
income
of
the
appellant
for
his
1951
taxation
year
in
the
amount
of
$862.50
as
a
profit
from
trading
in
oil
properties
and
interest
therein
and
shares
received
therefor
being
shares
in
Trans-Empire.
Trans-Empire
is
a
company
controlled
by
Clifton
C.
Cross
who
was
also
a
broker
and
who
had
employed
the
appellant
as
a
salesman.
It
was
apparent
that
Cross
and
the
appellant
had
worked
in
close
collaboration
in
the
promotion
of
various
companies
to
their
mutual
advantage.
By
virtue
of
arrangements
between
Cross
and
the
appellant
an
exchange
of
Redwater
and
Roxboro
shares
was
arranged
for
so
that
in
effect
Redwater
and
Roxboro
would
eventually
become
absorbed
in
Trans-Empire.
The
values
fixed
for
the
purposes
of
the
exchange
were
as
to
Redwater
shares
40
cents,
Roxboro
shares
25
cents
and
Trans-
Empire
shares
$4.00,
or
10
Redwater
shares
for
one
Trans-
Empire
and
16
Roxboro
for
one
Trans-Empire.
The
transaction
is
summarized
in
a
letter
dated
December
10,
1951
from
Petroleum
Incomes
(Clifton
C.
Cross)
Ltd.
to
the
appellant,
(Exhibit
301).
It
was
agreed
that
Petroleum
Incomes
would
:
(1)
purchase
600,000
Redwater
Shares
from
the
appellant
at
40¢
per
share,
(2)
purchase
600,000
Roxboro
shares
from
the
appellant
at
25¢
per
share,
(3)
pay
the
appellant
$230,000
in
cash
and
deliver
to
the
appellant
40,000
Trans-Empire
shares
at
$4.00
per
share,
(4)
repurchase
from
the
appellant
all
or
any
of
Trans-Empire
shares
at
$4.00
per
share
up
to
June
30,
1952,
(5)
sell
the
appellant
an
additional
25,000
Trans-Empire
shares
at
$4.00
prior
to
February
15,
1952
if
the
appellant
requested,
and
(6)
the
appellant
agreed
to
assist
Pacific
Petroleum
and
Trans-
Empire
to
effect
the
exchange
of
shares
of
Redwater
and
Roxboro
of
other
holders
thereof
for
Trans-Empire
shares.
The
Minister
based
his
assessment
in
this
respect
on
profits
or
losses
from
the
disposal
of
Trans-Empire
shares
received
in
exchange
for
Redwater
and
Roxboro
shares
at
the
values
mentioned
above
together
with
other
transactions
involving
purchases
and
sales
of
Trans-Empire
shares.
The
Minister
based
his
assessment
on
information
received
from
the
appellant.
As
previously
intimated
the
amount
added
to
the
appellant’s
income
was
$24,479.43
in
respect
of
Trans-Empire
shares
in
his
1951
taxation
year.
As
a
result
of
errors
and
adjustments
outlined
in
paragraphs
93
to
96
of
the
Notice
to
Admit
Facts
(which
paragraphs
were
not
admitted
by
the
appellant
because
he
disputes
the
assumptions
on
which
the
computation
was
made)
the
addition
to
profit
in
the
amount
of
$24,479.47
was
reduced
by
the
Minister
to
$862.50.
The
appellant
contends
that
he
used
the
balance
of
his
escrow
shares
in
Redwater
and
Roxboro
in
exchange
for
Trans-Empire
shares
as
well
as
Redwater
and
Roxboro
shares
remaining
in
the
hands
of
R.
P.
Leveque
Investments,
Ltd.
as
a
result
of
market
support
transactions
and
as
a
result
of
bonus
shares
for
underwriting
still
on
hand.
In
addition
the
appellant
contends
that
he
assembled
Redwater
and
Roxboro
shares
from
other
holders
thereof
for
Trans-Empire
shares,
the
cash
equivalent
thereof
or
partly
in
Trans-Empire
shares
and
partly
in
cash
and
as
a
consequence
merely
acted
as
a
conduit
for
other
shareholders
from
which
no
profit
accrued
to
him.
The
Minister’s
position
is
simply
that
the
records
indicate
the
sale
of
Redwater
and
Roxboro
shares
from
R.
P.
Leveque
Investments,
Ltd.
(the
Company)
to
the
appellant
and
that
the
appellant’s
transactions
with
other
brokers
and
clients
for
the
purpose
of
gathering
Redwater
and
Roxboro
shares
to
be
exchanged
for
Trans-Empire
shares
are
recorded
as
sold
to
the
appellant.
It
is
his
contention
that
any
difference
in
the
purchase
price
by
the
appellant
and
the
price
fixed
for
the
purpose
of
exchange
would
accrue
to
the
appellant.
It
was
my
distinct
impression
from
the
evidence
given
by
Mr.
Leveque
and
from
his
manner
in
giving
that
evidence
that
his
prime
motivation
in
all
transactions
here
under
review
was
to
make
as
much
money
as
was
possible
within
the
shortest
possible
time.
It
is
not
my
intention
to
make
such
remark
in
any
derogatory
sense
and
in
fact
the
motive
of
the
appellant
may
well
be
most
commendable.
However,
I
do
not
think
that
the
appellant
was
concerned
where
the
money
was
made,
that
is
in
the
proprietorship,
the
Company,
Edmonton
Leaseholds
Ltd.,
Redwater,
or
Roxboro
or
personally
so
long
as
it
was
made
and
it
was
to
this
end
that
he
directed
his
attention
and
energy.
When
the
appellant
embarked
upon
his
securities
brokerage
business
in
1948
he
required
office
staff.
He
employed
Mrs.
Russell
who
began
her
duties
about
March,
1949.
She
continued
in
that
employment,
first
as
an
employee
of
the
appellant
and
then
as
an
employee
of
R.
P.
Leveque
Investments,
Ltd.
until
about
June,
1953.
Mrs.
Russell
had
been
employed
by
C.
C.
Cross
(Alberta)
Ltd.
for
about
15
years
as
a
secretary.
Her
duties
there
included
the
posting
of
books
and
looking
after
deliveries
of
stock.
I
assume
that
the
appellant
knew
Mrs.
Russell
during
the
period
he
was
a
securities
salesman
with
Cross,
that
he
had
some
knowledge
of
her
duties
there,
that
he
was
impressed
with
the
efficiency
with
which
she
performed
those
duties
and
accordingly
concluded
that
she
would
be
a
valuable
employee
for
him
to
have.
Mrs.
Russell
testified
that
she
had
no
formal
training
in
accountancy.
Her
initial
duties
with
the
appellant
were
as
a
secretary
and
as
in
charge
of
the
management
of
the
office.
The
appellant
had
implicit
trust
in
Mrs.
Russell’s
capability
and
left
the
office
management
to
her
while
he
devoted
his
efforts
to
arranging
the
deals
which
have
been
outlined
and
directing
the
disposition
of
securities.
In
any
event
the
appellant
vested
Mrs.
Russell
with
wide
authority
and
responsibility
with
little
or
no
direction
from
him.
She
held
a
power
of
attorney
from
him,
was
a
signing
officer
at
the
bank,
and
frequently
acted
as
the
appellant’s
nominee
for
the
purpose
of
holding
shares.
She
also
held
a
qualifying
share
in
the
Company
when
incorporated
and
was
a
director
thereof.
Mr.
Russell
started
the
bookkeeping
system
for
the
proprietorship
and
adapted
that
system
for
the
Company
and
was
in
sole
and
complete
charge
of
the
books
until
July
1,
1950
when
Mr.
Stuart
Aitken
was
employed
initially
as
an
accountant.
He
then
took
over
the
daily
posting
of
ledgers
and
the
general
supervision
of
accounting
and
eventually
became
the
office
manager.
It
appears
odd
to
me
that
the
auditors
employed
by
the
Company
did
not
direct
the
setting
up
of
the
books
required
or
that
Mrs.
Russell
did
not
seek
their
direction
and
assistance
particularly
since
she
testified
that
she
relied
upon
the
auditors
to
rectify
anything
that
she
was
doing
incorrectly.
In
any
event
Mrs.
Russell
set
up
a
personal
account
for
“R.
P.
Leveque’’
in
the
books
of
the
proprietorship
and
later
continued
that
account
in
the
books
of
the
Company.
This
account
clearly
appears
to
indicate
that
it
is
the
personal
account
of
the
appellant,
first
as
a
client
of
the
proprietorship
and
then
as
a
client
of
the
Company.
These
accounts
were
introduced
in
evidence
as
Exhibit
10.
After
the
employment
of
Aitken
in
July
of
1950,
Mrs.
Russell
had
less
to
do
with
the
posting
of
the
books
but
continued
to
keep
track
of
the
stock
positions.
Her
evidence
was
to
the
effect
that
when
orders
for
shares
in
an
underwriting
could
not
be
filled
because
no
shares
were
available
for
delivery
or
there
were
not
funds
readily
available
to
draw
down
shares
from
the
Treasury,
that
she
would
then
“borrow”
shares
of
Redwater
or
Roxboro,
as
required,
from
the
appellant’s
personal
escrow
position
and
replace
them
later
from
time
to
time
as
shares
became
available
either
from
the
Treasury
or
off
the
market.
These
transactions
were
entered
as
sales
and
purchases
by
the
appellant
and
for
which
she
inserted
a
money
value.
Mrs.
Russell’s
explanation
was
that
these
entries
were
made
for
the
purpose
of
keeping
track
of
the
stock
positions
and
that
she
entered
a
money
value
because
she
thought
it
to
be
necessary
and
obligatory
to
do
so.
The
accounts
in
the
clients
ledger
(i.e.
Exhibit
10,
being
the
account
of
the
appellant)
had
stock
position
columns.
At
this
point
I
should
mention
that
Mrs.
Russell
also
maintained
Exhibit
466
a
stock
position
book
for
the
purpose
of
keeping
track
of
the
stock
position
with
respect
to
shares
of
Redwater
and
Exhibit
467
a
stock
position
book
for
keeping
track
of
all
other
stock
positions.
Further
in
the
general
ledger
(Exhibit
11)
individual
accounts
respecting
acquisition
and
disposition
of
securities
contain
entries
reflecting
the
stock
position.
Mrs.
Russell
also
prepared
confirmation
slips,
receipts,
delivery
slips,
made
manual
notations
on
such
documents
and
typed
letters
with
respect
thereto
on
her
own
initiative,
all
as
would
be
done
in
an
ordinary
sale
or
purchase.
Mrs.
Russell
also
testified
that
she
put
entries
respecting
various
royalties
and
leases
through
the
clients’
account
entitled
R.
P.
Leveque,
in
the
proprietorship
and
the
Company
(Exhibit
10)
because
there
was
no
other
account
in
the
books
which
seemed
appropriate
and
in
any
event
she
considered
this
to
be
a
Company
account.
These
transactions
respecting
the
appellant’s
escrow
stock
to
make
deliveries
to
customers
are
what
are
referred
to
as
loan
transactions.
An
expert
witness,
Mr.
John
Bowles,
was
called
to
explain
loan
transactions
when
a
broker
does
not
have
stock
available
to
make
deliveries.
He
explained
that
it
was
customary
in
the
trade
for
a
broker
requiring
shares
to
meet
deliveries
to
make
arrangements
with
(1)
another
broker,
(2)
a
client,
or
(3)
one
of
the
principals
of
the
company,
to
provide
shares
as
an
accommodation
on
the
basis
that
the
shares
will
be
returned,
normally
accompanied
by
a
goodfaith
cheque
in
payment
which
would
not
be
negotiated.
