Gibson,
J.:—This
is
an
appeal
from
the
re-assessment
by
the
Minister
of
National
Revenue
for
income
tax
made
against
the
appellant
in
respect
to
to
the
taxation
years
1952,
1953
and
1954,
wherein
respectively,
by
reason
thereof,
he
was
assessed
tax
in
the
sums
of
$219,562.01,
$74,223.38
and
$151,527.64.
In
this
appeal
at
the
outset,
it
should
be
noted
that
there
are
the
circumstances
surrounding
the
acquisition
and
disposal
of
shares
in
three
companies
and
one
syndicate
in
the
years
1952,
1953
and
1954
which
have
to
be
considered,
namely
:
(1)
St.
John’s
Trust
Syndicate,
(2)
Inland
Natural
Gas
Co.
Ltd.,
(3)
Yankee
Princess
Oils,
Ltd.,
and
(4)
Canadian
Collieries
(Dunsmuir)
Ltd.
(changed
in
name
in
1958
to
Canadian
Collieries
Resources.
Ltd.).
It
should
also
be
noted
that
some
of
these
three
companies
either
had
their
origin
in
other
companies,
or
purchased
shares
or
assets
of
other
companies
or
of
so-called
syndicates.
For
this
reason
reference
will
be
made
in
these
reasons
to
the
Wilson
Syndicate,
Peace
River
Natural
Gas
Co.
Ltd.,
St.
John’s
Trust
Agreement,
St.
John
Gas
and
Oil
Ltd.,
Canadian
Northern
Oil
and
Gas
Co.
Ltd.,
West
Coast
Transmission
Co.
Ltd.,
Northwest
Syndicate,
Inland
Natural
Gas
Co.
Ltd.,
Pacific
Petroleums
Ltd.,
Yankee
Princess
Oils
Ltd.,
Canadian
Atlantic
Oil
Co.
Ltd.,
Canadian
Oil
and
Gas
Ltd.,
Canadian
Collieries
(Dunsmuir)
Ltd.
(later
changed
the
name
to
Canadian
Collieries
Resources
Ltd.
in
the
year
1958),
Canadian
Wellwood
Ltd.,
and
other
companies.
The
adjustments
for
taxable
income,
which
are
the
subjects
of
this
appeal,
made
by
the
Minister
on
the
re-assessment
notices
for
the
years
1952,
1953
and
1954
read
as
follows:
For
the
year
1952:
|
|
Taxable
Income
previously
assessed
..................
|
.."
$
81,928.43
|
Add:
|
|
Share
of
proceeds
re
sale
of
St.
John’s
|
|
Trust
Syndicate
units
_.
|
|
-
$116,500.00
|
|
Less
:
|
|
Cost
of
interest
in
4
Wilson
Syn-
|
|
dicate
units
|
j.
|
|
-
|
7,500.00
|
109,000.00
|
Profit
on
sale
of
shares
of
Yankee
|
|
Princess
Oils
Ltd.
acquired
during
|
|
promotion
and
reorganization
|
of
|
|
Yankee
Princess
Oils
Ltd.
—
Sales
|
|
January
29,
1952
to
April
21,
1952,
|
|
per
schedules
filed—105,250
shares..
$110,157.34
|
|
Less
:
|
|
Purchase
of
January
31,
1952
|
|
shown
as
sale
in
error—500
|
|
shares
|
|
383.06
|
|
|
$109,774.28
|
|
Sale
of
March
5,
1952—not
included
|
|
in
schedule
filed—2,000
shares
|
2,135.00
|
|
|
$111,909.28
|
|
Deduct
:
|
|
Cost
of
shares
sold:
|
|
92,800
shares
|
$6,750.00
|
|
13,950
|
@71/z¢
|
1,046.25
|
7,796.25
|
104,113.03
|
Adjusted
Taxable
Income
now
assessed
|
|
$295,036.46
|
For
the
year
1953
:
|
|
Taxable
Income
previously
assessed
|
|
$
50,928.96
|
Add:
|
|
Proceeds
of
sale
of
shares
of
Inland
|
|
Natural
Gas
Co.
Ltd.,
which
were
|
|
received
from
St.
J
ohn’s
Trust
Syn
|
|
dicate
in
1952
|
|
$
77,285.05
|
|
Less
:
|
|
Cost
of
same
@
$1.00
per
share
|
387,500.00
|
39,785.05
|
Proceeds
of
sale
of
shares
of
Canadian
|
|
Collieries
|
(Dunsmuir)
|
Ltd.
|
pur
|
|
chased
from
Sunray
Oils
through
|
|
participation
in
purchases
by
Ross
|
|
Whittall
Ltd.—14,650
shares
|
|
$
93,203.75
|
|
Less:
|
|
Cost
@
$38.50
per
share
|
|
51,275.00
|
41,928.75
|
Adjusted
Taxable
Income
assessed
|
|
$132,642.76
|
For
the
year
195^:
|
|
Taxable
Income
previously
assessed
|
|
$.
92,645.31
|
Add:
|
|
Proceeds
from
sale
of
shares
of
Inland
|
|
Natural
Gas
Co.
Ltd.
which
were—
|
|
(1)
Received
from
St.
John’s
|
|
Trust
Syndicate
in
1952,
and
|
|
(2)
Acquired
by
exchange
as
a
|
|
result.
of
the
purchase
of
|
|
Canadian
Northern
Oil&
Gas
|
|
Co.
Ltd.
shares
which
were
|
|
underwritten
by
Ross
Whit-
|
|
tall
Ltd.
|
$
55,721.50
|
|
Less
:
|
|
Cost
at
$1.00
per
share
|
21,000.00.
|
34,721.50
|
Proceeds
of
sale
of
shares
of
Canadian
|
|
Collieries
(Dunsmuir)
Ltd.,
which
|
|
were
acquired
through
participation
|
|
with
Ross
Whittall
Ltd.
in
purchase
|
|
from
Sunray
Oils—10,350
shares
|
$
89,446.88
|
|
Less:
|
|
Cost
price
at
$3.50
per
share
|
36,225.00
|
53,221.88
|
Proceeds
from
sale
of
Canadian
Col
|
|
lieries
(Dunsmuir)
Ltd.
shares
ac
|
|
quired
as
a
result
of
an
option
from
|
|
Can.
Collieries
(Dunsmuir)
Ltd.
to
|
|
purchase
shares
in
that
company—
|
|
which
option
was
acquired
at
a
time
|
|
when
Ross
Whittall
Ltd.
underwrote
|
|
an
issue
of
that
company’s
shares—
|
|
14,650
shares
|
$132,200.16
|
|
Less
:
|
|
Cost
at
$4.00
per
share
|
08,600.00
|
73,600.16
|
Adjusted
Taxable
Income
assessed
|
|
$254,188.85
|
The
appellant
at
all
material
times
was
president
and
a
director
of
Norman
R.
Whittall
Ltd.,
a
company
incorporated
under
the
laws
of
British
Columbia
and
carrying
on
business
as
investment
dealers
and
stockbrokers,
with
place
of
business
at
424
Burrard
St.,
in
the
City
of
Vancouver,
B.C.
Norman
R.
Whittall
Ltd.
was
wound
up
in
the
year
1954
and
a
successor
company
was
incorporated
known
as
Normal
Whit-
tall
Ltd.
In
this
company
the
appellant
and
his
son
H.
Richard
Whittall
(who
was
also
an
appellant
in
another
case)
are
and
were
shareholders,
directors
and
officers
at
all
material
times.
It
was
the
submission
of
the
appellant
in
this
appeal
that
shareholdings
at
all
material
times
were
“ordinary
investments’’
within
the
meaning
of
the
jurisprudence
concerning
the
same
and
that
any
profit
which
he
made
on
the
realization
of
any
of
these
shares
was
capital
and
not
income
within
the
meaning
of
the
Income
Tax
Act.
On
the
contrary,
the
respondent,
the
Minister
of
National
Revenue,
submitted
on
this
appeal
that
the
transactions
entered
into
by
the
appellant
whereby
the
shares
in
these
companies
were
obtained
and
realized
upon
were
entered
into
as
a
scheme
for
profit
making
and
with
the
intention
of
making
a
profit
and
the
profit
gained
or
received
and
derived
by
the
appellant
in
these
transactions
was
a
profit
or
gain
received
or
derived
from
a
trade
or
business
of
the
appellant
and
was
income
within
the
meaning
of
Sections
3
and
4,
and
Section
139(1)
(e)
of
the
Income
Tax
Act.
