GIBSON,
J.:—On
the
hearing
of
this
appeal
two
issues
were
raised,
namely:
(1)
the
deductibility
for
income
tax
purposes
of
a
payment
made
in
September
1963
by
the
appellant
in
the
sum
of
$103,500
to
certain
trustees
purporting
to
be
in
respect
to
a
deferred
profit
sharing
plan
within
the
meaning
of
Section
19C
of
the
Income
Tax
Act;
and
(2)
the
recapture
of
certain
capital
cost
allowances
included
in
the
income
of
the
appellant
for
the
year
1963,
purportedly
pursuant
to
Section
20(1)
of
the
Income
Tax
Act.
The
relevant
facts
in
brief
are
these:
In
the
summer
of
1963,
the
appellant
operated
a
new
and
used
car
agency
in
the
City
of
Hamilton,
Ontario
holding
a
Chevrolet/Oldsmobile
franchise
from
General
Motors
of
Canada
Limited.
Another
company
carrying
on
another
new
and
used
car
agency
holding
a
Buick/
Pontiac
franchise
from
General
Motors
of
Canada
Limited
carried
on
business
in
the
City
of
Hamilton
at
the
same
time.
The
main
shareholder
of
the
latter
company
was
the
father
of
the
principal
shareholder
of
the
appellant.
The
father
wished
to
retire
from
the
latter
business
and
the
said
son
wished
(i)
to
change
franchises,
viz.,
by
giving
up
the
Chevrolet/Oldsmobile
franchise
and
by
acquiring
the
Buick/Pontiac
franchise,
and
also
(ii)
to
take
over
the
premises
on
which
the
company
controlled
by
his
father
did
business,
which
premises
were
more
desirable
than
the
premises
where
the
appellant
carried
on
business
under
the
Chevrolet/Oldsmobile
franchise.
Accordingly,
at
the
said
time,
the
appellant
acquired
an
option
to
buy
in
bulk
the
assets
of
the
new
and
used
car
agency
of
the
company
controlled
by
his
father,
(which
held
the
Buick/Pontiac
franchise)
and
at
the
same
time
the
appellant
gave
to
Motors
Holding
Company
of
Canada
Limited
an
option
to
buy
in
bulk
the
assets
of
the
appellant’s
new
and
used
car
agency
where
it
operated
the
Chevrolet/Oldsmobile
franchise.
Both
options
were
exercised
and
on
or
about
October
4,
1963,
both
contracts
of
purchase
and
sale
were
completed.
In
the
result,
the
appellant
did
two
things
which
are
relevant
regarding
the
[second]
issue
raised
on
this
appeal,
and
a
third
thing
which
is
relevant
regarding
the
[first]
issue
raised
on
this
appeal.
The
first
two
things
are
namely:
(1)
the
appellant
sold
all
the
assets
used
at
the
premises
where
it
carried
on
the
Chevrolet/Oldsmobile
Agency
and
discharged
all
its
employees
who
worked
there
from
its
employ,
save
and
except
the
principal
shareholder
of
it
and
his
brother.
(The
new
purchaser
purchased
these
assets
and
hired
these
said
employees)
;
and
(2)
the
appellant
acquired
all
the
assets
used
at
the
premises
where
the
Buick/Pontiac
Agency
was
carried
on
and
hired
all
the
employees
of
the
company
(controlled
by
his
father)
which
had
formerly
carried
on
that
agency
at
those
premises.
The
third
thing
done
by
the
appellant,
relevant
to
the
[first]
issue
raised
in
this
appeal,
was
namely
:
(3)
Just
prior
to
closing
these
two
transactions,
viz.,
September
27,
1963,
the
appellant
wrote
an
undated
letter
to
the
Department
of
National
Revenue,
Ottawa,
(Ex.
I)
and
enclosed
with
it
a
Trust
Agreement
and
a
copy
of
its
By-law
No.
7
(Ex.
J).
This
letter
was
an
application,
and
the
trust
agreement
and
by-law
were
the
supporting
documents,
for
approval
of
a
deferred
profit
sharing
plan
pursuant
to
the
enabling
provisions
of
Section
79C
of
the
Income
Tax
Act.
Said
By-law
No.
7,
according
to
the
company
minute
book
(Ex.
4)
the
appellant
purports
to
have
passed
on
September
14,
1963.
Then,
subsequently
on
September
30,
1963,
the
Department
of
National
Revenue
wrote
requesting
an
amendment
to
Article
V,
subparagraph
(3)
of
the
said
By-law
No.
7
of
the
proposed
deferred
profit
sharing
plan
of
the
appellant,
and
on
October
2,
1963
the
solicitors
of
the
appellant
forwarded
to
the
Department
of
National
Revenue
a
copy
of
a
revised
Article
V,
subparagraph
(3)
of
the
said
by-
law
(see
Ex.
5).
Following
this,
the
Department
of
National
Revenue
(see
Ex.
6)
approved
the
registration
of
the
plan
under
Section
79C
of
the
Income
Tax
Act,
and
pursuant
to
the
enabling
statutory
provisions
in
Section
79
C
stated
that
the
approval
was
as
of
the
date
of
the
application,
namely,
September
27,
1963.
At
this
time,
there
were
only
two
employees
of
the
appellant,
namely,
the
principal
shareholder
and
his
brother
who
was
a
nominal
shareholder.
As
stated,
although
the
minutes
of
the
appellant
company
record
that
By-law
No.
7
was
passed
on
September
14,
1963,
there
was
no
amending
by-law
passed
by
the
appellant
authorizing
the
change
requested
by
the
Min-
ister
to
Article
V,
subparagraph
(3)
of
By-law
No.
7
of
the
deferred
profit
sharing
plan.
On
September
27,
1963,
there
was
paid
to
the
three
trustees
(who
were
the
principal
shareholder
of
the
appellant,
his
brother
and
its
accountant)
the
sum
of
$103,500
for
the
purpose
of
this
plan
(see
Ex.
7).
Attached
to
the
minutes
of
the
appellant
company
of
September
14,
1963
authorizing
the
payment
of
this
sum
is
a
list
of
employees
to
whom
certain
amounts
were
allocated
pursuant
to
the
enabling
provisions
contained
in
Section
79C(7)
of
the
Income
Tax
Act.
The
maximum
allocated
to
any
employee
was
$1,500
which
is
the
maximum
permitted
by
the
said
subsection.
To
permit
this
plan
to
be
implemented
under
the
statute
utilizing
the
payment
of
$103,500,
it
was
necessary
for
the
appellant
to
have
a
sufficient
number
of
employees
(because
of
the
$1,500
limit
per
employee
permitted
under
Section
79C(7)),
or
otherwise
the
said
sum
could
not
have
been
paid
into
such
a
deferred
profit
sharing
plan.
When
the
approval
retroactively
to
September
27,
1963
was
given
by
the
Minister
on
October
4,
1963,
there
were
in
fact
only
two
employees
of
the
appellant,
viz.,
the
principal
shareholder
and
his
brother.
No
employee
of
the
appellant,
other
than
the
principal
shareholder
and
his
brother
ever
was
told
of
the
precise
terms
of
this
plan
at
any
time.
On
the
discharge
by
the
appellant
of
its
employees
other
than
the
principal
shareholder
and
his
brother
by
September
30,
1963,
the
sum
of
a
little
over
$19,000
less
withholding
tax
was
allocated
among
and
paid
to
such
former
employees
and
a
T-4
income
tax
form
was
subsequently
filed
(see
Ex.
9)
by
the
trustees,
on
which
was
noted
the
Department
of
National
Revenue
file
number
of
the
plan.
Then
in
December
1963,
pursuant
to
and
as
permitted
by
the
provisions
of
this
particular
alleged
deferred
profit
sharing
plan,
all
of
the
funds
in
it
were
transferred
to
a
suspense
account
and
then
re-allocated
in
the
proportion
of
60%
thereof
to
the
principal
shareholder
and
40%
to
his
brother.
So
much
for
the
facts
of
this
case.
In
respect
to
the
issue
of
recapture
of
certain
capital
cost
allowances
included
in
the
income
of
the
appellant
for
the
year
1963,
I
am
of
the
opinion
that
the
appellant
was
still
in
the
same
business
at
all
material
times
(namely,
the
new
and
used
car
sales
and
service
business)
within
the
meaning
of
Section
1101(1)
of
the
Income
Tax
Regulations
when
it
took
the
necessary
action
above
recited
in
brief
to
change
franchises,
namely,
from
the
Chevrolet/Oldsmobile
to
the
Buick/Pontiac
franchise
and
accordingly,
no
recapture
of
capital
cost
allowance
should
have
been
added
to
the
income
of
the
appellant
for
the
year
1963
pursuant
to
the
provisions
of
Section
20(1)
of
the
Act.