He
added
that
the
proper
accounting
method
for
recording
such
a
transaction
is
to
record
only
stock
positions
either
as
long
or
short
but
without
attaching
a
dollar
value
to
them.
However,
Mr.
Bowles
did
concede
that
there
is
a
fourth
way
in
which
shares
required
by
a
broker
to
meet
deliveries
could
be
obtained
by
him
and
that
is
for
the
broker
to
purchase
them.
It
is
the
Minister’s
contention,
that
R.
P.
Leveque
Investments,
Ltd.,
as
underwriter,
purchased
shares
from
the
appellant
from
time
to
time.
The
appellant
also
contends
that
many
of
the
transactions
in
Redwater
and
Roxboro
shares
recorded
in
his
name
were
in
fact
market
support
transactions
of
the
underwriter,
in
the
first
instance
the
proprietorship
and
then
the
Company,
R.
P.
Leveque
Investments,
Ltd.
The
arrangements
between
the
Company
and
Roxboro
and
Redwater
negotiated
by
the
appellant
was
a
‘‘best
efforts’’
underwriting
rather
than
a
firm
underwriting.
It
is
my
understanding
of
a
“best
efforts”
underwriting,
that
the
underwriter
does
not
purchase
an
inventory
of
shares,
but
exercises
his
‘‘best
efforts’’
to
place
as
many
shares
as
possible
and
when
sufficient
money
is
available
to
draw
down
shares
from
the
Treasury
to
satisfy
orders.
Therefore,
the
underwriter,
in
this
instance,
the
Company,
has
no
large
inventory
of
shares
‘
on
the
shelf’’.
However
the
promoter,
and
I
believe,
the
appellant
is
the
promoter
in
these
instances,
has
his
escrow
stock
positions.
I
should
have
thought
that
the
promoter’s
interest
lies
in
selling
his
escrow
or
vendor’s
shares
at
a
profit
and
accordingly
it
would
be
to
his
advantage
to
support
the
market.
While
it
is
to
the
underwriter’s
advantage
to
support
the
market
so
as
to
be
able
to
sell
the
shares
at
the
agreed
price,
nevertheless,
for
the
reasons
I
have
indicated,
it
is
also
to
the
advantage
of
a
promoter
to
support
the
market.
Accordingly
it
cannot
be
said
that
it
is
to
the
underwriter’s
exclusive
advantage
to
support
the
market.
The
reason
for
an
underwriter
to
support
the
market
is
straight-forward
and
simple.
The
underwriter
agrees
to
sell
shares
at
a
fixed
price,
but
he
has
no
control
over
what
the
public
will
do
with
the
shares
it
has
acquired.
If
the
public
is
willing
to
offer
its
shares
for
sale
on
the
market
at
less
than
the
agreed
price,
it
is
difficult,
if
not
impossible,
for
the
underwriter
to
sell
shares
at
the
higher
agreed
price.
Therefore
the
underwriter
will
‘‘take
off
the
board’’
all
shares
which
are
offered
by
the
public
at
less
than
the
agreed
underwriting
price.
Having
acquired
these
shares
the
underwriter
will
feed
the
shares
back
into
the
market
when
the
market
is
able
to
absorb
them
without
affecting
the
underwriting
price.
These
market
support
transactions
may
result
in
either
a
profit
or
loss.
After
the
primary
distribution
of
shares
the
market
will
tend
to
seek
its
own
level.
If
that
level
is
higher
than
the
cost
at
which
the
supporter
acquired
the
shares,
then
he
reaps
a
profit.
It
is
less
then
he
absorbs
a
loss.
It
is
to
compensate
for
this
possible
loss
in
market
support
operations
that
bonus
shares
are
given
to
the
underwriter
as
was
done
in
the
case
of
Redwater
and
Roxboro.
The
appellant’s
contention
is
that
market
support
transactions
were
in
actuality
those
of
the
underwriter
(the
Company)
and
he
also
contends
that
these
transactions
were
improperly
recorded
in
Exhibit
10
(the
appellant’s
account
as
a
client,
in
the
books
of
the
Company),
rather
than
properly
in
a
Company
trading
account
relating
to
market
support
transactions
and
that,
therefore,
these
market
support
transactions
should
be
removed
from
Exhibit
10.
In
support
of
this
contention
he
refers
to
the
evidence
of
Mrs.
Russell,
Mr.
Aitken,
Mr.
Mathieson
and
Mr.
Luzi.
Mr.
Aitken
took
over
the
daily
posting
of
ledgers
and
the
supervision
of
accounting
from
Mrs.
Russell
on
July
1,
1950
and
later
took
over
the
market
support
of
Redwater
and
Roxboro.
He
testified
that
certain
shares
were
purchased
from
clients
who
would
not
take
them
or
would
not
pay
for
them.
As
a
result
the
Company
took
them
into
account
and
for
this
purpose
recorded
such
transactions
in
the
appellant’s
account
with
the
Company
as
a
client
(Exhibit
10).
Mr.
Mathieson
was
employed
by
the
Company
from
January
1951
until
December
1951.
He
stated
in
his
testimony
that
he
was
most
surprised
to
find
that
the
Company
had
no
house
account”?
or
firm
trading
account
with
respect
to
the
Company’s
trading
activities.
Mr.
Mathieson
discussed
with
the
appellant
the
account
entitled
‘‘R.
P.
Leveque”
in
the
clients
ledger
of
the
Company
(Exhibit
10).
He
asked
the
appellant
if
it
was
the
‘‘firm
account”
to
which
the
appellant
replied
it
was
his
personal
account.
However
the
appellant
did
qualify
that
unequivocal
statement
to
some
extent.
I
gathered
from
Mr.
Mathieson’s
testimony
that
the
appellant
told
him
the
account
was
his
personal
account
for
some
purposes,
but
not
for
others.
However
Mr.
Mathieson
did
remove
the
market
support
transactions
in
Roxboro
from
the
R.
P.
Leveque
account
and
set
up
separate
securities
account
for
Roxboro
and
Redwater
in
the
Clients
Ledger
section
of
the
Company,
but
they
remained
in
the
clients
ledger.
Mr.
Luzi
is
a
chartered
account
who
was
engaged
by
the
appellant
following
the
decision
of
the
Tax
Appeal
Board
in
1959
which
is
presently
being
appealed
from.
One
of
the
reasons
for
the
appellant
doing
so
is
because
the
failure
of
the
appellant
to
call
independent
evidence
in
support
of
his
own
evidence
at
the
hearing
before
the
Board.
The
Chairman
said
this
at
page
39:
In
coming
to
a
determination
of
what
should
be
done
with
this
appeal
it
must
be
kept
in
mind
that
the
only
evidence
brought
in
support
of
the
appeal
was
the
evidence
of
the
appellant
himself.
This,
of
course,
leads
to
the
observation
that
the
presentation
of
this
appeal
rests
solely
on
the
evidence
of
the
appellant—the
person
most
interested
in
the
outcome
of
the
appeal
and
hence
the
matter
of
credibility
must
be
weighed
in
the
light
of
this
interest.
Surely
in
an
appeal
characterized
by
so
many
involved
and
complicated
features
it
would
have
been
the
course
of
wisdom
to
have
called
a
competent
independent
witness,
well
versed
in
accountancy
and
auditing
principles,
to
give
evidence
covering
the
complex
circumstances
of
the
many
deals
described
by
the
appellant
and
from
what
was
strictly
his
point
of
view.
No
such
independent
evidence
was
forthcoming
at
the
hearing
of
the
appeal
and
this
was
the
subject
of
comment
at
that
time.
Mr.
Luzi
expended
great
effort
and
time
in
reconstructing
the
accounts
of
the
Company
and
in
analyzing
the
nature
of
various
transactions
which
occurred
and
produced
a
series
of
sheets
which
might
be
referred
to
as
the
Luzi
Sheets.
He
characterized
many
of
these
transactions
recorded
in
the
R.
P.
Leveque
account
(Exhibit
10)
as
(1)
Firm
trading
or
market
support
account,
(2)
Shares
borrowed
from
and
returned
to
the
appellant,
(3)
Shareholders’
loan
account
R.
P.
Leveque,
(4)
Errors
and
omissions,
(5)
An
account
for
gathering
securities
and
(6)
An
account
for
putting
out
securities.
However,
I
cannot
escape
the
conclusion
that
Mr.
Luzi,
of
necessity,
must
have
based
his
evidence
primarily
upon
an
acceptance
of
what
the
appellant
told
him
and
to
have
made
his
calculations
and
characterizations
on
that
basic
assumption.
To
me,
even
accepting
that
some
of
the
transactions
in
question
were
market
support
transactions
and
I
have
no
doubt
that
they
were,
the
question
is
not
whether
they
were
market
support
transactions,
but
who
was
supporting
the
market.
Was
it
the
Company
or
was
it
the
appellant?
Was
it
the
Company’s
market,
as
underwriter,
that
was
being
supported
by
the
Company
or
was
it
the
appellant’s
market
as
promoter
being
supported
by
him
and
to
whom
did
any
resultant
profits
belong?
The
assessments
under
appeal
were
the
subject
matter
of
prolonged
and
intensive
investigation
which
resulted
in
the
exchange
of
correspondence.
The
financial
statements
of
the
proprietorship,
(Exhibit
1)
the
Company
(R.
P.
Leveque
Investments,
Ltd.)
(Exhibit
95)
and
Edmonton
Leaseholds
Ltd.,
(Exhibit
141)
and
Redwater
(Exhibit
179)
were
filed
with
the
Minister.
These
gave
rise
to
requests
by
the
Minister
for
further
information
by
letters
dated
November
8,
1952
addressed
to
appellant
(Exhibit
351)
and
to
the
Company
(Exhibit
352).
A
similar
letter
dated
November
7,
1952
was
addressed
to
Edmonton
Leaseholds,
Ltd.
(Exhibit
358).
These
letters
were
acknowledged
by
the
appellant
by
letter
dated
November
26,
1952
(Exhibit
470)
indicating
that
the
questionnaires
were
being
discussed
with
the
appellant’s
and
companies’
auditors
but
because
of
the
wide
territory
involved
and
the
advent
of
the
year
end
considerable
time
would
be
required
to
supply
the
information
requested.
Approximately
a
year
later
information
was
supplied
by
the
appellant,
the
Company
and
by
Edmonton
Leaseholds
in
Exhibits
14,
16
and
21
respectively.
In
addition
further
information
was
made
available
to
the
Minister
respecting
transactions
in
shares
of
Redwater,
Roxboro
and
Trans-Empire.
These
sheets
were
entitled
“R.
P.
Leveque
—
Transaction
in
Shares
of
Redwater
Leaseholds,
Ltd.”,
“R.
P.
Leveque
—
Transactions
in
Shares
of
Roxboro
Oils,
Ltd.”
and
“R.
P.
Leveque
—
Transactions
in
Trans-Empire
Oils,
Ltd.”
These
sheets
are
collectively
referred
to
as
the
‘Muir
Sheets’’
and
for
convenience
were
segregated
into
Exhibit
62
with
respect
to
Redwater,
Exhibit
212
with
respect
to
Roxboro
and
Exhibit
302
with
respect
to
Trans-Empire.
It
is
common
ground
between
the
parties
that,
in
the
main,
it
is
on
the
information
furnished
in
the
Muir
Sheets
that
the
assessments
are
based
respecting
transactions
in
Redwater,
Roxboro
and
Trans-Empire.