The
appellant,
the
only
witness,
gave
oral
evidence
and
in
addition
there
were
entered
as
exhibits
a
large
number
of
documents
and
memoranda.
According
to
the
evidence,
in
the
year
1952,
the
appellant
Norman
R.
Whittall
owned
6714%
of
the
proprietary
interest
in
the
brokerage
firm
of
Ross
Whittall
Ltd.,
which
carried
on
a
brokerage
business
on
a
commission
basis
and
at
times
took
part
in
underwriting
security
issues,
and
which
was
a
member
of
the
Vancouver
Stock
Exchange,
a
member
of
the
Dealers
and
Brokers
Association
in
Canada
and
various
other
investment
and
brokerage
organizations.
It
dealt
with
clients
in
British
Columbia
and
elsewhere.
‘The
evidence
dealt
with
the
history
of
the
aequisition
and
disposal
of
shares
in
the
various
companies
and
syndicates
at
various
times
and
the
transactions.
were
not
dealt
with
in
evidence
year
by
year
to
tie
in
by
time
sequenee
with
the
assessment
notices.
The
evidence
adduced
in
support
of
the
submission
of
the
appellant
that
the
profit
realized
on
the
sale
of
St.
John’s
Trust
Syndicate
units
and
of
Inland
Natural
Gas
Co.
Ltd.
shares
was
not
income
was
quite
detailed
and
fairly
complex.
re:
St.
John’s
Trust
Syndicate
Units
and
Inland
Natural
Gas
Co.
Ltd.
In
February,
1952,
the
appellant
acquired
through
Frank
McMahon
and
George
McMahon
of
Calgary,
Alberta,
one
and
one-half
units
(out
of
four
units
which
the
latter
had
available)
in
what
was
called
the
Wilson
Syndicate,
and
Frank
and
George
McMahon
kept
two
of
these
units
themselves.
One-quarter
of
one
of
these
units
was
acquired
by
the
son
of
the
appellant,
H.
Richard
Whittall,
and
the
other
one-quarter
of
one
unit
was
acquired
by
William
K.
McGee,
an
associate
of
the
appellant
in
Ross
Whittall
Ltd.
There
were
40
units
in
total
in
the
Wilson
Syndicate.
The
Wilson
Syndicate
owned
a
10%
‘‘carried
interest’’
in
Permit
No.
22
which
was
a
right
granted
by
the
Province
of
British
Columbia
to
prospect
for
and
develop
petroleum
and
natural
gas
on
about
one
hundred
thousand
acres
in
the
northern
part
of
British
Columbia
known
as
the
Fort
St.
John
area
which
is
near
Dawson
Creek.
This
10%
“çarried
interest’’
was
acquired
from
one
Innes
who
was
an
applicant
to
the
British
Columbia
Government
for
Permit
No.
22,
and
who
withdrew
his
application
in
favour
of
another
applicant,
namely,
Peace
River
Natural
Gas
Co.
Ltd.,
which
was
issued
Permit
No.
22
and
for
withdrawing
Innes
received
a
10%
“carried
interest’’
in
Permit
No.
22.
P
eace
River
Natural
Gas
Co.
Ltd.
at
that
time
was
a
wholly-
owned
subsidiary
of
Pacifie
Petroleums
Ltd.
Pacific
Petroleums
Ltd.
was
a
company
formed
by
the
merger
of
several
companies
in
1936
and
1937,
and
prominent
in
the
management
and
ownership
of
it
were
the
said
Frank
McMahon
and
George
McMahon
of
Calgary,
Alberta.
In
1952:
the
appellant
was
a
director
of
1
both
Pacific
Petroleums
Ltd.
and
Peace
River
Natural
Gas
Co.
Ltd.
A
‘‘carried
interest’’
obviated
the
legal
requirement
of
its
owner
to
put
up-any
money
for
drilling
or
other
exploration
expenses.
Only
if
a
property
(in
respect
of
which
there
was
a
carried
interest)
proved
itself
were
these
costs
recoverable
out
of
the
revenues
derived
from
the
well
or
wells
on
such
property,
which
costs.
would
be
deducted
on
a
pro
rata
basis
from
the
revenues
aceruing
to
all
interests
including
the
‘‘carried
interest”,
before
distribution
of
any
net
proceeds
of
such
revenue
to
the
various
owners
of
interests.
At
that
time,
according
to
the
evidence,
neither
West
Coast
Transmission
‘Co.
Ltd.,
Peace
River
Natural
Gas
Co.
Ltd.,
or
Pacific
Petroleums
Ltd.
had
any
interest
in
this
10%
“carried
interest”?
.
Pacific
Petroleums
Ltd.,
however,
had
the
largest
single
interest
in
the
other
90%
of
Permit
No.
22
and
also
an
interest
in
what
was
known
as
Permit
No.
30.
The
other
owners
in
1952
of
the
90%
interest
in
Permit
No.
22,
besides
Pacific
Petroleums
Ltd.,
were
Hudson’s
Bay
Gas
Co.
Ltd.,
Union
Oil
of
California,
Peace
River
Oil
Co.
of
Tulsa,
Oklahoma,
and
and
certain
other
large
oil
companies.
In
Permit
No.
30,
Ross
Whittall
Ltd.
had
a
6%
interest
and
also
a
20%
interest
in
part
of
it.
There
were
a
number
of
other
persons
who
owned
interests
in
it,
including
the
McMahon
brothers.
The
evidence
disclosed
that
Pacific
Petroleums
Ltd.
at
this
time
had
drilled
on
property
included
in
Permit
No.
22,
and
had
discovered
oil
but
it
was
not
of
great
commercial
quality
or
value.
(The
appellant
called
this
well
at
this
time
a
“teaser”—
a
term
employed
in
the
security
market.
)
The
next
thing
that
took
place,
at
the
suggestion
of
the
McMahon
brothers
of
Calgary,
Alberta,
was
the
pooling
of
certain
interests
in
Permits
No.
22
and
30,
so
that
there
would
be
a
larger
geographical
spread
thereby
increasing
the
likelihood
of
getting
gas
and
oil
for
these
owners
of
interests
and
also
thereby
spreading
the
drilling
costs
among
more
persons.
This
pooling
arrangement
as
implemented,
constituted
what
was
known
as
the
St.
John’s
Trust
Agreement,
which
was
filed
as
Exhibit
A-1.
By
this
contract,
the
McMahon
brothers’
two
units
in
the
Wilson
Syndicate,
the
one
and
one-half
units
owned
by
the
appellant
in
the
Wilson
Syndicate,
the
two
one-quarter
interests
owned
by
H.
Richard
Whittall
and
William
K.
McGee,
and
the
interests
of
Ross
Whittall
Ltd.
in
Permit
No.
22
and
in
Permit
No.
30
were
placed
in
the
St.
John’s
Trust
Agreement.
The
St.
John’s
Trust
Agreement
in
total’
consisted
of
the
following
:
one
and
one-half
shares
of
the
appellant
in
the
Wilson
Syndicate,
two
shares
in
it
of
the
McMahon
brothers,
and
two
one-quarter
shares
in
it
of
H.
Richard
Whittall
and
William
H.
McGee.
In
addition
Ross
Whittall
Ltd.
had
an
interest
in
the
nearby
but
not
contiguous
Permit
No,
30.
Ross
Whittall
Ltd.’s
interest
had
originally
consisted
of
a
414%
interest
in
a
block
carved
out
of
Permit
No.
22
which
had
been
consolidated
with
a
block
formed
out
of
Permit
No.
30
in
which
Ross
Whittall
Ltd.
had
a
6%
interest.
Ross
Whittall
Ltd.
also
had
a
20%
interest
in
the
remainder
of
Permit
No.
30.
Ross
Whittall
Ltd.
had
sold
to
the
McMahon
brothers
(represented
in
the
St.