In
respect
of
the
issue
of
the
payment
made
by
the
appellant
in
September
1963
in
the
sum
of
$103,500
purporting
to
be
in
respect
of
a
referred
profit
sharing
plan
within
the
meaning
of
Section
79C
of
the
Income
Tax
Act,
I
am
of
the
opinion
that
it
is
not
deductible
by
the
appellant
for
income
tax
purposes
for
at
least
two
reasons,
hereinafter
recited.
Section
79C
of
the
Income
Tax
Act
in
the
wording
in
which
it
was
in
1963
was
added
to
the
statutes
in
1961.
Section
79
C
(l)(a)
defines
‘‘Deferred
Profit
Sharing
Plan’’.
Section
79C
(l)(b)
defines
‘‘Profit
Sharing
Plan’’.
Section
79C(15)
prescribes
that
the
payments
to
such
a
plan
must
be
made
‘‘out
of
profits’’.
The
payments
may
be
made
by
an
employer
to
the
trustee
of
such
a
plan
for
the
benefit
of
any
employee.
If
the
plan
is
accepted
by
the
Minister
for
registration,
then
the
payments
to
the
plan
are
deductible
for
income
tax
purposes
subject
to
certain
ceilings
on
the
amount
that
may
be
allocated
to
any
employee,
namely,
$1,500
under
Section
79C(7).
The
profit
from
such
a
plan
is
not
subject
to
income
tax,
subject
to
certain
modifications
under
Section
79C(6).
The
employees
are
not
taxable
on
monies
paid
into
such
a
plan
unless
and
until
they
actually
receive
the
monies
from
the
plan
under
Section
79C(9).
Sections
79C
(2)
and
(3)
of
the
Act
prescribe
that
certain
matters
must
be
included
in
a
deferred
profit
sharing
plan
failing
which
such
a
plan
will
not
be
accepted
for
registration.
The
Minister
in
any
event,
is
not
bound
to
accept
any
plan.
The
Minister,
if
he
accepts
a
plan,
may
back-date
a
plan
for
its
effective
ployees
of
the
employer
who
are
beneficiaries
under
the
plan,
not
exceeding,
however,
in
respect
of
each
individual
employee
in
respect
of
whom
the
amounts
so
paid
by
the
employer
were
paid
by
him,
an
amount
equal
to
the
lesser
of
(a)
the
aggregate
of
each
amount
so
paid
by
the
employer
in
respect
of
that
employee,
or
(b)
$1,500
minus
the
amount,
if
any,
deductible
under
paragraph
(g)
of
subsection
(1)
of
section
11
in
respect
of
that
employee
in
computing
the
income
of
the
employer
for
the
taxation
year,
to
the
extent
that
such
income
was
not
deductible
in
computing
the
income
of
the
employer
for
a
previous
taxation
year.
date,
pursuant
to
Section
79C(4),
namely,
to
the
date
of
the
application
for
the
registration
of
the
plan
or
when
in
the
application
for
the
registration
of
the
plan
or
when
in
the
application
for
registration
a
later
date
is
specified
as
the
date
upon
which
the
plan
is
to
commence
as
a
deferred
profit
sharing
plan,
on
that
date.
Once
the
Minister
has
accepted
a
plan,
the
monies
do
not
have
to
be
paid
into
the
plan
so
that
they
irrevocably
vest
in
the
employees
in
the
proportion
that
they
are
allocated
to
such
employees.
(This
was
changed
by
subsequent
legislation.
)
The
purported
plan
in
this
action
provided
for
the
vesting
of
monies
in
any
employee
only
if
he
was
an
employee
when
he
reached
the
age
of
65,
but
if
any
such
employee
died
before
that
time
or
left
the
employ
of
the
employer
he
had
no
rights
under
this
plan.
On
the
evidence,
two
things
are
obvious.
Firstly,
no
valid
by-law
was
passed
amending
By-law
No.
7
pursuant
to
the
request
of
the
Minister
in
October
1963,
or
alternatively,
By-law
No.
7
was
never
validly
passed
until
some
time
after
October
2,
1963.
At
that
time
there
were
only
two
employees,
all
the
other
employees
having
been
discharged
from
service.
There
therefore
was
no
basis
for
setting
up
a
deferred
profit
sharing
plan
by
reason
of
the
limits
placed
on
the
allocation
of
monies
in
respect
of
each
employee
in
such
plan
by
Section
79C(7)
of
the
Act.
(e)
the
plan
includes
a
provision
stipulating
that
no
right
or
interest
under
the
plan
of
an
employee
who
is
a
beneficiary
thereunder
is
capable,
either
in
whole
or
in
part,
of
surrender
or
assignment;
(f)
the
plan
includes
a
provision
stipulating
that
each
of
the
trustees
under
the
plan
shall
be
resident
in
Canada;
and
(g)
the
plan,
in
all
other
respects,
complies
with
regulations
of
the
Governor
in
Council
made
on
the
recommendation
of
the
Minister
of
Finance.
(3)
The
Minister
shall
not
accept
for
registration
for
the
purposes
of
this
Act
any
employees
profit
sharing
plan
unless
all
the
capital
gains
made
by
the
trust
governed
by
the
plan
before
the
date
of
application
for
registration
of
the
plan
and
all
the
capital
losses
sustained
by
the
trust
before
that
date
have
been
allocated
by
the
trustee
under
the
plan
to
employees
and
other
beneficiaries
thereunder.
I
therefore
find
as
a
fact
and
conclude
as
a
matter
of
law
that
no
valid
deferred
profit
sharing
plan
under
Section
79C
was
ever
set
up
by
the
appellant.
Secondly,
and,
in
any
event,
Section
137(1)
of
the
Income
Tax
Act,
in
my
opinion,
is
clearly
applicable.
The
appellant
never
intended
to
set
up
a
bona
fide
profit
sharing
plan.
What
was
done
was
a
mere
sham,
and
on
the
evidence,
beyond
any
doubt,
was
a
transaction
or
operation
that
was
designed
to
unduly
and
artificially
reduce
the
income
of
the
appellant
for
the
taxation
year
1963.
The
matters
ae
referred
back
to
the
Minister
for
re-assessment
not
inconsistent
with
these
Reasons.
Success
being
divided,
there
shall
be
no
Order
as
to
costs.
CYRIL
JOHN
RANSOM,
Appellant,
and
MINISTER
OF
NATIONAL
REVENUE,
Respondent.
Exchequer
Court
of
Canada
(Noël,
J.),
August
18,
1967,
on
appeal
from
an
assessment
of
the
Minister
of
National
Revenue.
Income
tax—Federal—Income
Tax
Act,
R.S.C.
1952,
c.
148—Sections
The
appellant
was
an
employee
of
DuPont
of
Canada
Ltd.
who
in
1961
was
transferred
from
Sarnia
to
Montreal.
In
selling
his
home
in
Sarnia
he
incurred
an
estimated
loss
of
$4,810
in
respect
of
which,
under
the
general
agreement
applicable
to
employees
of
the
firm
in
such
circumstances,
he
was
reimbursed
by
DuPont
in
the
amount
of
$3,617,
under
a
formula.
In
the
Minister’s
view
the
amount
so
received,
less
$808
in
respect
of
legal
fees
and
real
estate
commission,
or
$2,809,
constituted
income
from
an
office
or
employment
within
the
meaning
of
Section
5(1)
(a),
(b)
or
25
of
the
Act,
as
a
benefit
or
allowance
enjoyed
by
virtue
of
the
employment.
Alternatively,
the
Minister
calculated
the
taxable
benefit
to
be
(a)
$1,479,
being
the
difference
between
the
house’s
basic
cost
(without
subsequent
improvements
by
the
appellant)
and
the
net
proceeds,
less
a
3%
per
annum
allowance
for
occupancy,
or
(b)
$2,669,
being
the
difference
between
the
appraised
value
and
the
selling
price,
less
a
3%
per
annum
allowance
for
occupancy.