James
Muir
who
is
deceased,
did
not
give
evidence
at
the
trial.
Mr.
Muir
was
engaged
by
the
appellant
sometime
after
1951
to
reconstruct
the
position
of
the
Company
with
respect
to
its
share
positions
in
Redwater,
Roxboro
and
Trans-Empire.
It
had
become
apparent
that
the
stock
positions
did
not
balance.
It
was
Mr.
Muir’s
primary
task
to
trace
through
the
books,
find
areas
of
error
and
reconcile
actual
positions
of
stock
with
the
apparent
positions.
Although
he
was
directing
his
attention
to
stock
positions,
nevertheless,
in
preparing
his
share
reconciliations
he
used
dollar
values
with
respect
to
the
shares
which
he
found
in
the
books
and
records
of
Edmonton
Leaseholds,
Ltd.
and
the
Company.
The
appellant
by
letter
dated
December
14,
1953
(Exhibit
14)
replied
to
the
Minister’s
request
for
information
as
follows:
It
is
difficult
to
segregate
the
dispositions
of
1,200,000
shares
of
“Redwater”
received
by
me
in
consideration
of
the
transfer
of
my
leases
to
the
company,
but
as
far
as
I
can
ascertain
a
detailed
list
of
all
my
transactions
in
“Redwater”
stock
is
shown
in
Exhibit
1
attached.
Exhibit
1
to
that
letter
had
various
schedules
attached
thereto
as
follows:
(1)
Exhibit
1
is
entitled
“Summary
of
Transactions
of
‘Redwater’
stock
by
R.
P.
Leveque”.
(2)
Schedule
1
contains
a
table
entitled
“Releases
of
‘Redwater’
Escrow
Stock
to
R.
P.
Leveque”
and
includes
a
further
table
entitled
“Properties
Assigned
to
‘Redwater’
by
R.
P.
Leveque
for
Escrow
Stock”.
(3)
Schedule
2
is
entitled
“Buys
and
Sells
‘Redwater’
Stock
not
through
Leveque
Investments”.
(4)
Schedule
3
is
entitled
“Buys
and
Sells
‘Redwater’
Stock
by
R.
P.
Leveque
through
R.
P.
Leveque
Investments
and
R.
P.
Leveque
Investments,
Ltd.”.
(5)
A
further
sheet
is
entitled
“Buys
and
Sells
‘Redwater’
Stock
by
R.
P.
Leveque
through
R.
P.
Leveque
Investments”.
(6)
A
still
further
sheet
is
entitled
“Buys
and
Sells
‘Redwater’
Stock
by
R.
P.
Leveque
through
R.
P.
Leveque
Investments
Ltd.”.
(7)
Schedule
4
is
entitled
“Transfers
of
‘Redwater’
Stock
into
‘Trans
Empire’
Stock
by
R.
P.
Leveque”.
By
letter
dated
November
8,
1952
addressed
to
the
appellant
(Exhibit
353)
the
Minister
asked
the
appellant
for
further
information
as
follows
:
The
R.
P.
Leveque
Investments,
Ltd.
is
being
requested
to
supply
information
relative
to
the
transactions
of
shareholders
on
their
own
account,
but
will
you
please
advise
whether
or
not
stock
transactions
were
undertaken
by
yourself
through
any
other
investment
dealer
or
brokerage
house
in
the
years,
1948,
1949,
1950
and
1951.
If
such
transactions
were
undertaken,
will
you
please
provide
particulars
of
any
stock
in
which
the
stock
of
Redwater
Leaseholds,
Ltd.,
Edmonton
Leaseholds,
Limited
or
Roxboro
Oils
Ltd.,
were
traded.
The
appellant
replied
thereto
by
letter
dated
December
14,
1955
(Exhibit
14)
stating:
As
far
as
I
can
recall
my
personal
trading
was
carried
on
through
R.
P.
Leveque
Investments
and
R.
P.
Leveque
Investments,
Ltd.
in
the
years
1948
to
1951
inclusive,
except
for
the
items
shown
on
Schedule
2
of
Exhibit
1
attached.
The
foregoing
information
is
supplemented
respecting
the
disposition
of
shares
of
Redwater
and
Roxboro
by
Exhibits
62
and
212
(the
Muir
Sheets),
and
by
Exhibit
21
supplied
by
KR.
P.
Leveque
Investments,
Ltd.
Exhibit
21
is
a
letter
dated
December
14,
1953
signed
by
the
appellant
as
president
of
the
Company
(R.
P.
Leveque
Investments
Ltd.)
in
reply
to
the
Minister’s
letter
dated
November
8,
1952
(Exhibit
353).
It
stated
that
stock
transactions
undertaken
by
the
Company
on
behalf
of
the
appellant
were
listed
in
Exhibit
2
to
that
letter.
The
transactions
listed
in
the
exhibit
supplementary
to
the
letter
are
reflected
in
the
account
entiled
“R.
P.
Leveque’’
mainained
in
the
books
of
the
Company
in
the
clients
ledger
(Exhibit
10
pages
13
to
39)
together
with
transactions
beginning
July
8,
1949
and
continuing
into
1952.
By
the
Minister’s
letter
dated
November
8,
1952
(Exhibit
352)
the
Company
was
also
asked
to
confirm
that
the
amount
of
$51,435.91
in
its
balance
sheet
as
at
November
30,
1950
as
‘‘
Due
from
shareholders’’
represented
the
balances
in
the
trading
accounts
of
shareholders
in
its
entirety
and
requested
particulars
of
the
securities
held
for
shareholders
and
the
market
value
thereof.
The
reply
to
this
query
is
in
the
letter
dated
December
14,1953
(Exhibit
21)
to
the
effect
that
‘‘the
amount
of
$51,435.91
recorded
in
the
balance
sheet
as
at
November
30,
1950
as
‘Due
from
Shareholders’
was
the
balance
in
R.
P.
Leveque’s
trading
account
as
at
November
30,
1950.
The
total
market
value
of
the
securities:
held:
by
the
firm
against
this
account
was
$246,317.21
as
follows
:
’
’.
There
then
follows
a
list
of
the
securities
held
for
shareholders.
In
the
same
letter
the
Minister
also
asked
for
information
respecting
the
Company’s
1951
financial
statements.
Shareholders’
free
securities
with
a
market
value
of
$141,041.30
were
shown
on
the
1951
Balance
Sheet
(Exhibit
179).
By
the
reply
dated
December
14,
1953
(Exhibit
21)
the
Company
confirmed
that
Shareholders’
free
securities
with
a
market
value
of
$141,041.30
shown
on
the
1951
Balance
Sheet
were
‘‘securities
held
in
R.
P.
Leveque’s
account’’.
It
is
not
disputed
that
amounts
outstanding
as
a
debit
or
credit
balance
in
the
R.
P.
Leveque
account
in
the
clients
ledger
(Exhibit
10)
are
reflected
in
the
balance
sheets
of
the
Company
for
1949,
1950
and
1951
and
are
reconcilable
therewith
and
I
think
it
is
also
agreed
that
the
share
position,
as
long
or
short
as
the
case
might
be,
in
that
same
account
at
the
fiscal
year
ends
agree
with
the
information
supplied
to
the
Minister
as
to
the
number
and
kind
of
shares.
Mr.
Morton,
the
senior
partner
in
the
firm
of
chartered
accountants
who
prepared
the
financial
statements
of
the
Company
testified
that
the
financial
statements
were
prepared
in
accordance
with
the
requirements
of
the
Calgary
Stock
Exchange.
As
I
understand
the
appellant’s
position,
it
is
that
he
does
not
dispute
that
the
method
of
recording
transactions
in
Red
water
and
Roxboro
in
the
books
of
the
Company
was
a
recording
of
sales
and
purchases
by
the
appellant
to
or
from
the
Company,
but
he
does
dispute
that
such
was
the
true
nature
of
the
transactions.
Further,
he
suggests
that
it
was
natural
for
the
auditors
to
simply
transfer
the
year
end
balances
to
the
balance
sheets
without
explanation
from
the
appellant
or
his
employees
and
even
if
such
explanation
were
requested
it
would
not
be
forthcoming
from
the
appellant
because
he
did
not
understand
the
bookkeeping
at
that
time
and
possibly
not
from
the
employees.
It
is
also
suggested
that
the
auditors
did
not
have
a
true
understanding
of
Mrs.
Russell’s
purpose
in
so
recording
the
transactions.
I
should
also
mention
that
further
information
was
also
requested
and
received
from
Edmonton
Leaseholds,
Limited
by
letter
from
the
Minister
dated
November
7,
1952
(Exhibit
351)
and
by
a
reply
dated
December
14,
1953
(Exhibit
16)
respecting
a
number
of
transactions
in
Redwater
and
Roxboro
shares.
It
was
not
until
about
October
1955
that
the
appellant
was
advised
by
the
Minister
of
his
liability
to
personal
income
tax
assessments
in
respect
of
the
transactions
in
shares
and
properties
He
then
corresponded
with
the
Minister
by
letter
dated
November
2,
1955
(Exhibit
18).
In
that
letter
he
stated,
in
part,
‘‘that
there
were
many
times
that
I
used
my
own
shares
only
with
the
though
of
using
the
money
value
temporarily
for
some
other
purpose
and
then
replacing
the
shares
so
that
my
stock
position
for
control
of
the
company
would
not
be
impaired
.
.
.
in
order
to
provide
.
.
.
cash
it
became
necessary
for
me
to
sell
Redwater’
shares,
which
I
did,
with
the
full
intention
of
restoring
my
stock
position
from
the
underwriting
when
it
was
granted
through
the
Stock
Exchange.
’
’
To
the
extent
that
the
appellant
succeeded
in
restoring
his
stock
position
the
cost
of
doing
so
is
reflected
in
the
Muir
Sheets.
The
letter
of
November
2,
1955
(Exhibit
18)
continued:
During
1951
and
1952
I
discussed
the
possible
confusion
of
this
account
(Exhibit
10—the
account
entitled
“R.
P.
Leveque”
in
the
clients
ledger
of
the
Company)
with
our
auditors
and
the
suggestion
was
made
that
perhaps
it
would
be
better
to
open
a
firm
trading
account
and
keep
the
firms
actual
trading
in
the
stock
out
of
my
personal
account.
This
could
have
been
done
just
as
well
commencing
in
1949
had
I
loaned
to
the
investment
company
100,000
to
200,000
shares
at
a
time
for
them
to
overcome
their
problems
and
they
could
then
return
these
shares
to
me
when
they
were
able.
The
suggestion
inherent
in
the
above
quoted
extract
is
that
the
transactions
might
have
taken
another
form.
The
position
now
taken
by
the
appellant
is
that
the
transactions
were
not
his,
but
those
of
the
Company.
Statements
in
summary
form
of
the
information
before
the
Minister
on
which
the
assessments
are
based,
the
calculations
by
the
Minister
of
the
profits
of
the
appellant
for
each
taxation
year
and
the
Minister’s
explanatory
notes
relating
to
his
method
of
assessment
with
respect
to
Redwater,
Roxboro
and
Trans-Empire,
together
with
the
respective
corrections
and
adjustments
thereto
are
set
forth
in
the
Minister’s
Notice
to
Admit
Facts.
While
the
appellant
does
not
accept
the
results,
nevertheless,
these
statements,
do
indicate
how
the
Minister
reached
those
results.
