JACKETT,
J.:—This
is
an
appeal
from
a
decision
of
the
Tax
Appeal
Board
dismissing
the
appellant’s
appeal
from
its
income
tax
assessment
for
the
1962
taxation
year.
The
appeal
involves
a
question
as
to
whether,
by
virtue
of
subsection
(1)
of
Section
20
of
the
Income
Tax
Act,
an
amount
has
to
be
included
in
computing
the
appellant’s
income
for
the
year
by
way
of
what
is
commonly
referred
to
as
recapture
of
capital
cost
allowance.
It
also
involves
a
question
as
to
whether
certain
amounts
are
deductible
in
computing
the
appellant’s
income
for
the
year,
by
virtue
of
subsection
(2)
of
Section
1100
of
the
Income
Tax
Regulations,
as
what
is
commonly
referred
to
as
terminal
allowances.
At
all
material
times,
Rinaldo
A.
Wassman
was
the
sole
beneficial
shareholder
and
managing
director
of
the
appellant.
In
1949
Wassman
personally
agreed
to
purchase
from
one
Williams
a
property
known
as
Gateway
Lodge
at
Radium
Hot
Springs
in
Kootenay
National
Park
in
the
Province
of
British
Columbia.
At
that
time,
the
property
consisted
of
a
hotel
or
lodge
building
and
two
smaller
buildings,
all
of
which
were
furnished
and
equipped,
and
were
located
on
land
in
the
Park
that
was
held
under
lease
from
the
Crown
in
right
of
Canada.
Two
features
of
the
leases
of
some
importance
are
(a)
that
the
rent
was
nominal
but
subject
to
adjustment
on
stated
occasions
by
reference
only
to
the
bare
land
value
of
the
demised
property
;
and
(b)
that
the
lease
was
renewable
from
time
to
time
in
perpetuity
at
the
option
of
the
tenant.
Wassman
agreed
to
pay
Williams
for
the
property
$65,000
plus
the
value
of
stock
in
trade
on
hand
at
the
time
of
purchase.
Wassman
assigned
to
the
appellant
his
interest
under
the
purchase
agreement
with
Williams.
In
its
books
of
account,
the
appellant
allocated,
of
the
purchase
price,
$40,000
as
being
the
capital
cost
of
‘‘buildings’’
and
$25,000
as
being
the
capital
cost
of
“equipment”.
Upon
payment
of
the
purchase
price,
Williams
assigned.
the
leases
to
the
appellant.
The
appellant
then
surrendered
the
leases
to
the
Crown
and
received
new
leases
dated
August
25,
1955
in
lieu
thereof.
During
the
period
prior
to
1962,
the
appellant
expanded,
in
addition
to
the
aforesaid
$40,000,
which
it
had
allocated
to
buildings,
an
additional
$12,129.83
by
way
of
capital
improvements
or
additions
to
the
buildings
in
question,
making
a
total
capital
cost
to
it
of
such
interest
at
it
had
in
the
buildings
of
$52,129.83.
In
the
same
period,
the
appellant
claimed
capital
cost
allowances
with
respect
thereto
in
amounts
totalling
$29-,
689.64.
These
amounts
were
allowed
by
the
Minister
by
his
assessments
for
the
various
taxation
years
in
the
period.
There
was,
therefore,
at
the
beginning
of
the'1962
taxation
year,
on
the
appellant’s
books,
a
capital
cost
in
respect
of
these
buildings
in
respect
of
which
no
capital
cost
allowance
had
been
made
under
the
Income
Tax
Act
of
$22,440.19.
With
reference
to
the
furniture
and
equipment
in
the
buildings,
there
was
a
parallel
situation.
The
appellant,
as
already
indicated,
had
allocated,
of
the
original
cost
of
the
total
property,
$25,000
to
the
contents.
It
had
made
capital
improvements
and
additions
to
the
contents.
during
the
period
prior
to.
1962,
according
to
its
books,
of
$12,936.60.
It
had
claimed,
and
been
allowed,
under
the
Income
Tax
Act,
in
respect
of
the
furniture
and
equipment
constituting
the
contents,
capital
cost
allowances
in
amounts
aggregating
$28,911.39.
