Noël,
J.:—This
is
an
appeal
against
the
appellant’s
income
tax
assessments
for
the
years
1957
and
1958.
The
appellant
(hereinafter
sometimes
called
Foreign
Power)
realized
a
gain
of
$703,636
in
1957
on
the
sale
of
16,000
common
shares
of
TransCanada
Pipelines
Limited
(hereinafter
sometimes
called
TransCanada),
725
common
shares
of
Quebec
Natural
Gas
Corporation
(hereinafter
sometimes
called
Quebee
Gas),
16,000
class
B
shares
of
Quebec
Gas
and
150
units
of
Trans-Canada
and
(because
of
a
loss
sustained
of
$6,025
on
the
sale
of
500
Quebec
Gas
units
and
the
loss
of
$77,625
on
the
sale
of
2,500
units
of
Trans-Canada)
a
reduced
gain
of
$63,932.83
in
1958
on
the
sale
of
2,367
common
shares
of
Trans-Canada
and
8,865
classes
B
shares
of
Quebec
Gas.
The
sole
question
for
determination
is
whether
these
gains
were
realizations
of
an
enhancement
in
the
value
of
investments
by
the
appellant
and,
therefore,
not
subject
to
income
tax
as
claimed
by
it
or
income
from
the
appellant’s
business
within.
the
meaning
of
Sections
3
and
4
and
the
definition
of
business
in
Section
139(1)
(e)
of
the
Income
Tax
Act,
R.S.C.
1952,
c.
148
and,
therefore,
taxable
as
submitted
on
behalf
of
the
Minister.
Sections
3
and
4
of
the
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
employments.
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.’’
Section
139(1)
(e)
defines
‘‘business’’
as
follows:
“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;”
Taxation
of
the
appellant
here
is
sought
by
the
Minister
under
somewhat
extraordinary
circumstances
in
that
as
the
appellant
is
a
bona
fide
public
investment
company,
whatever
gains
it
may
realize
on
its
investments
should
normally
not
be
taxable.
The
Minister,
however,
in
this
instance
has
asked
the
Court
to
go
beyond
the
actual
purchase
and
sale
of
the
shares
involved
herein,
delve
into
the
manner
in
which
they
were
obtained
from
a
company
called
N.T.
Investments
Ltd.
and
look
at
the
interrelationship
between
the
appellant,
its
officers
and
two
corporations,
N.T.
Investments
Limited
and
Nesbitt
Thomson
and
Co.
Ltd.
and
its
officers
and
directors
and
consider
the
fact
that
N.T.
Investments
Ltd.
purchased
the
control
of
the
appellant
in
between
the
purchase
in
two
batches
of
some
of
the
shares
involved
herein.
The
above
facts
were
brought
into
this
appeal
by
the
respondent
immediately
prior
to
this
appeal
being
placed
on
the
roll
by
way
of
a
motion
to
amend
his
reply
by
inserting
therein
paragraph
12
which
lists
a
number
of
assumed
facts
on
which
he
relies
for
the
assessments.
This
motion
was
strongly
opposed
before
the
President
of
this
Court
on
the
basis
that
facts
which
occurred
prior
to
the
date
when
the
appellant
acquired
the
securities
as
well
as
matters
dealing
with
other
companies
and
persons
are
irrelevant.
The
President,
however,
granted
the
motion
but
reserved
the
appellant’s
right
to
argue
at
the
trial
whether
the
said
assumptions
were
irrelevant
or
not
as
well
as
to
object
to
the
production
of
any
document
dealing
with
any
other
person
than
the
appellant.
Prior
to
the
evidence
adduced
at
this
appeal,
one
of
the
appellant’s
counsel
reiterated
its
objection
to
any
evidence
dealing
with
the
assumptions
of
fact
submitted
by
the
Minister
which
facts
had
occurred
prior
to
the
time
when
the
appellant
acquired
the
securities
as
well
as
to
all
matters
dealing
with
companies
and
persons
other
than
the
appellant
and
it
is
now
incumbent
upon
me
to
deal
with
this
matter.
The
appellant
here
relies
on
the
often
referred
to
Salomon
v.
Salomon
G
Co.,
[1897]
A.C.
22
at
30,
where
Lord
Halsbury
stated
:
“But
short
of
such
proof
it
seems
to
me
impossible
to
dispute
that
once
the
Company
is
legally
incorporated
it
must
be
treated
like
any
other
independent
person
with
its
rights
and
liabilities
appropriate
to
itself,
and
that
the
motives
of
those
who
took
part
in
the
promotion
of
the
Company
are
absolutely
irrelevant
in
discussing
what
those
rights
and
liabilities
are.’’
as
well
as
on
Pioneer
Laundry
v.
M.N.R.,
[1938-39]
C.T.C.
411
and
the
decision
of
Lord
Thankerton
at
p.
417:
“Their
Lordships
agree
with
the
Chief
Justice
and
Davis,
JJ.
that
the
reason
given
for
the
decision
was
not
a
proper
ground
for
the
exercise
of
the
Minister’s
discretion,
and
that
he
was
not
entitled,
in
the
absence
of
fraud
or
improper
conduct,
to
disregard
the
separate
legal
existence
of
the
appellant
company
and
to
enquire
as
to
who
its
shareholders
were
and
its
relation
to
its
predecessors.
The
taxpayer
is
the
company
and
not
its
shareholders.”
Now,
although
there
is
no
question
that
in
questions
of
property
and
capacity,
of
acts
done
and
rights
acquired
or
liabilities
assumed,
the
company
is
always
an
entity
distinct
from
its
corporators,
it
appears
that
for
the
purpose
of
determining
the
character
in
which
property
is
held
and
the
conditions
on
which
the
capacity
to
act
is
enjoyed
and
acts
are
done,
the
character
of
a
company’s
shareholders
and
corporators
are
open
for
consideration
and
this
would
not
seem
to
be
at
variance
with
the
principle
stated
in
the
Salomon
case
(supra)
if
one
refers
to
the
dictum
in
Daimler
Company
Limited
v.
Continental
Tyre
and
Rubber
Company
(Great
Britain),
Limited,
[1916]
2
A.C.
307
at
p.
340.
It
also
appears
that
the
facts
surrounding
a
purchase
may
be
of
some
assistance
in
determining
taxability
on
the
basis
and
that
the
true
nature
of
the
transactions
involved
must
always
be
considered
and
where
motives
are
important,
the
interconnection
or
interrelationship
of
companies
dealing
with
each
other
as
well
as
the
motives
and
acts
of
a
company’s
manager
or
directors
must
be
explored
because
a
corporation
is
but
a
legal
entity
which
cannot
have
purposes
separate
from
those
of
its
managers
and
directors.
The
question
as
to
whether
the
intention
of
a
company
may
be
ascertained
through
its
manager
or
directors
has
come
before
our
courts
and
been
affirmed
in
several
instances,
i.e.,
in
Atlantic
Sugar
Refineries
Limited
v.
M.N.R.,
[1949]
S.C.R.
706
at
707;
[1949]
C.T.C.
196
at
198,
where
Kerwin,
J.,
as
he
then
was,
stated
that:
“While
the
circumstances
of
these
two
cases
are
entirely
different,
the
intention
in
each,
as
stated
by
Mr.
Seidensticker,
the
company’s
president
and
manager,
was
the
same,
i.e.,
to
offset
losses
either
actual
or
feared.
His
intention,
and
therefore
the
intention
of
the
appellant,
was
to
do
something
as
part
of
the
latter’s
business
and
to
secure
a
profit.”
In
Regal
Heights
v.
M.N.R.,
[1960]
S.C.R.
902
at
905;
[1960]
C.T.C.
384
at
388,
where
although
the
taxpayer
w
as
a
corporation,
Judson,
J.
stated:
‘
There
is
no
doubt
that
the
primary
aim
of
the
partners
in
the
acquisition
of
these
properties,
and
the
learned
trial
judge
so
found,
was
the
establishment
of
a
shopping
centre
but
he
also
found
that
their
intention
was
to
sell
at
a
profit
if
they
were
unable
to
carry
out
their
primary
aim.”
And
in
Rivershore
Investments
Ltd.
v.
M.N.R.,
[1964]
C.T.C.
112,
where
my
brother
Kearney
stated
at
p.
127:
“I
consider,
however,
that
the
intentions
of
the
appellant
are
deemed
to
be
those
of
its
directors
and
it
is
bound
by
the
artificiality
of
the
transactions
carried
out
by
the
said
directors.
”
The
question
also
of
whether
individuals
or
a
corporation
have
constituted
another
company
their
or
its
agent
is
always
a
question
of
fact
and
may
be
looked
into,
cf.
Palmolive
Manufacturers
Co.
(Ontario)
Ltd.
v.
The
King,
[1933]
S.C.R.
131
at
156
and
137,
and
may
be
useful
in
some
cases
in
determining
the
nature
of
a
transaction
and
assist
in
fixing
liability
for
taxes.
The
sole
fact,
however,
that
the
controlling
corporators
hold
a
majority
or
even
the
whole
of
the
shares
and
are
the
managing
directors
will
not
alone
suffice
to
establish
the
relationship
of
principal
and
agent
as
pointed
out
by
Thurlow,
J.
in
Davidson
v.
M.N.R.,
[1964]
Ex.
C.R.
48
and
56
;
[1963]
C.T.C.
240
at
247
:
“Moreover
though
the
appellant
was
the
president
and
the
sole
owner
of
the
capital
stock
of
Davidson
Securities
Ltd.
and
no
doubt
dictated
its
course
of
action,
there
is
nothing
in
the
evidence
to
indicate
that
the
company
was
in
fact
or
in
law
an
agent
for
the
appellant
in
carrying
out
its
transactions
or
that
its
business
was
not
its
own
and
a
separate
one
from
that
of
the
appellant.”
And,
finally,
in
some
cases
in
matters
of
taxation
it
is
necessary
for
the
court
to
go
beyond
the
corporate
entity
in
order
to
determine
whether
a
transaction
was
at
arm’s
length
or
not
or
artificial
(vide
Shulman
v.