In
summary
there
are
nine
items
involved
in
the
assessments
for
1949,
1950
and
1951
which
are
in
dispute
and
I
feel
that
the
most
expedient
way
to
deal
with
the
issues
so
raised
is
to
consider
each
item
separately.
A
summary
of
the
issues
involved
and
the
appellant’s
position
with
respect
thereto
is
as
follows:
1949
(1)
The
appellant
submits
that
the
amount
of
$3,000
with
respect
to
40
units
of
Sun
Alta
#1
was
in
effect
taxed
in
the
hands
of
the
Company
(R.
P.
Leveque
Investments
Ltd.)
and
should
not
now
be
taxed
in
his
hands.
(2)
The
appellant
submits
that
his
profit
with
respect
to
the
disposal
of
Redwater
shares
is
only
$11,008.30.
1950
(3)
The
appellant
submits
that
any
profit
on
oil
rights
in
1950
in
the
amount
of
$4,762.50
was
a
profit
of
R.
P.
Leveque
Investments
Ltd.,
and
in
effect
has
been
taxed
in
the
hands
of
this
Company.
(4)
The
appellant
submits
that
his
profit
with
respect
to
Redwater
shares
in
1950
was
only
$400.
(5)
The
appellant
submits
that
no
profit
was
received
by
him
in
respect
of
the
disposal
of
Roxboro
shares
in
1950.
1951
(6)
The
appellant
submits
that
the
profit
on
the
sale
of
oil
rights
in
1951
in
the
amount
of
$12,146.23
was
a
profit
of
R.
P.
Leveque
Investments
Ltd.
and
in
effect
has
been
taxed
in
the
hands
of
this
Company.
(7)
The
appellant
submits
that
no
profit
was
received
by
him
in
respect
of
Redwater
shares
in
1951.
(8)
The
appellant
submits
that
no
profit
was
received
by
him
in
respect
to
the
disposal
of
Roxboro
shares
in
1951
but
that
there
was
a
loss
based
on
the
valuation
of
River
Lot
A
at
fair
market
value
rather
than
at
cost.
(9)
The
appelant
submits
that
no
profit
was
received
by
him
with
respect
to
the
disposal
of
Trans-Empire
shares
in
1951.
The
first
item
in
dispute
between
the
parties
is
an
amount
of
$3,000
in
the
appellant’s
1949
taxation
year
in
respect
of
40
units
of
Sun
Alta
#1.
The
entries
in
the
books
and
records
of
the
proprietorship
show
the
purchase
of
these
40
units
of
Sun
Alta
#1
for
$3,000
by
the
proprietorship
from
the
proprietor.
This
is
not
disputed
by
the
appellant.
However
the
Minister’s
contention
is
that
the
purchase
has
the
effect
of
inflating
the
cost
of
sales
by
the
proprietorship
by
$3,000
and
reducing
the
appellant’s
income
for
his
1949
taxation
year
by
the
same
amount.
The
appellant’s
position
is
that
the
$3,000
was
transferred
to
the
Company’s
accounts
as
at
October
31,
1949
as
a
result
of
errors
in
the
auditors’
journal
entries.
I
am
unable
to
follow
the
appellant’s
contention
in
this
respect.
It
will
be
recalled
that.
the
Company
(R.
P.
Leveque
Investments
Ltd.)
took
over
the
proprietorship
business
effective
July
1,
1949
but
that
the
Auditors
did
not
complete
the
entries
necessary
to
close
out
the
proprietorship
books
at
that
time.
Such
steps
were
taken
in
stages
until
as
late
as
November
30
1950.
The
appellant’s
position
is
that
later
auditors’
entries
had
the
effect
of
transferring
all
of
the
balance
of
the
assets
and
liabilities
of
the
proprietorship
to
the
Comapny
as
at
June
30,
1949.
By
virtue
of
entries
in
the
General
Ledger
of
the
Company
(Exhibit
11)
the
transfer
of
Clients
Accounts
is
recorded
under
date
of
September
30,
1949.
The
clients
ledger
of
the
proprietorship
contineud
in
use
as
part
of
the
records
of
the
Company
without
closing
or
opening
entries
being
made
in
the
individual
clients
accounts.
A
new
account
in
the
name
of
the
appellant
in
the
clients
ledger
of
the
Company
was
opened
as
at
July
8,
1949
(see
Exhibit
10
page
13).
The
account
in
the
name
of
the
appellant
which
had
been
opened
in
the
clients
ledger
of
the
proprietorship
continued
in
use
as
another
part
of
the
records
of
the
Company
(see
Exhibit
10
pages
6
and
7).
As
at
October
31,
1949
the
credit
balance
of
$5,752.24
in
the
old
account
in
the
clients
ledger
in
the
name
of
the
appellant
(Exhibit
10
page
7),
which
was
taken
over
by
the
Company
as
a
liability,
was
moved
to
a
new
account
in
the
appellant’s
name
in
the
clients
ledger
of
the
Company.
An
effect
was
that
the
credit
given
to
the
appellant
in
the
clients
ledger
of
the
proprietorship,
because
of
the
purchase
from
him
of
40
units
of
Sun
Alta
#1,
was
moved
from
one
account
to
another
in
the
books
of
the
Company.
The
$3,000
had
become
a
part
of
the
credit
balance
in
the
account
in
the
appellant’s
name
in
the
clients
ledger
of
the
proprietorship.
All
of
the
credit
balances
in
the
clients’
names
in
the
clients
ledger
of
the
proprietorship
had
been
assumed
as
liabilities
of
the
Company
as
at
June
30,
1949.
I.
therefore,
fail
to
follow
the
appellant’s
contention
that
the
$3,000
was
transferred
to
the
Company’s
accounts
as
at
October
31,
1949,
or
that
the
transfer
was
as
a
result
of
errors
in
auditors’
journal
entries.
As
I
appreciate
the
situation
any
error
arose
only
by
reason
of
the
fact
that
certain
accounts
between
the
offices
of
the
proprietorship
for
which
accounts
had
been
opened
in
the
old
clients
ledger,
and
offices
of
the
Company
for
which
accounts
had
been
opened
in
the
new
clients
ledger,
did
not
balance
as
a
result
of
errors.
The
differences
were
not
reconciled
but
were
charged
to
the
appellant’s
name
in
the
clients
ledger
of
the
Company.
Accordingly,
the
Minister’s
contention
appears
to
me
to
be
the
correct
one
and
I
fail
to
follow
how
the
amount
of
$3,000
was
taxed
in
the
hands
of
the
Company.
It
follows,
therefore,
that
the
Minister’s
assessment
of
$3,000
with
respect
to
40
units
of
Sun
Alta
#1
in
the
appellant’s
1949
taxation
year
must
be
confirmed.
It
is
convenient
to
consider
items
3
and
6
in
the
foregoing
summary
together.
Item
3
relates
to
a
profit
on
oil
rights
in
the
amount
of
$4,762.50
which
was
the
subject
of
assessment
in
the
appellant’s
hands
in
his
1950
taxation
year
and
item
6
relates
to
a
profit
in
the
amount
of
$12,146.23
which
was
the
subject
of
assessment
in
the
appellant’s
hands
in
his
1951
taxation
year.
In
both
instances
the
appellant
contends
that
the
respective
amounts
were
profits
of
R.
P.
Leveque
Investments
Ltd.
(the
Company)
and
in
effect
had
been
taxed
on
its
hands.
The
properties
on
which
the
profit
of
$4,762.50
was
made
in
1950
are
those
sometimes
herein
referred
to
as
Sun
Alta
#2
and
are
included
in
a
transaction
with
Edmonton
Leaseholds
Limited
which
is
described
in
a
letter
dated
July
24,
1950
(Exhibit
35)
from
that
Company
to
the
appellant.
There
is
no
dispute
between
the
parties
as
to
the
amount
of
the
profit
being
$4,762.50
but
the
dispute
arises
as
to
whose
profit
it
is.
The
above
letter
(Exhibit
35)
begins,
We
today
confirm
the
purchase
from
you
of
the
following
royalties’’,
followed
by
a
list
of
royalty
interests
opposite
to
each
is
set
the
purchase
price
which
prices
total
$55,050.
The
appellant
takes
the
position
that
the
evaluations
for
the
purpose
of
the
royalty
trust
being
formed
were
imposed
by
the
Alberta
Securities
Commission
as
the
result
of
an
independent
geological
assessment,
As
I
understood
the
evidence
on
this
matter,
it
was
that
the
independent
geological
assessment
established
values
which
the
Alberta
Securities
Commission
would
accept
as
the
maximum
values
at
which
the
properties
might
be
charged
to
the
trust
being
formed.
The
selling
price
of
the
properties,
being
the
sum
of
$55,050
is
credited
to
an
account
entitled
‘‘R.
P.
Leveque’’
in
the
books
of
Edmonton
Leaseholds
Limited
(Exhibit
468).
The
monies
so
standing
to
the
credit
of
the
appellant
are
recorded
in
Exhibit
468
as
being
paid
to
the
appellant
or
to
others
for
the
benefit.
of
the
appellant
from
time
to
time.
An
entry
dated
October.
13,
1950
reads:
“Cheque
R.
P.
Leveque
Inv.
for
R.
P.
Leveque”
and
a
debit
of
$11,000
is
recorded.
In
the
account
in
the
name
of
the
appellant
in
the
clients
ledger
of
the
Company
(Exhibit
10
at
page
27,
line
16)
a
credit
of
$11,000
is
recorded
by
an
entry
reading
October
18,
Deposit
re
Ed.
L.
Ltd.”
Therefore
Edmonton
Leaseholds
Limited
treats
the
properties
as
those
of
the
appellant.
It
writes
the
letter
dated
July
24,
1950
(Exhibit
85)
and
credits
the
appellant’s
account
in
its
books
with
$55,050
(Exhibit
468).
At
the
same
time
R.
P.
Leveque
Investments
Ltd.
(the
Company)
treats
the
properties
as
those
of
the
appellant.
The
Company
charges
the
cost
of
the
properties
to
an
account
in
the
clients
ledger
in
the
name
of
the
appellant
(Exhibit
10)
and
it
delivers
the
properties
to
the
appellant
through
that
account.
So
far
as
I
can
see
the
Company
does
not
receive
from
the
appellant
an
accounting
for
the
monies
accruing
due
from
the
sale
of
the
properties
to
Edmonton
Leaseholds
Limited.
While
it
might
have
been
the
appellant’s
intention
when
he
acquired
the
properties
to
sell
them
either
to
Edmonton
Leaseholds
Limited
or
R.
P.
Leveque
Investments
Ltd.,
nevertheless,
the
difference
between
the
cost
of
the
acquisition
of
the
properties
and
the
price
at
which
they
were
sold
accrued
to
the
appellant’s
personal
benefit.
Further
that
difference,
so
far
as
I
can
follow,
is
not
included
in
the
earnings
of
either
Edmonton
Leaseholds
Limited
or
R.
P.
Leveque
Investments
Ltd.
Therefore
I
am
unable
to
accede
to
the
appellant’s
contention
that
neither
the
properties,
nor
the
monies
received
therefor
were
not
his
or
that
the
profits
arising
from
the
disposition
of
these
properties
were
directly
or
indirectly
reflected
in
the
accounts
of
the
Company
(R.
P.
Leveque
Investments
Ltd.).
It
therefore
follows
that
the
Minister’s
assessment,
as
it
relates
to
the
profit
on
the
sale
of
oil
rights,
in
the
amount
of
$4,762.50
in
the
1950
taxation
year
must
be
confirmed.
