CATTANACH,
J.:—This
is
an
appeal
from
an
assessment
under
the
Income
Tax
Act,
R.S.C.
1952,
c.
148
of
West
Coast
Parts
Co.
Ltd.
for
its
1958
taxation
year.
The
appellant
is
a
company
incorporated
pursuant
to
the
laws
of
the
Province
of
British
Columbia
with
its
head
office
at
2015
Main
Street
in
the
City
of
Vancouver
in
that
Province.
It
was,
prior
to
1955,
engaged
in
the
business
trading
in
parts
for
motor
vehicles
and
more
particularly
parts
for
Kenworth
motor
trucks,
which
were
sold
through
sub-dealers
and
to
users.
The
annual
sales
averaged
about
$700,000,
of
which
ninety
per
cent
were
in
the
Province
of
British
Columbia.
The
appellant
maintained
an
inventory
between
$150,000
and
$200,000.
In
the
year
1955,
the
manufacturers
of
Kenworth
motor
trucks
undertook
the
distribution
of
its
own
parts
through
a
subsidiary
company
known
as
Canadian
Kenworth
Limited.
This
Company
purchased
all
Kenworth
parts
owned
by
the
appellant,
whereupon
the
appellant
began
a
gradual
liquidation.
of
its
remaining
assets.
The
appellant’s
banking
arrangements.
were
somewhat
unusual.
They
were
described
by
William
John
Ferguson,
Jr.,
who
was
the
only
witness
at
the
trial.
Mr.
Ferguson
is
presently
the
president
and
general
manager
of
Canadian
Kenworth
Ltd.,
but
at
the
time
material
to
this
appeal,
he
was
the
vice-president
of
the
appellant.
The
appellant
was
one
of
seven
very
closely
related
companies,
(1)
Transport
Finance
Ltd.,
which
as
the
name
implies,
was
a
company
dealing
in
commercial
paper,
(2)
Ferguson
Truck
&
Equipment
Co.
Ltd.,
the
distributor
of
Kenworth
motor
trucks,
(3)
Ferguson
Automotive
Parts
Ltd.,
which
repaired
and
maintained
the
motor
trucks,
(4)
Ferguson
Trucks
Ltd.,
the
distributor
of
Kenworth
motor
trucks
on
Vancouver
Island,
(5)
Midwest
Kenworth
Sales
Ltd.,
the
distributor
for
Alberta,
(6)
Seymour
Securities,
Ltd.,
which
was
dormant,
and
(7)
the
appellant
which,
as
previously
intimated,
engaged
in
the
sale
of
truck
parts.
Basically
all
shares
in
the
other
six
companies,
were
owned
by
Transport
Finance
Ltd.
and
the
shares
of
Transport
Finance
Ltd.
were
owned
by
the
members
of
the
Ferguson
family.
All
companies
shared
a
common
office,
a
common
accounting
staff
and
a
common
board
of
directors.
The
Board
consisted
of
W.
J.
Ferguson,
Jr.,
his
father
W.
J.
Ferguson,
Sr.,
a
brother
and,
in
some
instances,
his
mother,
and
sister.
All
major
corporate
decisions
of
each
of
the
seven
companies
were
made
by
W.
J.
Ferguson,
Jr.,
his
father
and
brother.
The
funds
of
all
the
companies,
except
Transport
Finance,
Ltd.,
were
deposited
in
a
bank
account
in
the
name
of
Ferguson
Truck
&
Equipment
Co.
Ltd.
although
each
company
kept
a
separate
book
of
accounts.
Thus
the
funds
of
all
companies
were
intermingled,
the
reason
given
being
that
there
was
no
necessity
for
segregation
and
this
constituted
a
simpler
method
of
doing
business.
Furthermore,
when
a
bank
loan
was
required
by
any
one
of
the
six
companies,
it
was
negotiated
in
the
name
of
Ferguson
Truck
&
Equipment
Co.