M.N.R.,
[1961]
Ex.
C.R.
410;
[1961]
C.T.C.
385)
and
Rivershore
Investments
Ltd.
v.
M.N.R.
(supra)
or
to
find
out
whether
the
corporation
should
be
characterized
as
a
“paper
sham’’,
a
‘‘simulacrum’’,
cloak
or
alias
or
alter
ego
or
an
artificial
vehicle
(wide
Rolka
v.
M.N.R.,
[1963]
Ex.
C.R.
138;
[1962]
C.T.C.
637),
and
thereby
in
some
cases
establish
whether
the
transaction
entered
in
by
it
be
given
legal
effect
or
not.
Before
parting
with
this
matter
I
should
add
here
that
even
a
corporation
set
up
as
a
sham
cannot,
however,
be
disregarded,
although
as
stated
by
Lord
Buckmaster
in
Rainham
Chemical
Works
Ltd.
v.
Belvedere
Fish
Guano
Co.,
[1921]
2
A.C.
465
at
p.
475
:
.
.
it
may
be
established
by
evidence
that
in
its
operations
it
does
not
act
on
its
own
behalf
as
an
independent
trading
unit,
but
simply
for
and
on
behalf
of
the
people
by
whom
it
has
been
called
into
existence.”
For
the
purpose
of
dealing
with
the
appellant’s
objection
here,
it
will
be
sufficient,
I
believe,
to
rely
only
on
the
necessity
for
the
Court
to
consider
the
true
nature
of
the
transactions
involved
herein
which
will
then
require
an
examination
of
all
the
facts
listed
in
the
appellant’s
assumption
of
facts.
Whether
such
a
course
of
action
will
be
useful,
however,
and
will
sustain
the
respondent’s
contentions
is
another
matter
and
this
will
be
dealt
with
after
reviewing
and
assessing
the
evidence
adduced.
It
is
with
this
in
mind
that
I
now
turn
to
the
facts
assumed
and
relied
on
by
the
respondent
in
assessing
the
appellant
and
which
are
recited
in
paragraph
12
of
the
respondent’s
reply
which
is
reproduced
hereunder
:
12.
In
making
the
assessment
appealed
from,
he
relied
on
the
following
assumptions
:
(a)
On
December
22,
1954,
The
Warnock
Hersey
Co.
Ltd.
which
was
controlled
by
P.
Thomson
acquired
control
of
N.T.
Investments
Ltd.
and
on
June
28,
1956,
acquired
control
of
Foreign
Power
Securities
Corp.
Ltd.
On
December
31,
1956,
The
Warnock
Hersey
Co.
Ltd.
sold
its
controlling
interest
in
Foreign
Power
Securities
to
N.T.
Investments.
Therefore,
from
June
29th
to
December
31,
1965,
N.T.
Investments
and
Foreign
Power
Securities
were
controlled
by
The
Warnock
Hersey
Co.
Ltd.
From
December
31,
1956,
and
at
all
relevant
times
thereafter,
Foreign
Power
Securities
was
a
subsidiary
of
N.T.
Investments
Ltd.
;
(b)
N.T.
Investments
Ltd.
was
originally
Nesbitt
Thomson
&
Co.
Ltd.
The
latter,
whose
business
was
underwriting
and
dealing
in
securities,
was
one
of
the
underwriters
when
in
1950
a
project
was
entered
into
for
the
construction
of
a
pipe
line
to
carry
natural
gas
from
Alberta
to
Eastern
Canada;
(c)
To
this
end,
during
the
years
1950,
1951
and
1952,
Nesbitt
Thomson
&
Co.
Ltd.
made
advances:
to
Western
Pipe
Line
Ltd.
and
to
Alberta
Interfield
in
the
amount
of
$84,142.22,
which
expenses
were
charged
against
taxable
income
and
allowed
as
such
for
income
tax
purposes;
(d)
In
1952,
Nesbitt
Thomson
&
Co.
Ltd.
changed
its
name
to
N.T.
Investments
Ltd.
and
changed
also
its
corporate
powers
from
those
of
a
dealer
in
securities
to
those
of
an
investment
company
;
(e)
A
new
company,
Nesbitt
Thomson
and
Co.
Ltd.,
was
created
for
the
purpose
of
carrying
on
the
trading
activities
of
the
predecessor
company
and
by
agreement
dated
April
1,
1952,
all
trading
assets
including
rights
to
financing
and
underwriting
agreements
were
purported
to
be
transferred
to
the
new
company,
and
the
assets
considered
in
the
nature
of
investment
were
retained
by
N.T.
Investments
Ltd.
;
(f)
The
pipe
line
project
was
not
transferred
to
Nesbitt
Thomson
and
Co.
Ltd.
despite
the
fact
that
it
was
a
trading
asset
and
had
been
considered
as
such
by
the
old
company
;
(g)
After
it
had
changed
its
name
to
N.T.
Investments
Ltd.,
further
advances
were
made
to
the
Western
Companies,
which
expenses
were
not
charged
against
income
but
were
capitalized
as
being
investments
;
(h)
On
January
12,
1954,
N.T.
Investments
Ltd.,
through
its
agent,
Nesbitt
Thomson
and
Co.
Ltd.,
and
together
with
and
as
one
of
a
group
of
original
participators
in
the
financing
of
the
pipe
line
project,
entered
into
an
agreement
with
Canadian
Delhi
Petroleum
Ltd.
for
the
purpose
of
joining
forces
in
the
carrying
out
of
the
pipe
line
project
under
the
existing
incorporated
company,
Trans-Canada
Pipe
Lines
Ltd.,
and
with
the
understanding
that
no
one
group
would
have
control;
(i)
For
the
advances
to
the
Western
Companies
by
Nesbitt
Thomson
&
Co.
Ltd.
in
1950,
1951
and
1952,
N.T.
Investments
Ltd.
in
1954
and
1955
received
72,624
common
shares
of
Trans-Canada
Pipe
Lines
Ltd.
In
addition
to
the
above
treasury
shares,
it
also
acquired
from
Canadian
Delhi
Petroleum
Ltd.
10,712
common
shares
of
Trans-Canada
Pipe
Lines
Ltd.
;
(3)
The
72,624
treasury
shares
and
the
10,712
shares
acquired
from
Canadian
Delhi
Petroleum
Ltd.
forming
a
total
of
83,330
common
shares
of
Trans-Canada
Pipe
Lines
Ltd.
were
disposed
of
at
cost
as
follows:
Date
|
|
Shares
|
1954
—
Nov/10
|
Hudson
Bay
Oil
&
Gas
|
|
1,910
|
Nov/30
|
‘6
|
|
156
|
1955
—
May/11
|
P.
Thomson
|
....
|
14,500
|
‘6
|
Canadian
Power
&
Paper
Securities
|
14,600
|
se
|
Power
Corp.
|
|
14,600
|
Nov/19
|
Mr.
Tanner
|
|
417
|
1956
—
Jan/27
|
Mr.
J.
R.
Donald
|
|
416
|
Apr/11
|
Canadian
Power
&
Paper
Securities
|
5,400
|
|
Power
Corporation
|
|
9,400
|
July/6
|
Foreign
Power
Securities
Corp.
Ltd.
|
11,225
|
1957
—
Feb/18
|
Foreign
Power
Securities
Corp.
Ltd.
|
7,142
|
Mar/5
|
Nesbitt,
Thomson
and
Company
Ltd.
|
3,570
|
|
Total
shares
|
|
_..
83,336
|
(k)
Foreign
Power
Securities
Corp.
Ltd.
disposed
of
the
18,367
shares
of
Trans-Canada
Pipe
Lines
Ltd.
as
follows:
Number
|
of
|
Selling
|
|
Profit
|
|
of
|
|
Date
|
Shares
|
Price
|
Cost
|
(Loss)
|
May/28/57
|
6,000
|
$167,880.00
|
$
48,096.00
|
$119,784.00
|
Jun/15/57
|
10,000
|
426,960.00
|
79,904.00
|
347,056.00
|
Jan/13/58
|
2,367
|
55,600.83
|
18,936.00
|
36,664.83
|
|
18,367
|
$650,440.83
|
$146,936.00
|
$503,504.83
|
(1)
Foreign
Power
also
acquired
in
March
1957,
150
Units
of
Trans-Canada
Pipe
Lines
Ltd.
for
$26,650.00
which
it
resold
in
the
same
month
for
$29,163.00,
making
a
profit
of
$2,513.00
;
(m)
Foreign
Power
Securities
also
acquired,
in
June
1957,
2,500
Partial
Units
of
Trans-Canada
Pipe
Lines
Ltd.,
which
it
disposed
of
as
follows:
|
Number
of
|
|
|
Partial
|
Price
|
|
Profit
|
Date
|
Units
|
Selling
|
Cost
|
(Loss)
|
Nov/4/57
2,500
|
$229,875.00
|
$377,500.00
|
($77,625.00)
|
(n)
Quebec
Natural
Gas
was
incorporated
in
June,
1955,
for
the
purpose
of
acquiring
the
gas
distributing
business
of
Hydro-Quebee
including
the
gas
manufacturing
operations
of
Montreal
Coke
and
the
shipping
facilities
of
Keystone
Transports.
(o)
Upon
its
organization,
5,000
common
shares
were
issued
at
$10.00
per
share
as
follows:
N.
T.
Investments
Ltd.
|
725
shares
|
Wood,
Gundy
&
Co.
Ltd.
|
725
|
|
International
Utilities
Corp.
|
1,000
|
|
Canadian
Delhi
Oil
Ltd.
|
1,250
|
‘6
|
Lehman
Brothers
|
625
|
|
Alben
&
Co.
|
.
625
|
|
Osler,
Hammond
&
Nanton
Ltd.
|
50
|
|
|
5,000
|
|
N.T.