HELD:
(i)
That,
as
to
Section
25,
the
evidence
was
sufficient
to
rebut
the
presumption
created
by
the
section
in
that
the
indemnity
could
not
reasonably
be
regarded
as
consideration
for
accepting
the
employment,
as
remuneration
for
services
rendered,
or
as
consideration
for
a
covenant
as
to
what
the
appellant
was
or
was
not
to
do
before
or
after
termination
of
employment;
(ii)
That,
as
to
Section
5(1)(a),
(b),
for
a
payment
to
be
taxable
it
must
not
only
relate
to
the
office
or
employment
but
its
effective
cause
must
lie
in
services
rendered,
which
was
not
the
case
here;
(iii)
That
a
payment
by
an
employer
to
an
employee
was
not
to
be
treated
as
referable
to
services
if
the
payment
was
motivated
by
reasons
of
efficiency
or
even
of
mere
compassion;
(iv)
That
there
was
no
difference
in
principle
between
the
reimbursement
by
an
employer
of
an
expense
incurred
on
his
behalf
by
an
employee
and
the
reimbursement
of
a
loss
which,
in
these
circumstances,
was
in
the
same
category
as
“removal
expenses”;
(v)
That
the
reimbursement
of
an
employee
by
an
employer
for
expenses
or
losses
incurred
by
reason
of
the
employment
was
neither
remuneration
nor
a
benefit
“of
any
kind
whatsoever”
and
did
not
fall
within
either
paragraph
(a)
or
(b)
of
Section
5(1);
(vi)
That
the
amount
reimbursed
to
the
appellant
was
not
a
taxable
benefit
to
him
except
to
the
extent
that
it
related
to
the
cost
of
inside
painting,
which,
as
an
element
of
the
calculated
cost,
the
appellant
had
not
established
to
be
other
than
maintenance,
and
to
the
cost
of
a
television
power
antenna,
drape
rods,
fire
screen
and
grate,
which
the
appellant
had
not
established
could
not
be
used
in
the
new
location,
all
of
which
totalled
$585;
(vii)
That
the
appeal
be
allowed
and
the
assessment
referred
back
to
the
Minister
for
re-assessment
on
the
indicated
basis.
CASES
REFERRED
TO:
Jennings
v.
Kinder,
[1958]
3
W.L.R.
215;
38
T.C.
673;
Hochstrasser
v.
Mayes,
[1959]
1
Ch.
22;
38
T.C.
678;
Tennant
v.
Smith,
[1892]
A.C.
162.
R.
deWolfe
Mackay,
for
the
Appellant.
A.
Garon
and
P.
Cumyn,
for
the
Respondent.
Noël,
J.:—This
is
an
appeal
from
an
assessment
dated
November
8,
1965,
whereby
the
appellant
was
assessed
for
additional
tax
in
the
amount
of
$773.04
by
reason
of
adding
to
his
declared
taxable
income
for
the
year
1963
the
amount
of
$2,809,
a
portion
of
the
loss
incurred
by
him
on
the
sale
of
his
home
in
Sarnia,
which
amount
had
been
reimbursed
by
DuPont
of
Canada
Limited,
his
employer.
The
appellant
was
transferred
on
January
16,
1961,
from
Sarnia,
in
the
Province
of
Ontario,
to
the
City
of
Montreal,
in
the
Province
of
Quebec.
On
March
23,
1959,
he
had
purchased
a
house
in
Sarnia
in
which
he
dwelt
until
September
30,
1961,
at
which
date
he
moved
his
family
to
Montreal,
where
since
January
16,
1961,
he
was
then
working.
He
then
attempted
to
sell
his
house
in
Sarnia
with
no
success
until
the
year
1963
when
on
May
15
of
that
year
he
sold
it
for
a
gross
price
of
$17,000
which,
after
payment
of
legal
fees
and
real
estate
commission
of
$808,
resulted
in
a
net
selling
price
of
$16,192.
According
to
the
appellant,
the
cost
of
the
said
house
was
$21,002
made
up
as
follows
:
Purchase
price
|
$18,750
|
Extras
|
275
|
Inside
painting
|
335
|
Legal
fees
and
mortgage
insurance
|
805
|
Improvements
|
837
|
|
$21,002
|
The
expense
which
the
appellant
claims
he
incurred
on
the
sale
of
the
house,
caused
by
his
employer’s
requirement
that
he
move
from
Sarnia
to
Montreal
amounted,
therefore,
to
$4,810
(i.e.,
$21,002
minus
$16,192
(net
selling
price)
).
In
accordance
with
the
general
policy
of
the
appellant’s
employer,
DuPont
of
Canada
Limited,
as
set
forth
in
its
statement
of
General
Company
Procedure
(Exs.
ASF-6,
ASF-7,
ASF-8
and
ASF-29)
of
which
I
will
say
more
later,
the
employer
reimbursed
the
appellant
in
respect
of
such
expense
an
amount
of
$3,617
which,
less
legal
fees
and
real
estate
commission
of
$808,
namely
$2,809,
was,
as
aforesaid,
added
to
appellant’s
taxable
income
for
the
1963
taxation
year
as
a
taxable
allowance
under
Section
5
of
the
Income
Tax
Act
of
Canada.
Prior
to
selling
the
said
house,
it
was
appraised
by
independent
appraisers
at
Hamilton
Loan
&
Investment
Company,
of
Sarnia,
Ontario,
at
an
appraised
selling
price
of
$20,012.
The
appellant
herein
states
that
as
his
employer,
DuPont
of
Canada
Limited,
required
as
a
condition
of
his
employment,
that
he
move
from
Sarnia,
Ontario,
to
Montreal,
P.Q.,
reimbursement
to
the
extent
above
mentioned
constituted
reimbursement
of
expenses
caused
to
him
by
reason
of
his
employment.
The
appellant
further
urged
(although
this
allegation
was
not
established
at
the
trial)
that
the
said
reimbursement
by
the
employer
was
a
matter
of
convenience
for
the
employer
who
preferred
to
make
the
above-mentioned
reimbursement
rather
than
purchase
the
employee’s
house
(as
it
could
have
done
under
the
company’s
housing
scheme)
at
the
appraised
selling
price
and
then
incur
expenses
of
subsequently
disposing
of
it.
The
appellant,
therefore,
takes
the
position
that
as
the
expenses
incurred
by
him
were
caused
wholly
and
exclusively
by
reason
of
the
terms
and
conditions
of
his
employment
in
respect
of
which
his
employer,
by
reason
of
its
General
Company
Procedure,
undertook
to
reimburse
him,
this
reimbursement
constituted
one
of
the
expenses
incurred
by
him
in
the
course
of
his
employment,
and
one
provided
for
as
a
term
and
condition
of
his
employment.
It
does
not,
he
says,
in
any
manner
whatsoever,
constitute
a
benefit
for
services
as
an
employee
under
the
provisions
of
Section
5
of
the
Income
Tax
Act
or
any
other
section
of
the
said
Act.
In
making
the
assessment
for
the
appellant’s
1963
taxation
year,
the
respondent
assumed
that
:
(a)
the
sum
of
$2,809
paid
by
DuPont
to
the
appellant
constituted
salary,
wages
or
other
remuneration
paid
to
appellant
in
1963,
within
the
meaning
of
subsection
(1)
of
Section
5
of
the
Income
Tax
Act;
(b)
the
aforementioned
sum
was
paid
to
the
appellant
as
an
allowance
for
personal
expenses
or
for
some
other
purpose
and
therefore
was
income
of
the
appellant
within
the
meaning
of
paragraph
(b)
of
subsection
(1)
of
Section
5
of
the
Income
Tax
Act,
and
relies
inter
alia
upon
Section
8,
paragraphs
(a)
and
(b)
of
subsection
(1)
of
Section
5
and
Section
25
of
the
Income
Tax
Act.
The
respondent
admits
that
the
appellant
sold
his
house
for
$16,192,
that
he
had
purchased
it
for
$18,750
and
that
his
employer
paid
him
$2,809
but
refused
to
admit
that
the
appellant
is
entitled
to
add
to
the
amount
of
$18,750
the
‘‘extras,
inside
painting,
legal
fees
and
mortgage
insurance
and
improvements’’
totalling
$2,252.
The
respondent
also
contests
the
right
of
the
appellant
to
place
in
the
amount
of
loss
the
price
of
the
following
items:
mortgage
insurance
($255),
inside
painting
($335),
television
antenna
and
tower
($120),
drape-rods
($90),
and
fire
screen
and
grate
($40)
(the
last
two
of
which
are
included
in
the
item
of
$837
for
improvements).
The
respondent,
indeed,
alternatively
submits
that
the
real
expense
incurred
by
the
appellant
upon
selling
his
house
was
not
$2,809
but
rather
(a)
$1,479.88
being
the
difference
between
the
house’s
cost
price
of
$18,750
and
its
selling
price
of
$16,192
with
a
three
per
cent
per
annum
allowance
for
occupancy
or,
subsidiarily,
(b)
$2,669.31
being
the
difference
between
the
house’s
appraised
value
of
$20,012
and
its
selling
price
of
$16,192,
with
a
three
per
cent
per
annum
allowance
for
occupancy,
and
that
in
either
case
the
excess
of
appellant’s
allowance
over
his
real
expense
should
be
included
in
his
taxable
income
for
1963
for
services
in
that
year.
