CATTANACH,
J.:—This
is
an
appeal
from
a
decision
of
the
Tax
Appeal
Board
(1966),
41
Tax
A.B.C.
409
dated
July
25,
1966,
whereby
appeals
by
the
taxpayer
against
its
assessments
to
income
tax
for
its
taxation
years
ending
September
30,
1961
to
1964
inclusive
were
dismissed.
At
the
outset
of
the
trial
counsel
for
the
appellant
announced
that
the
appeal
with
respect
to
the
appellant’s
1961
and
1962
taxation
years
was
abandoned.
In
those
taxation
years
the
appellant
had
claimed
as
deductions
from
its
income
the
amounts
of
$8,159.57
and
$16,365
respectively,
being
losses
sustained
by
it
on
the
sales
of
Dominion
of
Canada
bonds
in
the
years
in
question
and
which
deductions
were
disallowed
by
the
Minister.
Accordingly,
only
the
assessments
to
income
tax
for
the
appellant’s
1963
and
1964
taxation
years
remain
in
issue.
In
the
taxation
year
1963
the
appellant
included
in
its
income
a
profit
of
$700.22
realized
upon
the
sale
of
100
shares
of
Dallas
Transit
Limited
which
had
been
purchased
by
it
in
1956.
However,
in
computing
its
income
for
its
1964
taxation
year
the
appellant
claimed
a
loss
of
$13,304.04
arising
from
the
sale
of
securities.
The
foregoing
loss
was
computed
in
the
following
manner
:
|
Date
of
|
Date
of
|
|
|
Purchase
|
Sale
Sale
|
Profit
|
Loss
|
100
shares—Bristol-
|
|
Myers
Company
|
Sept.
28/61
|
Mar.
16/64
|
$5,181.38
|
|
300
shares—Manu
|
|
facturers
&
|
|
Traders
Trust
|
|
Co.
of
Buffalo
|
Nov.
21/61
|
Mar.
16/64
|
|
$
3,102.51
|
208
shares—Atlas
|
|
Credit
Corpora
|
|
tion
|
Dec.
1/61
|
Mar.
19/64
|
|
3,188.06
|
200
shares—Marrud,
|
|
Inc.
|
Dec.
1/61
|
Mar.
19/64
|
|
1,783.92
|
300
shares—Harvest
|
|
Brand,
Inc.
|
Dec.
1/61
|
Mar.
19/64
|
|
3,050.25
|
204
shares—Monroe
|
|
Auto
Equipment
|
Dec.
6/61
|
Mar.
19/64
|
|
3,470.19
|
100
shares—Inter-
|
|
State
Vending
|
|
Co.
|
Dec.
8/61
|
Mar.
19/64
|
|
3,963.75
|
100
shares—Ameri
|
|
can
Cryogenics
|
|
Inc.
|
Mar.
23/62
|
Mar.
19/64
|
|
475.29
|
4%
Minneapolis-St.
|
|
Paul
Soo
Line
|
|
Railway
Bonds
|
Apr.
10/62
|
Mar.
19/64
|
426,60
|
|
100
shares—Celanese
|
|
Corp.
of
America
Nov.
29/63
|
July
21/64
|
2,013.29
|
|
2,000
shares—Forty-
|
|
Four
Mines
Ltd.
|
Acquisitions
|
|
|
July
1962
|
Feb.
24/64
|
1,606.00
|
2,000
shares—San
|
|
Antonio
Gold
|
|
Mines
|
June
13/63
|
Feb.
24/64
|
285.34
|
|
$7,621.27
|
$20,925.31
|
|
7,621.27
|
|
$13,304.04
|
The
Minister
refused
to
include
the
profit
of
$700.22
realized
by
the
appellant
from
the
sale
of
shares
in
Dallas
Transit
Limited
in
computing
the
appellant’s
income
for
its
1963
taxation
year
on
the
ground
that
the
appellant
was
not
in
the
business
of
trading
in
securities
within
the
meaning
of
the
word
“‘business’’
as
defined
in
Section
139(1)
(e)
of
the
Income
Tax
Act
and
accordingly
the
profit
so
realized
was
not
profit
from
a
business
within
the
meaning
of
Sections
3
and
4
of
the
Act.