The
property
giving
rise
to
the
addition
of
$12,146.23
to
assessment
of
the
appellant’s
income
as
profit
on
the
sale
of
oil
rights
in
the
appellant’
s
1951
taxation
year
(Item
6
in
the
above
summary)
is
the
interest
referred
to
as
/8
of
River
Lots
10
and
11,
in
the
St.
Albert
Settlement.
There
is
no
dispute
between
the
parties
as
to
the
cost,
the
selling
price
or
the
amount
of
the
profit.
The
appellant
contends
that
the
profit
of
$12,146.23
was
the
profit
of
R.
P.
Leveque
Investments
Ltd.
and
was,
in
effect,
taxed
in
its
hands.
This
particular
item
was
not
the
subject
of
a
specific
plea
in
the
appellant’s
Notice
of
Appeal
and
for
that
reason
the
Minister’s
assessment
with
respect
to
this
item
might
be
confirmed
without
further
consideration.
The
appellant
takes
the
position
that
all
matters
which
were
the
subject
of
assessment
in
the
years
1949,
1950
and
1951
are
put
in
issue
by
the
Notices
of
Appeal
whether
specifically
pleaded
or
not
and
that
the
Minister
made
an
adjustment
to
this
item
thereby
admitting
the
relevancy
of
the
appellant’s
submission.
While
I
do
not
agree
with
the
appellant’s
submission
in
this
respect,
evidence
was
adduced
and
the
trial
was
conducted
as
though
the
matter
were
in
issue.
In
the
letter
dated
December
14,
1953
(Exhibit
16)
Edmonton
Leaseholds
Limited,
which
was
signed
by
the
appellant
as
president,
advised
the
Minister
that
this
property
had
been
purchased
by
Edmonton
Leaseholds
Limited
from
R.
P.
Leveque.
In
Exhibit
468
(the
account
maintained
in
the
appellant’s
name
in
the
books
of
Edmonton
Leaseholds
Limited)
the
following
entry
appears
under
date
of
February
17,
1951,
‘‘%
of
/8
River
Lots
10
and
11
R.P.L.’’.
A
credit
to
the
appellant
in
the
amount
of
$15,000
is
recorded.
The
appellant
points
out
that
River
Lots
10
and
11
became
the
property
of
Edmonton
Leaseholds
Limited
at
a
valuation
of
$15,000
and
eventually
became
a
part
of
the
property
which
went
into
Redwater.
An
account
was
opened
in
the
books
of
Edmonton
Leaseholds
Limited
(Exhibit
468)
under
the
title
‘‘River
Lots
10
and
11,
St.
Albert
Settlement’’.
Under
date
of
February
17,
1951
this
entry
appears,
‘Buy
/8
of
/8
int—R.
P.
Leveque”
followed
by
a
debit
of
$15,000.
Further
entries
in
this
account
record
the
sale
of
River
Lots
10
and
11
to
Roxboro,
the
purchase
back
from
Roxboro
and
the
sale
to
Redwater.
From
such
entries
I
can
only
logically
conclude
that
the
appellant
sold
/8
of
7%
interest
in
River
Lots
10
and
11
to
Edmonton
Leaseholds
Limited
and
that
the
profit
resulting
from
that
transaction
is
that
of
the
appellant
and
properly
taxable
in
his
hands.
I
cannot
follow
how
that
profit
became
a
profit
of
R.
P.
Leveque
Investments
Limited
and
was,
in
effect,
taxed
in
its
hands.
Therefore,
in
my
view,
the
Minister’s
addition
of
$12,146.23
as
a
profit
in
the
sale
of
oil
rights
to
the
appellant’s
income
in
his
1951
taxation
year
must
be
confirmed.
The
remaining
items
in
dispute
between
the
parties
result
from
profits
on
transactions
in
shares
of
Redwater,
Roxboro
and
Trans-Empire.
With
respect
to
transactions
in
shares
of
Redwater,
the
appellant
admits
that
in
1949
he
realized
a
profit
of
$11,008.30
(Item
2
of
the
Summary
of
Issues
in
Dispute).
This
computation
is
arrived
at
by
deducting
the
cost
of
the
shares
to
the
appellant
of
$7,375
(being
the
cost
of
the
properties
transferred
therefor
and
with
respect
to
which
there
is
no
dispute
between
the
parties)
from
cash
sales
of
$18,383.30
which
the
appellant
acknowledges
to
be
his
personal
transactions.
Similarily
in
his
1950
taxation
year,
the
appellant
acknowledges
a
personal
profit
of
$400
resulting
from
cash
sales
in
that
year
(Item
4)
of
Redwater
shares.
In
1951
(Item
7)
the
appellant
denies
realizing
any
profit
from
sales
of
Redwater
shares.
The
Minister
has
added
to
the
appellant’s
income
in
the
1950
and
1951
the
amounts
of
$61,831.80,
$42,761.78
and
$47,508.33
respectively
as
profit
on
the
sale
of
Redwater
shares.
The
appellant
attributes
the
differences
in
the
respective
taxation
years
to
the
transactions
giving
rise
to
profits
as
being
those
of
R.
P.
Leveque
Investments
Ltd.
for
the
purpose
of
supporting
or
stabilizing
the
underwriting
market
by
reason
of
the
fact
that
the
Company
was
the
principal
underwriter
of
Redwater
shares
and
as
being
loans
of
the
appellant’s
Redwater
shares
to
the
Company
and
their
eventual
return
to
him.
To
the
extent
that
these
transactions
gave
rise
to
profits
the
appellant
contends
that
they
are
reflected
directly
or
indirectly
in
the
books
of
R.
P.
Leveque
Investments
Ltd.
where
they
were
taxed.
It
is
common
ground
between
the
parties
that
the
main
basis
of
the
assessments
by
the
Minister
is
information
supplied
by
the
appellant
in
the
Muir
Sheets
(Exhibit
62
as
to
Redwater,
Exhibit
212
as
to
Roxboro
and
Exhibit
302
as
to
Trans-Empire).
Transactions
set
out
in
the
Muir
Sheets
between
the
appellant
and
Edmonton
Leaseholds
Limited
are
found
with
two
exceptions,
in
an
account
maintained
in
the
appellant’s
name
in
the
books
of
that
Company
(Exhibit
468).
These
transactions
are
not
recorded
in
the
books
of
R.
P.
Leveque
Investments
Ltd.
either
in
the
name
of
“R.
P.
Leveque’’
in
the
clients
ledger
or
elsewhere
from
which
circumstance
it
is
logical
to
conclude
that
these
were
not
Company
transactions.
It
follows
that
the
profits
therefrom
are
not
reflected
in
the
books
of
that
Company
and
accordingly
would
not
be
taxed
there.
Certain
transactions
listed
in
the
Muir
Sheets
are
purchases
from
other
brokers,
(e.g.
Carlile
&
McCarthy
Exhibit
62,
page
6,
line
19)
amongst
others.
Such
purchases
are
not
recorded
in
the
books
of
R.
P.
Leveque
Investments
Ltd.,
in
the
account
in
the
name
of
R.
P.
Leveque,
in
the
clients
ledger
or
elsewhere,
nor
are
the
subsequent
sales
or
dispositions.
Again
it
is
logical
to
conclude
that
these
were
transactions
personal
to
the
appellant
and
not
Company
transactions.
Therefore,
any
resultant
profit
cannot
be
said
to
be
reflected
in
the
books
of
R.
P.
Leveque
Investments
Ltd.
and
taxed
there.
Most
of
the
transactions
listed
in
the
Muir
Sheets
are
recorded
as
purchases
and
sales
by
the
appellant
in
the
account
maintained
in
his
name
in
the
clients
ledger
of
the
Company
(Exhibit
10).
At
the
trial
these
transactions
were
examined
in
detail
and
traced
through
the
various
books
and
records
of
KR.
P.
Leveque
Investments
Ltd.
In
the
synoptic
journal,
in
the
stock
position
book,
in
the
general
ledger
and
in
the
clients
ledger
by
reason
of
entries
in
the
account
entitled
‘‘R.
P.
Leveque’’
sales
by
the
appellant
to
R.
P.
Leveque
Investments
Ltd.
are
recorded
and
on
the
other
side
of
the
coin
purchases
by
the
appellant
from
that
Company
are
also
recorded.
By
confirmation
slips,
sales
by
the
appellant
to
R.
P.
Leveque
Investments
Ltd.
and
purchases
by
the
appellant
from
that
Company
are
confirmed.
Receipts
were
issued
by
KR.
P.
Leveque
Investments
Ltd.
acknowledging
that
the
appellant
delivered
to
it
share
certificates
described
in
the
receipt
as
to
certificate
numbers
and
registered
owner.
These
receipts
evidence
the
completion
of
sale
transactions
by
change
of
possession
of
the
certificates
for
the
shares
involved
in
the
sale
transactions
from
the
appellant,
or
his
attorney,
Mrs.
Russell,
to
R.
P.
Leveque
Investments
Ltd.
An
appropriate
entry
was
made
in
Exhibit
10
(the
account
entitled
“R.
P.
Leveque’’
in
the
clients
ledger)
to
deliver
to
R.
P.
Leveque
Investments
Ltd.,
the
shares
that
had
been
recorded
as
sold
by
him
to
that
Company
and
for
which
a
money
credit
was
given
by
the
Company.
On
the
other
side
of
the
coin,
delivery
slips
were
issued
by
the
Company
advising
the
appellant
that
share
certificates
as
described
therein
were
delivered
to
the
appellant.
Appropriate
entries
were
made
in
Exhibit
10
(R.
P.
Leveque
account
in
the
clients
ledger)
to
indicate
that
the
Company
had
delivered
the
shares
and
a
money
charge
was
made
against
the
appellant.
In
several
instances
receipts
were
issued
by
the
Company
clearly
indicating
that
shares
had
been
received
by
it
on
loan
from
the
appellant.
In
these
cases
the
only
entry
in
the
‘‘R.
P.
Leveque’’
account
(Exhibit
10)
is
one
indicating
a
receipt
by
the
Company
of
shares
and
a
credit
therefor.
No
money
credit
was
made.
As
illustrative
thereof
see:
(1)
Exhibit
96,
500
shares
borrowed
from
the
appellant
noted
“borrowed
for
delivery
to
Reimer’’—entry
in
Exhibit
10,
page
20,
line
4.
(2)
Exhibit
120,
100,000
Redwater
shares
with
notations,
‘‘on
loan
for
office
deliveries’’
‘‘this
was
not
sold
and
is
to
be
replaced’’—entry
in
Exhibit
10,
page
23,
line
20.
(3)
Exhibit
121,
10,000
Redwater
shares
from
the
appellant
noted
‘‘on
loan
only.
This
is
for
Mac.
Winnipeg—draft.
10,000
out
of
first
100,000
we
borrowed
from
him”.
(4)
Exhibit
122,
200,000
Redwater
shares
from
appellant
noted
“received
by
us
to
hypothecate
at
bank’’.
Delivery
slips
were
issued
from
time
to
time
by
R.
P.
Leveque
Investments
Ltd.
to
advise
the
appellant
that
it
had
returned
to
him
shares
previously
borrowed.
The
entries
in
Exhibit
10
record
a
delivery
and
indicate
a
debit
in
shares.
No
money
charge
is
made
against
the
account.
It
therefore
appears
that
in
some
instances,
where
shares
are
loaned
by
the
appellant,
the
records
clearly
indicate
such
circumstance
and
no
money
values
are
inserted
in
the
records.