Investments
transferred
its
common
shares
at
cost
to
Foreign
Power
Securities
as
follows:
Jul/1956
|
612%
shares
at
$10.00
or
|
$6,115.00
|
|
[sic]
|
Jan/1957
|
112%
|
‘6
“
10.00
“
|
1,125.00
|
|
725
|
|
$7,250.00
|
(p)
Financing
of
Quebec
Natural
Gas
Corporation
was
to
be
made
by
the
above
companies
in
proportion
to
their
interest
in
common
shares
;
(q)
During
1956
and
1957,
there
was
an
initial
advance
of
$1,200,000
plus
an
additional
$3,159,880.00
for
which
544,986
Class
B
shares
at
$8.00
were
issued
;
(r)
N.T.
Investments
Ltd.
entered
into
an
agreement
in
or
about
September
1956
with
various
companies
including
Foreign
Power
Securities
Ltd.
whereby
these
companies
were
to
participate
in
the
financing
of
Quebec
Natural
Gas
to
the
extent
of
N.T.
Investments’
interests
in
common
shares;
(s)
The
companies
involved
and
the
extent
of
their
participation
were
as
follows:
Foreign
Power
Securities
Ltd.
|
....
$250,000.00
|
31,250
Class
‘B’
shares
|
Power
Corporation
|
|
of
Canada
Ltd.
_..
|
|
100,000.00
|
12,500
|
|
|
‘6
|
Great
Britain
and
|
|
Canada
Inv.
Ltd.
|
..
....
|
30,000.00
|
3,750
|
|
|
se
|
Can.
Power
&
Paper
|
|
Securities
Ltd.
|
....
200,000.00
|
25,000
|
|
Nesbitt,
Thomson
|
|
&
Co.
Ltd
|
...
|
52,184.00
|
6,523
|
|
|
u
|
|
$632,184.00
|
79,023
|
«
|
(t)
The
79,023
shares
received
were
issued
to
N.T.
Investments
Ltd.,
which
company
in
turn
endorsed
the
shares
to
the
above
companies
;
(u)
The
725
common
shares
acquired
at
cost
from
N.T.
Investments
Ltd.
in
July
1956
and
January
1957
were
disposed
of
as
follows:
Number
|
of
|
Selling
|
|
Profit
|
Date
|
Shares
|
Price
|
Cost
|
(Loss)
|
Apr/27/57
|
725
|
$21,373.00
|
$7,250.00
|
$14,123.00
|
(v)
The
31,250
Class
‘B’
Shares
acquired
from
N.T.
Investments
Ltd.
on
March
26,
1957,
were
disposed
of
as
follows:
|
Number
|
|
|
Of
|
of
|
Price
|
|
Profit
|
Date
|
Shares
|
Selling
|
Cost
Cost
|
(Loss)
|
May/28/57
|
|
10,000
|
$228,900.00
|
$
80,400.00
|
$148,500.00
|
Oct/1/57
|
|
6,000
|
120,000.00
|
48,840.00
|
71,160.00
|
May/22/58
|
|
1,000
|
24,565.00
|
8,040.00
|
16,525.00
|
May/27/58
|
|
1,000
|
24,565.00
|
8,040.00
|
16,525.00
|
Jun/19/58
|
|
300
|
6,957.00
|
2,412.00
|
4,545.00
|
Jun/20/58
|
|
100
|
2,319.00
|
804.00
|
1,515.00
|
Jun/23/58
|
|
1,740
|
39,132.60
|
13,989.60
|
25,143.00
|
Jun/27/58
|
|
1,500
|
33,735.00
|
12,060.00
|
21,675.00
|
Jul/28/58
|
|
500
|
11,595.00
|
4,020.00
|
7,575.00
|
Jul/29/58
|
|
100
|
2,319.00
|
804.00
|
1,515.00
|
Jul/31/58
|
|
200
|
4,838.00
|
1,608.00
|
3,230.00
|
Aug/1/58
|
|
50
|
1,209.50
|
402.00
|
807.50
|
Aug/5/58
|
|
50
|
1,209.50
|
402.00
|
807.50
|
Aug/6/58
|
|
200
|
4,838.00
|
1,608.00
|
3,230.00
|
Sep/2/58
|
|
500
|
11,845.00
|
4,040.00
|
7,825.00
|
Nov/12/58
|
|
125
|
2,961.15
|
1,005.00
|
1,956.25
|
Nov/28/58
|
|
1,000
|
21,690.00
|
8,040.00
|
13,650.00
|
Dec/1/58
|
|
500
|
10,845.00
|
4,020.00
|
6,825.00
|
Jan/16/59
|
|
1,400
|
31,077.50
|
11,256.00
|
19,821.50
|
Jan/19/59
|
|
100
|
2,219.00
|
804.00
|
1,415.00
|
Jan/20/59
|
|
625
|
14,025.00
|
5,025.00
|
9,000.00
|
Jan/21/59
|
|
375
|
8,415.00
|
3,015.00
|
5,400.00
|
Jun/2/59
|
|
500
|
8,595.00
|
4,020.00
|
4,575.00
|
Jun/3/59
|
|
300
|
5,157.00
|
2,412.00
|
2,745.00
|
Jun/4/59
|
|
300
|
5,174.50
|
2,412.00
|
2,762.50
|
Jun/12/59
|
|
1,000
|
16,690.00
|
8,040.00
|
8,650.00
|
Jun/24/59
|
|
200
|
3,338.00
|
1,608.00
|
1,730.00
|
Feb/23/61
|
|
100
|
840.50
|
804.00
|
36.50
|
Feb/23/61
|
|
385
|
3,191.65
|
3,095.40
|
96.25
|
Feb/28/61
|
|
1,100
|
9,119.00
|
8,844.00
|
275.00
|
|
31,150
|
$661,366.00
|
$251,850.00
|
$409,516.00
|
(w)
Foreign
Power
also
acquired
in
June
1957,
500
Partial
Units
of
Quebec
Natural
Gas
Corp.
which
it
disposed
of
as
follows
:
(x)
N.T.
Investments,
as
a
continuation
of
the
old
Nesbitt
&
Co.
Ltd.,
did
not
throw
off
the
trading
nature
of
its
interest
in
the
pipe
line
project
when
in
1952
it
sold
its
purported
trading
assets
to
Nesbitt
Thomson
and
Co.
Ltd.
and
changed
its
corporate
powers
from
those
of
a
dealer
in
securities
to
those
of
an
investment
company
;
|
Number
of
|
|
|
Partial
|
Selling
|
|
Profit
|
Date
|
Units
|
Price
|
Cost
Cost
|
(Loss)
|
Nov/4/57
500
|
$58,475.00
|
$64,500.00
|
($6,025.00)
|
(y)
The
organization
and
promotion
of
the
pipe
line
and
the
Quebee
Natural
Gas
projects
proceeded
in
the
same
way
when
the
shares
were
held
by
Foreign
Power
Securities
as
when
they
were
held
by
N.T.
Investments
or
its
predecessor,
Nesbitt
Thomson
&
Co.
Ltd.;
(z)
The
venture
in
the
pipe
line
and
the
Quebec
Natural
Gas
projects
was
from
the
beginning
to
the
end
a
venture
in
the
nature
of
trade,
the
Respondent
alleging
that
it
was
never
the
intention
of
the
Appellant
to
hold
as
investment
the
shares
and
units
of
Trans-Canada
Pipe
Lines
Ltd.
and
Quebec
Natural
Gas
Corporation
as
appears
from
all
the
circumstances
surrounding
the
purchases
and
sales
thereof.
15.
He
submits
that
the
profits
derived
from
the
sales
of
the
shares
and
units
of
Trans-Canada
Pipe
Lines
Ltd.
and
Quebec
Natural
Gas
Corporation
are
profits
derived
from
a
venture
in
the
nature
of
trade
within
the
meaning
of
Section
139(1)
(e)
of
the
Income
Tax
Act
and
taxable
under
the
provisions
of
Sections
3
and
4
of
the
said
Act.
’
’
The
appellant,
as
already
mentioned,
on
the
other
hand,
submitted
that
the
gains
realized
were
realizations
of
an
enhancement
in
the
value
of
its
investments
and
consideration
must
now
be
given
to
its
evidence
in
this
regard.
The
evidence
for
the
appellant
was
supplied
by
one
witness
only,
William
Howard
Wert,
a
chartered
accountant
by
profession
and
a
vice-president
and
director
of
the
appellant
company
since
the
end
of
June
1956.
The
appellant,
a
publie
company,
was
incorporated
as
a
Canadian
company
on
March
1,
1927,
for
the
purpose
of
investing
in
securities
of
public
utility
companies
throughout
the
world
and
primarily
outside
of
Canada.
It
engaged
in
this
type
of
activity
until
the
early
years
of
the
last
war
having
suffered,
however,
throughout
the
depression
of
the
thirties
many
substantial
losses
in
its
investments.
Its
main
asset,
prior
to
the
war,
which
it
continued
to
hold
was
located
in
France.
With
the
war,
the
assets
were
appropriated
and
nationalized
by
the
French
Government
and
payments
of
the
expropriation
price
of
its
assets
were
made
over
a
number
of
years
in
blocked
franes.
As
and
when
the
appellant
was
permitted
to
remit
the
franes
and
convert
them
into
Canadian
dollars,
a
portion
thereof
was
then
invested
in
short
term
Government
bonds
and
the
balance
deposited
in
Canadian
banks.
The
securities
purchased
prior
to
June
30,
1956,
from
funds
received
from
France
and
the
amounts
deposited
in
Canadian
banks
at
that
date
are
listed
in
Ex.
A-2
which
is
reproduced
hereunder
:
The contents of this table are not yet imported to Tax Interpretations.
$69,000
Capital
Repayment
Funds
temporarily
deposited
at
June
30th
1956
by
Montreal
Trust
Company
in
1%
Non-Personal
Savings
Accounts.”
Mr.
Wert
stated
that
up
to
the
end
of
June
1956,
the
appellant
company
had
no
other
assets
than
the
above
short
term
securities,
some
shares
of
stock,
an
amount
of
$1,032,555.80
in
the
bank
and
was
carrying
on
no
other
activity.
In
the
month
of
July
1956,
the
appellant
purchased
a
number
of
securities
in
an
amount
of
approximately
214
million
dollars
with
monies
obtained
from
the
company
funds
as
well
as
from
the
proceeds
of
the
sale
of
the
short
term
Government
bonds.