The
appellant
joined
Canadian
Industries
Limited
on
June
5,
1950,
after
graduating
from
the
University
of
Toronto
with
a
degree
in
mechanical
engineering
and
first
commenced
to
work
for
the
above
corporation
at
Shawinigan
Falls,
P.Q.
He
agreed
that
when
he
became
an
employee
of
the
corporation,
he
knew
he
would
not
work
in
Toronto
and
expected
that
the
company
would
move
him
to
different
locations
in
Canada.
He
also
knew,
and
it
was
understood,
that
he
would
be
reimbursed
for
his
expenses,
but
this
did
not
form
part
of
the
written
contract.
The
evidence
also
shows
that
he
had
no
inducement
to
move
as
he
expected
no
increase
in
salary
nor
any
advancement
when
it
occurred.
It
was
a
practice
of
the
company
to
move
its
employees
from
one
location
to
another,
because
of
their
experience,
skill
and
qualifications,
the
employees
having
no
say
in
the
matter
as
the
transfer
is
the
decision
of
the
company
and
not
the
employee.
From
Shawinigan,
he
was
transferred
to
Montreal,
P.Q.,
on
June
1,
1952,
where
he
dwelt
with
his
wife
and
children
until
he
was
transferred
on
August
1,
1955,
to
Winnipeg,
Manitoba.
Prior
thereto,
as
appears
from
Ex.
ASF-3,
on
June
1,
1954,
the
appellant’s
employment
was
transferred
from
Canadian
Industries
Limited
to
DuPont
Company
of
Canada
Limited,
as
a.
result
of
the
segregation
of
the
assets
of
the
former
company
pursuant
to
a
compromise
sanctioned
by
the
Quebee
Superior
Court
under
Section
126
of
the
Companies
Act
of
Canada.
Under
an
assignment
(Ex.
ASK-3)
the
appellant
agreed
to
the
transfer
to
DuPont
Company
of
Canada
Limited
of
all
rights
accruing
to
Canadian
Industries
Limited
under
his
employment
agreement
in
consideration
of
the
assumption
by
DuPont
Company
of
Canada
Limited
of
all
the
obligations
of
Canadian
Industries
Limited.
On
January
1,
1957,
the
appellant
then
agreed,
pursuant
to
a
record
of
assignment
(Ex.
ASF-4)
to
the
transfer
to
DuPont
Company
of
Canada
(1956)
Limited
of
all
rights
accruing
to
DuPont
Company
of
Canada
Limited
under
his
employment
agreement
in
view
of
the
consolidation
of
the
latter
company
into
DuPont
Company
of
Canada
(1956)
Limited.
The
latter
company’s
name
was
later
changed
to
DuPont
of
Canada
Limited
in
1958.
On
June
1,
1957
he
was
transferred
from
Winnipeg
to
Montreal
where
he
bought
a
house
and
on
July
3,
1959,
he
was
transferred
to
Sarnia,
Ontario.
On
this
occasion
he
sold
his
Montreal
house
at
a
capital
loss
of
$1,000
which,
however,
he
did
not
claim
from
the
company
because
he
did
not
think
the
amount
involved
was
large
enough.
He
stated
that
he
was
roughly
familiar
with
the
policy
of
the
company
permitting
him
to
claim
compensation
for
his
loss
but
did
not
know
exactly
the
details
of
the
procedure
to
follow
to
recover
it
until
he
was
returned
to
Montreal
in
1961.
He
left
his
family
in
Montreal
until
his
wife
sold
his
Montreal
house
and
stayed
in
Sarnia
alone
where
he
attempted
to
rent
a
house.
There
were,
however,
no
houses
available
for
rental
and
he
therefore
had
one
built
and
moved
into
it
in
November
of
1959.
He
financed
the
purchase
of
this
house
through
the
Dominion
Bank
and
paid
the
balance
of
six
or
seven
thousand
dollars
in
cash.
He
was
then
transferred
from
Sarnia
to
Montreal
on
June
20,
1961,
and
as
soon
as
he
was
notified
of
his
transfer,
the
house
in
Sarnia
was
put
up
for
sale.
He
advertised
in
the
newspaper
and
then
shortly
thereafter
it
was
placed
in
the
hands
of
a
real
estate
agent
until
it
was
sold.
He
had
considerable
difficulty
in
selling
his
house
in
Sarnia
because
at
that
time
Imperial
Oil
had
just
decided
to
move
a
fairly
large
number
of
their
senior
personnel
from
Sarnia
to
Toronto
with
the
result
that
there
were
about
60
homes
in
the
same
price
bracket
as
his
for
sale
at
the
same
time.
The
company
participated
in
no
way
in
the
sale
of
his
house,
which
took
place
on
May
15,
1963,
for
a
gross
price
of
$17,000.
Upon
arriving
in
Montreal,
he
bought
a
three-bedroom
house
and
has
not
moved
since.
The
parties
admitted
that
the
General
Company
Procedure,
which
the
employees
of
DuPont
of
Canada
could
take
advantage
of
in
order
to
obtain
reimbursement
for
the
financial
loss
sustained
as
a
result
of
their
transfer
to
another
location
was
ASF-
29,
for
the
period
January
1,
1956
to
May
31,
1961,
ASF-6
for
the
period
June
1,
1961
to
August
4,
1963,
and
ASF-7
from
August
5,
1963,
and
is
still
in
effect.
The
main
difference
between
General
Company
Procedure
Exs.
ASF-29
and
ASF-6
and
ASF-7
is
that
ASF-29
and
ASF-6
contain
a
provision
for
reimbursement
of
transfer
expenses
and
real
estate
losses
only,
whereas
Ex.
ASF-7
contains
in
addition
thereto
a
housing
scheme
under
which
it
provides
interest-free
loans
to
an
employee
who
has
been
transferred
to
another
location
in
an
amount
not
to
exceed
the
difference
between
the
adjusted
cost
and
the
outstanding
indebtedness
on
the
employee’s
present
residential
property
which
loan
must
be
used
for
the
purchase
of
a
house
at
the
new
location.
To
be
eligible
for
such
a
loan
the
employee
must
evidence
his
intention
of
disposing
of
his
present
residential
property
by
placing
it
on
the
market
with
a
real
estate
broker
or
agent
unless
there
is
a
bona
fide
offer
or
sales
contract
relating
to
the
employee’s
property
in
existence
at
the
time
of
his
loan
application.
The
appellant
herein
did
not,
however,
borrow
from
his
employer
as
he
purchased
his
house
by
means
of
a
loan
from
a
bank
and
a
personal
investment
of
some
$7,000,
nor
does
it
appear
did
he
borrow
for
the
purchase
of
a
house
at
the
new
location.
He
merely
claimed
and
obtained
reimbursement
for
the
real
estate
loss
he
sustained
as
a
result
of
his
transfer
to
Montreal.
It
is
stated
in
Ex.
ASF-6
that
‘‘it
is
the
policy
of
the
Company
that
an
employee
transferred
to
a
new
location
by
the
Company
should
not
suffer
financial
loss
as
a
result
of
such
transfer
except
through
his
own
fault’’,
and
except
for
the
above-mentioned
differences
the
moving
or
transfer
expenses
provided
for
under
the
old
and
new
procedure
are
substantially
the
same.
They
are
spelt
out
in
the
procedure
as
covering
(a)
the
cost
of
moving
the
employee’s
household
goods,
(b)
transportation
for
the
employee
and
his
family,
(c)
hotel
expenses
for
a
temporary
period,
(d)
unexpired
rental
payments
under
a
lease
agreement,
(e)
other
necessary
expenses
arising
out
of
the
transfer
at
the
discretion
of
the
department
manager.
A
number
of
incidental
expenses
can
also
be
reimbursed
the
employee
as
out
of
pocket
expenses,
such
as
(a)
connection
of
appliances,
(b)
alteration
of
rugs
and
draperies,
(c)
house
cleaning
and
other
similar
expenses
within
the
discretion
of
the
department
manager.