Ltd.
Clearly,
the
affairs
of
the
companies
were
closely
interwoven.
On
the
asset
side
of
the
appellant’s
balance
sheets
for
the
fiscal
years
ending
November
1956,
1957
and
1958
under
the
heading
4
‘Current
Assets’’
the
following
item
appears,
‘
Advance
receivable—Ferguson
Truck
&
Equipment
Co.
Ltd.’’
in
the
respective
amounts
of
$128,680.36,
$114,805.29
and
$187,170.57,
which
represent
the
appellant’s
funds
deposited
in
the
bank
account
of
Federal
Truck
&
Equipment
Co.
Ltd.
No
interest
was
paid
to
the
appellant
on
these
deposits.
In
the
latter
months
of
1956,
a
group
of
companies
consisting
of
Lions
Equipment
Limited,
C.
&
R.
Welding
Ltd.,
Craig
&
Ralston
Testing
Co.,
Ltd.,
Vancouver
Ditching
Co.,
Ltd.,
and
Craig
&
Ralston
Construction
Co.,
Ltd.,
(hereinafter
referred
to
as
‘‘the
Lions
Equipment
group’’
or
‘‘the
borrowers’’)
were
engaged
in
negotiating
a
contract
with
Canadian
Bechtel
Ltd.,
as
agents
for
West
Coast
Transmission
Ltd.,
to
test
a
West
Coast
natural
gas
pipeline
for
leaks.
Such
work
would
be
carried.
out
over
a
period
of
150
days
and
required
highly
specialized
and
expensive
equipment,
which
would
be
of
no
further
use
after
the
completion
of
the
work.
This
was
to
be
a
single
specialized
venture
which
had
prospects
of
being
very
profitable.
The
shareholders
and
directors
of
the
Lions
Equipment
group
were
J.
D.
Craig
and
W.
C.
Ralston.
Ralston
was
a
professional
engineer
possessed
of
skill
and
knowledge
in
the
particular
type
of
work
required
by
the
proposed
contract.
The
amount
required
to
be
borrowed
to
purchase
the
specialized
equipment
needed
to
undertake
this
work
was
$125,000.
Craig
and
Ralston
had
tried
unsuccessfully
over
a
period
of
time
to
arrange
for
a
loan
in
the
required
amount.
A
mutual
friend
of
J.
D.
Craig
and
W.
J.
Ferguson,
Jr.
suggested
that
Ferguson
might
have
funds
available
whereupon
Craig
telephoned
Ferguson
explaining
the
proposed
contract
between
the
Lions
Equipment
group
and
West
Coast
Transmission
Ltd.,
the
need
for
money
to
purchase
the
specialized
equipment
to
perform
the
contract
and
suggesting
that,
if
a
loan
were
forthcoming,
the
payment
of
interest
at
the
going
rate
for
loans
of
this
nature
plus
a
substantial
bonus.
This
telephone
call
was
not
made
to
Ferguson
in
his
capacity
as
vice-president
of
the
appellant,
but
as
an
individual,
who
might
be
in
a
position
to
make
a
loan,
the
source
of
the
funds
to
do
so
being
unknown
and
immaterial
to
Craig.
Thereupon
there
followed
a
series
of
conferences
between
the
Lions
Equipment
group
and
the
Fergusons
and
a
series
of
meetings
of
the
Ferguson
directors
and
their
legal
and
accountancy
advisors
aS
a
consequence
of
which
it
was
decided
to
make
the
loan,
the
terms
and
conditions
of
which
were
embodied
in
an
agreement
dated
February
22,
1957,
between
the
Lions
Equipment
group,
as
borrowers,
the
appellant,
as
lender,
and
Craig
and
Ralston,
as
guarantors.