The
securities
so
purchased
include
those
sold
by
the
appellant
in
1957
and
1958
at
a
profit,
the
gains
of
which
were
assessed
for
income
tax
and
which
were
bought
from
N.T.
Investments
Ltd.
at
a
price
of
$95,925
comprising
11,225
shares
of
Trans-Canada
Pipe
Lines
Limited
at
a
cost
of
$89,800,
i.e.
$8
a
share
which
shares
were
at
the
time
represented
by
voting
trust
certificates
and
612144
common
shares
of
Quebec
Natural
Gas
Corporation
at
a
cost
of
$6,125,
i.e.
$10
per
share.
Mr.
Wert
stated
that
of
the
total
purchase
of
some
214
million
dollars
worth
of
securities
in
July
1956
of
which
$95,925
were
invested
in
Trans-Canada
and
Quebec
Gas
common
shares
about
$1,800,000
are
invested
in
the
same
securities
which
the
appellant
still
holds
today.
On
January
25,
1957,
the
appellant
purchased
from
Canadian
oil
companies
112%
additional
common
shares
of
Quebec
Gas
at
$10
a
share
also.
In
December
1956
it
was
agreed
that
the
appellant
would
purchase
a
further
7,142
odd
common
shares
of
Trans-Canada
from
N.T.
Investments
Ltd.
represented
by
voting
trust
certificates
at
a
price
of
$8
a
share
which
were
delivered
shortly
after
the
turn
of
the
year
in
February
of
1957.
These
voting
trust
certificates
were
subject
to
a
voting
trust
agreement
produced
as
Ex.
A-3
which
restricted
the
sale
to
the
public
of
these
shares
up
until
1958.
These
shares
had
been
issued
from
the
treasury
of,
Trans-Canada
for
the
money
put
up
to
organize
and
get
it
into
an
operating
position.
The
purchase
of
the
18,367
shares
of
Trans-Canada
represented
by
the
voting
trust
certificates
from
N.T.
Investments
Ltd.,
which
according
to
Mr.
Wert
had
been
acquired
by
means
of
advances
to
provide
funds
in
conjunction
with
other
founders
of
Trans-Canada
Pipe
Lines
Ltd.
for
the
economic
and
engineering
studies
preliminary
to
the
actual
construction
of
the
pipe
lines,
took
place
in
the
following
circumstances.
N.T.
Investments
Ltd.
received
in
1954
and
1955,
72,624
common
shares
of
TransCanada
for
the
advances
it
made
to
Western
Pipe
Lines
Ltd.
from
1950
to
1952
when
it
was
called
Nesbitt
Thomson
&
Co.
Ltd.
and
was
trading
in
securities
and
from
1952
to
1955
when
it
had
become
N.T.
Investments
Ltd.
as
well
as
10,712
common
shares
of
Trans-Canada
from
Canadian
Delhi
Petroleum
Ltd.
as
a
result
of
an
agreement.
made
with
the
latter
company
on
January
12,
1954,
thus
forming
a
total
of
83,336
common
shares
which
were
all
sold,
11,225
to
the
appellant
at
cost
on
July
6,
1956
and
7,142
on
February
18,
1957.
I
should
interpolate
here
that
in
December
1956
N.T.
Investments
Ltd.
purchased
38,683
shares
of
Foreign
Power
from
the
parent
company
for
the
sum
of
$2,000,250
thereby
obtaining
control
of
the
company.
Wert
at
page
79
of
the
transcript
stated
that
when
Nesbitt
Thomson
&
Co.
Ltd.
changed
its
name
in
1952
to
N.T.
Investments
Ltd.
and
changed
its
operations
from
trading
to
that
of
an
investment
company
“it
retained
the
right
to
receive
shares
to
subscribe
for
the
monies,
but
surrendered
any
rights
which
it
might
have
in
conjunction
with
underwriting’’
and
for
underwriting
purposes
another
company
was
formed
called
Nesbitt
Thomson
and
Co.,
Ltd.
The
appellant
then,
on
March
25,
1957,
through
N.T.
Investments
Ltd.,
again
acquired
31,250
class
B
shares
of
Quebec
Gas
from
the
treasury
of
the
company
at
a
cost
of
$250,000,
i.e.
at
$8
per
share,
which
money
had
also
been
put
up
to
organize
it
and
get
it
in
to
an
operating
position
and
these
shares
were
delivered
in
March
1957.
It
appears
from
the
evidence
of
Mr.
Wert
as
well
as
from
Ex.
A-8,
a
certified
extract
from
the
minutes
of
a
meeting
of
the
directors
of
the
appellant
company
held
on
September
28,
1956,
that
this
purchase
took
place
in
the
following
circumstances.
On
September
20,
1956,
the
appellant
had
agreed
‘to
participate
to
the
extent
of
12^/29ths
of
N.T.
Investment
Limited’s
option
to
purchase
shares
of
Quebec
Natural
Gas
Corporation
with
Foreign
Power
Security
Corporation
Limited
to
two
hundred
and
fifty
thousand
dollars
($250,000)
principal
amount
instalment
payments
on
account
of
such
sum
to
be
payable
on
demand’’.
I
might
point
out
here
that
N.T.
Investments
Limited
had
prior
thereto
undertaken
to
advance
to
Quebec
Gas
amounts
up
to
$580,000
as
one
of
the
founders
of
the
latter
company.
It
later,
however,
decided
to
invest
its
money
in
other
things
and
as
a
result
of
an
arrangement
made
in
September,
1956,
with
a
number
of
companies
such
as
the
appellant,
Great
Britain
and
Canada
Investments
Ltd.
and
Canadian
Power
and
Paper
Securities
who
all
agreed
to
put
up
a
portion
of
the
funds
N.T.
Investments
had
undertaken
to
advance,
the
latter
had
no
longer
any
interest
in
the
matter
except
for
the
obligation
to
turn
over
to
the
above
companies
a
number
of
shares
corresponding
to
their
respective
interests.
As
and
when
monies
were
required
by
Quebec
Gas
to
maintain
its
option
to
acquire
the
facilities
of
the
gas
distribution
system
of
Hydro-Quebec,
the
appellant
made
its
portion
of
monies
available
at
four
or
five
different
dates
beginning
about
October
1,
1956,
and
ending
in
the
early
part
of
1957
when,
as
already
mentioned,
in
March
of
1957
the
advances
of
$250,000
were
then
converted
into
31,250
class
B
shares
issued
to
N.T.
Investments
Ltd.
and
then
transferred
to
the
appellant.
These
class
B
shares
were
subject
to
a
limitation
inscribed
thereon,
effective
until
March
31,
1958
(when
they
automatically
became
common
shares)
to
the
effect
that
they
had
been
issued
to
the
subscriber
for
his
own
account
for
investment
and
not
with
a
view
to
their
distribution
and
were.
not
to
be
sold
to
the
public.
The
company
had
the
right
to
refuse
transfer
of
any
of
these
shares
unless
the
transferor
or
transferee
certified
that
the
requested
transfer
was
not
a
part
of
a
public
sale.
They
still,
however,
could
be
the
subject
of
a
private
sale.
Six
hundred
and
twelve
and
a
half
common
shares
of
Quebec
Gas
of
the
725
purchased
by
the
appellant
were
bought
from
N.T.
Investments
Ltd.
at
cost
at
$10
per
share
and
the
balance
of
112^
shares
was
purchased
from
Canadian
oil
companies
also
at
$10
per
share.
N.T.
Investments
Ltd.
had
obtained
the
shares
so
sold
at
the
formation
of
the
company
together
with
a
group
of
other
founders
and
sponsors
such
as
Wood
Gundy
&
Co.
Ltd.,
International
Utilities
Corporation,
Canadian
Delhi
Oil
Ltd.,
Lehman
Brothers,
Allen
&
Co.
and
Osler,
Hammond
&
Nanton
Ltd.
who
all
had
received
a
certain
number
of
shares.
Two
of
the
sponsors
of
Quebee
Gas,
Osler,
Hammond
&
Nanton
Ltd.
and
Wood
Gundy
&
Co.
Ltd.
had
also
sponsored
TransCanada,
together
with
the
Calgary
and
Edmonton
Corporation
Limited,
Anglo
Canadian
Oil
Company
Limited
and
International
Utilities
Corporation
and
although
there
was
no
connection
between
both
companies,
Quebec
Gas
was
a
natural
outlet
for
the
distribution
of
the
gas
supplied
and
carried
by
TransCanada.
The
appellant
also
purchased
in
1957
a
certain
number
of
units
of
Trans-Canada
and
Quebec
Gas
of
which
some
were
sold
in
1957
and
the
balance
in
1958
as
follows:
(1)
150
units
of
Trans-Canada
were
purchased
on
March
8,
1957
and
sold
the
same
month;
(2)
2,900
partial
units
of
Trans-Canada
were
purchased
on
the
open
market
from
a
broker
of
$250,000
principal
amount
of
the
subordinated
debentures
and
5,000
common
shares
(2
shares
remained
only
of
the
original
5
as
3
had
been
stripped
off)
which
were
sold
by
the
appellant
in
November
1958
for
an
aggregate
of
$299,875
at
a
loss
of
$77,625.
(3)
500
partial
units
(100
in
debentures
and
2
common
shares)
of
Quebec
Gas
were
purchased
in
June
1957
and
sold
in
November
1958
at
a
loss
of
$6,025.
Mr.
Wert
explained
that
in
purchasing
these
partial
units
the
company
wanted
to
maintain
an
interest
in
what
it
considered
to
be
a
sound
industry,
but
to
minimize
the
risk
and,
at
the
same
time,
to
obtain
an
income
in
debentures.
His
explanation
as
to
why
the
partial
units
were
sold
can
be
found
at
page
41
of
the
transcript
where
he
stated
:
“A.
I
believe
that
our
judgment
in
buying
them
was
poor,
our
judgment
in
selling
them
was
good,
because
they
continued
to
further
depreciate
in
price
after
we
had
sold
them,
and
we
would
be
in
a
position
of
having
some
debenture
income
at
a
risk
of
a
further
capital
loss.