The
procedure
which
covers
reimbursement
of
real
estate
losses
upon
providing
details
of
same
to
the
Real
Estate
Division
of
the
company
sets
down
the
manner
in
which
the
loss
shall
be
calculated
which,
the
procedure
provides,
shall
be
the
amount
by
which
the
cost
of
the
employee’s
house
(i.e.,
the
purchase
price
plus
reasonable
legal
and
survey
fees
and
capital
improvements
which
increased
the
market
value
of
the
property)
exceeds
the
net
selling
price
of
the
house
(1.e.,
gross
sale
price
less
the
amount
of
any
normal
real
estate
commission
and
mortgage
prepayment
penalty
paid,
legal
fees
and
other
reasonable
costs
incidental
to
the
sale).
In
the
event
the
loss
appears
greater
than
warranted
by
local
real
estate
conditions,
the
Real
Estate
Division
may,
at
its
discretion,
make
an
appraisal
of
the
property.
Where
the
appraisal
reveals
that
either
purchase
or
sale
was
out
of
line
with
prices
for
comparable
properties
in
the
area
the
procedure
provides
that
such
deviation
shall
be
taken
into
account
and
the
loss
reduced
accordingly.
I
should
also
add
that
under
the
old
procedure,
ASI'-6,
the
real
estate
loss
is
adjusted
by
reducing
it
by
1/60
for
each
full
calendar
month
of
owner
occupancy
(thus
the
loss
of
$4,810
reduced
by
$1,844
gives
us
an
adjusted
loss
of
$2,966)
whereas
under
the
new
or
more
recent
procedure
(Ex.
ASF-7,
which
was
adopted
in
the
present
case
and
where
the
amount
reimbursed
is
equal
to
(a)
selling
expenses,
or
(b)
capital
loss,
whichever
is
the
greater)
the
capital
loss
is
the
excess
of
adjusted
cost
over
net
proceeds
of
$3,617.
This
is
the
amount
paid
to
the
appellant
from
which
legal
fees
and
real
estate
commission
of
$808
was
deducted
to
obtain
$2,809,
which
as
already
mentioned,
was
added
to
the
taxable
income
of
the
appellant
by
the
assessment
appealed
from.
There
are
no
decisions
in
this
country
on
the
taxability
of
an
indemnity
paid
to
an
employee
against
the
loss
sustained
on
the
sale
of
his
house
when
he
is
transferred
from
one
locality
to
another
and
the
present
appeal
is
a
test
case
of
special
interest
to
a
number
of
employees
who,
like
the
appellant,
do
not
wish
to
be
taxed
on
amounts
which
they
consider
to
be
reimbursement
for
expenses
incurred
in
the
course
of
their
employment.
There
are,
however,
two
English
decisions,
Jennings
v.
Kinder,
[1958]
3
W.L.R.
215,
and
Hochstrasser
v.
Mayes,
[1959]
1
Ch.
22,
which
were
heard
together
in
the
Court
of
Appeal
and
the
House
of
Lords
and
were
reported
together
in
38
T.C.
at
p.
673.
In
the
case
of
Jennings
v.
Kinder,
the
majority
in
the
Appeal
Court
held
that
the
payment
in
question
made
under
a
scheme
to
compensate
the
employee
for
the
loss
suffered
on
the
sale
of
his
house,
when
he
had
to
move
in
the
course
of
his
employment,
was
a
payment
for
a
consideration
other
than
services,
as
such
payment
had
been
received
not
in
his
capacity
as
employee
but
in
his
capacity
as
party
to
the
contract
concerning
his
house
and
that
the
amount
received
should,
therefore,
not
be
added
to
his
income.
There
is,
in
that
case,
a
statement
by
Jenkins,
L.J.
to
the
effect
that
even
if
the
employee
had
not
given
any
consideration
other
than
service
for
the
payment,
it
might
not
have
been
taxable
as
not
constituting
a
profit.
He
expressed
this
at
p.
693
of
volume
38
of
Tax
Cases
as
follows
:
The
transaction
may
be
described
as
a
form
of
insurance.
It
cannot
bestow
any
profit
on
the
employee
but
merely
protects
him
against
loss.
To
segregate
the
benefit
(in
cases
in
which
it
materializes)
from
the
burden,
and
to
ignore
the
cost
to
the
employee
of
obtaining
it
(in
the
shape
of
the
purchase
money
he
has
laid
out
in
the
faith
of
the
housing
scheme
and
agreement
and
lost
through
the
depreciation
in
value
of
the
house),
ignoring
also
the
other
forms
of
consideration
moving
from
the
employee
as
above
described,
and
thus
to
arrive
at
the
conclusion
that
the
sum
paid
by
I.C.I.
under
the
indemnity
by
way
of
recoupment
for
that
loss
is
a
profit
of
his
employment
as
being
a
sum
received
for
no
consideration
other
than
services
appears
to
me
to
involve
a
considerable
distortion
of
the
facts.
And
at
p.
694
he
concludes
:
I
find
it
difficult
to
rid
myself
of
the
inclination
to
think
that,
if
the
house-purchase
transaction
is
looked
at
as
a
whole,
no
profit
arises
from
it
to
the
employee
even
in
a
case
in
which
the
guarantee
becomes
operative.
The
above
English
decisions
were
rendered
under
Schedule
E,
the
first
rule
of
which
reads
as
follows:
Tax
under
Schedule
E
shall
be
annually
charged
on
every
person
having
or
exercising
an
office
or
employment
of
profit
mentioned
in
Schedule
E
or
to
whom
any
annuity,
pension
or
stipend
chargeable
under
that
Schedule
is
payable
in
respect
of
ali
salaries,
fees,
wages,
perquisites
or
profits
whatsoever
therefrom
for
the
year
of
assessment,
after
deducting
the
amount
of
duties
or
other
sums
payable
or
chargeable
on
the
same
by
virtue
of
any
Act
of
Parliament
where
the
same
have
been
really
and
bona
fide
paid
and
borne
by
the
party
to
be
charged.
The
above
rule
is
quite
different
from
the
sections
under
which
the
appellant
was
assessed
and
which
are
reproduced
and
emphasized
hereunder:
5.
(1)
Income
for
a
taxation
year
from
an
office
or
employment
is
the
salary,
wages
and
other
remuneration,
including
gratuities,
received
by
the
taxpayer
in
the
year
plus
(a)
the
value
of
board,
lodging
and
other
benefits
of
any
kind
whatsoever
(except
the
benefit
he
derives
from
his
employer’s
contributions
to
or
under
a
registered
pension
fund
or
plan,
group
life,
sickness
or
accident
insurance
plan,
medical
services
plan,
supplementary
unemployment
benefit
plan
or
deferred
profit
sharing
plan)
received
or
enjoyed
by
him
in
the
year
in
respect
of,
in
the
course
of,
or
by
virtue
of
the
office
or
employment;
and
(b)
all
amounts
received
by
him
in
the
year
as
an
allowance
for
personal
or
living
expenses
or
as
an
allowance
for
any
other
purpose
except
(i)
travelling
or
personal
or
living
expense
allowances.
A
number
of
specific
exceptions
then
follow
of
expenses
which
are
not
included
in
income
and
the
section
then
ends
as
follows:
minus
the
deductions,
permitted
by
paragraphs
(i),
(ib),
(q)
and
(qa)
of
subsection
(1)
of
section
11
and
by
subsections
(5)
to
(11),
inclusive,
of
section
11
but
without
any
other
deductions
whatsoever.
(Italics
added.)
25.
An
amount
received
by
one
person
from
another,
(a)
during
a
period
while
the
payee
was
an
officer
of,
or
in
the
employment
of,
the
payer,
or
(b)
on
account
or
in
lieu
of
payment
of,
or
in
satisfaction
of,
an
obligation
arising
out
of
an
agreement
made
by
the
payer
with
the
payee
immediately
prior
to,
during
or
immediately
after
a
period
that
the
payee
was
an
officer
of,
or
in
the
employment
of,
the
payer,
shall
be
deemed,
for
the
purpose
of
section
5,
to
be
remuneration
for
the
payee’s
services
rendered
as
an
officer
or
during
the
period
of
employment,
unless
it
is
established
that,
irrespective
of
when
the
agreement,
if
any,
under
which
the
amount
was
received
was
made
or
the
form
or
legal
effect
thereof,
it
cannot
reasonably
be
regarded
as
having
been
received
(i)
as
consideration
or
partial
consideration
for
accepting
the
office
or
entering
into
the
contract
of
employment,
(ii)
as
remuneration
or
partial
remuneration
for
services
as
an
officer
or
under
the
contract
of
employment,
or
(iii)
in
consideration
or
partial
consideration
for
covenant
with
reference
to
what
the
officer
or
employee
is,
or
is
not,
to
do
before
or
after
the
termination
of
the
employment.