John’s
Trust
Agreement,
Exhibit
A-1,
by
the
Eastern
Trust
Company
and
John
McMahon)
for
the
sum
of
$13,000,
a
51%
share
in
its
interests
above
described,
subject
to
a
“carried
interest’’
reserved
by
Ross
Whittall
Ltd.,
to
the
extent
of
25%.
The
McMahon
brothers
assigned:this
.51%
and
Ross
Whittall
Ltd.
assigned
its
remaining
49%
to
the
St.
John’s
Trust
Agreement.
In
this
connection
it
should
be
noted
that
the
only
thing
left
out
of
the
St.
John’s
Trust
Agreement
was
a
25%
‘‘carried
interets”
which
remained
with
Ross
Whittall
Ltd.
In
summary,
therefore,
the
St.
John’s
Trust
Agreement
had
three
interests
in
it,
namely,
firstly
the
“participating”
interest
to
the
extent
of
414%
which
obligated
the
owners
of
it
to
pay
their
proportionate
share
of
drilling
expenses,
etc.,
namely,
414%
;
secondly,
the
‘‘carried
interest”
of
1%
in
Permit
No.
22
and
the
20%
interest
in
190,000
acres
in
Permit
No.
30;
and
thirdly,
the
6%
“participating
interest’’
in
Permit
No.
30
which
was
coneerned
with
10,000
acres.
In
the
total
there
were
16414
units
in
the
St.
John’s
Trust
Agreement
and:the
owners
of
the
unit
certificates
were
as
set
out
on
page
6;
paragraph
6,
of
that
agreement,
Exhibit
A-1,
viz.:
The
Eastern
Trust
Company
|
|
46
|
John
McMahon
|
|
3914
|
E.
W.
Mason
(1
e.,
Norman
Whittail,
|
|
the
appellant)
|
|
..•_
27
|
Ross
Whittall
Ltd.
|
|
43
|
H.
Richard
Whittall
|
.—4^
|
...
|
41%
|
William
K.
McGee
|
|
4%
|
Total
|
|
164½
|
The
27
units
in
that
agreement
owned
by
the
appellant
were
in
the
name
of
his
confidential
secretary,
E.
W.
Mason,
who
was
trustee
for
him.
These
27
units
in
the
St.
John’s
Trust
Agreement
were
subsequently,
on
October
15,
1962,
sold
to
St.
John
Gas
and
Oil
Ltd.
and
in
the
result
710,000
shares
in
Inland
Natural
Gas
Co.
Ltd.
were
obtained
by
the
appellant
for
them.
It
is
in
respect
to
this
transaction
that
the
appellant
was
assessed
for
the
year
1952.
The
respondent
alleges
that
the
value
of
the
Inland
Natural
Gas
Co.
Ltd.
shares
the
appellant
received
from
the
sale
of
his
interest
in
the
St.
John’s
Trust
Agreement
was
$116,500
and
that
the
difference
between
that
sum
and
the
cost
to
the
appellant
of
his
original
units
in
the
Wilson
Syndicate,
viz.,
$7,500
which
was
$109,000,
was
taxable
income.
The
appellant
at
this
time
was
a
director
in
both
St.
John
Gas
and
Oil
Ltd.
and
Inland
Natural
Gas
Co.
Ltd.
The
evidence
showed
that
at
the
time
the
Wilson
Syndicate
was
originally
formed,
no
drilling
had
taken
place,
but
that
after
that
time
in
April,
1952,
there
was
drilled
one
well
which
was
known
as
Fort
St.
John
No.
7
and
in
May,
1952,
there
was
drilled
another
well
called
Fort
St.
John
No.
9.
In
respect
to
the
costs
of
these
drillings,
which
costs
were
respectively
approximately
$128,000
and
$195,000
it
appears
that
the
participating
members
of
the
St.
John’s
Trust
Agreement
received
notice
of
the
proposal
to
incur
the
same
and
did
in
fact
put
up
their
proportionate
share
of
the
drilling
costs.
The
appellant
said
that
the
decision
as
to
these
drillings
was
made
by
the
Pacific
Petroleum
Co.
Ltd.,
Union
Oil
of
California,
Sunray
Oil
of
Tulsa,
Oklahoma,
and
the
other
oil
companies
who
owned
interests
in
Permit
No.
22,
and
not
by
him.
The
actual
costs
of
the
drilling
that
the
St.
John’s
Trust
Agreement
people
had
to
put
up
amounted
to
approximately
$15,000
and
the
appellant
said
that;
he
put
up
his
proportionate
share,
namely,
the
proportionate
cost
as
27
units
bears
to
16414
units
of
414%
of
the
cost.
It
turned
out
that
Fort
St.
John
Wells
Nos.
7
and
9
were
large
gas
wells
and
as
a
result
Permits
Nos.
22
and
30
became
valuable
and
many
oil
companies
became
interested
in
further
drilling.
The
appellant
said
that
as
a
director
of
some
of
these
companies,
such
as
Pacific
Petroleums
Ltd.,
Westcoast
Transmission
Co.
Ltd.
and
the
Peace
River
Natural
Gas
Co.
Ltd.,
that
he
might
have
known
of
the
plans
for
drilling
on
the
property
in
Permit
No.
20.
As
a
result
of
the
success
of
these
gas
wells
Nos.
7
and
9
at
Fort
St.
John,
Westcoast
Transmission
Co.
Ltd.,
in
order
to
market
the
gas,
wished
to
build
a
pipe
line
from
Fort
St.
John
to
the
British
Columbia-State
of
Washington
border
in
order
to
sell
the
gas
in
the
United
States
market.
The
British
Columbia
market
could
not
take
enough
gas
to
pay
for
the
pipe
line
which
it
was
estimated
would
cost
over
$20,000,000,
so
a
market
had
to
be
found
also
in
the
United
States.
The
evidence
was
that
the
Canadian
Federal
Board
of
Transport
Commissioners
would
give
no
permission
to
export
gas
out
of
Canada
until
the
British
Columbia
market
was
fully
serviced.
It
was
at
this
stage
that
Westcoast
Transmission
Co.
Ltd.
arranged
to
get
B.C,
Electric
Co.
Ltd.
and
Inland
Natural
Gas
Co.
Ltd.
as
substantial
purchasers
of
gas
before
the
necessary
permits
could
be
obtained
from
the
Canadian
and
United
States
authorities.
The
appellant
was
a
director
of
Westcoast
Transmission
Co.
Ltd.,
at
this
time,
when
he
was
asked
by
the
directors
of
Westcoast
Transmission
Co.
Ltd.
to
form
Inland
Natural
Gas
Co.
Ltd.
for
it.
This
he
did.
In
addition,
Inland
Natural
Gas
Co.
Ltd.
subsequently
went
about
acquiring
property
so
that
it
would
not
be
dependent
on
Westcoast
Transmission
Co.
Ltd.
entirely
for
gas
and
as
a
result
Inland
Natural
Gas
Co.
Ltd.
formed
a
wholly-owned
subsidiary
which
became
known
as
Fort
St.
John
Oil
and
Gas
Co.
Ltd.
This
company
was
formed
for
the
purpose,
therefore,
of
holding
the
gas
rights
and
interests
in
lands
for
Inland
Natural
Gas
Co.
Ltd.
The
next
thing
that
happened
was
the
making
of
an
offer
to
the
Fort
St.
John
Trust
Agreement
people,
above
referred
to,
by
Fort
St.
John
Oil
and
Gas
Co.
Ltd.
to
purchase
their
interests
in
the
permits
above
referred
to.
As
stated
above,
the
offer
was
for
$710,000
for
the
16414
units
in
it,
and
it
was
conditional
upon
the
owners
of
those
units
buying
7
10,000
shares
of
Inland
Natural
Gas
Co.
Ltd.
at
a
$1
per
share,
which
they
all
did.
This
agreement
was
dated
October
15,
1952,
and
was
filed
as
Exhibit
A-4
in
this
appeal.
In
due
course,
the
appellant
received
his
proportionate
share
of
the
710,000
shares
in
Inland
Natural
Gas
Co.
Ltd.,
namely,
116,
200
shares.
As
mentioned
above,
it
is
in
respect
of
these
116,500
shares
at
$1
per
share
that
the
appellant
was
assessed
for
the
year
1952.
The
respondent
says
that
this
was
the
equivalent
of
a
receipt
of
cash
of
$116,500.