There
were
therefore
on
the
appellant’s
books,
at
the
beginning
of
the
1962
taxation
year,
capital
cost
in
respect
of
such
furniture
and
equipment
in
respect
of
which
no
capital
cost
allowance
had
been
made
under
the
Income
Tax
Act
of
$9,025.21.
In
1960,
the
Department
‘of
Northern
Affairs
and
National
Resources
advised
the
appellant
that
they
required
the
land
upon
which
his
hotel
was
located
for
road
and
related
purposes.
The
Crown
therefore
negotiated
with
the
appellant
for
a
surrender
of
his
leases
with
a
view
to
removing
the
buildings
as
well
as
their
contents.
It
seems
clear
that
neither
the
buildings
nor
the
contents
had
any
value
except
where
they
were
and
as
an
integral
part
of
the
appellant’s
hotel
business
on
that
location
as
a
going
concern.
The
appellant
fixed
its
original
asking
price
for
the
surrender
of
its
leasehold
property
on
the
basis
of
the
profits
it
had
been
making
in
recent
years
from
the
carrying
on
if
its
business
and
ultimately
entered
into
an
agreement
pursuant
to
which
it
accepted
a
somewhat
lower
amount—$155,000—therefor.
There
is
no
information
as
to
the
basis
upon
which
the
department
officials
justified
seeking
authority
to
pay
that
amount
for
a
surrender
to
the
Crown
of
the
appellant’s
leases.
There
is
a
copy
of
an
appraisal
report
made
for
the
Department
in
evidence,
but
no
evidence
as
to
whether
it
was
accepted
by
the
Minister.
It
is
established
that
the
departmental
officials
indicated
that
they
were
prepared
to
recommend
a
settlement
on:the
basis
of
the
appellant
being
entitled
to
remove
and
use
or
sell
both
the
buildings
and
their
contents;
but
the
appellant
refused
to
bargain
except
on
the
basis
that
the
Crown
would
accept
a
surrender
of
the
leasehold
land
with
the
buildings
on
it
and
their
contents
in
them.
r
The
actual
agreement
is
contained
in
an
offer
made
by
the
appellant
to
the
Minister
of
Northern
Affairs
and
National
Resources
by
a
document
dated
October
2,
1961,
and
reading
as
follows
:
I,
the
Lessee
of
Villa
Lots
6,
7
and
7A
in
Radium
Hot
Springs
Townsite,
in
Kootenay
National
Park,
in
the
Province
of
British
Columbia,
agree
to
sell
to
Her
Majesty
the
Queen
in
right
of
Canada,
free
from
all
encumbrances,
my
interest
in
the
said
lots,
including
buildings
and
contents,
and
improvements
thereon,
for
the
sum
of
One
Hundred
and
Fifty-five
thousand
dollars
($155,000.00).
This
agreement
was
implemented
in
part
by
formal
surrender
documents
dated
April
2,
1962,
whereby
the
appellant
surrendered
to
the
Crown
the
lands
comprised
in
the
leases
‘‘to
the
intent
that’’
the
unexpired
terms
‘‘may
be
merged
and
extinguished
in
the
reversion
and
inheritance
of
the
said
lands’’
and
whereby
the
appellant
also
granted,
conveyed,
released
etc.,
to
the
Crown
“all
its
right,
title
and
interest
in
the
building
and
improvements’’
situate
on
such
lands.
It
was
also
implemented
in
part
by
the
execution
by
the
appellant
in
favour
of
the
Crown
of
a
bill
of
sale
of
the
contents
bearing
date
April
2,
1962.
By
its
1962
Income
Tax
Return,
the
appellant
claimed
terminal
allowance
under
subsection
(2)
of
Section
1100
of
the
Income
Tax
Regulations
in
the
sum
of
$31,465.40,
which
was,
apparently,
made
up
as
follows
:
Building's
|
$22,440.19
|
Furniture
and
equipment
|
9,025.21
|
|
$31,465.40
|
By
the
re-assessment
that
is
the
subject
matter
of
this
appeal,
the
respondent
disallowed
this
claim.
By
the
same
re-assessment,
the
respondent
added
to
the
appellant’s
declared
income
an
amount
of
‘‘
Capital
cost
allowance
recaptured’’
in
the
sum
of
$29,689.64.