The
language
of
Section
5(1)
(a)
appears
to
be
wider
than
its
English
counterpart
as
it
taxes
66
.
.
other
benefits
of
any
kind
whatsoever
.
.
.
received
or
enjoyed
by
him
(the
employee)
in
the
year
in
respect
of,
in
the
course
of,
or
by
virtue
of
the
office
or
employment’’.
I
should
also
point
out
that
the
facts
of
the
present
case
are
not
entirely
the
same
as
in
the
two
English
decisions
in
that
the
appellant
had
not
taken
advantage
of
the
interest-free
loan
in
purchasing
the
house
he
later
sold
at
a
loss
having
merely
availed
himself
of
the
right
he
had
as
an
employee
to
require
reimbursement
of
the
capital
loss
he
sustained
upon
the
sale
of
it.
In
the
English
cases,
on
the
other
hand,
both
taxpayers
had
taken
advantage
of
the
whole
scheme
having
borrowed
from
their
employer
to
purchase
their
house
and
having
later
claimed
compensation
for
the
loss
sustained
through
depreciation
in
its
value
against
which
the
employer
had
guaranteed
them.
In
the
English
cases
under
the
terms
of
the
agreement
signed
by
each
employee
taking
advantage
of
the
scheme,
he
was
required,
if
he
wanted
to
sell
or
let
the
house
on
being
transferred
to
a
new
place
of
employment
in
the
company’s
service,
to
offer
to
sell
the
house
first
to
the
company.
Furthermore,
the
employee
was
bound
to
keep
the
house
in
good
tenantable
repair.
It
was
because
of
this
that
the
Court
held
that
the
payment
made
to
the
employee
in
both
cases
was
made
for
a
consideration
other
than
services
and,
therefore,
was
not
taxable.
Jenkins,
L.J.
clearly
sets
this
out
in
Hochstrasser
(H.M.
Inspector
of
Taxes)
v.
Mayes
and
Jennings
v.
Kinder
(supra)
at
p.
692:
In
order
to
participate
in
the
housing
scheme
an
employee
of
I.C.I.,
over
and
above
answering
that
description,
and
being
married,
had
to
comply
with
a
number
of
conditions.
In
order
to
bring
himself
within
the
ambit
of
the
scheme
he
had,
of
course,
as
an
essential
prerequisite,
to
buy
a
house
and
find
the
purchase
money
for
it
either
out
of
his
own
resources
or
by
means
of
an
ordinary
mortgage
supplemented
by
an
interest-free
loan
granted
by
I.C.I.
It
is,
of
course,
true
that
an
employee
need
not
buy
a
house
or
enter
the
scheme
unless
he
chose.
But
any
employee
buying
a
house
and
entering
the
scheme
must,
I
think,
be
taken
to
have
done
so
on
which
it
promised,
he
would
in
all
probability
not
have
ventured
the
faith
of
the
scheme.
Apart
from
the
scheme
and
the
guarantee
to
buy
a
house
owing
to
the
risk
of
capital
loss
in
the
event
of
his
having
to
sell,
especially
in
the
case
of
his
being
transferred.
Then
he
had
to
enter
into
the
housing
agreement
and
comply
with
the
conditions
on
which
his
right
to
the
indemnity
was
by
that
agreement
made
to
depend.
In
the
forefront
of
those
conditions
is
the
positive
obligation
laid
upon
him
to
offer
the
house
for
sale
to
I.C.I.
in
the
event
of
his
desiring
to
sell
or
let
it
by
reason
of
transfer.
This,
as
I
understand
it,
is
an
obligation
with
which
the
employee
is
bound
to
comply
in
that
event
and
not
merely
a
condition
he
must
fulfil
in
order
to
claim
the
benefit
of
the
guarantee.
Moreover,
it
applies
when
the
employee
desires
to
let
and
not
merely
when
he
desires
to
sell.
This,
I
think,
is
a
restriction
of
sub-
stance.
The
employee
might
have
perfectly
good
reasons
for
wishing
to
let
rather
than
sell
on
being
transferred.
But
the
housing
agreement
precludes
him
from
doing
this
without
first
offering
the
house
for
sale
to
I.C.I.
Then
it
is
to
be
observed
that
the
agreement
makes
it
condition
precedent
to
any
claim
under
the
guarantee
that
the
employee
should
keep
the
house
in
good
tenantable
repair
.
.
.
And
then
lower
down
at
p.
693
he
continues:
.
.
.
In
the
event
of
the
house
depreciating
in
value,
the
employee
does
no
doubt
gain
a
substantial
advantage,
but
not,
as
I
think,
by
any
means
an
advantage
representing
pure
bounty
on
the
part
of
I.C.I.
referable
to
no
consideration
moving
from
the
employee
other
than
his
services.
Jenkins,
L.J.
then
concluded
at
p.
696
as
follows:
I
think
it
may
well
be
said
here
that,
while
the
employee’s
employment
by
I.C.I.
was
a
causa
sine
qua
non
of
his
entering
into
the
housing
agreement
and
consequently,
in
the
events
which
happened,
receiving
a
payment
from
I.C.I.,
the
causa
causans
was
the
distinct
contractual
relationship
subsisting
between
I.C.I.
and
the
employee
under
the
housing
agreement,
coupled
of
course
with
the
event
of
the
house
declining
in
value.
Mr.
Pennycuick
said,
in
effect,
that
a
consideration
other
than
services
could
only
be
shown
if
the
consideration,
other
than
services,
moving
from
the
employee
for
the
benefit
received
demonstrably
represented
full
value
in
money
or
money’s
worth
for
the
benefit
in
question.
I
find
no
warrant
in
the
authorities
for
this
proposition.
It
would
no
doubt
be
right
to
disregard
a
fictitious
or
colourable
bargain
designed
to
disguise
what
was
in
fact
remuneration
as
payable
on
some
other
account.
But
nothing
of
that
sort
enters
into
this
case.
The
housing
agreement
constitutes
a
genuine
bargain,
advantageous
no
doubt
to
the
employee,
but
also
not
without
its
advantages
to
I.C.I.,
and
I
see
no
reason
for
disregarding
it
as
the
source
of
the
payments
sought
to
be
taxed
in
these
two
appeals.
In
the
House
of
Lords
(reported
at
38
T.C.
702)
both
Viscount
Simonds
and
Lord
Cohen
appear
to
attach
little
importance
to
the
adequacy
of
the
consideration
involved
in
the
two
cases.
Indeed,
both
stated
that
the
housing
agreement
was
a
bona
fide
arrangement
in
which
the
employer
received
consideration,
the
adequacy
of
which
was
irrelevant,
in
accordance
with
ordinary
legal
principles.
The
agreement,
therefore,
in
their
view,
and
not
the
employee’s
office
or
employment
was
the
effective
cause
of
the
payment
and
constituted
the
source
of
the
payment.
In
this
respect
Lord
Cohen
expressed
himself
as
follows
at
p.
710
:
It
is
clear
from
the
finding
of
the
Commissioners
that
the
Respondent
was
receiving
under
his
service
agreement
the
full
salary
appropriate
to
the
appointment
he
held.
The
housing
scheme
pursuant
to
which
the
housing
agreement
was
made
was
introduced
by
I.C.I.
not
to
provide
increased
remuneration
for
employees
but
as
part
of
a
general
staff
policy
to
secure
a
contented
staff
and
to
ease
the
minds
of
employees
compelled
to
move
from
one
part
of
the
country
to
another
as
the
result
of
the
Company's
action.
The
housing
agreement
itself
gave
advantages
to
the
Company
which
may
not
be
easy
to
quantify
but
which
are
not
negligible
or
colourable.
For
these
reasons,
as
well
as
the
reasons
given
by
the
noble
and
learned
Lord
on
the
Woolsack,
I
agree
with
Jenkins,
L.J.
that
the
housing
agreement
constituted
a
genuine
bargain,
advantageous
no
doubt
to
the
Respondent
but
also
not
without
its
advantages
to
I.C.I.,
and
I
see
no
reason
for
disregarding
it
as
the
source
of
the
payment
sought
to
be
taxed
in
the
appeal.
(The
italics
added.)
Lord
Radcliffe
on
the
other
hand
seems
to
regard
the
conclusion
that
the
amount
received
was
not
taxable
as
supported
by
the
facts
on
the
case,
whether
or
not
the
employee
provided
consideration
under
the
agreement.
He
expressed
this
at
p.
708
as
follows:
.
.
.