At
this
same
time,
another
agreement.
was
entered
into.
(This
was
the
letter
agreement
dated
October
14,
1952,
and
is
Exhibit
A-5,
filed
in
this
appeal.)
It
shows
how
the
shares
in
Inland
Natural
Gas
Co.
Ltd.
were
acquired
in
these
transactions.
When
these
agreements
were
implemented,
the
St.
John’s
Trust
Agreement
people
were
relieved
of
their
obligations
to
put
up
certain
development
monies,
which
is
referred
to
in
clause
4
of
the
agreement,
Exhibit
A-4,
dated
October
14,
1952.
At
this
stage,
therefore,
and
as
a
result
of
these
transactions,
the
appellant
owned
1514
%
of
the
Inland
Natural
Gas
Co.
Ltd.
Thereafter,
more
wells,
other
than
Fort
St.
John
Nos.
7
and
9,
were
drilled
and
became
valuable
so
that
in
the
year
1953
the
appellant
alleges
he
found
it
desirable
to
sell
certain
shares
he
had
acquired
in
the
above
manner,
in
the
Inland
Natural
Gas
Co.
Ltd.,
and
it
is
in
respect
of
certain
of
the
profits
on
sales
of
such
shares
that
the
appellant
for
the
taxation
year
1953
was
assessed
$77,285.05
less
the
cost
of
same
at
a
$1
per
share
of
$37,500
for
a
net
taxable
item
of
income
of
$39,785.05.
(See
adjustments
for
taxable
income
on
the
re-assessment
notice
for
1953,
above
recorded.)
In
other
words
this
assessment
for
the
taxation
year
1953
concerns
the
sale
by
the
appellant
of
certain
of
the
shares
of
Inland
Natural
Gas
Co.
Ltd.
which
he
had
acquired
pursuant
to
the
letter
agreement
dated
October
14,
1952,
Exhibit
A-5,
through
the
agreement,
Exhibit
A-4.
In
this
connection,
there
was
filed
a
record
of
all
the
purchases
and
sales,
made
by
the
appellant,
of
Inland
Natural
Gas
Co.
Ltd.
and
of
the
shares
of
the
other
companies
which
are
the
subject
of
this
appeal.
This
document
is
Exhibit
A-6
and
was
prepared
by
the
auditors
of
the
appellant,
namely,
Peat,
Marwick
&
Mitchell.
On
pages
7,
8
and
9
of
it,
the
dealings
in
the
shares.
of
Inland
Natural
Gas
Co.
Ltd.
by
the
appellant
:
are
recorded.
The
appellant
submitted
that
at
the
material
time
when
he
liquidated
certain
of
these
Inland
Natural
Gas
Co.
Ltd.
shares
it
was
a
prudent
liquidation
in
view
of
the
difficulties
that
were
then
being
encountered
by
Westcoast
Transmission
Co.
Ltd.
(of
which
the
appellant
was
a
director)
in
obtaining
export
permits
from
both
the
Canadian
Board
of
Transport
and
the
United
States
Power
Commission.
At
the
same
time,
the
appellant
stated
that
Inland
Natural
Gas
Co.
Ltd.,
because
it
had
not
received
these
permits,
had
not
obtained
any
firm
franchises
from
any
of
the
municipalities
in
the
inland
of
British
Columbia
which
it
hoped
to
obtain
in
order
tb
be
the
supplier
of
gas
through
Westcoast
Transmission
Co.
Ltd.
On
August
11,
1953,
the
appellant
had
exchanged
36,000
shares
of
Canadian
Northern
Oil
and
Gas
Ltd.,
which
he
had
purchased
for
50^
on
a
two-share
for
one-share
basis
for
Inland
Natural
Gas
Co.
Ltd.
shares.
At
that
time
the
appellant
was
a
director
of
both
Canadian
Northern
Oil
and
Gas
Ltd.
and
Inland
Natural
Gas
Co.
Ltd.
In
the
year
1954
the
appellant
made
a
further
liquidation
of
certain
shares
in
Inland
Natural
Gas
Co.
Ltd.
and
in
respect
of
this
the
appellant
was
assessed
by
the
respondent
a
net
of
$34,721.50.
(See
adjustment
for
taxable
income
on
the
re-assess-
ment
notice
for
1954,
above
recorded.)
Again,
the
appellant
said
in
evidence
that
he
sold
because
of
the
difficulty
that
Westcoast
Transmission
Co.
Ltd.
was
having.
in
obtaining
permits
so
as
to
be
in
a
position
to
deliver
to
Inland
Natural
Gas
Co.
Ltd.
and
as
a
result
the
appellant
thought
that
the
stock
was
overpriced
in
the
market
at
the
time.
The
appellant
said
that
at
the
material
time
he
was
active
in
the
negotiations
of
Westcoast
Transmission
Co.
Ltd.,
being
a
director
of
it,
and
that
this
information
concerning
the
difficulties
of
Westcoast
Transmission
Co.
Ltd.
with
the
U.S.
Federal
Power
Commission
and
the
authorities
of
the
Canadian
Department
of
Transport
came
to
him
in
that
capacity.
The
next
transaction
in
shares
in
respect
to
which
the
appellant
was
assessed
concerned
shares
in
Yankee
Princess
Oils,
Ltd.
re:
Yankee
Princess
Oils,
Ltd.
For
the
year
1952,
the
appellant,
in
respect
to
transactions
concerning
shares
in
Yankee
Princess
Oils,
Ltd.,
was
declared
to
have
income
in
the
sum
of
$104,111.03.
The
acquisition
of
shares
in
this
company
by
the
appellant
commenced
with
the
interest
the
appellant
had
in
C.P.R.
Permit
No.
257
which
Yankee
Princess
Oils,
Ltd.
obtained.
This
permit
covered
acreage
in
the
Province
of
Alberta
and
the
interest
in
this
permit
in
1944
was
owned
by
one
D.
C.
MacDonald,
who
was
at
that
time
in
arrears
of
rent
for
it
to
the
Government
of
Alberta.
At
that
time
Neil
McQueen
of
Calgary,
Alberta,
the
appellant
says,
asked
him
if
he
was
interested
in
acquiring
part
of
it
and
the
appellant,
along
with
one
Ross
of
the
firm
of
Ross
Whittall
Ltd.,
on
August
31,
1944,
along
with
others,
acquired
the
interest
of
D.
C.
MacDonald
in
this
permit.
The
interest
of
D.
C.
MacDonald
in
C.P.R.
Permit
No.
257
as
purchased
was
divided
into
shares
which
were
distributed
as
follows
:
(1)
37%%
to
Neil
McQueen,
(2)
37%%
to
the
appellant,
Normal
Whittall,
(3)
1214
%
to
Mr.
Ross,
and
(4)
12%%
to
Ross
Whittall
Co.
Ltd.
The
purchase
price
for
this
interest
in
C.P.R.
Permit
No.
257
at
that
time
was
the
payment
of
two
or
three
years
of
rent
in
arrears.
and
develop
almost
10,000
acres
of
land
in
Alberta.
This
permit
gave
the
owners
of
it
the
righ
to
explore,
prospect
From
1944
to
1948,
when
the
rights
to
4,162
acres
of
this
permit
were
sold
to
Yankee
Princess
Oils,
Ltd.,
this
group
paid
the
annual
rentals
which
amounted
to
about
10¢
per
acre,
or,
in
other
words,
about
$416.20
per
year.
On
September
24,
1948,
Yankee
Princess
Oils,
Ltd.
was
incorporated.
The
applicants
for
the
charter
of
that
company
were
Henry
Tudor
and
his
wife,
from
Boston,
Massachusetts.
Henry
Tudor
acted
for
Yankee
Princess
Oils,
Ltd.
and
as
its
first
purchase
it
acquired
this
interest
in
part
of
C.P.R.
Permit
No.
257
consisting
of
4,162
acres
above
mentioned.
The
contract
of
sale
was
made
through
Neil
McQueen
and
Yankee
Princess
Oils,
Ltd.
paid
for
his
interest
$20,000
in
cash,
$18,000
in
promissory
notes
and
it
also
gave
54,000
treasury
shares
at
5^
per
share.