By
this
appeal
the
appellant
maintains
its
right
to
the
terminal
allowance
so
disallowed
in
the
sum
of
$31,465.40
and
attacks
the
assessment
by
the
respondent
in
so
far
as
it
adds
the
amount
of
$29,689.64,
or
any
amount,
to
his
income
for
1962
by
way
of
capital
cost
allowance
recaptured.
It
is
well
to
bear
in
minds,
in
considering
capital
cost
allowance
problems
under
the
Income
Tax
Act,
that,
while
the
general]
rule
in
computing
profit
from
a
business
for
the
purposes
of
Part
I
of
the
Act
is
that
it
is
to
be
computed
in
accordance
with
business
or
commercial
principles,
Section
12(1)
(b)
of
the
Act
expressly
excludes
any
deduction
in
respect
of
depreciation
or
obsolescence.
In
place
of
any
such
allowance,
there
is
what
is
provided
for
by
Section
11(1)
(a)
when
it
authorizes
as
a
deduction,
in
computing
the
income
of
a
taxpayer
for
a
taxation
year,
“‘such
part
of
the
capital
cost
to
the
taxpayer
of
property
.
.
.,
1£
any,
as
is
allowed
by
regulations’’.
What
we
have
to
deal
with
is
therefore
a
purely
statutory
scheme
of
deductions
and
not
a
businessman’s
concept
of
an
allowance
for
depreciation.
While
the
statute
leaves
to
regulations
the
actual
definition
of
the
amounts
that
may
be
deducted,
there
is
to
be
found
in
subsection
(5)
of
Section
20
of
the
statute
a
series
of
definitions
of
arbitrarily
selected
concepts
that
are
to
be
used
in
the
Regulations
as
well
as
the
statute.*
So
we
find
that,
in
this
context
“depreciable
property’’
means
property
in
respect
of
which
the
taxpayer
has
been
allowed,
or
is
entitled
to,
a
deduction
under
regulations
made
under
Section
11(1)
(a);
and
we
find
that
“proceeds
of
disposition’’
include
such
things
as
the
price
of
property
that
has
been
sold,
the
compensation
for
property
that
has
been
expropriated,
and
the
insurance
monies
for
property
lost
or
destroyed;
and
further
that
‘‘disposition
of
property’’
includes
any
transaction
or
event
entitling
a
taxpayer
to
“proceeds
of
disposition”
in
this
enlarged
sense.
Futhermore,
by
virtue
of
these
arbitrary
definitions,
we
find
that
‘‘total
depreciation”
allowed
to
a
taxpayer
for
property
of
a
class
means
all
the
amounts
allowed
under
the
Section
11(1)
(a)
regulations
(commonly
called
capital
cost
allowance)
in
respect
of
property
of
that
class,
and
that
the
expression
‘‘undepreciated
capital
cost’?
of
property
of
a
particular
class
is
defined
in
very
detailed
and
precise
terms.
The
overall
scheme
of
capital
cost
allowances
is
to
be
found
on
the
one
hand
in
the
regulations
made
under
Section
11(1)
(a)
of
the
Act,
which
provide
for
the
deductions
that
may
be
made,
and,
on
the
other
hand,
in
Section
20
(1)
of
the
Act,
which
provides
for
the
“recapture”
of
allowances
previously
made
when
it
turns
out
that
the
actual
overall
capital
cost
of
property
to
the
taxpayer
was
less
than
the
total
of
the
allowances
that
were
made
under
Section
11(1)
(a)
in
the
years
during
which
the
property
was
held
for
income
earning.
purposes.
The
parts
of
the
Regulations
that
are
relevant
here
include
the
following
:
1100.
(1)
Under
paragraph
(a)
of
subsection
(1)
of
section
11
of
the
Act,
there
is
hereby
allowed
to
a
taxpayer,
in
computing
his
income
from
a
business
or
property,
as
the
case
may
be,
deductions
for
each
taxation
year
equal
to
(a)
such
amounts
as
he
may
claim
in
respect
of
property
of
each
of
the
following
classes
in
Schedule
B
not
exceeding
in
respect
of
property
(vi)
of
class
6,
10%
(viii)
of
class
8,
20%
of
the
undepreciated
capital
cost
to
him
as
of
the
end
of
the
taxation
year
(before
making
any
deduction
under
this
subsection
for
the
taxation
year)
of
property
of
the
class;
(iii)
each
amount
by
which
the
undepreciated
capital
cost
to
the
taxpayer
of
depreciable
property
of
that
class
as
of
the
end
of
a
previous
year
was
reduced
by
virtue
of
subsection
(2).”
