CATTANACH,
J.:—These
appeals
against
the
appellants’
income
tax
assessments
for
their
respective
taxation
years
ending
March
31,
1958,
with
the
exception
of
the
appellant,
Brookview
Investments
Limited
which
is
an
appeal
against
the
assessment
for
the
taxation
year
ending
March
31,
1959
and
in
the
case
of
the
appellant,
Ellendale
Investments
Limited
the
appeal
is
against
the
assessments
for
the
taxation
years
ending
March
31,
1958
and
March
31,
1959.
The
appellants
were
members
of
a
group
of
individuals
and
corporations
(hereinafter
referred
to
as
‘‘the
group’’)
formed
to
acquire
a
parcel
of
land
located
in
the
Township
of
Toronto,
in
the
County
of
Peel,
consisting
of
approximately
200
acres.
The
group
consisted
of
Leon
E.
Weinstein,
A.
Posluns
and
his
brothers,
Frank
Wilson,
Morris
Wilson,
Sydney
Wilson,
Ellendale
Investments
Limited,
Maxwell
S.
Lewis,
Bruce
A.
Finkler,
Elliot
L.
Marrus
and
Brookview
Investments
Limited.
Assessments
have
not
issued
with
respect
to
Leon
E.
Weinstein,
A.
Posluns
and
his
brothers
and
Maxwell
S.
Lewis.
However,
assessments
have
issued
with
respect
to
the
remaining
members
of
the
group
all
of
whom
have
appealed
against
their
respective
assessments.
As
the
same
problem
is
involved
in
all
cases,
the
appeals
were
heard
together.
On
April
25,
1956
two
agreements
of
purchase
and
sale
were
entered
into
by
Maxwell
S.
Lewis
‘‘as
trustee
for
companies
to
be
incorporated’’,
one
with
Allanthorpe
Holdings
Limited
for
approximately
100
acres
and
the
other
with
Burnhamthorpe
Holdings
Limited
also
for
approximately
100
acres.
The
land
which
was
the
subject
of
the
two
foregoing
agreements
together
comprised
the
parcel
of
land
sought
to
be
acquired
by
the
group.
Mr.
Lewis
signed
both
agreements
‘‘as
trustee’’.
Mr.
Lewis
is
the
senior
partner
in
the
legal
firm
of
Lewis,
Marrus
&
Finkler,
which
firm
acted
as
solicitors
for
the
group
as
well
as
participating
in
the
group
in
their
individual
capacities.
Mr.
Lewis
was
the
prime
motivator
of
the
venture
and
acted
as
manager
for
the
group.
The
group
had
individually
and
collectively
decided
to
purchase
the
land
in
question
and
had
instructed
Mr.
Lewis
to
act
on
their
behalf.
The
purchase
price
for
the
200
acre
parcel
was
$2,725
an
acre,
a
total
of
$545,000.
A
deposit
of
$40,000
was
paid
by
two
cheques
drawn
by
Lewis,
Marrus
&
Finkler
both
dated
April
25,
1956
payable
to
Earle
Freeman
Real
Estate
Ltd.,
the
agent
of
the
vendors,
Allanthorpe
Holdings
Limited
and
Burnhamthorpe
Holdings
Limited
(herein
referred
to
as
“the
vendors’’).
A
further
sum
of
$110,000
was
to
be
paid
on
the
closing
diate,
being
August
24,
1956
and
the
balance
of
$395,000
was
to
become
due
and
payable
in
half
yearly
instalments
as
provided
in
the
agreements.
By
letters
dated
May
11,
1956,
Mr.
Lewis
made
an
interim
report
to
the
members
of
the
group
on
the
transaction,
outlining
the
particulars
thereof
and
the
contributions
made
by
the
respective
members
of
the
group
to
make
up
the
deposit
of
$40,000.
He
also
advised
that
ample
notice
would
be
given
of
the
contributions
required
on
closing.
The
question
whether
a
special
company
or
companies
would
be
formed
to
hold
the
land,
or
if
it
should
be
held
in
the
names
of
the
individual
members
was
raised
and
reserved
for
future
decision.