The
appellant
for
his
interest
in
this
sale
received
$7,762.50
cash,
$6,650
in
promissory
notes
and
20,250
shares
in
Yankee
Princess
Oils,
Ltd.
In
March,
1951,
the
capitalization
of
Yankee
Princess
Oils,
Ltd.
was
increased
to
3,000,000
shares.
The
company
had
been
dormant
up
to
that
time
and
was
not
listed
on
any
stock
exchange
;
but
nine
months
later
the
company
was
changed
to
a
public
company
and
the
capital
stock
was
changed
from
no
par
value
to
par
value
shares.
The
only
shareholders
at
that
time
were
Henry
Tudor
and
his
group
and
the
group
to
which
the
appellant
belonged.
As
a
result,
630,000
shares
were
issued
and
the
promissory
note
holders
were
given
an
opportunity
to
convert
their
notes
into
shares
at
the
price
of
71/2¢
per
share.
The
evidence
also
was
that
in
August,
1950,
the
appellant
and
Ross
had
sold
to
Ross
Whittall
Ltd.
their
notes
received
from
Yankee
Princess
Oils,
Ltd.
for
80%
of
their
par
value;
and
Ross
Whittall
Ltd.
at
this
juncture
exchanged
these
notes
for
shares
in
the
Yankee
Princess
Oils,
Ltd.
at
the
rate
of
7^^
per
share.
In
accordance
with
this
arrangement,
the
appellant
exchanged
his
former
shares
for
the
new
par
value
shares
in
Yankee
Princess
Oils,
Ltd.
In
addition,
in
March,
1951,
for
$800
the
appellant
had
bought
a
40%
interest
in
a
spread
of
25
quarter
sections
under
lease
for
$1
per
acre
from
the
Alberta
government.
In
other
words,
he
received
a
10%
interest
in
this
spread
of
acreage.
This
acreage
was
located
in
an
area
where
oil
was
indicated.
On
December
21,
1951,
Yankee
Princess
Oils,
Ltd.
purchased
this
40%
interest
of
25%
interest
for
$38,000
and
paid
for
it
as
follows,
namely,
by
the
payment
of
$8,000
cash
and
the
balance
by
issuance
of
its
treasury
shares
at
714¢
per
share.
It
was
a
condition
of
this
arrangement
that
all
owners
of
the
interest
in
this
spread
of
acres
agree
to
sell
and
for
this
purpose
the
lawyers
representing
Yankee
Princess
Oils,
Ltd.
prepared
a
contract
constituting
a
syndicate
called
the
North
West
Syndicate,
a
copy
of
which
contract
was
filed
as
Exhibit
A-10,
and
it
was
this
vehicle,
so
to
speak,
through
which
the
transaction
was
completed
with
Yankee
Princess
Oils,
Ltd.
pursuant
to
the
contract,
Exhibit
A-9,
dated
December
11,
1951.
North
West
Syndicate,
according
to
the
evidence,
only
lasted
long
enough
to
complete
this
transaction,
which
took
about
one
day.
The
appellant
stated
that
his
reasons
for
selling
his
interests
in
this
spread
of
acres
to
Yankee
Princess
Oils,
Ltd.
was
to
get
rid
of
his
obligations
to
drill,
which
obligations
were
being
taken
over
by
a
company
which
could
carry
out
the
drilling
obligations,
and
at
the
same
time
he
could
retain
his
investment.
Out
of
this
transaction,
the
appellant
obtained
40,000
shares
in
Yankee
Princess
Oils,
Ltd.
and
all
other
members
of
the
North
West
Syndicate
took
shares
in
Yankee
Princess
Oils,
Ltd.
Around
this
time
also
the
appellant
purchased
another
65,000
shares
in
Yankee
Princess
Oils,
Ltd.
and
this
came
about
because
Henry
Tudor
offered
Ross
Whittall
Ltd.
100,000
shares
at
7%^
and
the
appellant
purchased
65,000
of
these
shares
from
Ross
Whittall
Ltd.
at
8¢,
the
differential
being
made
up
in
the
commission
paid
to
that
firm.
The
appellant
also
said,
speaking
generally,
that
in
the
case
of
practically
90%
of
all
syndicates
or
groups
which
were
successful,
their
interests
were
taken
over
by
purchase
by
larger
oil
or
gas
companies.
In
this
connection,
he
noted
that
subsequently
(1.e.,
between
1954
and
1964),
Yankee
Princess
Oils,
Ltd.
was
taken
over
by
Medallion
Petroleums
Ltd.
at
about
85^
per
share
and
that
now
Medallion
Petroleums
Ltd.
has
been
taken
over
by
Canadian
Industrial
Gas
Ltd.,
which
was
a
$20,000,000
corporation
and
which
in
turn
is
controlled
by
Power
Corporation
Ltd.
The
appellant
said
that
any
investment
in
interests
in
oil
or
gas
lands
which
was
successful
had
its
origin
similar
to
the
subject
investment,
and
that
there
were
always
various
exchanges
and
stages
of
holdings
before
it
emerged
in
its
final
form.
In
this
regard,
it
should
be
noted
that
the
start
of
all
of
this,
in
so
far
as
the
appellant
was
concerned,
was
his
interest
in
C.P.R.
Permit
No.
257.
When
all
this
was
accomplished,
by
December,
1951,
the
appellant
owned
10%
of
Yankee
Princess
Oils,
Ltd.
shares
of
which
there
were
outstanding
a
total
of
1,250,000
shares.
The
appellant
had
become
a
director
of
Yankee
Princess
Oils,
Ltd.
when
it
became
a
public
company.
Prior
to
becoming
a
public
company,
it
had
obtained
another
oil
lease,
namely,
on
January
2,
1951,
being
a
farm-out
from
Atlantic
Oil
Company
Ltd.
This
farm-out
obligated
Yankee
Princess
Oils,
Ltd.
to
pay
all
costs
of
drilling
and
after
subtracting
these
costs
it
was
to
retain
50%
of
the
net
profit
from
any
revenue
obtained
from
production.
In
order
to
raise
funds
to
develop
these
interests
in
lands,
the
evidence
was
that
it
was
necessary
for
Yankee
Princess
Oils,
Ltd.
to
become
a
public
company
and
at
the
end
of
January,
1952,
a
notice
was
sent
out
calling
for
an
extraordinary
general
meeting
for
such
purpose
and
because
of
what
subsequently
transpired
it
became
a
public
company.
Yankee
Princess
Oils,
Ltd.
then
entered
into
an
underwriting
agreement
with
Ross
Whittali
Ltd.
and
sold
to
it
a
million
shares.
These
shares
were
released
to
the
public
market
early
in
February,
1952.
Prior
to
this
and
after
February,
1952,
as
appears
from
Exhibit
A-6,
the
appellant
had
sold
40,006
shares
in
Yankee
Princess
Oils,
Ltd.
at
856.
At
that
time,
as
stated,
he
was
a
director
of
Yankee
Princess
Oils,
Ltd.
and
a
10%
shareholder
and
a
director
of
Ross
Whittali
Ltd.
who
were
underwriting
and
selling
to
the
public
1,000,000
shares
in
Yankee
Princess
Oils,
Ltd.
The
price
of
the
stock
went
up
after
its
initial
issue
to
the
public
but
finally
settled
down
to
around
85^
per
share
which
was
the
price
these
shares
were
sold
to
Medallion
Petroleums
Ltd.
On
February
7,
1952,
a
telegram
was
received
by
Ross
Whittali
Ltd.
that
a
well
of
Yankee
Princess
Oils,
Ltd.
was
successful.
This
was
filed
as
Exhibit
A-12.
In
this
underwriting,
Ross
Whittail
Ltd.
made
a
commitment
to
underwrite
350,000
shares
of
Yankee
Princess
Oils,
Ltd.
shares
at
48¢
net
to
the
treasury,
retailing
to
the
public
at
60¢
and
also
took
an
option
for
650,000
shares
and
the
commitment
was
fulfilled
and
the
option
was
exercised
immediately
and
the
stock
was
all
sold.
The
underwriting
agreement
with
Ross
Whittall
Ltd.
dated
January
31,
1952,
was
filed
as
Exhibit
A-13
in
this
appeal.