The
Minister
also
disallowed
the
amount
of
$13,304.04
claimed
by
the
appellant
as
a
deduction
from
income
for
its
1964
taxation
year
on
the
ground
that
the
losses
incurred
by
it
were
capital
losses
within
the
meaning
of
Section
12(1)
(b)
of
the
Act.
The
pertinent
sections
of
the
Income
Tax
Act
read
as
follows
:
3.
The
income
of
a
taxpayer
for
a
taxation
year
for
the
purposes
of
this
Part
is
his
income
for
the
year
from
all
sources
inside
or
outside
Canada
and,
without
restricting
the
generality
of
the
foregoing,
includes
income
for
the
year
from
all
(a)
businesses,
(b)
property,
and
(c)
offices
and
employment.
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)
In
this
Act,
(e)
“business”
includes
a
profession,
calling,
trade,
manufacture
or
undertaking
of
any
kind
whatsoever
and
includes
an
adventure
or
concern
in
the
nature
of
trade
but
does
not
include
an
office
or
employment;
12.
(1)
In
computing
income,
no
deduction
shall
be
made
in
respect
of
(b)
an
outlay,
loss
or
replacement
of
capital,
a
payment
on
account
of
capital
or
an
allowance
in
respect
of
depreciation,
obsolescence
or
depletion
except
as
expressly
permitted
by
this
Part,
Prior
to
trial
the
Minister
served
notice
on
the
appellant
to
admit
facts
as
therein
specified
with
which
the
appellant
readily
agreed
subject
to
four
minor
corrections.
The
Statement
of
Facts
so
admitted
is
comprised
of
48
paragraphs
some
of
which
are
divided
into
subparagraphs.
The
Minister
also
served
notice
on
the
appellant
to
admit
documents
referred
to
in
the
Notice
to
Admit
Facts.
The
appellant
also
agreed
to
this
notification.
The
documents
so
admitted
are
the
financial
statements
of
the
appellant
for
its
1956
to
1964
fiscal
years
and
a
schedule
which
accurately
and
completely
sets
forth
the
appellant’s
transactions
in
stocks
and
bonds
for
the
period
October
1,
1954
to
September
30,
1965.
The
relevant
facts
may
be
summarized
as
follows.
The
appellant
is
a
joint
stock
company
incorporated
pursuant
to
the
laws
of
the
Province
of
Manitoba
by
Letters
Patent
dated
August
19,
1954
with
an
authorized
capital
stock
of
900
non-
cumulative
redeemable
preference
shares
of
the
par
value
of
$100
each
and
100
common
shares
without
nominal
or
par
value
for
the
following
purposes
and
objects:
(a)
To
carry
on
the
business
of
an
investment
company
and
to
invest
in
shares,
stocks,
bonds,
debentures,
mortgages,
agreements
for
sale,
and
other
evidences
of
indebtedness
and
obligations
with
or
without
guarantee
by
any
person,
firm,
corporation
or
public
authority;
(b)
To
promote,
organize,
manage
or
develop
investment,
enterprise
or
undertakings;
(c)
To
purchase
or
otherwise
acquire
and
hold,
or
otherwise
deal
in
real
and
personal
property
and
rights
in
particular
lands,
buildings,
business
or
individual
concerns
and
undertakings,
mortgages,
contracts,
franchises,
patents,
licenses,
securities,
book
debts
and
any
interest
in
real
or
personal
property,
any
claims
against
such
property
or
against
any
personal
company
and
any
privileges
and
choses
in
action
of
all
kinds;
(d)
To
act
as
insurance
brokers
or
agents.
In
1954
Mrs.
Sidonia
Maibach,
the
wife
of
Jack
Maibach,
purchased
all
the
authorized
preference
shares
of
the
appellant.
Three
common
shares,
of
which
Mrs.
Maibach
was
the
beneficial
owner,
were
issued
to
members
of
the
legal
firm
of
Sokolov
and
Wolinsky
who
became
the
directors
and
officers
of
the
appellant.
In
addition
to
the
$90,000
paid
for
the
preference
shares,
Mrs.
Maibach
also
advanced
monies
to
the
appellant
by
way
of
loan.
In
1954
the
sum
loaned
by
Mrs.
Maibach
to
the
appellant
was
$6,777.75,
in
1955,
$5,713.82
and
in
each
of
the
years
1956
to
1964,
$6,669.33.