’
’
From
the
evidence
and
documents
produced
as
well
as
from
the
assessments
of
the
respondent,
it
would
appear
that
the
following
nomenclature
sets
out
generally
the
purchase
and
sale
of
the
securities
involved
in
this
appeal.
For
purpose
of
convenience
Trans-Canada
and
Quebec
Gas
are
hereinafter
abbreviated
as
T.C.
and
Q.N.
|
1957
|
|
Purchase
|
|
Com
|
|
date
|
No.
of
shares
|
Price
pany
|
Sale
date
|
July/56
|
11,225
common
shares
|
$8.00
T.C.
10,000-June
15/57
|
Feb./57
|
4,775
|
|
6,000
—
May
28/57
|
July/56-612
|
|
f
|
725
common
shares
|
10.00
Q.N.
|
-
Apr.
27/57
|
Jan./57-112%’
|
|
Mar./57
|
6,000
class
B
shares
|
8.00
Q.N.
10,000
—
May
28/57
|
|
6,000
—
Oct./57
|
Mar./57
|
150
units
|
T.C.
|
—
Mar./57
|
|
1958
|
|
Feb./57
|
2,367
common
shares
|
$8.00
T.C.
|
—
Jan.
13/58
|
Mar./57
|
8,865
class
B
shares
|
8.00
Q.N.
between
May
22/58
|
|
and
Dec./58
|
June/57
|
2,500
units
|
T.C.
|
—
Nov./58
|
June/57
|
500
units
|
Q.N.
|
—
Nov./58
|
I
should
also
point
out
here
that
by
agreement
dated
May
8,
1956
made
between
the
Government
of
Canada
and
TransCanada,
the
Government
inter
alia
agreed
to
recommend
to
Parliament
that
a
loan
to
Trans-Canada
be
authorized
in
an
amount
of
up
to
90
per
cent
of
the
cost
of
the
Western
section
of
the
pipeline,
not
to
exceed
$80,000,000
and
on
June
7,
1956
the
Northern
Ontario
Pipe
Line
Crown
Corporation
Act
came
into
force
and
the
above
loan
was
then
authorized.
It
therefore
appears
that
all
the
shares
involved
herein
were
purchased
after
the
above
agreement
and
the
passing
of
the
necessary
authority
to
enable
the
above
loan.
In
February
1957,
there
was
a
public
issue
of
Trans-Canada
securities
in
both
the
United
States
and
Canada
by
first
mortgage
bonds
and
their
subordinated
debentures.
These
Canadian
subordinated
debentures
were
marketed
in
units
of
$100
principal
amount
and
five
shares
of
common
stock.
In
Canada,
these
units
were
marketed
at
$150
per
unit
plus
accrued
interest
on
the
debentures.
After
the
public
offering,
the
initial
trade
over
the
Canadian
market
burst
into
action
as
appears
from
Ex.
A-4,
the
over
the
counter
trading
record
from
March
1,
1957
to
December
27,
1957
where
on
March
1,
1957
it
started
off
at
$24^
(from
a
value
of
$10)
a
share,
went
steadily
up
to
as
high
as
$47^
during
the
period
June
7
to
21
and
then
ended
off
on
December
27,
1957
at
$2014.
This
occurred
before
the
actual
listing
of
this
stock
which
took
place
on
January
2,
1958.
The
Quebec
Natural
Gas
Corporation
shares
were
offered
to
the
public
on
April
12,
1957.
The
financing
here
was
somewhat
similar
to
Trans-Canada
Pipe
Lines
Limited.
The
securities
were
marketed
both
in
Canada
and
in
the
United
States.
The
Canadian
offering
was
$100
subordinated
debentures
to
which
were
attached
four
common
shares,
the
unit
being
marketed
at
$140
and
accrued
interest.
Mr.
Wert
also
produced
a
similar
over
the
counter
record
of
the
price
of
the
Quebec
Natural
Gas
Corporation
common
shares
covering
the
period
April
18,
1957,
to
December
27,
1957,
which
indicates
that
these
shares
sold
on
April
18*
1957
at
a
price
of
$29
to
$30
(from
a
value
of
$10)
went
to
a
high
of
$3434
on
June
14,
1957
and
then
ended
up
just
prior
to
being
listed,
which
took
place
on
November
15,
1957,
at
$18%-$19^.
I
might
point
out
here
that
none
of
the
18,367
shares
of
Trans-Canada
represented
by
the
voting
trust
certificates,
nor
the
31,250
class
B
shares
and
725
common
shares
of
Quebec
Gas,
acquired
by
the
appellant
and
involved
in
the
appeal
were
part
of
the
public
issues
of
February
12,
1957
and
April
12,
1957
although,
of
course,
the
appellant
took
advantage
of
the
market
rise
which
occurred
after
the
public
issue
of
both
companies
to
sell
some
of
its
holdings
acquired
prior
thereto.
As
a
matter
of
fact,
the
evidence
discloses
that
the
appellant
did
not
subscribe
for
any
of
the
units
that
were
offered
to
the
public
by
both
companies
nor
was
it
involved
in
any
way
in
the
underwriting
of
the
public
issues.
In
July
1956,
when
the
appellant
purchased
the
Trans-Canada
and
Quebec
Gas
shares,
Mr.
Wert
as
well
as
Mr.
P.
N.
Thomson,
amongst
others,
were
directors
of
both
the
appellant
and
N.T.
Investments
Ltd.
and
Mr.
Wert
as
vice-president
of
the
appellant,
participated
in
the
discussions
which
led
to
the
purchase
of
11,225
shares
of
Trans-Canada
as
well
as
of
31,250
class
B
shares
of
Quebec
Gas.
He
also,
as
a
director
and
secretary
of
N.T.
Investments,
together
with
P.
N.
Thomson,
was
instrumental
in
the
decision
by
the
latter
company
to
sell
the
above
Shares
to
the
appellant,
adding
that
as
it
was
a
private
company
the
other
directors
would
readily
accept
the
opinion
of
Thomson
and
himself
in
this
regard.
This
appears
from
the
evidence
of
Mr.
Wert
at
pages
57-58
of
the
transcript
where,
in
answer
to
the
following
question,
he
admitted
having
exercised
this
dual
function:
“Q.
Could
we
say
that
at
the
particular
time
of
the
sale
of
these
shares
by
N.T.
Investments
Ltd.
and
the
purchase
by
Foreign
Power
Securities
Corporation
of
these
securities,
that
you
were
acting
in
the
capacity
of
an
officer
of
both
corporations,
as
seller
and
purchaser?
A.
I
acted
as
an
officer
of
both
corporations.”
Wert,
at
pages
111
and
112
of
the
transcript,
also
admits
he
was
instrumental
in
having
Foreign
Power
invest
$250,000
in
Quebec
Gas
for
which
it
received
31,250
class
B
shares
and
that
N.T.
Investments
Ltd.’s
plan
throughout
was
to
enlarge
its
holdings
in
the
appellant
company
:
“A.
We
considered
again
that
this
was
a
public
utility
and
there
was
every
reason
to
believe
that
it
should
prove
to
be
a
conservative
investment.
Public
utilities
usually
are.
This
one
simply
developed
special
characteristics.
Q.
When
did
it
come
about
that
it
was
decided
to
enlarge
your
holdings
in
Foreign
Power
Securities?
A.
Currently,
no
particular
day,
it
was
our
general
policy.’’
And
at
p.
112
:
“Q.
But
in
between
September
and
December,
when
the
negotiations
obviously
were
going
on
with
Quebee
Natural
Gas
Corporation,
N.T.
Investments
Ltd.
had
the
necessary
funds
to
purchase
this
block
of
thirty-one
thousand
two
hundred
fifty
(31,250)
Class
B
shares
for
two
hundred
and
fifty
thousand
dollars
($250,000)
that
were
eventually
purchased
by
Foreign
Power
Securities
Corporation
?
A.
I
repeat
it
was
the
decision
of
the
directors
that
we
would
not
invest
in
Quebec
Natural
Gas
but
we
would
hold
out
money
for
other
purposes.
Q.
This
was
simply,
largely
another
understanding
between
you
and
Peter
Thomson
as
regards
your
official
capacity
with
N.T.
Investments
Ltd.?
A.
Yes.
Q.
This
was
a
way
of
having
Foreign
Power
Securities
go
through
N.T.
Investments
to
obtain
these
thirty-one
thousand
two
hundred
fifty
(31,250)
Class
B
shares?
.
.
.
A.
Yes,
that
is
correct.
9.
Knowing
at
that
time
that
N.T.
Investments
Ltd.
was
planning
control
of
Foreign
Power
Securities
Corporation?
A.
Certainly.’’
The
policy
followed
by
the
board
of
directors
of
Foreign
Corporation
in
deciding
whether
or
not
it
should
invest
its
funds
in
shares
and
bonds,
which
decision
Wert
admitted
would
originate
between
Thomson
and
himself
would,
however,
according
to
Wert,
be
reported
to
and
be
approved
by
the
full
board
of
directors
of
the
appellant
as
the
latter
was
a
public
corporation
and
was
governed
by
a
desire
to
become
active
in
Canadian
business
and
investment
communities
and
divest
himself
of
its
short
term
Government
bonds,
convert
them
into
Canadian
dollars
and
invest
the
resultant
funds
in
situations
considered
potentially
profitable.
The
company
had
no
special
guide
lines
to
help
in
make
decisions,
but
according
to
Wert
relied
on
common
sense.
The
latter,
at
p.
61
of
the
transcript,
asked
whether
the
fact
that
the
shares
which
had
cost
$8
were
being
offered
at
$8
per
share
by
N.T.
Investments
Ltd.
played
any
part
in
the
decision
of
the
appellant
to
acquire
them,
answered
:
“A.
To
this
extent
that
we
considered
eight
dollars
($8)
a
share
to
be
a
proper
price.”
Later
the
price
at
which
these
shares
were
sold
came
up
again
and
when
Mr.