On
February
5,
1952,
as
stated,
and
on
April
21,
the
appellant
sold
substantial
shares
in
Yankee
Princess
Oils,
Ltd.
in
the
market.
The
appellant
stated
that
in
his
opinion
the
shares
were
worth
85^
at
the
time
and
were
so
sold
with
the
idea
that
when
the
boom
was
over
he
could
buy
them
back.
He
stated
that
it
was
his
policy
to
earmark
part
of
his
fortune
in
oil
and
had
the
philosophy
that
some
oil
wells
bring
back
“your
bait”
only
but
others
produced
substantial
returns,
depending
on
the
size
of
the
well.
Again,
in
1953,
the
appellant
sold
further
shares
in
Yankee
Princess
Oils,
Ltd.
but
the
Department
did
not
make
any
assessment
in
respect
to
the
net
profit
made
in
the
realization
of
these
shares.
The
next
transaction
in
shares
for
which
the
appellant
was
assessed
was
in
respect
to
shares
in
Canadian
Collieries
(Dunsmuir)
Ltd.
for
the
taxation
years
1953-1954.
re:
Canadian
Collieries
(
Dunsmuir
)
Ltd.
(name
changed
in
1958
to
Canadian
Colleries
Resources
Ltd.)
The
appellant
for
the
taxation
year
1953
was
re-assessed
by
the
Minister
increasing
his
taxable
income
(by
reason
of
certain
sales
of
shares
in
Canadian
Collieries
(Dunsmuir)
Ltd.)
in
the
net
sum
of
$41,928.75,
and
for
the
taxation
year
1954,
in
the
net
sum
of
$53,221.88.
In
this
matter,
the
evidence
was
that
Sunray
Oils
Ltd.
became
the
owner
of
a
block
of
shares
in
Canadian
Collieries
(Dunsmuir)
Ltd.
in
the
summer
of
1952.
Sunray
Oils
Ltd.
was
a
United
States
corporation,
and
at
that
time
it
had
a
large
number
of
oil
interests
in
Alberta,
and
it
had
acquired
243,000
shares
of
Canadian
Collieries
(Dunsmuir)
Ltd.
The
appellant
was
president
and
a
director
of
Canadian
Collieries
(Dunsmuir)
Ltd.
when
these
material
purchases
and
sales
of
shares
(hereinafter
referred
to)
were
made
by
him,
and
he
had
been
since
1945.
On
November,
1953,
the
appellant
was
offered
through
a
Mr.
Wright,
the
president
of
Sunray
Oils,
Ltd.,
a
block
of
100,000
shares
of
Canadian
Collieries
(Dunsmuir)
Ltd.
(out
of
the
said
243,000
shares
it
held)
at
a
price
of
$3.50
per
share.
This
was
about
the
market
value
of
the
shares
at
that
time
on
the
Vancouver
Stock
Exchange.
The
appellant
approached
Frank
McMahon
and
George
McMahon
to
see
if
they
were
interested
in
taking
some
of
these
Shares
and
in
the
result
they
agreed
to
take
and
did
buy
50,000
of
these
shares.
The
appellant
bought
25,000
of
these
shares
and
his
son
H.
Richard
Whittall
bought
2,500
and
W.
H.
McGee
bought
2,500,
and
the
balance
of
20,000
of
these
shares
was
bought
by
Ross
Whittall
Ltd.
This
purchase
took
place
about
the
end
of
November,
1953.
The
appellant
said
that,
in
his
view,
there
was
no
change
in
the
prospects
in
the
mines
and
minerals
holdings
of
Canadian
Collieries
(Dunsmuir
)
Ltd.
in
Alberta
at
that
time,
which
holdings
were
in
the
Pembina
area.
The
wells
in
the
Pembina
area
at
that
time,
the
appellant
said,
had
to
be
pumped
to
get
oil.
The
appellant
said
that
he
was
interested
in
seeing
that
these
100
,000
shares
of
Canadian
Collieries
(Dunsmuir)
Ltd.
were
in
“safe
hands’’,
as
he
put
it,
and
that
this
was
one
of
the
motives
impelling
him
to
make
this
arrangement
regarding
the
acquisition
of
this
block
of
100,000
shares.
The
appellant
said
that
he
did
not
buy
the
shares:
through
Ross
Whittall
Ltd.
(as
was
alleged
in
the
wording
of
the
reassessment
notice).
Instead,
the
balance
of
20,000
shares
to
make
up
what
was
left
out
of
the
100,000-share
lot
was
taken
by
Ross
Whittall
Ltd.
No
brokerage
was
paid
in
respect
of
the
other
acquisitions
because
no
purchase
and
sale
of
them
was
made
through
Ross
Whittall
Ltd.
The
appellant,
as
appears
from
page
2
of
Exhibit
A-6,
commenced
almost
immediately
to
sell
some
of
these
shares
after
he
acquired
them.
He
sold
5,000
shares
on
December
1,
1953,
and
about
15,000
shares
during
the
last
fifteen
days
of
December,
1953,
through
Ross
Whittall
Ltd.;
and
by
the
end
of
January,
1954.
he
had
in
effect
disposed
of
29,000
shares
of
Canadian
Collieries
(Dunsmuir)
Ltd.
which
is
equivalent
to
the
number
of
shares
he
had
obtained
out
of
this
block
from
Sunray
Oils
Ltd.
The
appellant
said
that
from
1945
he
was
a
shareholder
to
the
extent
of
20,000
shares
in
Canadian
Collieries
(Dunsmuir)
Ltd.
and
from
1954
to
1964
his
share
interest
was
maintained
and
in
1946
when
the
Canadian
Wellwood
Ltd.
bought
out
the
shares
in
Canadian
Collieries
Resources
Ltd.
(until
1958
Canadian
Collieries
(Dunsmuir)
Ltd.)
he
was
the
holder
of
100,000
shares
in
this
latter
company.
The
appellant
said
that
from
1948
to
1952
the
stock
had
been
priced
on
the
stock
exchange
from
$1.98
to
$4
per
share
and
then
in
1953
the
stock
did
go
as
high
as
$9
per
share.
The
appellant
said
that
during
the
period
1953-1954
his
holdings
did
not
fall
below
25,000
shares.
Speaking
generally,
in
respect
to
all
the
shares
in
these
companies,
which
were
mentioned
in
evidence,
the
appellant
stated
that
the
Inland
Natural
Gas
Co.
Ltd.
is
currently
paying
a
dividend;
Canadian
Collieries
Resources
Ltd.
would
have
started
paying
dividends
this
year
if
it
had
not
been
taken
over
by
Canadian
Wellwood
Ltd.
;
and
that
when
Medallion
Oil
Co.
Ltd.
took
over
Yankee
Princess
Oils,
Ltd.,
he
had
20,000
shares
in
the
latter
company;
that
in
any
of
these
purchases
of
shares
he
did
not
borrow
funds
but
instead
the
purchases
were
made
out
of
surplus
funds
of
his
own;
that
Ross
Whittall
Ltd.
itself
had
an
investment
account
and
that
its
policy
in
respect
to
investments
in
this
account
was
that
none
of
them
would
be
sold
for
at
least
eighteen
months
after
purchase.
In
addition
the
appellant
filed
his
income
tax
returns
for
the
years
1952
to
1955,
which
are
Exhibit
A-14,
which
set
out
the
substantial
income
he
received
from
his
employment
in
the
business
of
Ross
Whittall
Ltd.,
which
he
alleged
was
his
main
occupation,
and
at
which
he
spent
his
time.
In
respect
to
all
these
transactions,
as
mentioned
above,
the
appellant
was
a
shareholder,
director
and/or
officer
of
the
following
companies
at
the
material
times,
namely,
Pacific
Petroleums
Ltd.,
Peace
River
Natural
Gas
Co.
Ltd.,
Westcoast
Transmission
Co.
Ltd.,
Yankee
Princess
Oils,
Ltd.,
Inland
Natural
Gas
Co.
Ltd.,
St.
John
Oil
and
Gas
Co.
Ltd.,
Canadian
Northern
Oil
and
Gas
Ltd.,
Canadian
Collieries
(Dunsmuir)
Ltd.,
Ross
Whittall
Ltd.,
and
Norman
R.
Whittall
Ltd.