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Maibach
are
citizens
of
the
United
States
and
divide
their
period
of
residence
in
each
year
between
that
country
and
Canada.
Mrs.
Maibach
had
inherited
money
from
her
father
and
because
of
the
state
of
her
husband’s
health
(Mr.
Maibach
is
afflicted
with
a
heart
ailment)
they
were
both
anxious
that
Mrs.
Maibach’s
resources
should
be
increased
and
made
productive
of
income.
Mr.
Maibach,
therefore
instructed
the
legal
firm
of
Sokolov
and
Wolinsky
to
incorporate
the
appellant
company.
Mr.
Hyman
Sokolov
of
that
firm,
in
addition
to
being
the
Maibachs’
legal
adviser,
was
a
personal
friend
and
proffered
financial
advice.
At
the
outset
the
appellant
was
primarily
interested
in
acquiring
second
mortgages
and
agreements
for
sale,
either
at
a
discount
or
bonus,
which
were
either
sold
or
held
to
maturity.
The
number
of
mortgages
and
agreements
for
sale
acquired
by
the
appellant
is
tabulated
in
paragraph
28
of
the
Notice
to
Admit
Facts
as
follows:
|
Number
|
Acquired
|
Matured
or
Sold
|
|
Owned
|
in
Year
|
in
Year
|
1955
|
|
7
|
7
|
0
|
1956
|
|
13
|
6
|
0
|
1957
|
|
21
|
11
|
3
|
1958
|
|
22
|
4
|
3
|
1959
|
|
22
|
9
|
9
|
1960
|
1
|
21
|
4
|
5
|
1961
|
|
16
|
2
|
7
|
1962
|
|
14
|
4
|
6
|
1963
|
|
12
|
3
|
5
|
1964
|
_
_______________________
11
|
2
|
3
|
As
satisfactory
mortgages
were
not
readily
available,
the
appellant,
in
October
1954,
bought
Government
of
Canada
bonds
at
a
premium
to
the
face
value
of
$80,000
and
bearing
314
per
cent
interest.
The
bonds
were
left.
at
the
appellant’s
banks
as
collateral
security
against
which
the
appellant
could
borrow
at
favourable
rates
of
interest
to
purchase
mortgages
as
they
became
available.
By
this
method
there
would
be
no
idle
funds
at
any
time.
The
appellant
followed
this
course
until
1961.
The
amounts
of
the
appellant’s
bank
loans
were
as
follows:
1956
|
$67,500.00
|
1957
|
$50,000.00
|
1958
|
$58,000.00
|
1959
|
$59,500.00
|
1960
|
$49,000.00
|
1961
|
$32,500.00
|
1962
|
nil
|
On
November
24,
1961
the
appellant
sold
the
Government
of
Canada
bonds
at
a
loss
of
$16,365
because
of
the
low
interest
yield
and
an
anticipated
further
decline
in
their
market
value.
With
the
release
of
funds
consequent
upon
the
sale
of
the
Government
bonds
the
appellant
substantially
increased
its
purchases
of
stocks
in
late
1961
and
1962.
In
paragraph
29
of
the
Notice
to
Admit
Facts
the
allocation
of
the
appellant’s
capital
during
its
fiscal
years
1955
to
1964
is
tabulated
as
follows:
|
Mortgages
|
|
Total
|
Year
|
Receivable
|
Cash
|
Stocks
|
Bonds
|
Capital
|
1955
|
$
29,493.07
$11,021.56
$36,240.42
$86,025.00
$162,780.05
|
1956
|
|
47,878.10
13,248.84
29,607.93
86,025.00
176,759.87
|
1957
|
|
67,844.19
|
11,757.97
|
589.28
|
86,025.00
|
166,216.44
|
1958
..........
|
103,105.99
|
1,730.21
|
589.28
|
86,025.00
|
191,450.48
|
1959
..........
|
113,977.19
|
1,625.77
|
589.28
|
86,025.00
|
202,217.24
|
1960
..........
|
109,743.66
|
1,887.28
|
589.28
|
86,025.00
|
198,245.22
|
1961
....
91,161.78
1,463.88
9,096.77
86,025.00
187,747.43
1962
....
84,447.67
5,480.21
50,117.76
2,842.15
142,887.79
1963
....
