GIBSON,
J.:—In
this
appeal
the
quantum
of
the
1959
and
the
1961
taxable
income
of
the
appellant
is
in
dispute.
The
appellant
claims
that
it
is
entitled
to
deduct,
in
computing
its
1959
income,
a
loss
of
$157,189.97
arising
out
of
the
sale
for
$43,313.33
in
that
year
of
2,000
second
preference
shares
in
a
company
by
the
name
of
Parkton
Limited
which
had
cost
it
$200,000
approximately
three
years
prior
thereto,
plus
$503.30
legal
fees
incurred
in
completing
the
said
sale
of
the
shares.
And
the
appellant
further
claims
that
if
it
is
entitled
to
this
deduction
in
the
taxation
year
1959,
and
only
in
that
event,
that
there
will
result
a
balance
of
business
loss
in
its
profit
and
loss
account
which
it
is
entitled
to
use
as
a
deduction
in
computing
its
taxable
income
by
reason
of
the
provisions
of
Section
27(1)
(e)
of
the
Income
Tax
Act.*
The
respondent
claims
that
the
said
loss
of
$157,189.97
of
the
appellant
in
its
taxation
year
1959
is
a
loss
of
capital
within
the
meaning
of
Section
12(1)
(b)t
of
the
Act,
and
also
that
the
deduction
of
this
loss
in
any
event
is
prohibited
by
Section
28(11)$
of
the
Income
Tax
Act.
At
all
material
times
the
business
of
the
appellant,
Morgan
Securities
Limited,
was
that
of
bond-dealer,
underwriter,
and
share
broker,
and
for
its
own
account
was
most
active
in
trading
all
types
of
securities
and
commodity
futures,
and
on
numerous
occasions
did
the
financial
work
in
the
promotion
of
companies.
All
of
its
net
receipts
from
these
activities
were
declared
and
taxed
as
income
and
none
as
belonging
to
capital
account.
At
all
material
times
also
the
appellant,
Morgan
Securities
Limited,
was
a
wholly
owned
subsidiary
of
Houston
&
Company
Limited,
brokers
and
underwriters,
a
member
of
the
Toronto
Stock
Exchange,
or
of
the
individual
partners
of
the
predecessor
partnership
firm,
Houston
&
Company.
The
transaction
in
September
1955,
which
the
appellant
entered
into
as
a
result
of
which
it
expended
the
said
sum
of
$200,000
and
received
the
said
2,000
second
preference
shares
in
Parkton
Limited
was
as
follows:
The
appellant,
Morgan
Securities
Limited,
mainly
through
the
aegis
of
James
Houston,
Reginald
F.
Morgan
and
Ralph
H.
Tetlaw,
controlling
shareholders
of
Houston
&
Company
Limited,
and
partners
in
the
predecessor
partnership
firm
of
Houston
&
Company,
caused
a
private
Ontario
company
to
be
incorporated
under
the
name
of
Parkton
Limited,
and
then
caused
Parkton
Limited
in
September
1955,
to
buy
all
the
shares
of
three
car
transport
companies
from
one
Harold
Hoare,
namely
Gillson
Automobile
Transport
Limited,
Roadway
Carriers
Limited,
and
Automobile
Transport
Limited
for
$690,000
which
was
paid
for
as
follows:
firstly,
by
a
note
to
Harold
Hoare
for
$65,000
and
by
issuing
and
delivering
250,000
first
preference
shares
of
Parkton
Limited
to
him
and
by
paying
him
$375,000
in
cash.
(The
$375,000
in
cash
was
raised
by
Parkton
Limited
firstly
by
issuing
3,000
preference
3
per
cent
cumulative
nonvoting
shares
for
$100
each,
of
which
2,000
were
purchased
by
the
appellant,
Morgan
Securities
Limited,
and
500
by
one
C.
M.
Williams
and
one
C.
W.
E.
Scott,
neither
of
whom
was
in
any
way
financially
interested
in
the
appellant
company
or
Houston
&
Company
Limited
or
the
predecessor
partnership)
;
secondly,
by
Parkton
Limited
issuing
10,000
no
par
value
common
shares
for
one
dollar
each
which
was
subscribed
for
and
paid
by
James
Houston
who
acquired
4,000
shares,
by
Ralph
H.
Tetlaw
who
acquired
1,000
shares,
by
G.
M.
Park
who
acquired
2,000
shares,
by
C.
M.
Williams
who
acquired
1,000
shares,
and
by
C.
W.
E.
Scott
who
acquired
1,000
shares;
and
thirdly,
by
utilizing
for
the
balance
the
surplus
in
Gillson
Automobile
Transport
Limited
after
moving
the
necessary
sum
of
money
to
Parkton
Limited
by
way
of
inter-company
dividend.
Thus
subject
to
the
note
of
$65,000
and
the
$300,000
first
preference
shares
of
Parkton
Limited
held
by
Harold
Hoare,
at
the
date
of
this
acquisition
the
major
shareholders
of
Houston
&
Company
Limited,
or
its
predecessor
partnership,
controlled
Parkton
Limited
through
the
appellant,
that
is
to
say
James
Houston,
Reginald
H.
Tetlaw
and
Reginald
F.
Morgan.
The
cause
for
the
disposition
by
the
appellant
in
September
1958,
which
was
during
its
1959
taxation
year,
of
the
said
2,000
second
preference
shares
for
$48,313.33
resulting
in
said
loss
of
$157,189.97
(which
sum
includes
the
said
sum
of
$503.30
of
legal
fees)
was
as
follows:
It
was
intended
after
this
acquisition
to
build
up
a
successful
earnings
history
for
Parkton
Limited
through
the
operation
of
these
three
car
transport
companies
acquired
by
it
and
through
other
company
acquisitions.