Basically
this
agreement
provides
for
the
loan
of
$125,000
by
the
appellant
to
the
Lions
Equipment
group
to
be
advanced
in
two
stages,
$40,000
upon
execution
of
the
agreement
and
$85,000
upon
the
execution
of
the
contract
between
the
borrower
and
West
Coast
Transmission
Ltd.,
such
contract
to
be
executed
no
later
than
June
1,
1957.
The
loan
was
to
be
repayable,
as
follows,
$115,000
on
November
1,
1957
in
reduction
of
principal,
the
balance
of
$10,000
on
November
1,
1958,
plus
a
premium
of
$56,000,
together
with
interest
at
10
percent
per
annum
on
the
monies
advanced
from
the
date
of
such
advancement
to
date
of
repayment.
The
amount
of
$40,000
was
in
fact
advanced
to
the
borrowers
on
February
28,
1957.
The
agreement
included
a
provision
that,
if
the
contract
between
the
Lions
Equipment
group
and
West
Coast
Transmission
Ltd.
were
not
executed
by
June
1,
1957,
the
$40,000
advanced
would
be
forthwith
repayable
to
the
appellant
with
interest
at
10
per
cent
plus
a
premium
of
45
per
cent.
For
any
significance
that
it
may
have,
I
observe
that
a
premium
of
$56,000
on
$125,000
is
a
premium
of
approximately
45
per
cent.
However,
the
contract
between
the
borrowers
and
West
Coast
Transmission
Ltd.
was
executed
and
the
further
amount
of
$85,000
of
the
loan
was
advanced
to
the
borrowers
by
the
appellant
on
April
30,
1957.
The
agreement
between
the
appellant
and
the
borrowers
and
guarantors
also
provided
for
collateral
security
being
(1)
a
mortgage
on
all
equipment
owned
or
acquired
(2)
the
hypothecation
of
term
life
insurance
on
the
lives
of
Craig
and
Ralston,
(3)
the
hypothecation
of
all
of
the
shares
in
the
borrowing
companies
and
(4)
an
assignment
of
all
book
accounts
of
the
borrowers
subject
to
a
prior
assignment,
However,
the
security,
above
outlined,
was
not
sufficient
to
discharge
the
loan
if
it
became
necessary
to
realize
upon
the
security.
In
making
the
loan
the
appellant
was
relying
on
the
ability
of
the
individuals,
Craig
and
Ralston,
to
perform
the
contract
which
was
to
be
obtained.
The
repayment
of
$115,00
on
account
of
principal
became
due
on
November
1,
1957.
By
letter
dated
October
22,
1957
W.
J.
Ferguson,
Jr.,
wrote
the
borrowers
advising
them
of
the
approaching
due
date.
Payment
was
not
made
until
November
29,
1957,
some
28
days
beyond
the
due
date.
The
borrowers
apparently
encountered
difficulty
in
performing
the
conditions
of
their
contract
with
West
Coast
Transmission
Ltd.
and
had
fallen
behind
in
the
time
schedule.
The
borrowers
were
in
need
of
additional
funds
and
accordingly
approached
W.
J.
Ferguson,
Jr.
for
the
advance
of
a
further
amount.
Mr.
Ferguson
and
his
fellow
directors
had
become
alarmed
at
the
state
of
the
performance
of
the
borrowers’
contract
and
funds
were
not
so
readily
available
to
them
as
on
the
previous
occasion.
They
therefore
declined
to
make
a
further
loan.
The
borrowers’
need
for
further
funds
was
urgent
and
it
became
necessary
for
them
to
obtain
a
release
of
the
collateral
security
given
to
the
appellant
in
order
to
pledge
such
assets
as
security
for
a
loan
from
other
sources.
Therefore,
the
borrowers
paid
off
the
outstanding
balance
of
the
principal
of
their
loan
to
the
appellant,
being
$10,000,
plus
interest
to
the
date
of
payment
and
the
stipulated
bonus
of
$56,000
on
April
22,
1958,
being
six
months
prior
to
the
maturity
date
of
November
1,
1958.