(b)
where
a
taxpayer
has
property
of
class
13
in
Schedule
B
which
was
acquired
by
him
for
the
purpose
of
gaining
or
producing
income,
such
amount
as
he
may
claim
not
exceeding,
in
respect
of
each
item
of
the
capital
cost
thereof
to
him,
the
lesser
of
(i)
one-fifth
of
the
capital
cost
thereof
to
him,
or
(ii)
the
amount
for
the
year
obtained
by
apportioning
the
capital
cost
thereof
to
him
equally
over
the
period
of
the
lease
unexpired
at
the
time
the
cost
was
incurred,
but
the
total
of
the
amounts
allowed
under
this
paragraph
shall
not
exceed
the
undepreciated
capital
cost
to
him
as
of
the
end
of
the
taxation
year
(before
making
any
deduction
under
this
subsection
for
the
taxation
year)
of
property
of
the
class;*
The
parts
of
Section
1100(1)
of
the
Regulations
to
which
I
have
just
referred
must
be
read
with
the
definitions
of
Class
6,
Class
8
and
Class
13
as
set
out
in
Schedule
B
to
the
Regulations.
These
classes
are
defined,
so
far
as
is
relevant
for
present
purposes,
as
follows
:
Class
6
(10%)
Property,
not
included
in
any
other
class
that
is
(a)
a
building
of
(i)
frame,
Class
8
(20%)
Property
that
is
a
tangible
asset
that
is
not
included
in
any
other
class
in
this
Schedule
except
.
.
.
Class
13
Property
that
is
a
leasehold
interest
except
.
.
.
The
only
other
part
of
the
Regulations
to
which
I
should
refer
is
Section
1100(2),
which
provides
for
terminal
allowances
as
follows
:
(2)
Where,
in
a
taxation
year,
otherwise
than
on
death,
all
property
of
a
prescribed
class
that
had
not
previously
been
disposed
of
or
transferred
to
another
class
has
been
disposed
of
or
transferred
to
another
class
and
the
taxpayer
has
no
property
of
that
class
at
the
end
of
the
taxation
year,
the
taxpayer
is
hereby
allowed
a
deduction
for
the
year
equal
to
the
amount
that
would
otherwise
be
the
undepreciated
capital
cost
to
him
of
property
of
that
class
at
the
expiration
of
the
taxation
year.
As
already
indicated,
the
other
part
of
the
capital
cost
allowance
scheme
is
the
recapture
provision
which
is
to
be
found
in
Section
20(1)
of
the
Income
Tax
Act,
which
reads
as
follows:
20.
(1)
Where
depreciable
property
of
a
taxpayer
of
a
prescribed
class
has,
in
a
taxation
year,
been
disposed
of
and
the
proceeds
of
disposition
exceed
the
undepreciated
capital
cost
to
him
of
depreciable
property
of
that
class
immediately
before
the
disposition,
the
lesser
of
(a)
the
amount
of
the
excess,
or
(b)
the
amount
that
the
excess
would
be
if
the
property
had
been
disposed
of
for
the
capital
cost
thereof
to
the
taxpayer,
shall
be
included
in
computing
his
income
for
the
year.
I
propose
to
consider
first
the
two
questions
that
arise
in
respect
of
the
‘
buildings
”.
In
the
first
place,
having
regard
to
the
definition
of
the
relevant
classes,
it
seems
clear
that
the
appellant’s
leasehold
interest
in
the
land,
of
which
the
buildings
formed,
in
the
view
of
the
law,
a
part,
falls
within
prescribed
Class
13
and
not
within
prescribed
Class
6.
Class
6
extends
only
to
property
‘‘not
included
in
any
other
class’’
that
is
a
building
and
the
appellant’s
leasehold
interest
clearly
falls
within
Class
13.