Wert
was
asked
at
p.
87
of
the
transcript,
by
counsel
for
the
respondent,
whether
as
a
sound
business
practice
and
as
a
business
man
in
the
investment
field
he
would
have
sold
him
those
shares
at
$8
per
share
if
he
had
approached
him,
he
gave
the
following
answer
:
“A.
I
can
say
this,
there
were
days
when
you
could
have
had
them
for
about
one
cent
a
share.’’
The
Court
then
asked
Mr.
Wert
whether
this
was
the
situation
in
July
1956
and
he
stated:
“A.
But
there,
throughout
the
market
value
or
the
true
market
value
of
these
shares,
at
a
pertinent
time,
had
nothing
to
suggest
that
they
were
more
or
that
they
were
other
than
chis
eight
dollars
($8)
per
share.’’
He
later
asserted
that
there
was
no
information
available
to
him
that
led
to
believe
that
any
price
other
than
$8
a
share
would
be
a
fair
market
value
and
he
referred
to
the
Report
of
the
Royal
Commission
on
Energy,
Ex.
A-7,
p.
78,
where
it
appears
that
a
company
called
Tennessee
Gas
Transmissions
made
a
large
investment
in
order
to
make
the
pipe
line
possible
and
paid
$8
a
share,
though
it
appeared
later
that
this
sale
took
place
prior
to
the
commitment
of
the
Government
of
Canada
to
loan
$80,000,000
as
they
were
purchased
on
February
8,
1956
and
the
loan
was
undertaken
in
the
spring
of
1956.
And
finally,
at
pp.
87
and
88
Wert
gave
the
following
answer
to
the
following
questions
by
counsel
for
the
respondent
:
“Q.
If
I
had
come
to
you
after
the
announcement
that
the
Government
of
Canada
was
backing
the
pipe
line
up
to
eighty
million
($80,000,000)
dollars,
and
I
had
appeared
on
the
same
date
as
Foreign
Power
Securities
Corporation,
would
you
have
sold
me
those
shares
at
eight
dollars
($8)
per
share,
as
you
did
Foreign
Power
Securities?
A.
I
am
afraid
I
did
not
have
to
consider
that
matter.’’
And
at
pp.
89
and
90
of
the
transcript,
Wert,
with
regard
to
the
reasonableness
of
the
price
paid
by
the
appellant
for
the
shares,
stated
:
“A.
I
can
only
say
that
at
no
time
in
these
earlier
days
was
there
any
eventuality
that
these
shares
were
going
to
be
other
than
a
reasonably
sound
investment
in
public
utilities.
It
is
not
in
the
nature
of
things
that
public
utilities
stock
goes
from
nothing
to
a
very
high
price
overnight.
It
was
never
anticipated,
and
throughout
this
period
there
was
nothing
to
give
an
indication
that
the
stock
would
take
off
in
the
manner
that
it
did
elsewhere,
and
I
can
only
suggest
that
that
opinion
was
shared
by
all
of
the
oil
and
gas
companies
that
made
up
TransCanada
Pipe
Lines,
all
of
their
financing
advisors,
because
the
directors
and
officers
of
Trans-Canada
Pipe
Lines
would
have
been
most
derelict
in
their
duty
to
the
Trans-Canada
people
if
they
had
sold
to
the
public
shares
at
ten
dollars
($10)
per
share,
that
they
thought
were
going
to
be
worth
forty-seven
($47)
within
a
couple
of
months
.
.
.
A.
Having
regard
to
my
responsibility
as
an
officer
and
directors
of
Foreign
Power
Securities,
a
public
company
listed
on
the
stock
exchange,
with
several
hundred
shareholders
with
us
.
.
.
having
seventy
per
cent
(70%)
of
the
stock,
that
is
true,
but
having
a
substantial
minority
interest,
I
as
a
director,
had
to
be
satisfied
that
the
price
of
eight
dollars
($8)
that
we
paid
was
the
reasonable
market
value
of
these
securities,
I
could
do
nothing
else
but
purchase
at
fair
market
value.
Q.
How
would
you
reconcile
in
your
mind
the
fact
that
on
the
one
hand,
it
was
a
sound,
good
logical
investment
in
a
public
utility
company
that
had
possibilities
of
growth
and,
on
the
other
hand,
N.T.
Investments
Ltd.,
ostensibly
an
investment
company,
giving
up
these
shares
under
the
same
terms
and
conditions
of
the
possibility
of
growth?
A.
In
the
ease
of
N.T.
Investments
and
my
responsibility
there,
it
was
my
opinion
that
while
this
was
a
good
investment,
in
sum
total
there
were
too
many
dollars
invested
in
one
situation,
in
N.T.
Investments,
having
regard
to
its
total
resources,
and
in
addition
to
that
it
was,
or
rather
as
part
of
our
corporate
planning,
we
wished
to
use
funds
in
N.T.
Investments
or
invest
by
it,
in
the
acquisition
of
shares
of
other
companies,
notably
Foreign
Power
Securities
and
create
a
permanent
vehicle
.
.
.
Q.
By
selling
these
eighteen
thousand
three
hundred
sixtyseven
(18,367)
shares,
particularly
to
Foreign
Power
Securities,
you
acquired
approximately
ninety
thousand
some
odd
dollars
?
A.
Yes.
Q.
That
was
applied
to
other
money
to
obtain
control
of
Foreign
Power
Securities
Corporation?
A.
It,
with
other
monies
in
the
portfolio
of
N.T.
Investments,
were
used
to
purchase
‘Securities’
yes.”
And
at
p.
95:
“Q.
Did
you
not
find
it
strange
that
the
shares
were
offered
at
cost,
as
an
officer
and
director
of
Foreign
Power
Securities,
after
knowing
as
an
officer
and
director
of
the
Vendor
that
they
were
a
good
investment?
A.
I
repeat
that
in
my
opinion
I
was
selling
these
shares
as
an
officer
of
N.T.
Investments
at
a
fair
market
value
and
as
an
officer
of
Foreign
Power
Securities,
I
was
purchasing
them
at
a
fair
market
value.
Q.
And
on
both
sides
of
the
coin,
you
were
apparently
satisfied
that
selling
was
proper
for
N.T.
Investments
Ltd.
and
just
as
proper,
as
an
officer
of
another
corporation,
to
purchase
at
what
you
stated
was
fair
market
value?
A.
I
did
so
consider.”
He
was
then
asked
by
the
Court
at
p.
62
of
the
transcript
what
his
guide
was
when
the
shares
were
sold
on
behalf
of
N.T.
Investments
Ltd.,
and
he
gave
the
following
answer
:
“A.
In
the
investment
company,
we
had
decided
that
we
wished
to
put
the
money
that
was
there
available
to
other
purposes
and
to
that
end
we
disposed
of
our
shares
in
pipe
line
companies.
’’
Wert
admitted
at
p.
72
of
the
transcript
that
when
the
appellant
decided
to
purchase
the
Trans-Canada
shares
from
N.T.
Investments
Ltd.,
he
personally
knew
that
a
pipe
line
was
to
be
constructed
backed
by
the
Canadian
Government
up
to
an
amount
of
$80,000,000
and
that
the
latter
decision
influenced
the
decision
of
the
appellant
‘‘to
a
degree
but
not
wholly’’.
The
selling
of
the
83,336
common
shares
of
Trans-Canada
to
various
purchasers
(18,367
of
which,
as
we
have
seen,
were
sold
to
the
appellant)
over
a
period
extending
from
November
10,
1954
to
March
5,
1957
by
N.T.
Investments
Ltd.
was
explained
as
follows
by
Mr.
Wert
at
p.
86
of
the
transcript
:
“A.
It
was
the
intention
of
the
directors
of
N.T.
Investments
to
go
into
the
situations
that
would
be
of
a
permanent
investment
nature,
and
the
acquisition
of
the
control
of
Foreign
Power
Securities
Corporation
is
an
example
of
what
we
had
in
mind.’’
The
18,367
shares
purchased
by
the
appellant,
although
purchased
as
a
long
term
investment,
were
sold
by
the
latter
over
a
relatively
short
period
of
time
which,
however,
Wert
explains
as
follows
at
pp.
94-95
of
the
transcript:
“By
THE
Court:
Q.
Do
you
know
why
they
were
sold
within
four
(4)
months?
A.
Because
these
dates,
certainly
within
the
date
of
the
extreme
high
in
the
market,
the
shares
of
Trans-Canada
Pipe
Lines
had
gone
to
this
completely
unrealistic
price,
and
we
sold
them,
the
market
value
had
far
outstripped
any
possible
justification
as
an
investment.”
The
appellant
started
to
dispose
of
the
31,250
shares
of
Quebec
Gas
as
early
as
two
months
after
their
acquisition
as
appears
from
Wert’s
evidence
at
pp.
119
and
120
of
the
transcript:
“Q.
Foreign
Power
Securities
Corporation
disposed
of
approximately
one
third
(14)
of
its
interest
in
Class
B
shares
of
Quebec
Natural
Gas
Corporation
two
(2)
months
after
the
acquisition
of
them
?
A.
That
is
correct.
Q.
And
within
an
additional
four
(4)
months,
they
disposed
of
a
further
block
of
six
thousand
(6,000)
Class
B
shares
of
Quebec
Natural
Gas
Corporation,
making
a
total
of
pretty
close
to
half
of
their
portfolio
of
that
stock?
A.
That
is
correct.
Q.
How
do
you
account
for
selling
those
shares
at
a
time
when
they
were
purchased
for
an
investment
in
a
company
with
potential
growth?
A.
Again
in
the
case
of
Quebec
Natural
Gas
there
was
a
bidding
up
on
the
part
of
the
public
for
these
shares
at
levels
that
were
completely
unrealistic,
having
regard
to
our
responsibility
to
the
public
shareholders
of
Foreign
Power
Securities,
if
nothing
else,
it
was
our
duty
to
sell.”’
The
monies
received
by
the
appellant
from
the
sale
of
the
shares
of
both
companies
were
re-invested
partly
in
TransCanada
or
Quebec
Natural
Gas
partial
units,
in
Reynolds
Aluminum
and
in
preferred
shares
of
Canadian
Car
and
Bus
Advertising
Ltd.
and
Inspiration
Mining
&
Development
Co.