Two
more
companies
were
in
fact
acquired
for
this
purpose.
It
was
then
proposed
that
Parkton
Limited
would
be
caused
to
go
public,
at
which
time
a
profit
to
the
promoters
and
to
the
appellant
was
anticipated.
This
did
not
happen,
however.
Instead,
immediately
after
this
transaction
of
acquisition
by
Parkton
Limited
there
was
a
General
Motors
strike
which
commenced
around
the
end
of
September
1955,
and
lasted
for
five
months,
which
seriously
affected
the
earnings
of
the
three
car
companies
so
acquired
as
they
in
the
main
hauled
cars
from
the
General
Motors
plant
in
Canada.
There
resulted
also
because
of
this
strike,
extensive
use
of
equipment
which
caused
maintenance
charges
to
become
high
and
replacements
necessary;
and
generally
during
the
three-year
period
in
which
these
companies
were
operated
for
various
other
reasons
there
resulted
a
poor
earning
history
for
Parkton
Limited.
Finally,
in
September
1955,
the
appellant
and
the
three
promoters,
Messrs.
Houston,
Tetlaw
and
Morgan,
caused
the
Parkton
Limited
shares
which
the
appellant
held
and
the
common
shares
which
were
held
as
indicated
to
be
sold
to
said
Harold
Hoare
and
he
became
the
sole
owner
of
Parkton
Limited
then
and
also
in
turn
through
Parkton
Limited
owner
of
the
three
car
companies
and
the
two
companies
which
Parkton
Limited
had
acquired
during
the
three-
year
period.
For
the
$200,000
which
the
appellant
had
paid
for
the
second
preference
shares
in
Parkton
Limited
it
received
$43,313.33
or
$157,189.97
(including
the
said
sum
of
$503.30
of
legal
fees)
less
than
it
had
paid
for
them.
The
questions
for
decision
in
this
appeal,
namely,
firstly,
was
this
loss
of
$157,189.97
a
capital
loss
or
an
income
loss,
and
secondly,
was
the
deduction
of
this
loss
in
any
event
prohibited
by
Section
28(11)
of
the
Income
Tax
Act,
may
be
answered
briefly.
As
to
the
first
question,
I
am
of
opinion
that
the
appellant
in
acquiring
these
2,000
second
preference
shares
of
Parkton
Limited
for
$200,000
in
September
1955
was
engaging
in
its
usual
business.
It
intended
to
make
a
profit
from
this
transaction
through
the
way
that
Parkton
Limited
was
organized.
The
appellant
was
in
the
controlling
position
to
do
so
in
a
variety
of
ways
if
Parkton
Limited
was
financially
successful.
And
this
type
of
transaction
was
one
of
its
usual
sources
of
income.
The
appellant
did
not
make
this
expenditure
to
develop
a
new
source
of
income
different
and
distinct
from
its
usual
business.
It
follows
that
the
expenditure
in
1955
was
therefore
on
income
account
and
not
on
capital
account;
and
therefore
the
loss
in
September
1958,
which
was
during
the
taxation
year
of
1959
of
the
appellant,
was
an
income
loss
and
not
a
capital
loss.
As
to
the
second
question,
I
am
of
opinion
that
Section
28(1)*
of
the
Income
Tax
Act
cannot
be
invoked
by
a
taxpayer
so
as
to
enable
him
to
carry
forward
a
loss
(by
reason
of
the
enabling
provisions
of
Section
27(1)
(e)
of
the
Act),
which
is
greater
than
the
business
loss
of
such
taxpayer.
In
other
words
a
taxpayer
from
a
tax
point
of
view
from
inter-company
dividends
under
Section
28(1)
when
he
suffers
a
loss
only
gets
a
benefit
therefrom
when
he
has
a
profit
in
a
taxation
year.
The
meaning
of
the
words
“income”
and
‘‘taxable
income’’
in
the
concluding
words
of
that
subsection
make
this
clear.
(See
also
Sections
3
and
4
and
139(1)
(x)
of
the
Act.’r)
The
appellant
therefore
in
the
taxation
years
1957
and
1958
when
it
received
a
dividend
from
Parkton
Limited,
but
still
suffered
a
business
loss,
was
not
entitled
to
the
benefit
of
Section
28(1)
and
therefore
Section
28(11)
is
no
bar
to
the
appellant
to
a
deduction
of
this
loss
of
$157,189.97
arising
out
of
this
transaction
in
its
taxation
year
1959
with
reference
to
these
Parkton
Limited
second
preference
shares.
The
appeal
is
therefore
allowed
with
costs
and
the
matter
is
referred
back
for
re-assessment
for
the
1959
and
1961
taxation
years
of
the
appellant,
not
inconsistent
with
these
reasons.
4,
Subject
to
the
other
provisions
of
this
Part,
income
for
a
taxation
year
from
a
business
or
property
is
the
profit
therefrom
for
the
year.
139.
(1)
.
.
.
(x)
“loss”
means
a
loss
computed
by
applying
the
provisions
of
this
Act
respecting
computation
of
income
from
a
business
mutatis
mutandis
(but
not
including
in
the
computation
a
dividend
or
part
of
a
dividend
the
amount
whereof
would
be
deductible
under
section
28
in
computing
taxable
income)
minus
any
amount
by
which
a
loss
operated
to
reduce
the
taxpayer’s
income
from
other
sources
for
purpose
of
income
tax
for
the
year
in
which
it
was
sustained;