The
payment
was
in
the
total
amount
of
$73,872.61
made
up
as
follows:
As
previously
recited,
the
agreement
between
the
appellant
and
the
borrowers
dated
February
22,
1957
accurately
represents
the
ultimate
terms
agreed
upon
among
the
parties
thereto
arrived
at
following
a
series
of
conferences
between
the
parties
and
among
the
directors
of
the
Ferguson
group
of
companies.
The
rate
of
interest
payable
was
the
subject
of
negotiation
and
a
rate
of
10
percent
was
fixed
as
the
normal
rate
for
a
loan
of
this
nature.
The
term
of
the
loan
and
times
and
amounts
of
the
advances
and
repayment
were
also
the
subject
of
negotiation.
However,
Mr.
Ferguson,
Jr.
was
adamant
in
his
testimony
that
the
bonus
of
$56,000
was
proffered
in
the
initial
approach
by
telephone
by
Craig
on
behalf
of
the
prospective
borrowers
and
that
such
amount
remained
comparatively
constant
throughout
the
negotiations
antecedent
to
the
loan
being
made
although
he
conceded
that
it
was
a
matter
of
limited
discussion
and
negotiation.
Repayment
of
loan
|
$10,000.00
|
Interest:
$40,000—245
days
@
10%
|
2,684.93
|
$85,000—203
days
@
10%
|
4,727.40
|
$10,000—153
days
@
10%
|
419.18
|
April
3
to
April
18
|
41.10
|
Bonus
|
$56,000.00
|
The
decision
of
the
directors
of
the
Ferguson
companies
to
make
the
loan
in
the
name
of
the
appellant
was
predicated
upon
the
fact
that
the
appellant
was
no
longer
actively
engaged
in
the
business
of
selling
truck
parts,
but
was
merely
liquidating
its
inventory
on
hand
and
receiving
outstanding
accounts
and
primarily
because
there
was
an
adequate
amount
on
hand
with
the
appellant
to
mkae
the
loan,
that
amount
being
the
account
receivable
from
Ferguson
Truck
&
Equipment
Co.
Ltd.
The
issue
for
determination
is
whether
the
sum
of
$56,000
received
by
the
appellant
in
1958
as
a
bonus
upon
its
loan,
was
a
profit
arising
from
an
adventure
or
concern
in
the
nature
of
trade
and
is,
therefore,
income
from
a
business
within
the
meaning
of
Sections
3,
4
and
139(1)
(e)
of
the
Income
Tax
Act.
By
Section
3
of
the
Income
Tax
Act
the
income
of
a
taxpayer
for
a
taxation
year
for
the
purposes
of
Part
I
of
the
Act
is
declared
to
be
his
income
from
all
sources
and
includes
income
for
the
year,
inter
alia,
from
all
businesses.
By
Section
4,
income
from
a
business
is
declared
to
be,
subject
to
the
other
provisions
of
Part
I,
the
profit
therefrom
for
the
year
and
by
Section
139(1)
(e)
business
is
defined
as
including
a
profession,
calling,
trade,
manufacture,
or
undertaking
of
any
kind
whatsoever
and
as
including
an
adventure
or
concern
in
the
nature
of
trade.
The
determination
of
the
above
issue
must
depend
on
the
totality
of
the
facts
and
surrounding
circumstances
of
the
case
because
no
single
criterion
has
been
laid
down
upon
which
to
decide
whether
a
transaction
is
an
investment
or
an
adventure
in
the
nature
of
trade.
It
was
contended
by
counsel
for
the
appellant
that
the
sum
of
$56,000
received
by
it
was
a
bonus
compensation
for
risk
of
capital
on
a
loan
receivable
and
was,
therefore,
a
capital
receipt
and
not
income
subject
to
income
tax.