In
argument
counsel
for
the
appellant
submitted
that
the
appellant
was
in
law
an
investor
in
his
personal
capacity
and
was
not
engaged
in
the
business
of
trading
in
securities
by
reason
of
his
employment
in
Ross
Whittall
Ltd.
(Sherer
v.
Zacks,
[1952]
O.W.N.
841;
[1952]
4
D.L.R.
504,
and
Davidson
v.
M.N.R.,
[1964]
Ex.
C.R.
48;
[1963]
C.T.C.
240);
that
the
activities
of
the
company
Ross
Whittall
Ltd.
were
separate
and
apart
from
the
personal
investment
activities
of
the
appellant,
citing
also
as
a
director
case
Salomon
v.
Salomon,
[1897]
A.C.
22
at
51;
that
all
the
appellant’s
trading
activities
were
transferred
and
done
in
Ross
Whittall
Ltd.
and
were
within
the
exclusion
in
the
statutory
definition
of
‘‘business’’
contained
in
Section
139(1)
(e)
of
the
Income
Tax
Act,
namely,
as
defined
by
the
words
there
employed,
that
is,
‘
‘
but
does
not
include
an
office
or
employment’’;
that
the
securities,
the
profit
on
the
realization
of
which,
the
respondent
taxed
was
an
ordinary
investment
within
the
meaning
of
the
cases
Californian
Copper
Syndicate
v.
Harris
(1904),
5
T.C.
159,
and
Irrigation
Industries
Ltd.
v.
M.N.R.,
[1962]
S.C.R.
346;
[1962]
C.T.C.
215,
and
so
not
tax-
able
as
income;
that
an
ordinary
investment
within
the
jurisprudence
was
not
an
absolute
or
fixed
standard
but
a
variable
one
depending
on
who
was
the
investor
and
what
his
position
was
and
his
statutory
limitations,
if
any
(as,
e.g.,
an
executor
of
a
will);
that
although
Ross
Whittall
Ltd.
had
done
certain
of
the
underwriting
for
the
public
issue
of
shares
in
Canadian
Collieries
(Dunsmuir)
Ltd.,
Canadian
Northern
Oil
and
Gas
Co.
Ltd.,
Inland
Natural
Gas
Co.
Ltd.,
and
Yankee
Princess
Oils,
Ltd.,
there
was
no
legal
proposition
that
an
investor
should
be
taxed
on
an
investment
made
during
the
period
when
the
underwriting
limited
company
of
which
such
an
investor
was
a
member,
was
doing
an
underwriting
of
that
particular
investment
;
that
the
frequency
of
sales
of
investments
is
not
a
criterion,
Commercial
Investment
Co-op.
v.
M.N.R.,
32
Tax
A.B.C.
1
;
and
that
special
skill
such
as
that
of
the
appellant
in
financial
matters
is
of
minor
importance
in
deciding
the
issue
herein.
Edwards
v.
Ba/irstow,
[1956]
A.C.
14
at
37.
Counsel
for
the
respondent
submitted
that
the
sole
issue
is
whether
the
amount
re-assessed
by
the
Minister
is
properly
income
;
which
must
be
determined
according
to
the
facts
of
this
case:
Thorson,
P.
in
M.N.R.
v.
Spencer,
[1961]
C.T.C.
109
at
113;
and
that
the
issue
to
be
decided
in
this
case
is
quite
different
from
that
which
was
decided
in
Irrigation
Industries
Ltd.
v.
M.N.R.
(supra)
;
and
that
certain
surrounding
and
general
circumstances
were
relevant
in
this
case,
viz.:
(1)
that
the
appellant
was
an
associate
of
the
McMahon
brothers
of
Calgary,
Alberta,
who
were
substantial
traders
in
oil
and
gas
securities
;
(2)
that
the
appellant
at
all
material
times
was
a
shareholder,
director
and/or
officer
of
Peace
River
Natural
Gas
Co.
Ltd.,
Pacific
Petroleums
Ltd.,
Inland
Natural
Gas
Co.
Ltd.,
Yankee
Princess
Oils,
Ltd.,
St.
John
Oil
and
Gas
Co.
Ltd.,
Canadian
Collieries
(Dunsmuir)
Ltd.,
and
Ross
Whittall
Ltd.
;
(3)
that
he
was
a
member
of
the
stockbroker
firm
Ross
Whittall
Ltd.
who
underwrote
issues
of
certain
of
these
companies
for
treasury
shares
which
were
sold
to
the
public
;
and
(4)
that
the
appellant
participated
personally
in
the
formation
of
certain
of
these
oil
and
gas
companies
from
which
he
obtained
shares,
the
profit
on
the
realization
of
some
of
which
such
shares
forms
substantially
the
basis
of
the
reassessments
herein.
Referring
to
certain
particular
share
holdings,
counsel
for
the
respondent
submitted
(1)
that
the
acquisition
of
the
two
units
in
the
Wilson
Syndicate
was
at
that
stage
a
speculative
venture
which
should
be
categorized
properly
as
an
adventure
or
concern
in
the
nature
of
trade;
(2)
that
the
pooling
of
all
interests
in
the
Wilson
Syndicate
with
the
interests
of
Ross
Whittail
Ltd.
to
spread
the
risk
and
increase
the
opportunity
to
find
oil,
resulting
in
the
formation
of
the
St.
John’s
Trust
Agreement
and
the
sale
of
its
interests
for
$710,000
in
shares
of
Inland
Natural
Gas
Co.
Ltd.
through
two
contracts,
namely,
with
the
latter
company
and
with
St.
John
Oil
and
Gas
Co.
Ltd.,
by
which
the
appellant
by
October
17,
1952,
received
116,500
shares
of
Inland
Natural
Gas
Co.
Ltd.,
was
also
an
adventure
or
concern
in
the
nature
of
trade;
(3)
that
alternatively
after
October
17,
1952,
the
trading
of
substantially
all
the
said
116,500
shares
was
an
adventure
or
concern
in
the
nature
of
trade
and
the
profit
on
the
sales
was
income;
(4)
that
the
acquisition
of
Yankee
Princess
Oils,
Ltd.
shares
by
the
appellant
starting
with
his
interest
in
C.P.R.
Permit
No.
257,
and
carrying
through
to
the
varying
circumstances
under
which
he
obtained
further
shares
in
that
company
was
inconsistent
with
the
legal
concept
of
what
was
an
ordinary
investment
;
and
(5)
that
in
view
of
the
circumstances
surrounding
the
manner,
method
and
time
of
acquisition
and
disposal
of
the
shares
in
Canadian
Collieries
(Dunsmuir)
Ltd.
by
the
appellant,
and
the
offices
he
held,
the
conelusion
was
that
his
scheme
was
to
make
a
profit
on
this
block
of
shares
and
not
to
acquire
or
dispose
of
the
same
as
an
ordinary
investment.
The
issue
to
be
decided
on
these
facts
is
whether
or
not
all
or
any
of
these
securities
(the
profit
on
the
realization
of
which
was
taxed
by
the
Minister
as
income
of
the
appellant
in
the
relevant
years)
were
ordinary
investments
within
the
meaning
of
the
Jurisprudence
in
respect
of
the
same,
or
whether
the
transactions
entered
into
by
the
appellant
in
the
acquisition,
exchanging
and
realization
of
them
were
entered
into
as
a
scheme
for
profit
making
so
that
the
profit
gained,
received
or
derived
therefrom
by
the
appellant
was
profit
gained,
received
or
derived
from
a
trade
or
business
of
the
appellant
constituting
income
within
the
meaning
of
Sections
3,
4
and
139(1)
(e)
of
the
Income
Tax
Act.
The
former
President
of
this
Court,
Thorson,
P.,
in
M.N.R.
v.
Taylor,
[1956]
C.T.C.
189,
gave
an
exhaustive
treatise
on
the
meaning
of
‘‘adventure
or
concern
in
the
nature
of
trade
’
’
;
and
he
laid
down
certain
tests
(in
determining
whether
or
not
a
particular
transaction
did
or
did
not
constitute
an
adventure
in
the
nature
of
trade),
which
are
referred
to
in
both
the
majority
and
the
minority
Judgments
in
the
Supreme
Court
of
Canada
in
Irrigation
Industries
Ltd.
v.
M.N.R.