66,830.79
31,746.88
50,143.48
2,842.15
151,563.30
1964
....
58,383.97
69,643.22
15,717.44
Nil
143,744.63
During
its
fiscal
years
1955
to
1964
inclusive,
the
appellant
received
income
from
the
following
sources:
Mortgages:
Year
|
Interest
|
Bank
|
|
|
and
Bonus
|
Interest
|
Dividends
|
Bonds
|
1955
.....
$
2,724.38
|
—
|
$
127.50
|
$
812.60
|
1956
|
4,355.39
|
—
|
1,600.65
|
4,777.40
|
1957
|
4,808.68
|
—
|
56.30
|
2,795.00
|
1958
.....
....
6,109.82
|
—
|
25.82
|
2,795.00
|
1959
...
|
9,711.23
|
—
|
29.76
|
2,795.00
|
1960
|
10,147.42
|
—
|
29.76
|
2,795.00
|
1961
|
9,784.80
|
—
|
37.17
|
2,795.00
|
1962
.....
|
8,180.86
|
—
|
447.09
|
459.45
|
1963
|
8,796.63
|
—
|
692.41
|
Nil
|
1964
....
|
7,078.41
|
$479.64
|
734.80
|
Nil
|
|
$71,697.62
|
$479.64
|
$3,781.26
|
$20,024.45
|
It
is
common
ground
between
the
parties
that
Jack
Maibach
was
the
guiding
force
in
all
transactions
of
the
appellant.
It
was
he
who
gave
instructions
for
the
incorporation
of
the
appellant
and
it
was
he
who
decided
what
mortgages
would
be
acquired
by
the
appellant
and
the
decisions
to
purchase
or
sell
any
shares
and
bonds
by
the
appellant
were
made
by
him
in
every
instance.
When
Mr.
Maibach
made
the
decision
to
acquire
a
mortgage
or
shares
Sokolov
and
Wolinsky
as
solicitors
for,
and
officers
of
the
appellant
would
implement
his
instructions.
A
schedule
of
the
appellant’s
transactions
in
shares
and
bonds
from
October
1,
1954
to
September
30,
1965
is
appended
to
the
appellant’s
Notice
of
Appeal
and
to
the
Notice
to
Admit
Facts.
In
1955
the
appellant
used
funds
borrowed
from
its
bankers
on
the
security
of
the
Government
of
Canada
bonds
which
had
been
purchased
by
it
in
1954,
to
purchase
shares
in
Canadian
Breweries
Ltd.,
Pantapae
Oil
Co.,
Ltd.,
United
States
Steel
Corporation
and
Anglo
Canadian
Oils
Ltd.
at
a
total
cost
of
approximately
$38,000
in
addition
to
mortgages
at
a
total
cost
of
approximately
$29,000.
Later
in
the
same
year
the
appellant
bought
shares
in
the
Royal
Bank
of
Canada
at
a
cost
of
$16,157.50
which
were
sold
in
1956
at
a
profit.
In
1958,
the
appellant
sold
all
shares
acquired
prior
thereto
except
100
shares
in
Dallas
Transit
Company,
Limited
acquired
in
1956,
the
profit
of
$700.22
from
the
sale
of
which
in
1963
gives
rise
to
the
first
issue
in
the
present
appeal.
In
1958
the
appellant
realized
a
profit
in
the
purchase
and
sale
of
real
estate
which
it
included
in
its
income.
The
appellant
did
not
have
any
transactions
in
securities
in
1959
or
1960.
In
1961
the
appellant
purchased
100
shares
in
Bristol
Myers
Company
at
a
cost
of
$8,507.49.
In
1962,
as
previously
indicated.
the
appellant
sold
its
Government
of
Canada
bonds
and
purchased
shares
in
Manufacturers
&
Traders
Trust
Co.
of
Buffalo,
Atlas
Credit
Corporation,
Marrud,
Inc.,
Harvest
Brand,
Inc.,
Monroe
Auto
Equipment,
Inter-State
Vending
Co.,
American
Cryogenics,
Inc.
and
Forty-
four
Mines
Ltd.
at
an
aggregate
cost
of
$41,020.99
as
well
as
$5,000
principal
amount,
bonds
in
Minneapolis
St.