Coming
then
to
the
appellant’s
right
to
deduct
a
terminal
allowance
in
respect
of
‘‘buildings’’,
the
requirement
that
it
must
have
fulfilled
to
be
entitled
to
an
allowance
under
Section
1100(2)
of
the
Regulations
is
that
all
of
its
Class
13
leasehold
property
had
been
disposed:
of
(or
transferred
to
another
class)
in
the
1962
taxation
year
and.
that
it
had
no
property
of
that
class
at
the
end
of
that
year.
This
requirement
appears
to
have
been
met.
The
further
question
is,
however,
as
to
the
amount
of
the
deduction
to
which
it
was
entitled.
The
subsection
defines
that
to
be
‘‘the
amount
that
would
otherwise
be
the
undepreciated
capital
cost
to
him
of
property
of
that
class
at
the
expiration
of
the
taxation
year’’.
This
brings
me
to
the
definition
of
“undepreciated
capital
cost’’
to
a
taxpayer
of
depreciable
property
of
a
prescribed
class
as
of
any
time,
which,
as
I
have
already
indicated,
is
to
be
found
in
Section
20(5)
of
the
Income
Tax
Act,
paragraph
(e)
of
which
reads,
in
part:
(e)
“undepreciated
capital
cost”
to
a
taxpayer
of
depreciable
property
of
a
prescribed
class
as
of
any
time
means
the
capital
cost
to
the
taxpayer
of
depreciable
property
of
that
class
acquired
before
that
time
minus
the
aggregate
of
(i)
the
total
depreciation
allowed
to
the
taxpayer
for
property
of
that
class
before
that
time,
(ii)
for
each
disposition
before
that
time
of
property
of
the
taxpayer
of
that
class,
the
least
of
(A)
the
proceeds
of
disposition
thereof,
(B)
the
capital
cost
to
him
thereof,
or
(C)
the
undepreciated
capital
cost
to
him
of
property
of
that
class
immediately
before
the
disposition,
and
What
we
have
to
ascertain
in
order
to
determine
the
deduction
permitted
by
Section
1100(2)
of
the
Regulations
is
what
would
“otherwise
be
the
undepreciated
capital
cost’’
to
the
appellant
of
Class
13
leaseholds
as
of
the
end
of
its
1962
taxation
year.
As
I
read
the
definition
in
Section
20(5)(e),
this
would
be
(a)
the
capital
cost
to
the
appellant
of
its
leasehold
interests,
minus
the
total
of
(b)
the
total
depreciation
allowed
to
the
appellant
for
class
13
leasehold
interest
property
before
that
time,
and
(ce)
for
the
sole
disposition
of
leasehold
interests,
being
that
in
1962,
the
least
of
(A)
the
proceeds
of
disposition,
(B)
the
capital
cost
of
property
disposed
of,
or
(C)
the
undepreciated
capital
cost
to
the
appellant
of
class
13
leaseholds
immediately
before
the
disposition.
As
far
as
the
evidence
revals,
the
only
capital
cost
that
can
be
attributed
to
the
appellant’s
Class
13
leasehold
interests
is
what
is
shown
on
its
books
for
“buildings”,
namely,
$52,129.83.
Coming
to
the
amounts
that
must
be
deducted
from
that
capital
cost
of
$52,129.83
to
get
the
permitted
terminal
allowance,
the
‘‘depreciation
allowed’’
for
Class
13
leasehold
property
before
the
1962
taxation
year
seems
to
me
to
be
clearly
the
amount
that
was
claimed
and
allowed
for
‘‘buildings’’.
Such
amount
could
only
validly
be
allowed
as
a
Class
13
allowance.
I
know
that
it
was
allowed;
and
I
have
nothing
before
me
to
show
that
it
was
allowed
in
any
way
that
compels
me
to
treat
is
as
having
been
unlawfully
allowed
as
a
Class
6
allowance.
The
amount
so
allowed
was
$29,689.64.
With
reference
to
the
1962
‘‘proceeds
of
disposition’’
of
leasehold
interests,
it
is
necessary
to
turn
to
Section
20(5)
(c),
which
defines
“proceeds
of
disposition’’
to
include,
inter
alia,
(i)
the
sale
price
of
property
that
has
been
sold,
(ii)
compensation
for
property
damaged,
destroyed,
taken
or
injuriously
affected,
either
lawfully
or
unlawfully,
or
under
statutory
authority
or
otherwise,
and
to
Section
20(5)
(b)
which
defines
“disposition
of
property’’
to
include
any
transaction
or
event
entitling
the
taxpayer
to
proceeds
of
disposition
of
property.