It
is
true
enough
that
the
guarantee
or
indemnity
offered
was
not
unqualified,
that
an
employee
adopting
the
housing
scheme
undertook
certain
obligations,
and
that
some
of
these
were
capable
of
enuring
in
certain
events
to
the
advantage
of
the
employer.
But
there
is
no
reason
to
suppose
that
the
employer’s
purpose
in
proposing
the
scheme
was
to
obtain
these
advantages.
What
he
wanted
was
to
ease
the
mind
and
mitigate
the
possible
distress
of
an
employee
who,
having
sunk
money
in
buying
a
house,
might
find
himself
called
upon
at
short
notice
to
put
it
on
the
market
without
any
assurance
of
getting
the
whole
of
his
money
back.
To
me
therefore,
it
seems
beside
the
point
to
scrutinize
the
housing
agreement
with
the
aim
of
measuring
precisely
how
much
in
the
way
of
valuable
consideration
was
afforded
by
the
employee
under
the
agreement.
I
should
have
taken
the
same
view
of
the
result
if
he
had
afforded
none.
(Italics
added.)
I
can
deal
with
Section
25
of
the
Act
briefly
by
saying
that
the
appellant
has,
in
my
view,
rebutted
by
the
production
of
adequate
evidence
the
presumption
this
section
creates
that
the
payment
he
received
from
his
employer
is
remuneration
for
services
rendered.
It
indeed
appears
clearly
that
the
indemnity
paid
to
the
appellant
in
respect
of
the
capital
loss
sustained
upon
the
sale
of
his
house
when
transferred,
cannot
reasonably
be
regarded
as
falling
within
any
of
the
following
categories:
(1)
‘‘as
consideration
or
partial
consideration
for
accepting
the
office
or
entering
into
the
contract
of
employment’’
as
the
evidence
discloses
that
it
had
nothing
to
do
with
his
engagement
as
an
employee;
(ii)
‘as
remuneration
or
partial
remuneration
for
services
as
officer
or
under
the
contract
of
employment’’
as
the
evidence
discloses
that
the
appellant
was
receiving
under
his
service
contract
the
full
salary
appropriate
to
his
appointment.
Furthermore,
the
source
of
the
payment
was
not
the
services
rendered
by
the
appellant
but
resulted
from
the
fact
that
he
availed
himself
of
the
procedure
whereby
he
could
claim
compensation
for
the
capital
loss
sustained
as
a
result
of
his
transfer
from
Sarnia
to
Montreal.
The
fact
that
he
did
not
claim
che
loss
sustained
in
1959
on
the
sale
of
his
house
in
Montreal
prior
to
his
transfer
to
Sarnia,
Ontario,
would
indicate
that
it
was
nov
vart
of
his
remuneration
for
services
under
his
employment
and
.
hat
if
he
wanted
to
obtain
such
an
amount,
it
was
necessary
to
cla.
"n
it
by
means
of
the
procedure
set
down
in
the
company’s
polic.
regulations
and
comply
with
its
conditions;
(iii)
nor
can
it
be
said
that
the
payment
received
by
the
appellant
was
‘‘in
consideration
or
partial
consideration
for
covenant
with
reference
to
what
the
officer
or
employee
is,
or
is
not,
to
do
before
or
after
the
termination
of
the
employment’’.
I
now
come
to
Section
5(1)
(a)
and
(b)
of
the
Act
which,
as
already
mentioned,
is
couched
in
language
which
appears
to
be
wider
than
the
English
taxation
rule
on
which
the
taxpayers
in
Hochstrasser
v.
Mayes
and
Jennings
v.
Kinder
(supra)
were
held
not
to
be
taxable.
The
Canadian
taxation
section
indeed
uses
such
embracing
words
that
at
first
glance
it
appears
extremely
difficult
to
see
how
anything
can
slip
through
this
wide
and
closely
interlaced
legislative
net.
In
order,
however,
to
properly
evaluate
its
intent
it
is,
I
believe,
necessary
to
bear
in
mind
firstly,
that
Section
5
of
the
Act
is
concerned
solely
with
the
taxation
of
income
identified
by
its
relationship
to
a
certain
entity,
namely,
an
office
or
employment
and
in
order
to
be
taxable
as
income
from
an
office
or
employment,
money
received
by
an
employee
must
not
merely
constitute
income
as
distinct
from
capital,
but
it
must
arise
from
his
office
or
employment.
Similar
comments
were
made
in
Hochstrasser
v.
Mayes
with
reference
to
the
English
legislation
by
Viscount
Simonds
at
p.
705
and
by
Lord
Radcliffe,
at
p.
707.
Secondly,
the
question
whether
a
payment
arises
from
an
office
or
employment
depends
on
its
causative
relationship
to
an
office
or
employment,
in
other
words,
whether
the
services
in
the
employment
are
the
effective
cause
of
the
payment.
I
should
add
here
that
the
question
of
what
was
the
effective
cause
of
the
payment
is
to
be
found
in
the
legal
source
of
the
payment,
and
here
this
source
was
the
agreement
which
resulted
from
the
open
offer
of
the
employer
to
compensate
its
employee
for
his
loss
and
the
acceptance
by
him
of
such
offer.
The
cause
of
the
payment
is
not
the
services
rendered,
although
such
services
are
the
occasion
of
the
payment,
but
the
fact
that
because
of
the
manner
in
which
the
services
must
be
rendered
or
will
be
rendered,
he
will
incur
or
have
to
ineur
a
loss
which
other
employees
paying
taxes
do
not
have
to
suffer.
Indeed,
here,
as
in
Hochstrasser
v.
Mayes,
the
real
basis
for
the
decision
that
the
payment
received
should
not
form
part
of
his
income,
is
that
the
legal
source
of
the
payment,
and
therefore
the
effiective
cause,
was
the
source
designated
by
the
bona
fide
procedure
and
agreement
entered
into
by
the
parties
and
not
the
services
rendered.
It
may
indeed
be
inferred
from
the
evidence
that,
as
in
the
English
cases,
the
company
policy
pursuant
to
which
the
present
claim
and
reimbursement
was
made,
was
introduced
by
the
appellant’s
company
‘‘not
to
provide
increased
remuneration
for
employees,
but
as
part
of
a
general
staff
policy
to
secure
a
contented
staff
and
ease
the
minds
of
employees
compelled
to
move
from
one
city
to
another
as
the
result
of
the
company’s
action’’.
Furthermore,
the
agreement
to
pay
this
compensation
to
the
appellant
gave
to
the
company
the
advantage
of
an
employee
whose
production
would
not
be
affected
by
the
prospect
of
sustaining
a
loss
on
the
house
he
was
leaving
to
proceed
to
another
city
where,
again,
he
would
be
faced
with
other
problems
of
location,
which
in
view
of
the
numerous
transfers
required
as
a
result
of
its
extended
operations
throughout
the
country,
cannot
be
considered
as
negligible.
It
cannot
be
said
here
also
that
the
payment
was
a
fictitious
or
colourable
bargain
designed
to
disguise
remuneration
payable
on
some
other
account,
nor
is
this
the
case
of
an
employer
undertaking
to
purchase
a
particular
asset
from
an
employee
at
a
price
in
excess
of
the
apparent
value
of
the
asset.
The
procedure
laid
down
in
the
company
procedure
is
indeed
such
that
the
price
determined
thereby
is,
in
my
view,
substantially
a
fair
evaluation
of
the
capital
loss
sustained
in
all
cases.
That
the
payment
is
made
for
no
consideration
in
the
legal
sense,
should
not
(as
pointed
out
by
Jenkins,
L.J.
in
Jennings
v.
Kinder
(supra)
at
p.
692)
‘‘be
treated
as
referable
to
services
or
as
made
to
the
employee
in
that
capacity
’
’
if
the
payment
is
motivated
or
caused
by
reasons
of
efficiency
or
even
of
mere
compassion,
In
this
vein,
it
should
not
be
irrelevant
to
point
out
in
passing,
that
if
a
certain
class
of
taxpayers
in
this
country
are
required,
in
order
to
earn
their
emoluments
of
office
or
of
employment,
to
incur
certain
expenses,
reimbursement
of
these
expenses
should
not
be
considered
as
conferring
benefits
under
Section
5(1)
(a)
of
the
Act.
Furthermore,
and
this
is
really
the
answer
to
the
respondent’s
case,
a
reimbursement
of
an
expense
actually
incurred
in
the
course
of
the
employment
or
of
a
loss
actually
incurred
in
the
course
of
the
employment
is
not
an
“allowance”
within
the
meaning
of
the
word
in
Section
5(1)
(b)
as
an
allowance
implies
an
amount
paid
in
respect
of
some
possible
expense
without
any
obligation
to
account.