Paul
Soo
Line
Railway
bearing
interest
at
4
per
cent
at
a
cost
of
$2,842.15.
In
1963
the
appellant
sold
its
shares
in
Dallas
Transit
Company
Ltd.
and
in
that
year
bought
2,000
shares
in
San
Antonio
Gold
Mines
Limited
at
a
cost
of
$615.
In
1964
the
appellant
sold
all
the
stocks
and
bonds
in
its
possession
(except
210
shares
in
American
Telephone
and
Telegraph
acquired
during
the
year
at
a
cost
of
$15,717.44)
resulting
in
a
net
loss
for
the
year
of
$13,304.04
computed
as
previously
indicated
above.
This
loss
gives
rise
to
the
second
issue
in
the
present
appeal.
Further,
purchases
of
stocks
were
made:
by
the
appellant
in
1965.
Paragraph
48
of
the
Notice
to
Admit
Facts
contains
a
recapitulation
of
the
dividend
yield
per
share
of
twenty-one
companies
in
which
the
appellant
owned
shares
in
the
years
1954
to
1965.
A
cursory
examination
of
the
information
therein
contained
would
appear
to
indicate
an.
average
dividend
yield
between
314
and
4
per
cent.
From
its
inception
the
appellant,
in
making
its
tax
returns,
invariably
declared
in
its
income
amounts
received
from
bond
and
mortgage
interest,
bonuses
or
discounts
realized
on
the
purchase
of
mortgages
and
agreements
for
sale,
dividends,
and
gains
or
losses
on
the
purchase
and
sale
of
shares
as
well
as
the
one
real
estate
transaction
in
1958.
In
previous
taxation
years
the
Minister
included
any
profit
made
on
the
sale
of
securities
in
the
appellant’s
income
and
any
losses
incurred
by
the
appellant
in
such
transactions
were
allowed
by
the
Minister
as
deductions
from
income.
All
of
the
securities
purchased
and
sold
by
the
appellant
are
listed
and
traded
on
one
or
more
recognized
stock
exchanges.
The
appellant
purchased
the
shares
outright
and
never
on
margin,
through
Winnipeg
investment
dealers
for
the
most
part,
but
on
occasion
from
a
dealer
in
New
York
who
was
either
known
to
or
related
to
Mr.
Maibach.
Most
of
the
shares
purchased
by
the
appellant
appear
to
be
of
the
‘‘blue
chip’’
variety
in
that
they
were
dividend
producing,
although
in
some
instances
Mr.
Maibach
testified
he
was
willing
to
take
a
‘‘flyer’’
in
a
stock
which
might
be
termed
as
‘‘speculative’’.
Mr.
Maibach’s
decisions
to
cause
the
appellant
to
purchase
the
shares
it
did
were
based
on
tips
from
persons
whose
information
he
considered
reliable,
such
as
his
physician,
a
relative
who
was
a
dentist
and
a
customer’s
man
for
a
New
York
brokerage
firm.
He
further
testified
that
his
intention
in
having
the
appellant
purchase
shares
was
that
it
might
reap
an
appreciation
in
the
market
price,
rather
than
to
look
for
a
dividend
return
and
he
conceded
(as
subsequent
events
proved
that
he
must)
that
in
some
instances
his
tipsters
were
wrong
in
their
recommendations.
The
appellant
was
not
assessed
as
a
“personal
corporation”
as
defined
in
Section
68(1)
of
the
Income
Tax
Act*
from
which
it
might
be
assumed
that
the
appellant
therefore
carried
on
‘an
active
financial,
commercial
or
industrial
business’’
within
Section
68(1)
(c).
However,
a
consideration
of
the
facts
discloses
that
such
an
assumption
is
not
warranted.
Paragraph
30
of
the
Notice
to
Admit
Facts
shows
that
in
the
taxation
years
1955
to
1964,
with
the
exception
of
1956,
the
appellant
derived
far
in
excess
of
one-quarter
of
its
income
from
ownership
of
or
trading
or
dealing
in
mortgages.
It
was
common
ground
between
the
parties
that
the
appellant’s
income
from
its
transactions
in
second
mortgages
was
income
from
a
business
and
on
the
facts
disclosed
in
evidence
and
on
the
basis
of
the
authorities
applicable
to
those
facts,
I
have
no
doubt
whatsoever
that
this
is
so.