(supra),
and
affirmed
that
(&
.
.
it
is
not
possible
to
determine
the
limits
of
the
ambit
of
the
term
or
lay
down
any
single
criterion
for
deciding
whether
a
particular
transaction
was
an
adventure
of
trade
for
the
answer
in
which
cases
must
depend
on
the
facts
and
surrounding
circumstances
of
the
case.
’
9
Martland,
J.
in
the
Irrigation
Industries
Ltd.
ease
(supra),
at
pp.
349,
217
stated
that
in
that
case:
‘“The
issue
in
this
appeal
is
as
to
whether
an
isolated
purchase
of
shares
from
the
treasury
of
a
corporation
and
subsequent
sale
thereof
at
a
profit,
not
being
a
part
of
the
business
carried
on
by
the
purchaser
of
the
shares,
or
in
any
way
related
to
it,
constitutes
an
adventure
in
the
nature
of
trade
so
as
to
render
such
profit
liable
to
income
tax.”’
The
deciding
of
this
issue,
Irrigation
Industries
Ltd.
case
(supra),
involved
an
adjudication
as
to
circumstances
in
which
enhanced
values.
are
taxable
when
the
realization
of
securities
is
involved;
and
on
the
facts
of
that
case
it
was
held
that
the
particular
security
was
an
‘‘ordinary’’
investment
of
a
capital
nature,
and
not
a
security
purchased
and
realized
upon
in
the
manner
of
trading
which
would
be
carried
on
ordinarily
by
those
engaged
in
the
business
of
trading
in
securities.
On
the
facts
of
this
case,
however,
and
irrespective
of
the
fiduciary
relationships
to
which
I
will
refer,
I
am
compelled
to
hold
that
this
appellant
in
respect
of
the
acquisition
of
all
these
securities
was
endeavouring
to
make
a
profit
by
a
trade
or
business,
and
was
actually
engaged
in
this
business
at
all
material
times
and
the
profitable
sales
and
exchanges
of
securities
were
not
in
law
a
substitution
of
one
form
of
investment
for
another.
During
all
the
material
times
the
appellant
assisted
materially
in
the
marketing
of
these
securities,
which
brought
substantial
gain
to
himself.
The
turning
of
these
investments
into
profit
was
not
merely
incidental
but
instead
was
the
essential
feature
of
his
personal
trading
operations
or
business
speculations.
These
investments,
the
realization
of
which
produced
the
profit,
in
my
opinion,
were
not
‘‘ordinary’’
investments
within
the
meaning
of
the
Irrigation
Industries
case
(supra)
and
the
Californian
Copper
Syndicate
case
(supra).
In
addition,
I
am
also
of
opinion
that
one
of
the
outstanding
facts
which
distinguishes
this
case
from
all
the
cases
cited
in
support
of
the
appellant’s
submission
is
the
fact
that
the
appellant
was
in
a
fiduciary
relationship
as
a
director,
and
in
some
cases
also
as
an
officer,
of
various
companies
at
the
material
times
as,
e.g.,
Pacific
Petroleum
Ltd.,
Atlantic
Oil
Co.
Ltd.,
Peace
River
Natural
Gas
Co.
Ltd.,
Westcoast
Transmission
Co.
Ltd.,
St.
John
Oil
&
Gas
Co.
Ltd.,
Yankee
Princess
Oils,
Ltd.,
Inland
Natural
Gas
Co.
Ltd.,
Canadian
Northern
Oil
&
Gas
Ltd.,
Canadian
Collieries
(Dunsmuir)
Ltd.,
and
Ross
Whittall
Ltd.
;
and
because
of
this
fiduciary
relationship
was
in
a
position
to
and
did
avail
himself
of
the
opportunity
to
make
these
trading
profits.
It
is
basie
equity
law
that
directors
are
creatures
of
statute
and
occupy
a
position
similar
in
varying
respects
to
those
of
avents,
trustees
and
managing
partners,
and
their
position
is
clearly
of
a
fiduciary
character.
They
are
trustees
of
the
powers
which
they
possess
as
directors,
as
for
example,
the
power
of
issuing
and
allotting
shares.
In
accepting
office
as
such,
directors
place
themselves
in
a
fiduciary
position
towards
the
company
and
its
shareholders.
And
a
director
of
two
companies
which
deal
with
each
other
owes
a
fiduciary
duty
to
each
of
them
and
to
their
respective
shareholders.
As
directors
they
may
not
exercise
their
powers
as
directors
in
such
a
way
as
to
benefit
themselves
at
the
expense
of
the
remaining
shareholders.
They
are
precluded
from
dealing
legally
on
behalf
of
the
company
with
themselves
when
there
is
a
personal
conflicting
interest.
Directors
may
only
take
up
shares
in
a
company
of
which
they
are
directors
on
the
same
terms
as
the
general
public
These
are
only
a
few
of
the
consequences
in
equity
which
flow
from
occupying
the
position
of
director
of
a
company
when
various
transactions
are
being
completed;
and
they
are
all
relevant
in
the
various
circumstances
which
obtained
in
the
transactions
under
review
in
this
appeal.
In
this
case,
because
of
the
various
fiduciary
relationships
in
which
the
appellant
was
at
the
material
times,
and
the
conflicts
of
interest
which
resulted,
on
this
ground
alone
I
am
of
opinion
that
none
of
these
investments
of
the
appellant
(the
acquisition
and
realization
of
which
resulted
in
a
profit)
were
‘‘ordi-
nary’’
investments
within
the
meaning
of
the
Irrigation
Industries
case
(supra).
The
fiduciary
relationships
at
the
material
times
of
the
appellant
in
relation
to
these
various
oil
and
gas
companies
and
their
shareholders,
and
in
relation
to
Ross
Whittall
Ltd.,
the
brokerage
firm
which
did
the
underwriting
of
certain
of
the
securities
of
these
companies,
changed
the
whole
character
of
these
investments
from
a
tax
point
of
view,
inter
alia;
and
the
profit
from
acquisition
and
realization
of
these
investments,
in
my
opinion
fits
squarely
within
the
legal
meaning
of
the
Income
Tax
Act
of
profit
from
an
adventure
or
concern
in
the
nature
of
trade;
or
putting
it
another
way,
the
conclusion
is
irresistible
that
the
financial
success
of
these
transactions,
in
a
most
substantial
way,
was
attributable
to
the
fact
that
the
appellant
was
able
to
use
and
act
on
information
obtained
through
these
fiduciary
relationships
and
as
a
consequence
the
appellant
in
respect
to
these
transactions
was
a
trader
in
securities
and
not
an
investor.
In
the
result,
therefore,
the
appeals
are
dismissed
with
costs.
Judgment
accordingly.
H.
RICHARD
WHITTALL,
Appellant,
and
MINISTER
OF
NATIONAL
REVENUE,
Respondent.
Exchequer
Court
of
Canada
(Gibson,
J.),
October
23,
1964,
on
appeal
from
assessments
of
the
Minister
of
National
Revenue.
Income
tax—Federal—Income
Tax
Act,
R.
s.
C.
1952,
c.
148—Sections
“or
income
from
a
business.
The
appellant,
the
vice-
president
of
a
firm
of
brokers,
investment
dealers
and
underwriters,
was
re-assessed
by
the
Minister
for
the
years
1952
to
1954
to
include
in
income
certain
profits
realized
on
the
sale
of
syndicate
units
and
oil
company
shares
that
had
been
acquired
in
various
exchanges
related
to
the
initial
phases
of
promotion
or
reorganization.
The
circumstances
surrounding
the
transactions
were
substantially
the
same
as
those
described
in
Norman
R.
Whittali
v.
M.N.R.,
[1964]
C.T.C.
417,
relating
to
an
appeal
by
the
appellant’s
father.
HELD:
(i)
That
for
the
reasons
given
in
Norman
R.
Whittali
v.
M.N.R.
the
transactions
were
assimilable
to
trading
operations
and
did
not
represent
the
acquisition
of
ordinary
investments
and
that
the
profits
realized
were
profits
from
a
“business”;
(ii)
That
the
appeal
be
dismissed.
Douglas
McKay
brown,
Q.C.,
and
k.
A.
McCall,
for
the
Appellant.
II.
J.
Grey,
for
the
Respondent.