There
can,
I
believe,
be
no
difference
in
principle
between
the
reimbursement
of
an
expense
or
of
a
loss
nor,
in
my
view,
can
anything
turn
on
the
fact
that
the
loss
or
expense
which
is
the
subject
matter
of
the
present
reimbursement
covers
the
value
of
a
capital
asset.
Although
I
have
no
doubt,
as
a
matter
of
substance,
that
the
payment
received
by
the
appellant
should
not
be
included
in
his
income,
I
have
had
some
difficulty
in
expressing
the
reasons
why
such
a
result
should
be
obtained.
The
English
House
of
Lords’
decision
has
been
of
some
use
in
dealing
with
Section
25
of
the
Act,
it
has
not,
however,
been
too
helpful
in
applying
Section
5
to
the
instant
case,
as
the
wording
of
the
English
rule
is
quite
different
from
our
Section
5
even
though
some
of
the
facts
are
similar.
The
correctness
of
the
conclusion
arrived
at
under
Section
5
can,
however,
I
believe,
be
sustained
by
a
mere
examination
of
the
notion
of
remuneration,
reimbursement
for
money
disbursed
in
the
course
of
or
by
reason
of
the
employment
and
allowance.
These
seem
to
me
to
be
three
distinctively
different
concepts.
In
a
particular
case,
it
may
be
difficult
to
decide
as
a
question
of
fact
into
which
category
a
particular
payment
falls.
There
1s,
however,
no
difficulty
when
an
employee
is
required
to
disburse
money
in
the
course
of
his
employment,
1.e.,
to
make
payments
on
behalf
of
the
employer.
A
clear
example
is
where
a
cashier
pays
wages.
There
would
equally
be
no
difficulty
with
reimbursement
of
such
an
expense
paid
out
of
an
employee’s
own
pocket
and
then
reimbursed,
1.e.,
if
a
lawyer’s
clerk
or
stenographer
paid
search
fees
out
of
his
or
her
own
pocket
and,
upon
returning
to
the
office,
took
the
money
out
of
petty
cash.
Such
transactions
are
too
obvious
for
debate.
Another
class
of
payment
by
an
employer
to
an
employee
is
also
so
well
established
as
to
be
beyond
debate.
Where
an
employment
contract
contemplates
an
employee
being
away
from
his
home
base
from
time
to
time,
the
employee
must
eat
and
sleep
while
away
from
home.
The
expense
involved
in
providing
himself
with
food
and
shelter
while
away
from
home
are
personal
expenses,
but
they
are
personal
expenses
that
arise
because
the
employee
is
required
to
perform
the
duties
of
his
employment
away
from
his
home
base
temporarily.
Such
a
payment
is
money
disbursed
‘by
reason
of’’
but
not
‘‘in
the
course
of’’
his
employment.
Nobody
questions
that
reimbursement
of
such
an
expense
is
something
quite
different
from
remuneration
for
the
services
performed
by
the
employee.
Such
person
expenses
are
ineurred
by
reason
of
the
employment.
Until
the
employee
has
been
reimbursed
for
such
expenses,
he
is
out
of
pocket
by
reason
of
the
employment.
His
remuneration
can
only
be
what
he
receives
over
and
above
such
reimbursement.
In
a
case
such
as
here,
where
the
employee
is
subject
to
being
moved
from
one
place
to
another,
any
amount
by
which
he
is
out
of
pocket
by
reason
of
such
a
move
is
in
exactly
the
same
category
as
ordinary
travelling
expenses.
His
financial
position
is
adversely
affected
by
reason
of
that
particular
facet
of
his
employment
relationship.
When
his
employer
reimburses
him
for
any
such
loss,
it
cannot
be
regarded
as
remuneration,
for
if
that
were
all
that
he
received
under
his
employment
arrangement,
he
would
not
have
received
any
amount
for
his
services.
Economically,
all
that
he
would
have
received
would
be
the
amount
that
he
was
out
of
pocket
by
reason
of
the
employment.
An
allowance
is
quite
a
different
thing
from
reimbursement.
It
is,
as
already
mentioned,
an
arbitrary
amount
usually
paid
in
lieu
of
reimbursement.
It
is
paid
to
the
employee
to
use
as
he
wishes
without
being
required
to
account
for
its
expenditure.
For
that.
reason
it
is
possible
to
use
it
as
a
concealed
increase
in
remuneration
and
that
is
why,
I
assume,
‘‘allowances’’
are
taxed
as
though
they
were
remuneration.
It
appears
to
me
quite
clear
that
reimbursement
of
an
employee
by
an
employer
for
expenses
or
losses
incurred
by
reason
of
the
employment
(which
as
stated
by
Lord
MacNaughton
in
Tennant
v.
Smith,
[1892]
A.C.
162,
puts
nothing
in
the
pocket
but
merely
saves
the
pocket)
is
neither
remuneration
as
such
or
a
benefit
‘‘of
any
kind
whatsoever’’
so
it
does
not
fall
within
the
introductory
words
of
Section
5(1)
or
within
paragraph
(a).
It
is
equally
obvious
that
it
is
not
an
allowance
within
paragraph
(b)
for
the
reasons
that
I
have
already
given.
I
would,
however,
exclude
from
the
cost
of
the
appellant’s
house
the
item
added
to
its
purchase
price
under
“inside
painting
($335)”
because
the
appellant
has
not
established
clearly
that
it
is
not
maintenance
and,
therefore,
if
so,
it
is
a
personal
or
living
expense
under
Section
139(1)
(ae)
(1).
I
would
also
exclude
the
television
power
antenna,
the
fire
screen
and
grate,
as
well
as
the
drape
rods
because
the
appellant
has
not
established
that
such
items
could
not
be
used
in
the
new
location.
If
they
could
have
been
so
used,
they
could
have
been
moved
to
Montreal,
and
cannot
be
considered
as
part
of
the
real
expense
of
moving
to
Montreal.
The
remainder
of
the
items,
however,
should
be
included
in
the
cost
of
the
house
and
the
appellant’s
loss
calculated
on
that
basis.
Such
a
loss,
in
my
view,
is
in
the
same
category
as
those
other
‘‘removal
expenses’’
(such
as
the
expenses
incurred
by
the
employee
in
moving
himself,
his
family
and
his
household
effects)
which
are
considered
by
the
respondent
as
conferring
no
benefit
on
the
employee
and
which,
as
a
matter
of
fact,
are
not
added
by
the
respondent
to
the
appellant’s
income.
I
can,
indeed,
see
no
difference
in
principle
between
the
case
of
a
salaried
employee
who
is
sent
away
for
a
few
days
to
work
outside
and
whose
expenses
are
paid
whether
he
remains
away
for
a
week,
a
month
or
even
a
year,*
or
the
case
of
the
appellant
here
who
incurred
expenses
in
moving
back
and
forth
to
wherever
he
was
employed.
As
a
matter
of
fact,
I
would
think
that
the
situation
of
the
appellant
is
very
similar
in
that
the
payment
he
received
covers
a
loss
sustained
by
him
because
of
the
exigencies
of
his
employment
and
is
as
far
removed
from
remuneration
for
services
or
from
a
benefit
of
employment
or
even
from
an
allowance,
as
the
‘‘removal
expenses”
he
now
receives
without
taxation
liability.
I
should
also
add
that,
although
the
procedure
set
down
in
Exhibit
ASF-7
(whereby
the
capital
loss
was
determined
as
being
the
excess
of
adjusted
costs
over
net
proceeds
less
legal
fees
and
real
estate
commission
of
$808,
namely
$2,809)
was
not
effective
(as
it
bears
the
date
of
August
5,
1963)
on
the
date
of
the
sale
of
the
appellant’s
house
which
took
place
on
May
15,
1963,
it
was
in
operation
and,
therefore,
available
to
the
appellant
on
December
5,
1963,
when
his
claim
was
finally
settled.
It
therefore
follows
that
the
cost
of
the
inside
painting
and
the
estimated
value
of
the
television
antenna,
of
the
drape
rods
and
fire
screen
and
grate,
totalling
$585,
should
not
be
added
to
the
cost
of
the
house
of
the
appellant.
Subject
to
the
above
correction,
the
amount
received
by
the
appellant
represents
in
my
view
a
fair
calculation
of
the
real
expenses
incurred
by
him
as
a
result
of
his
transfer
to
Montreal
and
should
not
be
added
to
his
income.
I
would,
therefore,
allow
the
appeal
with
costs
and
refer
the
assessment
back
to
the
respondent
for
re-assessment
on
the
above
basis.