(See
M.N.R.
v.
Spencer,
[1961]
C.T.C.
109,
Scott
v.
M.N.R.,
affirmed
by
the
Supreme
Court
of
Canada,
[1963]
8.C.R.
223;
[1963]
C.T.C.
176,
and
M.N.R.
v.
Maclnnnes,
[1963]
S.C.R.
299;
[1963]
C.T.C.
311.)
Therefore,
while
conceding
that
the
appellant
was
engaged
in
a
mortgage
business,
the
Minister
does
not
concede
that
the
appellant’s
transactions
in
shares
constituted
the
business
of
dealing
therein
or
adventures
or
concerns
in
the
nature
of
trade.
On
the
contrary,
as
I
understood
the
submissions
by
counsel
for
the
Minister
they
were
that
the
business
of
the
appellant
was
that
of
dealing
in
mortgages,
rather
than
that
of
trading
in
shares
and
bonds
and
that
the
purchase
of
shares
and
bonds
by
the
appellant
was
from
its
funds
surplus
to
or
not
devoted
to
its
mortgage
business
as
investments
rather
than
a
speculation
and
accordingly
any
resultant
gains
or
losses
would
be
gains
or
losses
of
capital.
In
support
of
the
foregoing
contentions,
it
was
submitted
by
counsel
for
the
Minister
that
(1)
the
nature
and
quantity
of
the
shares
and
bonds
sold
by
the
appellant
in
the
two
taxation
years
under
appeal,
were
not
such
as
to
indicate
the
carrying
on
of
a
business
or
adventures
in
the
nature
of
trade,
and
(2)
the
transactions
engaged
in
by
the
appellant
were
not
of
the
same
kind
or
carried
on
in
the
same
manner
as
those
characteristic
of
ordinary
trading.
On
the
other
hand,
the
appellant
contends
that
the
profit
realized
by
it
from
the
sale
of
shares
in
1963
and
the
net
loss
it
sustained
as
the
result
of
its
transactions
in
1964
were
not
merely
the
realizations
of
the
enhanced
value
of
the
shares
or
changes
in
investments,
but
were
gains
made
or
losses
suffered
in
the
operation
of
a
business
in
carrying
out
a
scheme
of
profit
making,
it
being
the
appellant’s
intention
to
make
profits
from
a
rise
in
the
market
price
of
the
shares
held
by
it.
I
do
not
attach
any
particular
significance
to
the
fact
that
the
Minister,
in
the
appellant’s
previous
taxation
years,
included
profits
made
on
the
sale
of
shares
in
the
appellant’s
income
and
that
he
allowed
losses
incurred
in
those
years
as
deductions
from
income.
It
is
well
settled
that
while
a
decision
reached
by
the
Minister
in
one
taxation
year
may
be
a
cogent
factor
in
the
determination
of
a
similar
point
in
a
following
year,
the
fact
that
a
concession
may
have
been
made
to
a
taxpayer
in
one
year,
does
not,
in
the
absence
of
any
statutory
provisions
to
the
contrary,
preclude
the
Minister
from
taking
a
different
view
of
the
facts
in
a
later
year
when
he
has
more
complete
data
on
the
subject
matter.
There
is
nothing
inconsistent
with
the
Minister
altering
his
decision
according
to
the
facts
as
he
finds:them
from
time
to
time.
An
assessment
is
conclusive
as
between
the
parties
only
in
relation
to
the
assessment
for
the
year
which
it
was
made.
(See
M.
N.
R
v.
British
and
American
Motors
Toronto,
Limited,
[1953]
Ex.
C.R.
153;
[1953]
C.T.C.
177.)
The
only
significance
that
can
be
attached
to
the
appellant
invariably
declaring
in
its
tax
returns
any
gains
or
losses
on
its
purchase
and
sale
of
shares
is
that
it
is
illustrative
of
its
consistent
treatment
of
such
gains
or
losses
as
gains
or
losses
from
a
business.
The
narrow
issue
for
determination
i
iS.
whether
the
;
gains
made
or
losses
incurred
by
the
appellant
in.
the
cireumstances
above
outlined
were
made
or
incurred
by
it
in
the
conduct
of
a
business
as
is
contended
by
the
appellant
or
whether
they
were
enhancements
in
value
or
losses
sustained
upon
the
realization
of
or
changes
in
investments
as
contended
by
the
Minister.