The
reason
why
after
the
sale
of
the
shares
by
Foreign
Power
Corporation,
the
latter
re-invested
part
of
that
money
in
other
stocks
or
debentures
of
Trans-Canada
is
also
explained
by
Wert
at
pp.
96
and
97
of
the
transcript:
“Q.
Could
you
explain
the
reasoning
behind
the
sale
of
shares
by
the
Corporation
and
re-investing
money
in
the
same
corporation,
within
a
very
short
period
of
time?
A.
Well,
my
Lord,
the
price
of
the
shares
had
gone
down,
but
we
felt
that
we
could
purchase
debentures
of
the
Trans-Canada
Pipe
Lines
to
which
were
attached
two
(2)
shares
at
a
price
which
would
give
us
a
continued
interest
in
this
industry
but
would,
at
the
same
time,
give
us
a
senior
position
and
assured
income
from
the
debenture
interest
and
would
permit
us
to
keep
our
funds
invested.”
Mr.
Wert
was
then,
at
p.
122
of
the
transcript,
finally
asked
by
counsel
for
the
respondent,
whether
one
of
the
reasons
for
the
transactions
was
to
transfer
the
profits
that
might
have
accrued
to
N.T.
Investments
to
Foreign
Power
and
gave
the
following
answers
:
“A.
I
would
say
no.
Q.
Even
in
the
light
of
the
explanation
that
you
have
given,
that
was
not
one
of
the
reasons?
A.
It
was
not.
Q.
It
just
happened
in
the
course
of
business?
A.
We
deliberately
did
not
attempt
to
transfer
any
tax
situation,
and
again
I
repeat
that
we
had
no
possible
knowledge,
we
made
these
decisions,
that
there
was
going
to
be
these
unprecedented
and
unjustified
increases
in
the
shares
of
these
companies.”
.I
have
gone
into
the
above
evidence
in
some
detail
because
it
is
on
the
basis
of
such
facts
that
the
respondent
asks
that
the
appellant
be
held
taxable
on
the
profits
realized
on
the
sale
of
the
securities
involved
in
this
appeal.
The
position
taken
by
the
Minister
is
a
rather
unusual
one
in
that
here
he
is
seeking
to
have
these
profits
held
taxable
as
resulting
from
an
adventure
in
the
nature
of
trade
on
the
basis
of
its
shareholder’s
(N.T.
Investments
Ltd.)
activities
and
intentions
and
as
being
a
means
used
by
it
to
transfer
its
profits.
The
respondent
would
indeed
appear
to
be
attempting
to
tax
the
appellant
because
the
corporation
from
which
it
purchased
the
securities
might
have
been
engaged
in
a
business
or
a
concern
in
the
nature
of
trade
because
of
its
former
trading
activities,
had
it
not
transferred
these
securities
to
the
appellant.
If
such
is
the
situation,
it
would
appear
to
me
that
the
proper
party
to
be
assessed
herein
would
be
not
the
present
appellant
but
N.T.
Investments
Ltd.
under
either
Section
16
or
17.
However,
as
this
situation
is
not
before
me,
I
will
refrain
from
expressing
an
opinion
on
the
taxability
of
N.T.
Investments
Ltd.
if
such
a
course
had
been
followed.
I
must
now
then
consider
the
submission
of
counsel
for
the
respondent
as
it
appears
to
be
that
the
profits
of
the
appellant
herein
are
derived
from
an
adventure
in
the
nature
of
trade
within
the
meaning
of
Section
139(1)
(e)
of
the
Income
Tax
Act.
According
to
the
respondent,
the
transactions
effected
by
the
appellant
should
be
held
to
be
a
business
because
(1)
of
the
appellant’s
association
with
N.T.
Investments
Ltd.;
(2)
the
transactions
were
from
the
beginning
to
the
end,
on
the
part
of
N.T.
Investments
and
its
subsidiary
the
appellant,
underwriting
transactions;
(3)
the
two
corporations
were
not
dealing
with
each
other
at
arm’s
length
at
the
time
of
the
transactions
as
they
were
either
controlled
by
the
same
interests,
or
one
was
controlled
by
the
other.
Warnock
Hersey
Co.,
controlled
by
Peter
Thomson
as
of
December
31,
1956,
acquired
control
of
the
appellant
company
and
the
same
Thomson
with
Wert
was
instrumental
in
making
this
sale
of
the
shares
from
N.T.
Investments
Ltd.
to
the
appellant;
(4)
the
shares
were
sold
to
the
appellant
at
cost
which
was
below
their
true
value
at
the
time
and,
finally,
according
to
counsel
for
the
respondent,
the
above
facts
as
well
as
a
proper
consideration
of
where
the
shares
came
from,
why
they
were
acquired
and
why
they
were
transferred
at
cost
would
appear
to
indicate
almost
a
deliberate
plan
to
divest
N.T.
Investments
Ltd.
of
certain
trading
assets
to
the
appellant.
The
appellant’s
association
with
N.T.
Investments
Ltd.
on
which
counsel
for
the
respondent
relies
in
determining
that
the
transactions
herein
are
adventures
in
the
nature
of
trade
is
not
of
much
assistance
in
this
regard
as
the
appellant
is
a
public
company
with
shares
on
the
market
and
although
during
the
course
of
the
transactions
N.T.
Investments
Ltd.
purchased
control
of
the
appellant,
it
did
so
in
the
course
of
investing
its
monies
in
a
public
investment
company
having
holdings
in
sev-
eral
Canadian
corporations
which
as
a
private
investment
corporation
since
1952
was
a
normal
thing
to
do
and
I
fail
to
see
how
this
can
be
indicative
of
a
business
even
within
the
extended
meaning
given
the
latter
by
Section
139(1)
(e)
of
the
Act.
The
assertion
that
the
transactions
were
from
the
beginning
to
the
end
on
the
part
of
both
N.T.
Investments
Ltd.
and
the
appellant,
its
subsidiary,
underwriting
transactions,
is
also
difficult
to
understand.
There
is
no
question
that
prior
to
1952
N.T.
Investments
Ltd.,
under
the
name
of
Nesbitt
Thomson
&
Co.
Ltd.,
was
carrying
on
a
stock-broking
business
as
well
as
that
of
an
investment
dealer
and
probably
was
also
underwriting
issues
of
shares
although
in
some
cases
it
might
well
have
also
invested
in
shares
as
a
founder
of
new
corporations
such
as
Trans-Canada
and
Quebec
Gas;
whatever
profits
it
would
realize
on
the
sale
of
the
shares
acquired
prior
to
1952,
even
after
the
change
of
the
name
and
powers
of
the
company
in
1952
to
N.T.
Investments
Ltd.
would
not
change
the
nature
of
these
profits
which
would
still
be
considered
as
business
profits
under
the
authority
of
Osler,
Hammond
&
Nanton
Ltd.
v.
M.N.R.,
[1963]
O.T.C.
164,
and
as
a
matter
of
fact,
this
was
the
manner
in
which,
according
to
Mr.
Wert
(cf.
p.
131
of
the
transcript)
an
item
representing
the
net
realization
of
certain
Trans-Canada
Pipe
Lines
Ltd.
shares
received
by
reason
of
advances
made
to
the
predecessors
of
Trans-Canada
Pipe
Lines
prior
to
April
1952
was
dealt
with.
The
amounts
had
been
written
off
but
when
they
were,
later
in
1956,
recovered
by
the
sale
of
the
shares,
they
were
brought
back
into
the
income
of
N.T.
Investments
Ltd.
This
appears
from
an
examination
of
N.T.
Investments
Ltd.’s
income
tax
return
for
1956
produced
as
Ex.
R-5.
The
profits
made,
however,
on
the
realization
of
investments
or
monies
which
had
been
invested
after
April
1952
were
taken
into
capital
surplus
account
and
that
appears
on
statement
IV
of
the
statements
contained
in
the
above
returns.
Whether
such
items
are
taxable
in
the
hands
of
N.T.
Investments
Ltd.
could
be
the
subject
of
an
assessment
of
the
latter
company
and
I
do
not
intend
nor
need
to
express
an
opinion
on
the
taxability
of
such
profits
here.
It
would
seem
clear,
however,
that
even
if
such
profits
were
taxable
as
underwriting
transactions
in
the
case
of
N.T.
Investments
Ltd.,
they
certainly
could
not
be
considered
as
such
in
the
hands
of
the
appellant
corporation
a
bona
fide
public
investment
corporation
with
no
prior
underwriting
activities.
Respondent’s
assertion
that
the
two
corporations
were
not
dealing
with
each
other
at
arm’s
length
at
the
time
of
the
transactions,
might
have
been
pertinent
in
a
case
where
the
Income
Tax
Act
specifically
refers
to
a
transaction
being
taxable
if
it
is
not
at
arm’s
length
but
such
is
not
the
nature
of
the
transactions
involved
here
where,
although
there
is
an
interconnection
or
interrelationship
of
the
two
corporations
involved,
and
a
situation
where
some
of
their
common
shareholders
and
common
directors
acted
in
a
dual
capacity,
this
inter-twining
of
interests
cannot
be
of
much
assistance
in
determining
the
issue
here
which
is
to
be
decided
on
the
sole
question
of
whether
the
profits
resulted
from
a
business
or
not.
The
submission
by
the
respondent
that
the
securities
were
sold
at
cost
which
respondent
submits
was
well
below
its
actual
value
at
the
time
should
also
be
commented
upon.
It
would
appear
from
the
evidence
that
all
of
the
Trans-Canada
securities
involved
herein
were
sold
to
the
appellant
after
the
Government
of
Canada
had
undertaken
to
advance
up
to
$80,000,000
and
although
at
this
time
the
prices
set
down
for
the
sale
of
the
shares
involved,
and
this
applies
as
well
to
the
Quebec
Gas
shares,
would
appear
to
have
been
a
conservative
figure,
it
would
appear
that
an
exact
evaluation
of
shares
in
such
public
utility
companies
in
the
initial
stages
is
of
considerable
difficulty.