The
evidence
with
respect
to
those
transactions
which
were
undoubtedly
loan
transactions,
is
clear.
The
other
transactions
were
recorded
as
sales.
With
respect
to
market
support
transactions,
I
have
previously
intimated
that
while
it
is
to
the
underwriter’s
advantage
to
support
the
market,
it
is
also
to
the
promoter’s
advantage
to
do
so.
Most
of
the
entries
as
sales
in
Exhibit
10
for
Redwater
are
at
1834
cents
per
share,
whereas
under
the
underwriting
agreement
these
shares
were
being
sold
at
25
cents
per
share.
From
this
circumstance
the
appellant
points
out
that
he
would
not
sell
his
shares
at
1834
cents
when
a
higher
price
was
obtainable
and
this
gives
support
to
his
contention
that
the
transactions
were
in
the
nature
of
a
loan.
The
appellant’s
contention
is
that
all
such
transactions
were,
in
fact,
‘“wash
transactions’’—that
the
shares
loaned
and
received
back
cancel
each
other
and
no
money
values
should
have
been
attached
thereto.
On
the
other
hand,
if
R.
P.
Leveque
Investments
Ltd.
were
buying
shares
from
the
appel-
lant,
it
would
not
pay
25
cents
per
share
when
such
shares
were
available
from
the
Treasury
of
Redwater
at
1834
cents.
As
to
the
‘‘washing’’
nature
of
the
transactions,
the
shares
which
replaced
the
‘‘loan’’
were
acquired
at
less
than
1834
cents
by
KR.
P.
Leveque
Investments
Ltd.
and
sold
at
less
than
1834
cents
to
the
appellant.
The
cost
to
R.
P.
Leveque
Investments
Ltd.
between
the
shares
which
might
have
been
borrowed
and
the
cost
to
it
of
the
shares
purchased
to
replace
those
shares
is
reflected
to
the
balance
standing
to
the
credit
of
the
appellant
in
the
account
in
his
name
in
the
clients
ledger
(Exhibit
10).
It
appears
from
the
evidence
that
such
credit
was
available
to
the
appellant
and
was
in
many
instances,
used
by
him
for
his
own
purposes.
As
to
the
market
support
transactions,
shares
were
acquired
and
charged
to
the
appellant
in
his
name
in
the
clients
ledger
(Exhibit
10)
and
in
most
instances
were
charged
at
less
than
18%
cents
per
share.
When
such
shares
were
put
back
on
the
market
there
was
a
resultant
credit
to
the
appellant
in
the
clients
ledger.
That
credit
was
available
to
the
appellant.
It
is
difficult
to
conceive
how
that
credit
can
be
considered
as
anything
other
than
a
profit
to
the
appellant.
Therefore,
I
am
unable
to
accept
the
appellant’s
contention
that
all
transactions
other
than
those
acknowledged
to
have
been
his
personal
transactions
may
be
loans,
although
recorded
as
purchases
or
sales
with
money
values
attached
thereto,
in
the
face
of
other
entries
and
notations
in
other
instances
which
clearly
indicate
that
the
transaction
was
a
loan
without
money
valuations
attached.
The
appellant
pointed
out
that
by
auditor’s
journal
entry
on
November
30,
1950
(Exhibit
10
page
29)
all
of
the
Redwater
underwriting
accounts
of
the
Company
was
transferred.
to
the
R.
P.
Leveque
account.
The
Company’s
Redwater
underwriting
account
had
a
loss
in
it
of
$42,383.17.
The
R.
P.
Leveque
account
had
in
it
a
profit
of
$16,564.18
with
respect
to
Redwater
shares.
As
a
result
of
the
consolidation
of
these
accounts,
a
net
loss
of
$25,818.99
resulted
to
the
appellant
at
that
time.
The
entry
of
November
80,
1950
is
recorded
as
a
purchase
of
189,950
shares
of
Redwater
by
the
appellant
from
R.
P.
Leyeque
Investments
Ltd.
for
the
sum
of
$125,961.17.
In
accordance
with
the
requirements
of
the
Calgary
Stock
Exchange
in
respect
of
member
brokers
year-end
audits
the
183.950
Redwater
shares
were
valued
at
the
lower
of
cost
or
market,
which
was
44
cents
per
share,
being
the
market
value
at
that
time,
the
value
of
those
189,950
shares
would
have
been
$83,578.
If
such
an
evaluation
has
been
placed
on
the
shares
in
the
hands
of
R.
P.
Leveque
Investments
Ltd.
a
loss
of
$42,383.17
would
have
been
transferred
to
earnings
in
accordance
with
the
requirements
of
the
Calgary
Stock
Exchange,
instructions
to
brokers
’
auditors,
(Exhibit
474).
What
was
done
was
to
sell
the
shares
to
the
appellant.
Mr.
Bunnin,
who
was
the
assessor
in
the
Department
of
National
Revenue,
Calgary
office,
responsible
for
the
appellant’s
assessment
to
income
tax,
gave
evidence
as
to
the
reason
for
the
sale
of
$189,950
Redwater
shares
as
recorded
in
the
auditor’s
journal
entry
of
November
30,
1950.
The
explanation
given
to
him
by
the
appellant,
and
the
auditor,
Mr.
Morton,
was
that
if
the
189,950
Redwater
shares
had
continued
to
be
held
as
an
asset
of
R.
P.
Leveque
Investments
Ltd.
and
had
the
consequent
loss
been
transferred
to
earnings,
the
Financial
Statement
of
R.
P.
Leveque
Investments
Ltd.
would
have
shown
a
deficiency
in
working
capital
of
about
$30,000
which
the
Calgary
Stock.
Exchange
would
have
insisted
to
be
made
up
to
a
working
capital
position
of
$10,000.
This
particular
transaction
was
a
source
of
concern
to
Mr.
Bunnin.
In
a
meeting
on
February
22,
1956
with
the
appellant
and
Mr.
Morton,
Mr.
Bunnin
asked
why
the
entry
was
not
reversed
in
the
following
fiscal
period.
He
was
advised
by
the
appellant
that
he,
the
appellant,
wished
to
sustain
the
loss
out
of
his
profits.
The
appellant’s
position
is
that
the
effect
of
this
entry
is
to
transfer
the
loss
to
the
R.
P.
Leveque
account
and
to
overstate
the
profits
of
the
Company
by
this
amount.
The
entry
reflected
the
sale
of
189,950
Redwater
shares
by
the
Company
to
the
appellant
and
the
effect
of
the
entry
is
to
record
the
transaction.
The
profit
or
loss
determined
in
respect
to
the
business
of
the
Company
as
at
November
30,
1950
is
neither
overstated
nor
understated.
The
balance
sheet
of
the
Company
after
the
transaction
indicates
the
amount
due
from
shareholders
as
$51,435.91
(which
is
reconcilable
with
the
amounts
shown
as
a
debit
balance
in
the
“R.
P.
Leveque’’
accounts
in
the
clients
ledger
(Exhibit
10,
page
29,
line
32)).
This
is
also
confirmed
by
the
letter
dated
December
14,
1953
from
the
Company,
signed
by
the
appellant,
to
the
Department
(Exhibit.
21).
The
total
market
value
of
securities
held
by
the
Company
against
this
account
was
$246,317.21
and
the
share
positions
in
the
KR.
P.
Leveque
account
in
the
clients
ledger
(Exhibit
10)
agreed
with
the
information
supplied
as
to
the
number
and
kind
of
shares
in
the
letter
of
December
14,
1953
(Exhibit
21).
In
the
Muir
Sheets
(Exhibit
62)
the
cost
of
the
189,950
Redwater
shares
to
the
appellant
is
shown
as
being
$125,961.17.
In
computing
the
profits
assessed
to
the
appellant
from
trading
in
Redwater
shares,
the
cost
of
$125,961.17
for
189,950
shares
was
taken
into
account
by
the
Minister
in
the
appellant’s
1950
taxation
year
and
in
my
opinion
the
Minister
was
correct
in
so
doing.
I
am
invited
to
look
behind
the
entries
indicating
purchases
and
sales
by
the
appellant
and
to
conclude
that,
despite
such
entries,
the
transactions
are,
in
reality,
those
of
R.
P.
Leveque
Investments
Ltd.
This
I
find
myself
unable
to
do
and
accordingly
I
would
confirm
the
Minister’s
assessments
with
respect
to
the
additions
to
the
appellant’s
income
consequent
upon
transactions
in
Redwater
shares
in
his
1949,
1950
and
1951
taxation
year.
Basically
similar
considerations
apply
to
the
transactions
in
Roxboro
shares
as
do
to
the
transactions
in
Redwater
shares.
In
the
appellant’s
1950
taxation
year
the
Minister
added
to
the
appellant’s
income
a
profit
from
the
sale
of
Roxboro
shares
an
amount
of
$15,365.18
and
in
the
appellant’s
1951
taxation
year
an
amount
of
$87,122.35.
The
appellant’s
position,
as
outlined
before,
is
that
he
received
1,400,000
Roxboro
shares
in
exchange
for
property
transferred
to
Roxboro,
being
River
Lot
A,
St.
Albert
Settlement.
The
Minister
placed
a
valuation
for
$13,782.35
on
that
property
which
is
the
consideration
for
the
1,400,000
Roxboro
shares.
The
appellant’s
contention
is
that
the
value
of
the
property
when
transferred
to
Roxboro
was
$63,095.40.
The
appellant
acknowledges
that
530,000
shares
of
Roxboro
were
disposed
of
by
him
in
1951
for
$61,492.90.
Accepting
the
appellant’s
conclusion
as
to
the
value
of
the
property
transferred
of
$63,095.40
rather
than
the
Minister’s
valuation
of
$13,782.35
it
would
follow
that
the
appellant
sustained
a
loss
of
$1,602.50
in
1951.
The
appellant
contends
that
all
transactions
recorded
in
the
Muir
Sheets
(Exhibit
212)
other
than
in
the
above
mentioned
530,000
Roxboro
shares,
were
in
the
nature
of
market
support
transactions
or
loan
transactions.
This
would
include
all
transactions
in
Roxboro
shares
in
the
appellant’s
1950
taxation
year.
For
the
reasons
applicable
to
the
transactions
in
Redwater
shares
above
outlined,
I
would
reject
the
appellant’s
contention
in
this
respect
and
confirm
the
Minister’s
assessment
of
the
appellant’s
income
resulting
from
transactions
in
Roxboro
shares
in
the
appellant’s
1950
taxation
year.
With
respect
to
the
assessment
of
the
appellant’s
income
for
1951,
the
appellant’s
alternative
argument
is
that
the
true
cost
of
the
1,400,000
Roxboro
shares
received
by
the
appellant
is
the
value
of
the
property
transferred
to
Roxboro
which
he
contends
was
$63,095.40
at
the
time
of
its
transfer.
The
transfer
to
Roxboro
was
subsequent
to
a
sale
of
168
acres
of
River
Lot
A
on
September
7,
1950
for
$50,000
or
$297.60
per
acre.
On
the
other
hand,
the
Minister’s
computation
of
the
value
of
the
1,400,000
Roxboro
shares
received
by
the
appellant
is
based
on
the
cost
of
the
property
to
the
appellant,
transferred
by
him
to
Roxboro
in
consideration
for
those
shares.
The
original
cost
to
the
appellant
of
the
entire
414
acres
is
admitted
to
have
been
$27,500
and
the
proportionate
cost
of
the
acreage
transferred
to
Roxboro
was
$13,782.35
as
computed
by
the
Minister.