I
should
have
no
doubt
myself
that
a
transaction
whereby
a
lessee,
for
a
consideration,
surrenders
his
leasehold
interest
so
that
it
merges
in
the
landlord’s
reversion
and
is
entirely
lost
to
him
falls
within
the
ordinary
meaning
of
the
expression
“disposition
of
property
’
’.
Indeed,
the
only
basis
upon
which
the
appellant
can
bring
itself
within
Section
1100(2)
in
order
to
claim
a
terminal
allowance
is
that
it
had
‘‘disposed
of’’
all
property
in
the.
prescribed
class.
If
it
disposed
of
its:
Class
13
leaseholds
so
as
to
be
in
the
position
of
claiming
a
terminal
allowance,
the
same
disposition
must
be
treated
as
a
disposition
for
the
purpose
of
determing
the
amount
of
the
allowance.
It
follows
that
the
“consideration”
for
the
surrender
is
“proceeds
of
disposition”?
within
the
meaning
of
that.
expression
as
defined
for
the
purpose
of
the
statute.
If,
however,
the
facts
of
this
case
are
open
to
the
view
that
the
department
concerned,
or
the
Crown,
by
their
acts
or
decisions,
either
wrongfully
or
legally,
took
or
injuriously
affected
the
appellant’s
leasehold
interests,
then
the
compensation
for
such
act,
which
is
clearly
contained
in
the
$155,000
paid
by
the
Crown
to
the
appellant,
is
equally
proceeds
of
disposition
of
leasehold
interests
within
the
definition
of
the
expression
“proceeds
of
disposition’’
to
which
I
have
just
referred.
On
the
admitted.
facts,
the
amount
thereof
must
be
regarded
as
being
much
more
than
the
total
capital
cost
of
Class
13
leaseholds,
which
is
only
$52,129.83.
My
reason
for
reaching
the
latter
conclusion
is
that
the
appellant
received
$155,000
for.
its
leasehold
interests
(including
buildings)
and
for
’the
contents.
Section
20(6)
(g)*
provides,
in
effect,
that,
where
an
amount
can
reasonably
be
regarded
as
being
in
part
consideration
for
disposition
of
depreciable
property
of
a
prescribed
class
and
as
being
in
part
consideration
for
something
else,
“the
part
of
the
amount
that
can
reasonably
be
regarded
as
being
the
consideration
for
such
disposition
shall
be
deemed
to
be
the
proceeds
of
disposition
of
depreciable
property
of
that
class’’.
Paragraph
15
of
the
agreement
as
to
facts
(Exhibit
1)
reads:
15.
For
the
purposes
of
this
appeal
the
parties
admit
that
to
a
prospective
purchaser
entitled
to
continue
the
existing
business
the
buildings
had
a
value
of
not
less
than
$52,129.83,
the
furni-
ture
and
equipment
a
value
of
not
less
than
$9,025.21,
and
the
lessee’s
interest
in
the
said
leases,
Exhibits
A-7
and
A-8,
a
value
(excluding
buildings
and
improvements)
of
not
more
than
$93,-
845.04.
The
parties
also
admit
that
the
buildings
had
no
value
to
a
purchaser
required
to
remove
them
from
Lots
6,
7,
and
7A.
There
is
no
doubt
in
my
mind
that
what
the
appellant
was
bargaining
about
was
the
surrender
of
a
leasehold
interest
in
property
that
had
a
value
as
part
of
his
business
enterprise.
That
is
what
he
was
selling.
He
had
a
right
to
continue
operating
the
business.
indefinitely.
It
was
a
profitable
business.
He
valued
his
leasehold
interest
on
that
basis
and
it
was
because
that
was
the
nature
of
the
asset
that
he
had
and
that
the
Crown
wanted
that
the
Crown
paid
him
$155,000.
Had
there
been
nothing
but
bare
land,
he
could
not
have
claimed,
and
the
Crown
could
not
have
paid,
any
such
amount.