In
Sutton
Lumber
&
Trading
Company
Limited
v.
M.N.
R.,
[1953]
2
S.C.R.
77
at
83;
[1953]
C.T.C.
at
244,
Locke,
J.
said:
The
question
to
be
decided
is
not
as
to
what
business
or
trade
the
company
might
have
carried.
on
under
its
memorandum,
but
rather
what
in
truth
the
business
it
did
engage
in.
To
determine
this,
it
is
necessary
to
examine
the
facts
with
care.
Mr.
Maibach,
whose
intentions
both
parties
acknowledge
to
have
been
the
intentions
of
the
appellant,
testified
that
the
shares
were
bought
and
sold
speculatively
in
order
to
make
a
gain
from
an
increase
in
their
market
price.
While
I
am
conscious
of
the
often
repeated
admonition
that
a
taxpayer’s
ex
post
facto
declaration
of
his
intention
should
be
scrutinized
with
care,
nevertheless,
I
have
no
reason
to
disbelieve
Mr.
Maibach’s
testimony.
On
the
contrary,
I
think
that
his
expression
of
his
intention,
which
was
also
that
of
the
appellant,
is
confirmed
by
the
appellant’s
course
of
conduct
and
what
it
actually
did.
From
its
inception
in
1954
the
appellant
in
its
tax
returns
reported
dividends
received
as
income
and
gains
or
losses
on
the
purchase
and
sale
of
shares
as
income
or
deductions
from
income
respectively
which
indicates
to
me
a
consistent
course
of
conduct
and
a
consistent
attitude
by
the
appellant
to
its
transactions.
Certainly
Mr.
Maibach
was
not
looking
to
a
safe
and
modest
return
by
way
of
dividends.
The
Government
of
Canada
bonds
were
sold
because
of
their
low
interest
yield
and
the
proceeds
of
that
sale
were
placed,
as
Mr.
Maibach
put
it,
where
the
“action”
was.
While
he
was
not
adverse
to
accepting
dividends
when
paid,
it
is
obvious
that
he
was
looking
for
a
much
greater
and
quicker
return
based
on
the
vagaries
of
the
stock
market.
His
selection
of
shares
purchased
was
not
based
on
any
thorough
analysis
of
the
companies
whose
shares
were
purchased
but
reliance
was
placed
on
tips
received
from
persons
whom
he
considered
knowledgeable
but
which
subsequent
events
proved
not
to
be
invariably
so.
While
shares
may
be
the
subject
matter
of
investment,
they
are
equally
susceptible
of
being
the
subject
matter
of
trade.
Whether
they
fall
into
one
category
or
the
other,
is
dependent
upon
the
particular
facts
of
the
case.
The
evidence
above
recited
leads
me
to
the
conclusion
that
the
purchase
and
sale
of
shares
here
involved
was
done
in
the
course
of
business.
What
must
be
looked
at
is
what
was
done
by
the
appellant
with
a
view
to
asking
the
question
in
Lord
President
Clyde’s
words
in
C.I.R.
v.
Invingston,
11
T.C.
538,
at
p.
542
:
.
whether
the
operations
involved
(in
the
transactions
of
the
company)
are
of
the
same
kind,
and
carried
on
in
the
same
way,
as
those
which
are
characteristic
of
ordinary
trading
in
the
line
of
business
in
which
the
venture
was
made.
While
the
appellant
was
not
a
trader
in
securities
in
the
sense
of
that
term
that
it
was
an
underwriter
and
held
a
seat
on
a
stock
exchange,
but
rather
made
its
purchases
and
sales
through
a
stock
exchange
in
the
usual
manner,
nevertheless,
the
acts
of
the
appellant
were
just
the
ordinary
transactions
of
a
person
who
deals
in
shares.
In
my
opinion
the
transactions
in
question
were
acts
done
in
carrying
on
a
business
from
which
it
follows
that
tax
is
payable
on
the
profit
realized
on
the
sale
of
shares
in
its
1963
taxation
year
and
that
the
appellant
is
entitled
to
deduct
the
loss
that
it
incurred
in
its
1964
taxation
year.
The
appeal
is,
therefore,
allowed
with
costs.