In
my
view
the
cost
of
the
shares
to
the
appellant
was
the
cost
of
the
property
which
he
exchanged
for
them
and
the
cost
of
that
property
was
$13,782.35.
If
Roxboro
had
issued
its
shares
without
nominal
or
par
value
for
a
cash
consideration
(as
it
must)
which
its
directors
considered
to
be
the
fair
equivalent
of
the
cash
consideration
of
the
property
in
excess
of
$13,782.35,
then
the
difference
would
be
income
to
the
appellant,
but
the
cost
of
the
property,
and
accordingly
the
shares
of
the
appellant,
would
remain
the
same.
Therefore
I
conclude
that
the
Minister’s
computation
of
the
cost
of
the
shares
is
the
correct
one.
The
appellant
placed
reliance
on
the
decision
of
the
Supreme
Court
of
Canada
in
W.
L.
Falconer
v.
M.N.R.,
[1962]
C.T.C.
426.
In
that
case
the
Supreme
Court
held
that
the
total
value
of
shares
issued
by
a
company
to
syndicate
members
was
no
more
or
no
less
than
the
value
of
a
farm-out
agreement
turned
over
to
the
company
pursuant
to
an
oral
agreement
as
of
June
15,
1951.
The
Minister
had
assessed
the
shares
in
the
hands
of
the
appellant
as
at
September
1951
when
a
written
agreement
was
signed
between
the
parties.
The
Supreme
Court
found
that
the
written
agreement
of
September
1951
did
no
more
than
evidence
the
oral
agreement
of
June
1951
and
that
as
at
June
1951
the
value
of
the
shares
represented
no
profit
to
the
appellant.
In
the
Falconer
case
the
Minister’s
assessment
was
based
on
the
proposition
that
the
appellant
did
not
acquire
a
right
to
his
shares
until
after
the
successful
completion
of
a
well
on
Septem-
ber
3,
1951
and
at
a
time
when,
as
a
result
of
that
successful
completion,
the
value
of
the
shares
had
increased.
In
the
present
case
the
Minister
has
made
no
assessment
for
income
on
the
Roxboro
shares
when
they
were
received
by
the
appellant,
but
only
upon
income
alleged
to
accrue
to
the
appellant
when
the
shares
were
disposed
of
by
him.
In
the
alternative,
if
the
Minister’s
position,
with
respect,
to
the
cost
of
the
shares
to
the
appellant
being
$13,782.35
is
correct,
as
I
have
found
it
to
be,
the
appellant
then
submits
that
he
received
a
profit
of
$47
710.55
being
the
difference
between
sales
at
$61,492.90
and
the
cost
of
$13,782.35.
He
submits
that
a
transaction
recorded
as
a
sale
of
148,098
Roxboro
shares
for
a
credit
of
$43,289.05
is
entered
in
the
account
entitled
‘‘R.
P.
Leveque”
in
the
clients
ledger
(Exhibit
10,
page
32)
on
January
23,
1951
and
had
the
effect
of
removing
all
share
transactions
which
had
gone
into
that
account
prior
to
that
date.
Thereafter,
transactions
in
Roxboro
shares
were
carried
in
a
special
account
in
the
general
ledger
of
R.P.
Leveque
Investments
Ltd.
From
this
account
there
is
ultimately
a
transfer
of
earnings
on
November
30,
1951
of
a
profit
of
$13,785.37.
From
this
the
appellant
contends
that
transactions
in
Roxboro
shares,
giving
rise
to
a
profit,
properly
end
up
in
the
profits
of
R.
P.
Leveque
Investments
Ltd.
In
the
general
ledger
of
R.
P.
Leveque
Investments
Ltd.
an
account
entitled
‘‘Roxboro
Oils
Ltd.
—
Stock
Purchased
on
the
Market
and
Sold
to
R.
P.
Leveque’’
was
opened
on
November
30,
1950.
It
was
established
in
evidence
that
the
total
purchase
on
the
market
was
posted
at
month
ends
in
the
General
Ledger
account.
In
so
far
as
sales
to
R.
P.
Leveque
are
concerned,
they
were
posted
daily
to
his
account
in
the
clients
ledger.
Thus,
while
the
appellant
contends
that
after
January
23,
1951,
transactions
in
Roxboro
were
carried
in
a
special
Roxboro
account
in
the
General
Ledger
of
the
Company,
an
examination
of
the
General
Ledger
shows
that
transactions
in
Roxboro
had
been
recorded
in
the
General
Ledger
of
R.
P.
Leveque
Investments
Ltd.
from
November
30,
1950
to
January
23,
1950
and
continued
to
be
so
recorded.
Further
the
account
in
the
name
of
the
appellant
in
the
clients
ledger
continues
to
record
sales
and
purchases
of
Roxboro
shares
(see
Exhibit
10,
page
32,
lines
16
to
19
and
page
33,
line
19).
Therefore,
there
is
no
clear
and
decisive
cut-off
as
alleged
by
the
appellant.
As
intimated
above
the
appellant
contends
that
from
this
special
Roxboro
account
there
is
ultimately
a
transfer
of
earnings
on
November
30,
1951
of
a
profit
of
$18,785.37
and
that
profits
arising
from
transactions
in
Roxboro
shares
end
up
in
the
profits
of
the
Company.
The
balance
standing
in
the
account
entitled
‘‘Roxboro
Oils
Ltd.
—
Stock
Purchased
and
Sold
to
R.
P.
Leveque’’
both
as
to
shares
and
the
amount
of
the
debit,
is
transferred
as
at
February
1,
1951
to
an
account
entitled
‘‘Securities
Account
—
Roxboro
Oils”
(Exhibit
10
additional
sheets).
From
the
account
entitled
“Securities
Account
—
Roxboro
Oils’’
(Exhibit
10
additional
sheets)
as
at
November
29,
1951
the
bulk
of
the
shares
shown
as
then
owned
by
R.
P.
Leveque
Investment
Ltd.
(the
Company)
are
sold
to
the
appellant
for
17
cents
per
share
giving
rise
to
a
credit
in
the
above
mentioned
Securities
Account
of
$16,320
and
leaving
standing
to
the
credit
of
the
Securities
Account
the
sum
of
$13,641.89.
As
a
result
of
the
last
sale
and
the
credit
appearing
in
the
Securities
Account,
a
transfer
of
$13,785.37
is
made
to
earnings
since
at
the
year
end
and
there
remained
on
hand
only
844
Roxboro
shares
which
were
valued
at
the
lower
of
cost
or
market
by
the
auditor.
The
market
was
then
17
cents
and
the
amount
standing
to
the
debit
of
the
account
as
being
the
cost
of
the
remaining
844
Roxboro
shares
owned
by
R.
P.
Leveque
Investments
Ltd.
is
$143.48.
The
entry
recording
the
transactions
which
is
the
sale
of
96,000
Roxboro
shares
at
17
cents
per
share
is
in
the
handwriting
of
Mr.
Mathieson,
both
in
the
account
‘‘
Securities
Account
Roxboro
Oils”
(Exhibit
10
additional
sheets)
and
in
the
account
in
the
appellant’s
name
in
the
clients
ledger
(also
Exhibit
10,
page
39,
line
7).
Mr.
Mathieson
testified
that:
There
was
a
confirmation
made
out
at
that
time
so
its
both
a
buy
and
sell.
That
is
what
it
really
was,
a
buy
and
sell
of
that
particular
stock.
Mr.
Mathieson
also
started
that
an
entry
involving
16
cents
appearing
in
the
account
in
the
name
of
the
appellant
in
the
clients
ledger
dated
November
30,
1951,
was
a
transfer
from
the
appellant’s
personal
account
in
the
clients
ledger
(Exhibit
10,
page
35,
line
9).
While
it
may
be
that
any
profit
in
transactions
in
Roxboro
shares
which
accrued
to
the
account
‘‘Securities
Account
Roxboro”
is
transferred
to
the
earnings
of
R.
P.
Leveque
Investments
Ltd.
no
entry
transferring
moneys
from
the
appellant’s
account
in
the
clients
ledger
to
the
earnings
of
R.
P.
Leveque
Investments
Ltd.
ean
be
found.
Therefore
it
follows
that
any
profits
or
losses
in
respect
of
transactions
in
Roxboro
shares
entered
into
by
the
appellant
and
which
are
reflected
in
the
account
in
his
name
in
the
clients
ledger
are
not
transferred
to
the
earnings
of
R.
P.
Leveque
Investments
Ltd.
Therefore,
I
cannot
agree
the
appellant’s
submission
that
the
transactions
are
reflected
directly
or
indirectly
in
the
accounts
of
R.
P.
Leveque
Investments
Ltd.
where
they
were
taxed.
It
follows
that
I
must
confirm
the
Minister’s
assessment
with
respect
to
the
addition
to
the
appellant’s
income
consequent
upon
his
transactions
in
Roxboro
shares
in
the
appellant’s
1951
taxation
year.
The
concluding
item
in
dispute
between
the
parties
is
with
respect
to
transactions
in
Trans-Empire
shares
in
the
appellant’s
1951
taxation
year.
The
appellant’s
submission
is
that
no
profit
was
received
by
him
from
a
disposal
of
these
shares
in
the
1951
taxation
year.
In
the
year
1951
an
opportunity
arose
whereby
Redwater
and
Roxboro
shares
could
be
exchanged
for
Trans-Empire
shares
in
the
circumstances
previously
outlined.
The
appellant’s
position
is,
as
I
understood
it,
that
he
merely
assembled
Redwater
and
Roxboro
shares
and
acted
as
a
conduit
pipe
through
which
other
parties
received
either
cash
or
shares
but
no
profit
or
loss
accrued
to
him
personally.
The
agreement
between
Petroleum
Incomes
(Clifton
C.
Cross)
Ltd.
and
the
appellant
was
summarized
in
Exhibit
301
under
which
the
appellant
was
to
be
paid
the
sum
of
$230,000
in
cash
and
he
also
undertook
to
facilitate
the
exchange
for
Trans-
Empire
shares
by
other
shareholders
of
Redwater
and
Roxboro.
The
Minister’s
position
is
that
any
difference
between
the
cost
of
acquisition
of
shares
and
their
selling
exchange
price
in
the
transaction
would
accrue
to
the
appellant.
The
question
therefore
is
did
any
such
difference
so
accrue?
While
shares
are
purchased
from
other
brokers
at
market
price
and
from
certain
clients
at
a
figure
established
for
the
purposes
of
the
exchange,
the
shares
which
are
recorded
as
sold
to
the
appellant
in
the
account
in
his
name
in
the
clients
ledger
of
the
Company
(Exhibit
10),
are
recorded
as
sold
at
a
price
less
than
the
price
fixed
for
the
purposes
of
exchange.
Therefore
that
difference
would
accrue
to
the
appellant,
assuming
that
Exhibit
10
is
the
appellant’s
personal
account
and
that
the
transactions
were
truly
sales
and
purchases
which
question
has
been
the
subject
of
controversy
throughout.
In
previous
instances
I
have
concluded
that
the
entries
must
be
concluded
to
have
been
what
they
purported
to
be,
that
is
purchases
by
the
appellant
from
R.
P.
Leveque
Investments
Ltd.
and
it
follows
that
I
must
reach
the
same
conclusion
in
the
present
instance.
The
cost
of
the
Redwater
and
Roxboro
shares
gathered
by
the
appellant
to
be
exchanged
for
Trans-Empire
shares
from
R.
P.