The
success
of
a
company
in
such
cases
is
dependent
upon
so
many
factors
that
the
value
of
its
shares
at
this
stage
can
only
be
approximated.
The
financial
assistance
given
Trans-Canada
by
the
backing
of
the
Canadian
Government
for
the
construction
of
the
line
across
the
northern
part
of
Ontario
although
undoubtedly
of
considerable
value,
might
still
not
have
been
sufficient
to
insure
the
success
of
the
undertaking,
although,
at
this
stage,
I
do
not
believe
that
N.T.
Investments
Ltd.
would
have
sold
the
shares
to
a
stranger
at
the
price
it
sold
them
to
the
appellant.
It
is
quite
difficult
to
establish
what
the
real
price
should
have
been
at
the
time.
I
would
not,
however,
say
that
it
should
have
been
the
high
of
$47½
for
Trans-Canada
and
$3434,
for
Quebec
Natural
Gas
shares
to
which
the
securities
went
practically
overnight.
It
could
have
been
expected
at
the
time
that
the
securities
would
eventually
do
well
and
here
I
am
even
prepared
to
say
that
the
incidence
of
taxation
may
have
been
an
element
in
the
minds
of
the
directors
of
both
the
appellant
and
N.T.
Investments
Ltd.
in
selling
the
shares
to
the
appellant.
I
do
accept
Mr.
Wert’s
statement
that
it
was,
however,
never
anticipated
and
that
throughout
the
period,
there
was
nothing
to
give
an
indication
that
the
stock
would
take
off
in
the
manner
that
it
did
and
as
he
asserted
at
p.
89
of
the
transcript
:
“A.
.
.
.
TI
can
only
suggest
that
that
opinion
was
shared
by
all
of
the
oil
and
gas
companies
that
made
up
Trans-Canada
Pipe
Lines,
all
of
their
financing
advisors,
because
the
directors
and
officers
of
Trans-Canada
Pipe
Lines
would
have
been
most
derelict
in
their
duty
to
the
Trans-Canada
people
if
they
had
sold
to
the
public
shares
at
ten
dollars
($10)
per
share
that
they
thought
were
going
to
be
worth
forty-seven
dollars
($47)
within
a
couple
of
months
.
.
.”’
As
a
matter
of
fact,
the
unrealistic
heights
reached
by
the
shares
at
one
time
were
based
on
popular
enthusiasm
which
eventually
came
back
to
more
objective
values
and
I
am
convinced
that
there
was
no
possibility
prior
thereto
for
anyone
to
anticipate
this
meteoric
rise.
Here
again
the
prices
of
the
securities
sold
can
be
of
little
assistance
in
establishing
that
the
transactions
were
of
a
business
nature.
Looking
at
these
transactions
in
the
light
of
the
above
circumstances,
as
urged
by
the
respondent,
and
after
giving
consideration
to
the
nature
and
origin
of
the
securities
involved,
why
they
were
sold
and
the
price
paid
for
them
and
even
assuming,
as
suggested
by
the
respondent,
that
the
above
would
almost
indicate
a
deliberate
plan
to
divest
N.T.
Investments
Ltd.
of
the
securities
to
the
appellant,
I
still
cannot
see
how
I
ean
reach
a
decision
that
the
profits
realized
by
the
appellant
should
be
held
to
be
taxable.
We
are
dealing
here
with
securities,
shares,
debentures
and
units,
which
are
essentially
a
means
of
investment,
as
pointed
out
by
Martland,
J.
in
Irrigation
Industries
Ltd.
v.
M.N.R.,
[1962]
S.C.R.
346
at
352;
[1962]
C.T.C.
215
at
221:
“Corporate
shares
are
in
a
different
position
because
they
constitute
something
the
purchase
of
which
is,
in
itself,
an
investment.
They
are
not,
in
themselves,
articles
of
commerce,
but
represent
an
interest
in
a
corporation
which
it
itself
created
for
the
purpose
of
doing
business.
Their
acquisition
is
a
well-organized
method
of
investing
capital
in
a
business
enterprise.”
The
short
period
during
which
these
securities
were
held
by
the
appellant
can
be
of
little
assistance
to
the
respondent
as
their
fast
disposal
was
properly
explained
by
Mr.
Wert
in
that
the
directors
of
the
appellant
would
have
been
remiss
in
their
duties
had
they
not
taken
advantage
of
the
surprising
high
rise
of
the
market
at
the
time
the
securities
were
sold.
The
fact
that
the
appellant
entered
into
these
transactions
for
the
purpose
of
making
a
profit
as
soon
as
it
could
and
took
advantage
of
this
rise
as
soon
as
it
occurred,
should
not
change
the
nature
of
its
investments
if
this
is
what
they
were
and
render
them
tax
able
as
trading
receipts
and
this
also
would
appear
from
the
remarks
of
Martland,
J.
at
pp.
355,
223
of
the
same
decision:
‘“The
only
test
which
was
applied
in
the
present
case
was
whether
the
appellant
entered
into
the
transaction
with
the
intention
of
disposing
of
the
shares
at
a
profit
so
soon
as
there
was
a
reasonable
opportunity
of
so
doing.
Is
that
a
sufficient
test
for
determining
whether
or
not
this
transaction
constitutes
an
adventure
in
the
nature
of
trade?
I
do
not
think
that,
standing
alone,
it
is
sufficient.’’
I
find
it
impossible
after
reviewing
this
whole
matter,
and
even
assuming
that
the
avoidance
of
taxes
was
one
of
the
elements
which
motivated
the
transactions,
to
come
to
the
conclusion
that
the
profits
realized
by
the
appellant
herein
resulted
from
an
adventure
in
the
nature
of
trade
and
are
taxable.
I
should
also
add
that
though
there
is
much
to
be
said
in
favour
of
preventing
the
ingenuity
expended
by
certain
people
to
devise
in
some
cases
elaborate
and
artificial
methods
of
disposing
of
income
in
order
to
avoid
the
payment
of
taxes
because
it
thereby
increases
pro
tanto
the
load
of
the
tax
on
the
shoulders
of
those
who
do
not
desire
or
know
how
to
use
such
methods,
in
the
absence
of
specific
legislation
to
prevent
such
practices,
“every
man’’
(as
stated
in
the
words
of
Lord
Tomlin
in
Duke
of
Westminster
v.
C'.I.R.,
[1986]
A.C.
1920)
:
‘‘is
entitled,
if
he
can,
to
order
his
affairs
so
as
that
the
tax
attracted
under
the
appropriate
Act
is
less
than
it
otherwise
would
be.
If
he
succeeds
in
ordering
them
so
as
to
secure
this
result,
then,
however,
unappreciative
the
Commissioner
of
Inland
Revenue
or
his
fellow
taxpayers
may
be
of
his
ingenuity,
he
cannot
be
compelled
to
pay
more.’’
Or
as
expressed
by
Lord
Sumner
in
C.I.R.
v.
Fisher
s
Executors,
[1926]
A.C.
395
at
p.
412:
“My
lords,
the
highest
authorities
have
always
recognized
that
the
subject
is
entitled
so
to
arrange
his
affairs
as
not
to
attract
taxes
imposed
by
the
Crown,
so
far
as
he
can
do
so
within
the
law
and
that
he
may
legitimately
claim
the
advantage
of
any
express
term
or
of
any
omissions
that
he
can
find
in
his
favour
in
the
taxing
acts.
In
so
doing,
he
neither
comes
under
liability
nor
incurs
blame.’’
I
would
think
that
if
it
is
desired
to
have
an
effective
deterrent
to
a
tax
avoidance
practice
which
is
considered
to
be
against
the
public
interest,
Parliament
should
legislate
(as
it
has
in
some
cases,
such
as
with
respect
to
dividend
stripping
in
Section
138A)
so
as
effectively
to
block
it.
The
Court
should
not
be
asked
to
accomplish
the
task,
as
it
is
being
asked
to
do
here,
by
squeezing
into
the
notion
of
an
adventure
in
the
nature
of
trade,
a
transaction
which
is
a
bona
fide
investment
and
nothing
else.
Nor
is
the
situation
any
different
if
such
a
bona
fide
investment
was
entered
into
with
the
knowledge
that
the
capital
value
of
the
res
would
surely
increase
or
if
the
situation
is
that,
if
the
res
had
not
been
sold
to
the
appellant
until
after
the
increase
in
value,
it
would
have
resulted
in
the
person
who
sold
to
the
appellant
realizing
a
trading
profit
that
would
have
been
taxable
in
his
hands.
Nor,
in
this
latter
case,
would
the
situation
have
been
any
different
if
the
person
who
sold
to
the
appellant
had
purchased
control
of
the
appellant
and
thus
arranged
to
get
indirectly
a
part
of
the
increase
in
value
of
the
res
that,
if
it
had
realized
it
directly
by
a
sale
of
that
res,
would
have
been
a
trading
profit
in
its
hands.
In
this
same
vein,
I
might
point
out
that,
under
the
Act
as
it
is
at
the
present
time,
the
situation
would
be
no
different
even
if
one
of
the
elements
in
the
transaction
was
the
avoidance
of
taxes.
There
is
indeed
no
provision
in
the
Income
Tax
Act
which
provides
that,
where
it
appears
that
the
main
purpose
or
one
of
the
purposes
for
which
any
transaction
or
transactions
was
or
were
effected
was
the
avoidance
or
reduction
of
liability
to
income
tax,
the
Court
may,
if
it
thinks
fit,
direct
that
such
adjustments
shall
be
made
as
respects
liability
to
income
tax
as
it
considers
appropriate
so
as
to
counteract
the
avoidance
or
reduction
of
liability
to
income
tax
which
would
otherwise
be
effected
by
the
transaction
or
transactions.
The
only
authority
of
this
character
conferred
by
the
statute
is
conferred
on
Treasury
Board
by
Section
138.
The
appeal,
therefore,
succeeds
and
it
will
be
allowed
with
costs
and
the
re-assessments
varied
accordingly.