It
is
conceded
by
the
Minister,
both
in
argument
and
in
his
pleadings,
that
to
be
taxable;
the
bonus
must
be
a
profit
arising
from
a
business,
within
the
extended
definition
‘thereof
including
an
adventure
or
concern
in
the
nature
of
trade.
Therefore,
as
stated
before,
the
issue
resolves
itself
into
whether
the
transaction
entered
into
by
the
appellant
as
described
above,
consti-
tûtes
an
adventure
or
concern
in
the
nature
of
trade
and
not
an
investment.
Counsel
for
the
appellant,
after
an
exhaustive
review
of
the
authorities
and
by
reference
to
definitions
in
standard
dictionaries,
submitted
that
the
word
‘‘trade’’
has
reference
to
a
commercial
or
mercantile
occupation
of
a
continuing
or
habitual
character
with
particular
emphasis
on
dealing
in
goods
or
commodities.
He
submitted
that
the
usual
badges
of
trade
were
lacking
in
the
transaction
under
review
in
that
(1)
there
was
no
organization
set
up
for
the
purpose,
(2)
there
was
no
multiplicity
of
transactions,
(3)
the
appellant
had
no
prior
association
with
the
business
and
(4)
there
was
no
scheme,
system,
business
or
operation.
However,
‘‘trade’’
is
not
the
same
thing
as
‘‘an
adventure
in
the
nature
of
trade’’.
A
single
transaction
may
well
be
the
latter
without
being
the
former,
provided
it
is
essentially
commercial.
The
absence
of
one
or
all
of
the
usual
badges
of
trade
does
not
negative
the
existence
of
an
adventure
in
the
nature
of
trade.
In
M.N.R.
v.
Taylor,
[1956]
C.T.C.
189
the
former
President
of
this
Court
points
out
that
while
the
words,
“adventure
or
concern
in
the
nature
of
trade”
first
appeared
in
a
Canadian
Income
Tax
Act
in
the
1948
Act,
they
have
been
in
the
United
Kingdom
Income
Tax
Acts
since
1842.
He
then
proceeds
to
a
careful
examination
of
the
leading
cases
dealing
with
the
meaning
of
the
expression
and
arrives
inductively
at
certain
general
propositions
to
guide
the
Court
in
dealing
with
a
particular
case.
He
first
advances
some
negative
propositions
concerned
with
excluding
a
number
of
erroneous
tests.
‘‘
On
the
negative
side
he
had
this
to
say:
(i)
The
singleness
or
isolation
of
a
transaction
cannot
be
a
test
of
whether
it
was
an
adventure
in
the
nature
of
trade
.
.
.
it
is
the
nature
of
the
transaction,
not
its
singleness
or
isolation
that
is
to
be
determined.
(ii)
It
is
not
‘essential
to
a
transaction
being
an
adventure
in
the
nature
of
trade
that
an
organization
be
set
up
to
carry
it
into
effect’.
(iii)
‘.
.
.
the
fact
that
a
transaction
is
totally
different
in
nature
from
any
of
the
other
activities
of
the
taxpayer
and
that
he
has
never
entered
upon
a
transaction
of
that
kind
before
or
since
does
not,
of
itself,
take
it
out
of
the
category
of
being
an
adventure
in
the
nature
of
trade.’
(iv)
‘The
intention
to
sell
the
purchased
property
at
a
profit
is
not
of
itself
a
test
of
whether
the
profit
is
subject
to
tax
for
the
intention
to
make
a
profit
may
be
just
as
much
the
purpose
of
an
investment
transaction
as
of
a
trading
one.
The
considerations
prompting
the
transaction
may
be
of
such
a
business
nature
as
to
invest
it
with
the
character
of
an
adventure
in
the
nature
of
trade
even
without
any
intention
of
making
a
profit
on
the
sale
of
the
purchased
commodity.’
”
On
the
positive
side
the
former
President
outlines
some
specific
guides:
“
(i)
‘.