Leveque
Investments
Ltd.
is
charged
to
the
account
in
his
name
in
the
clients
ledger
of
the
Company
(Exhibit
10)
and
those
shares
obtained
from
Edmonton
Leaseholds
Limited
are
charged
to
an
account
in
the
appellant’s
name
in
the
books
of
that
company.
All
such
shares,
as
well
as
those
obtained
from
other
brokers
or
clients,
were
delivered
to
the
appellant.
In
the
Muir
Sheets
(Exhibits
62
and
212)
the
cost
of
Redwater
shares
is,
in
some
instances
less
than
40
cents,
and
similarly
the
cost
of
Roxboro
shares
is,
in
some
instances
less
than
25
cents,
the
respective
prices
fixed
as
the
basis
of
exchange
for
Trans-Empire
shares.
The
difference
between
the
cost
and
price
of
those
shares
is
not
reflected
in
the
books
of
R.
P.
Leveque
Investments
Ltd.
and
accordingly
does
not
accrue
to
that
Company,
nor
is
it
taxed
in
its
hands.
The
entries
of
November
30,
1951
reflected
sales
of
Redwater
and
Roxboro
shares
by
R.
P.
Leveque
Investments
Ltd.
to
the
appellant.
Mr.
Mathieson,
who
made
the
entries,
described
them
as
purchases
by
the
appellant
and
stated
on
this
occasion
there
was
a
buy
and
sell
of
this
particular
stock.
The
profit
on
the
sale
of
Trans-Empire
shares
in
the
year
1951
was
originally
assessed
and
added
to
the
appellant’s
income
for
that
taxation
year
in
the
amount
of
$24,479.43.
This
computation
was
predicated
upon
a
value
of
$3.29
per
share
for
31,149
shares.
Subsequently
this
value
was
found
to
be
incorrect
by
reason
of
an
adjustment
to
be
made
in
the
value
of
Redwater
shares
exchanged
for
Trans-Empire
shares.
The
effect
of
the
errors
and
adjustments
is
to
change
the
addition
to
profit
in
the
appellant’s
income
for
his
1951
taxation
year
from
trading
in
Trans-Empire
shares
to
$862.50.
For
the
reasons
above
outlined,
I
would
confirm
the
Minister’s
assessment
of
the
appellant’s
income
in
the
1951
taxation
year
in
respect
of
trading
in
Trans-Empire
shares
as
has
been
subsequently
revised
by
the
Minister.
In
assessing
the
appellant
as
he
did,
to
arrive
at
a
calculation
of
the
value
of
the
inventory
at
each
taxation
year
end,
the
Minister
calculated
the
value
of
the
shares
in
the
inventory
at
the
lower
of
cost
or
market.
The
value
of
the
last
shares
acquired
in
each
taxation
year,
as
determined
by
such
calculation,
was
used
in
determining
the
value
of
the
closing
inventory.
The
accounting
principle
of
first
in,
first
out
(FIFO)
was
applied.
The
appellant
concedes
that
the
FIFO
method
of
inventory
valuation
might
well
have
been
proper
if
the
appellant
were
a
“trader”
in
Redwater,
Roxboro
and
Trans-Empire
shares,
but
submits
that
the
appellant
was
not
such
a
trader.
However,
I
think
that
the
evidence
is
overwhelmingly
conclusive
that
the
appellant
traded
in
shares.
Mr.
Bunnin,
who
was
the
assessor
of
the
Department
of
National
Revenue
primarily
concerned
with
assessments
under
review,
was
called
as
a
witness
by
the
Minitser
and
readily
agreed
in
cross-examination
that
the
FIFO
method
of
calculation
of
inventory
affected
the
calculation
of
any
profit
and
that
a
cash
in,
cash
out
method
of
inventory
valuation
would
have
produced
a
different
result.
While
I
have
difficulty
in
appreciating
what
is
implied
by
such
method,
there
is
no
evidence
that
a
cash
in,
cash
out
basis
of
inventory
evaluation
was
used
in
keeping
accounts.
Most
certainly
there
is
no
evidence
adduced
which
would
indicate
with
any
degree
of
precision
that
the
shares
which
were
traded
in
could
be
specifically
identified.
Accordingly
the
cost
thereof
would
have
to
be
fixed
on
one
of
the
assumptions.
There
was
no
evidence
adduced
or
argument
advanced
to
the
effect
that
the
FIFO
method
of
inventory
evaluation
adopted
by
the
Minister
was
not
in
fact
or
in
law
the
appropriate
or
proper
method.
The
furthest
extent
to
which
the
evidence
goes,
as
I
appreciate
it,
is
that
a
different
method
of
inventory
evaluation,
which
would
not
appear
to
have
been
used
by
the
appellant
in
keeping
his
accounts
or
preparing
his
tax
returns,
nor
by
the
Minister
in
making
his
assessments,
would
have
produced
a
different
result.
I
am,
therefore,
left
with
the
Minister’s
method.
No
evidence
was
given
that
would
lead
to
the
conclusion
that
a
method
other
than
that
adopted
by
the
Minister
would
be
closer
to
reality.
As
I
view
the
underlying
basis
of
the
dispute
it
amounts
simply
to
this.
Am
I
to
accept
the
bookkeeping
entries
with
respect
to
the
multitudinous
transactions
in
the
shares
of
Redwater,
Roxboro
and
Trans-Empire
and
properties
which
indicate
that
these
transactions
are
the
personal
transactions
of
the
appellant
as
contended
to
be
the
case
by
the
Minister,
or
am
I
to
accept
the
appellant’s
contention
that
the
transactions
in
shares
and
properties
are
the
transactions
of
R.
P.
Leveque
Investments
Ltd
?
I
quite
agree
with
the
contention
of
counsel
for
the
appellant
that
mere
bookkeeping
entries
are,
in
themselves,
not
sufficient
to
determine
tax
liability,
but
in
the
present
case
there
is
much
more
than
mere
bookkeeping
entries.
In
addition
to
the
recording
of
sales
and
purchases
in
the
account
in
the
appellant’s
name
in
the
clients
ledger
(Exhibit
10)
there
are
numerous
supplementary
documents
such
as
the
stock
position
books,
confirmations
of
transactions,
receipts,
delivery
slips
and
correspondence
from
the
appellant
which
was
placed
in
evidence.
The
financial
statements
of
the
proprietorship,
R.
P.
Leveque
Investments
Ltd.,
Edmonton
Leaseholds
Limited
and
Redwater
are
in
evidence
together
with
their
income
tax
returns.
Further
the
appellant
supplied
information
to
the
Minister
in
response
to
requests
therefor
included
in
which
was
the
Muir
Sheets
(Exhibits
62,
212
and
302)
which
formed
the
underlying
basis
of
the
Minister’s
assessments
and
particularly
the
appellant’s
letter
dated
November
2,
1955
(Exhibit
18).
While
I
agree
that
the
appellant
did
not
actively
supervise
the
detailed
keeping
of
accounts,
nor
give
specific
instructions
with
respect
thereto,
nevertheless
the
ultimate
responsibility
was
his
and
he
approved
the
financial
statements
prepared
by
the
auditors.
Therefore
it
cannot
be
said
that
he
was
not
in
a
position
to
control
or
direct
the
keeping
of
those
accounts.
As
I
have
mentioned
before,
the
appellant’s
energies
were
directed
to
making
money.
He
was
not
concerned
with
the
details
of
office
routine.
However
when
he
was
informed
by
the
Minister
in
1955-
that
he
was
being
assessed
a
substantial
amount
as
personal
income
tax
he
began
an
intensive
and
comprehensive
review
of
these
matters
and
his
interest
therein
became
much
more
intensive
subsequent
to
1959.
Counsel
for
the
appellant
quite
correctly
points
out
that
the
substance
of
a
transaction
must
be
determined
rather
than
its
mere
form,
but
the
substance
of
a
transaction
must
be
determined
from
the
legal
rights
which
flow
therefrom
ascertained
upon
ordinary
legal
principles
(see
Duke
of
Westminster
v.
C.I.R.,
[1936]
A.C.
1).
In
Zavadiuk
v.
M.N.R.,
[1967]
C.T.C.
447
at
450,
the
President
of
this
Court,
in
commenting
on
the
phenomenon
of
the
evidence
of
witnesses
with
an
obvious
interest,
had
this
to
say:
I
did
not
find
the
appellant’s
evidence
persuasive.
He
was
obviously
doing
his
best
to
put
forward
a
view
of
the
facts
that
would
support
his
appeal.
His
evidence
seemed
to
me
to
be
an
example
of
how
a
person
trying
to
recall
events
of
the
past
can
persuade
himself
that
he
actually
remembers
facts
favourable
to
himself
that
did
not
actually
occur.
This
is
not
an
uncommon
phenomenon
in
the
courts
and,
when
it
occurs,
the
person
involved
has
frequently
brought
himself
to
the
point
where
he
honestly
believes
what
he
says.
I
am
positive
that
the
appellant
has
been
living
with
this
matter
for
over
a
decade
and
I
am
convinced
that
he
has
per-
suaded
himself
that
the
transactions
in
question
have
changed
their
form.
In
his
letter
of
November
2,
1955
(Exhibit
18)
he
suggests
in
an
extract
quoted
above
that
it
might
have
been
better
to
have
opened
a
firm
trading
account
and
kept
the
firm
trading
out
of
his
personal
account
(Exhibit
10).
He
then
suggested
that
this
could
have
been
done
just
as
well
in
1949
if
he
had
loaned
to
the
investment
company
100,000
to
200,000
shares
at
a
time.
This
suggestion
is
to
the
effect
that
no
tax
is
exigible
against
him
because
the
transactions
might
have
taken
another
form.
At
the
present
trial
the
submission
is
that
the
transactions
were
not
those
of
the
appellant,
but
those
of
R.
P.
Leveque
Investments
Ltd.
The
appellant
has,
therefore,
persuaded
himself
that
the
transactions
have
changed
their
form.
In
my
view
the
evidence
discloses
that
the
appellant
took
or
could
have
taken
advantage
of
the
legal
rights
flowing
from
the
transactions
in
shares
and
properties
and
used
certain
of
the
monies
for
his
own
purposes.
It
cannot
now
be
said
that
the
transactions
were
other
than
what
they
appear
to
be
as
ascertained
upon
ordinary
legal
principles.
At
the
outset
of
the
trial
I
intimated
to
counsel
that,
as
I
then
understood
the
issues,
if
the
appellant
satisfied
me
that
the
transactions
were
in
fact
those
of
R.
P.
Leveque
Investments
Ltd.
and
any
resultant
profits
were
taxed
in
its
hands,
then
the
appellant
would
be
successful.
If
the
appellant
did
not
so
establish,
then
his
appeal
would
fail
and
I
added
that
the
onus
of
establishing
that
the
assumptions
of
the
Minister
in
assessing
the
appellant
as
he
did
were
ill-founded
and
erroneous,
falls
on
the
appellant.
In
my
view
the
appellant
has
failed
to
discharge
that
onus.
I
would
dismiss
the
appeal
were
it
not
for
the
fact
that
the
Minister
made
adjustments
in
the
assessments
as
originally
made
which
are
outlined
at
the
beginning
of
these
reasons.
Therefore,
the
appeal
is
allowed
and
referred
back
to
the
Minister
in
order
that
he
may
make
those
adjustments
to
the
appellant’s
assessments.
As
the
appellant
was
unsuccessful
on
the
issues
in
dispute
the
Minister
is
entitled
to
his
costs.