Once
it
is
accepted
that
that
was
the
subject
matter
of
the
bargain,
then
there
can
be
no
doubt
on
the
above
facts
that
more
than
$52,129.83
out
of
the
$155,000
can
reasonably
-be
regarded
as
being
consideration
for
the
leasehold
interest,
In
any
event,
this
fact
was
assumed
by
the
respondent
and
has
not
been
disaproved.
The
decision
of
this
Court
in
M.N.R.
v.
Steen
Realty
Limited,
[1964]
Ex.
C.R.
543;
[1964]
C.T.C.
133,
was
on
quite
different
facts
and
has
no
application
to
the
facts
of
this
case.
In
that
case,
the
highest
and
best
use
of
the
land,
and
the
basis
on
which
it
was
bought
and
sold,
was
as
land
with
the
buildings
removed.
As,
however,
the
undepreciated
capital
cost
of
the
leasehold
interests
is,
by
definition,
equal
to
or
less
than
the
capital
cost
thereof,
it
is
the
amount
that,
with
the
total
depreciation
allowed,
must
be
deducted
from
capital
cost
to
obtain
the
amount
of
the
terminal
allowance.
The
result
is
as
follows:
Capital
cost
-.
|
|
$52,129.83
|
Depreciation
allowed
|
$29,689.64
|
Plus
undepreciated
capital.
cost
immediately
|
|
before
the
disposition*
|
22,440.19
52,129.83
|
Terminal
allowance
for
buildings
or
for
Class
|
|
XIII
leaseholds
—
|
.
|
NIL
|
part
consideration
for
something
else,
the
part
of
the
amount
that
can
reasonably
be
regarded
as
being
the
consideration
for
such
disposition
shall
be
deemed
to
be
the
proceeds
of
disposition
of
depreciable
property
of
that
class
irrespective
of
the
form
or
legal
effect
of
the
contract
or
agreement;
and
the
person
to
whom
the
depreciable
property
was
disposed
of
shall
be
deemed
to
have
acquired
the
property
at
a
capital
cost
to
him
equal
to
the
same
part
of
that
amount;”’
I
turn
now
to
the
amount
added
by
the
respondent
to
the
appellant’s
income
for
1962
by
way
of
recapture
under
Section
20(1)
of
the
Act.
That
subsection
reads
as
follows:
20.
(1)
Where
depreciable
property
of
a
taxpayer
of
a
prescribed
class
has,
in
a
taxation
year,
been
disposed
of
and
the
proceeds
of
disposition
exceed
the
undepreciated
capital
cost
to
him
of
depreciable
property
of
that
class
immediately
before
the
disposition,
the
lesser
of
(a)
the
amount
of
the
excess,
or
(b)
the
amount
that
the
excess
would
be
if
the
property
had
been
disposed
of
for
the
capital
cost
thereof
to
the
taxpayer,
shall
be
included
in
computing
his
income
for
the
year.
I
have
already
reached
the
conclusion
that
the
appellant’s
Class
13
leaseholds
had
been
‘‘disposed
of’’
in
the
1962
taxation
year
and
that
the
proceeds
of
that
disposition
exceed
the
capital
cost
of
the
property
of
that
class,
within
the
meaning
of
those
concepts
in
the
statute.
It
follows
that
the
proceeds
of
disposition
exceed
the
undepreciated
capital
cost
immediately
before
the
disposition
because
undepreciated
capital
cost
must
always
be
less
than
capital
cost
if
any
capital
cost
allowance
has
been
taken.
The
subsection
therefore
applies
to
the
facts
of
this
case.
The
remaing
question
is
as
to
the
amount
that
must
be
included
in
computing
the
appellant’s
income
for
the
1962
taxation
year
by
virtue
of
that
subsection.
As
I
read
the
subsection,
this
amount
is,
on
the
facts
of
this
case,
(a)
the
capital
cost
of
the
Class
13
leaseholds
to
the
appellant,
which
was
$52,129.83,*
minus
(b)
the
undepreciated
capital
cost
to
the
appellant
of
Class
13
leaseholds
immediately
before
the
disposition,
which
was
$22,440.19,1
which
is
$52,129.83
minus
$22,440.19,
or
$29,689.64.
This
is
the
amount
added
to
the
appellant’s
income
for
the
1962
taxation
year
by
the
respondent.