.
if
a
person
deals
with
the
commodity
purchased
by
him
in
the
same
way
as
a
dealer
in
it
would
ordinarily
do
such
a
dealing
is
a
trading
adventure.’
(ii)
The
nature
and
quantity
of
the
subject
matter
of
the
transaction
‘may
exclude
the
possibility
that
its
sale
was
the
realization
of
an
investment
or
otherwise
of
a
capital
nature
or
that
it
could
have
been
disposed
of
otherwise
than
as
a
trade
transaction.’
”’
While
formulating
these
guides
as
helpful,
he
recognizes
that
the
question
whether
a
particular
transaction
is
an
adventure
in
the
nature
of
trade
depends
on
its
character
and
surrounding
circumstances
and
no
single
criterion
can
be
formulated.
When
a
person
enters
into
a
contract
whereby
he
advances
money
to
another
person
on
terms
that
it
is
to
be
repaid
at
a
fixed
time
together
with
an
additional
amount,
if
that
additional
amount
is
described
as
interest,
there
is
no
problem.
Interest
is
income
from
property
within
Section
3
of
the
Income
Tax
Act
and
it
is
specifically
required
to
be
included
in
computing
income
by
Section
6.
When
such
a
contract
requires
repayment
with
such
an,
additional
amount,
but
does
not
describe
it
as
interest,
it
becomes
a
question
of
fact
as
to
whether
the
additional
payment
is
or
is
not
in
fact
interest
or,
in
any
event,
a
profit
from
property
in
the
sense
of
revenue
derived
from
the
money
advanced.
If
the
additional
payment
is
the
sole
consideration
for
use
of
the
money,
there
would
appear
to
be
a
very
strong
probability
that
it
is
interest
or
a
payment
in
lieu
of
interest.
The
problem
is
more
complicated
where,
as
here,
the
contract
provides
for
repayment
with
interest
as
such
plus
an
additional
fixed
amount.
Usually
the
promise
of
such
an
amount
is
not
regarded
as
being
a
payment
for
the
use
of
the
money,
but
as
an
inducement
to
the
lender
to
incur
the
risk
of
not
getting
his
money
back
in
speculative
circumstances.
I
cannot
escape
the
conclusion
that,
in
such
event,
the
lump
sum
payment,
not
being
payment
merely
for
the
use
of
the
money,
is,
in
the
absence
of
very
special
circumstances,
a
profit
from
an
adventure
in
the
nature
of
trade.
There
can
be
no
doubt
that
a
moneylender
who
advances
money
in
the
course
of
an
established
business
on
terms
whereby
he
charges
interest
as
such
plus
a
fixed
amount
determined’
by
reference
to
the
special
risk
involved,
would
count
as
profits
from
his
‘‘trade’’
not
only
the
interest
collected
as
such,
but
the
additional
amounts
charged
by
reason
of
special
risks.
If
it
be
true
that
such
an
amount
is
a
profit
from
a
moneylender’s
trade,
it
follows,
in
my
view,
that,
when
a
person
who
is
not
a
moneylender
enters
into
such
a
contract
and
thus
embarks
on
an
adventure
in
the
nature
of
the
moneylender’s
trade
and
earns
a
similar
profit,
he
acquired
a
profit
from
an
adventure
in
the
nature
of
trade.
In
the
present
instance
the
borrowers
did
not
approach
the
appellant
to
obtain
the
loan,
but
rather
Mr.
W.
J.
Ferguson,
Jr.
in
his
personal
capacity,
who
in
turn
discussed
the
proposition
with
his
fellow
directors
who,
as
I
have
indicated,
were
directors
of
all
seven
companies
in
the
Ferguson
group.
The
decision
to
orant
the
loan
was
not
entered
into
lightly.
The
advantages
and
disadvantages
were
carefully
weighed
and
the
lenders
obtained
as
much
collateral
security
as
possible,
but
the
security
so
obtained
was
not
sufficient
to
cover
the
loan
in
event
of
default.