It
follows
that
I
have
reached
the
conclusion
that
the
appellant
fails
in
its
appeal
as
far
as
the
recapture
question
is
concerned.
The
final
question
is
as
to
the
right
of
the
appellant
to
deduct
a
terminal
allowance
in
respect
of
“furniture
and
equipment”
for
the
1962
taxation
year.
The
requirement
that
it
must
have
fulfilled
to
be
entitled
to
an
allowance
under
Section
1100(2)
is
that
all
of
its
Classs
8
property
had
been
disposed
of
(or
transferred
to
another
class)
in
the
1962
taxation
year,
and
that
it
had
no
property
of
that
class
at
the
end
of
that
year.
This
requirement
appears
to
have
been
met.
The
further
question
is
as
to
the
amount
of
the
deduction
to
which
it
was
entitled.
As
noted
above,
the
subsection
defines
the
amount
to
be
‘‘the
amount
that
would
otherwise
be
the
undepreciated
capital
cost
to
him
of
property
of
that
class
at
the
expiration
of
the
taxation
year’’.
Applying
the
definition
of
‘‘undepreciated
capital
cost’’
to
a
taxpayer
of
depreciable
property
of
a
prescribed
class
as
of
any
time
to
be
found
in
Section
20(5)
(e),
which
I
have
already
discussed,
what
we
have
to
find
is
the
amount:
by
which
(a)
the
capital
cost
to
the
taxpayer
of
the
furniture
and
equipment,
which
was
$37,936.60,
exceeds
(b)
the
total
depreciation
allowed
for
property
of
that
class,
which
was
$28,911.39,
plus
(c)
for
the
sole
disposition
of
assets
of
that
class,
being
that
in
1962,
the
least
of
(A)
the
proceeds
of
disposition
thereof,
(which
amount
is
in
dispute),
(B)
the
capital
cost
thereof
($37,936.60),
or
(C)
the
undepreciated
capital
cost
of
property
of
that
class
immediately
before
that
disposition
which,
on
the
facts,
was
capital
cost
minus
total
depreciation
previously
allowed
or
$37,936.60
minus
$28,911.39,
being
$9,025.21.
It
follows
that,
unless
the
proceeds
of
disposition
of
the
furniture
and
equipment
was
less
than
$9,025.21,
the
allowance
is
Capital
cost
|
$37,936.60
|
less
|
|
total
depreciation
|
$28,911.39
|
plus
|
|
undepreciated
capital
cost
just
before
the
|
|
disposition
|
9,025.21
|
|
$37,936.60
$37,936.60
|
|
NIL
|
That
raises
the
question
as
to
whether
the
proceeds.
of.
disposition
of
the
furniture
and
equipment
in
1962
was
less
than
$9,025.21.
As
appears
from
the
paragraph
from
the
Agreed
Facts
quoted
above,
to
“a
prospective
purchaser
entitled
to
continue
the
existing
business’’
the
furniture
and
equipment
had
a
value
of
not
less
than
$9,025.21.
For
the
reasons
already
given,
I
am.
of
opinion
that
the
proper
approach
to
the
application
of
Section
20(6)
(g)
to
the
facts
of
this
case
is
to
view
the
property
sold
as
property
whose
value
existed
in
its
being
the
assets
of
a
business
as
a
going
concern.
That
being
so,
it
seems
clear
that
at
least
$9,025.21
of
the
$155,000
ca
nreasonably
be
regarded
as
being
consideration
for
the
disposition
of
the
furniture
and
equipment.
Even
if
I
am
wrong
in
reaching:
this
conclusion
on
the
evidence
before
me,
just
as
I
indicated
with
reference
to
‘‘buildings’’,
this
fact
was
assumed
by
the
respondent
in
making
the
assessment
appealed
from
and
I
am
satisfied
that
it
has
not
been
disproved
by
the
evidence
before.
me.
That
being
so,
by
virtue
of
paragraph
(g)
of
Section
20(6),
at
least
that
amount
is
deemed
to
be
the
proceeds
of
disposition
of
the
appellant’s
Class
8
property
(the
furniture
and
equipment)
and,
as
indicated
above,
the
terminal
allowance
under
Section
1100(2)
of
the
Regulation
for
furniture
and
equipment
is
nil.
...
.
The
appeal
is
dismissed
with
costs.