The
prime
factor
which
influenced
the
grant
of
the
loan
was
the
reliance
placed
on
the
prospect
of
the
borrowers
making
a
substantial
profit
from
the
pipeline
testing
contract,
which
was
virtually
assured.
After
a
very
careful
apparisal
of
the
risks
involved
the
directors
of
the
Ferguson
group
decided
to
make
the
loan.
The
word
‘‘adventure’’
is
defined
in
the
Shorter
Oxford
Dictionary
as
a
‘‘pecuniary
venture’’
and
‘‘a
speculation”.
The
word,
‘‘venture’’
is
in
turn
defined
as
meaning
‘‘a
commercial
enterprise
in
which
there
is
a
considerable
risk
of
loss
as
well
as
a
chance
of
gain’’.
There
is
no
doubt
that
the
risk
of
loss
was
a
paramount
consideration
present
in
the
minds
of
the
directors
of
the
Ferguson
companies
and
it
is
equally
clear
that
the
chance
of
substantial
gain,
namely,
a
bonus
of
$56,000
or
in
terms
of
percentage
45
per
cent
on
the
principal
sum,
offset
the
risk
of
loss
and
was
the
determining
factor
in
the
decision
to
make
the
loan.
To
me
it
would
be
unrealistic
to
consider
a
transaction
such
as
this
as
an
investment
of
a
prudent
investor
looking
to
a
fair
and
safe
return
by
way
of
interest.
There
is
no
doubt
that
the
prospect
of
a
very
substantial
premium
within
a
very
short
period
of
time
was
the
dominant
consideration.
The
directors
of
the
appellant
were
not
unfamiliar
with
the
finance
and
loan
business.
Transport
Finance
Ltd.,
of
which
they
were
also
directors,
was
engaged
in
the
business
of
financing
motor
vehicles
sold
by
the
other
related
companies
and
a
loan
‘with
a
substantial
bonus
was
made
by
Ferguson
Automotive
Parts
Ltd.
to
oblige
a
customer
of
the
Ferguson
interests,
prior
to
the
present
loan.
In
my
view,
what
the
appellant
did
here
is
precisely
what
an
ordinary
moneylender
would
do.
I
should
also
say
that,
in
my
view,
the
question
whether
the
additional
amount
is
a
payment
in
respect
of
what
is
referred
to
as
“capital
risk
involved”?
is
immaterial
to
the
question
whether
it
is
profit
from
a
moneylender’s
trade
or
from
an
adventure
in
the
nature
of
such
trade.
Even
if
such
a
payment
can
be
classified
as
a
bonus
or
discount
rather
than
interest
(cf.
Lomaz
v.
Peter
Dixon
&
Sons
Ltd.,
25
T.C.
353),
such
classification
does
not
negative
its
character
as
a
profit
from
the
trade
or
adventure,
even
though
it
might
negative
its
character
as
interest
on
money
loaned.
Once
it
is
established
that
this
is
not
a
simple
case
of
investment,
such
as
the
purchase
of
a
debenture
at
a
discount,
but
is
an
adventure
in
the
nature
of
trade,
such
distinction
becomes
irrelevant.
I
am,
therefore,
of
the
opinion
that
this
transaction
entered
into
by
the
appellant,
by
reason
of
the
cumulative
effect
of
the
surrounding
circumstances,
was
an
adventure
in
the
nature
of
trade
within
the
meaning
of
Section
139(1)
(e)
of
the
Income
Tax
Act,
that
the
profit
from
it
was
a
profit
from
a
business
within
the
meaning
of
Section
3
of
the
Act
and
that
the
Minister
was,
therefore,
right
in
including
the
premium
of
$56,000
in
the
appellant’s
assessment
for
its
1958
taxation
year.
The
appeal
is,
therefore,
dismissed
with
costs.
Judgment
accordingly.