Prior
to
the
closing
date
of
August
24,
1956
the
group
concluded
that
land
values
were
depreciating.
Consideration
was
given
to
abandoning
the
purchase
and
accepting
a
loss
of
$40,000,
being
the
amount
of
the
deposit.
However,
the
group
negotiated
a
further
agreement,
through
the
agent
of
the
vendors,
whereby
instead
of
buying
a
100
per
cent
interest
in
the
land,
the
group
was
to
buy
an
undivided
60
per
cent
interest
therein
at
a
total
price
of
$321,004.80
of
which
$40,000
had
already
been
deposited,
a
further
$50,000
to
be
paid
on
closing
and
a
mortgage
to
be
delivered
to
the
vendors
for
the
sum
of
$231,004.80.
This
agreement
was
reduced
to
writing
in
a
document
introduced
in
evidence
as
Exhibit
5
and
executed
under
seal
by
the
parties,
Allanthorpe
Holdings
Limited
and
Burnhamthorpe
Holdings
Limited
as
vendors
and
Maxwell
S.
Lewis
as
purchaser
on
an
unspecified
date
in
September
1956.
Mr.
Lewis
again
described
as
‘‘trustee
for
a
company
or
companies
to
be
incorporated’’.
In
the
recitals
to
the
agreement
reference
is
made
to
the
previous
agreements
for
purchase
and
sale
dated
April
25,
1956
and
that
the
parties,
who
were
identical,
had
agreed
to
amend
the
terms
thereof.
Paragraph
1
provides
for
the
sale
by
the
vendors,
Allanthorpe
Holdings
Limited
and
Burnhamthorpe
Holdings
Limited
and
the
purchase
by
Maxwell
S.
Lewis,
as
trustee
of
an
undivided
60
per
cent
interest
in
the
land
described
in
the
previous
agreements
and
sets
out
the
purchase
price.
Paragraph
2
then
sets
out
an
acknowledgment
of
the
receipt
of
$40,000
to
be
applied
on
the
purchase
price,
that
on
the
closing
date
a
further
$50,000
shall
be
paid
and
outlines
the
terms
of
the
mortgage
for
the
balance
of
purchase
price.
Paragraph
3
of
the
agreement
reads
as
follows:
‘*3.
The
parties
hereto
agree
that
the
lands
shall
be
owned
by
them
in
partnership
and
they
shall
proceed
in
such
partnership
with
the
development
and/or
sale
of
the
lands
in
question.
All
costs
involved
in
connection
with
the
carrying
charges
of
such
lands,
excluding
the
mortgages
hereinbefore
dealt
with,
and
the
costs
of
development
thereof
shall
be
borne
by
the
parties
in
the
following
proportions
:
The
Companies
of
the
First
and
Second
Parts—
|
40%
|
The
party
of
the
Third
Part—
|
60%
|
The
profits
shall
belong
to
the
parties
hereto
in
the
same
proportions
as
have
been
outlined
above,
and
for
the
purpose
of
calculating
such
profits
the
cost
price
of
the
lands
in
question
shall
be
$2,725.00
per
acre.’’
In
paragraph
4
it
was
provided
that
neither
party
should
sell
its
interest
in
the
land
without
first
offering
such
interest
to
the
other
party.
If
not
purchased
by
the
other
party
the
interest
could
then
be
sold
to
any
other
bona
fide
purchaser
subject
to
the
right
of
the
other
party
to
purchase
the
interest
desired
to
be
sold
at
the
same
price
and
under
the
same
terms
as
it
would
be
sold
to
the
prospective
bona
fide
purchaser.
Meanwhile
on
August
7,
1956
the
corporate
name
of
Armley
Investment
Limited
had
been
reserved
with
the
Provincial
Secretary
of
Ontario
in
contemplation
of
an
application
for
incorporation.
thereunder.
By
letters
patent
dated
September
25,
1956
Armley
Investments
Limited
(hereinafter
referred
to
as
“Armley”)
was
incorporated
pursuant
to
the
laws
of
the
Province
of
Ontario
following
an
application
therefor
by
Maxwell
S.
Lewis,
Bruce
A.
Finkler
and
three
others
members
or
employees
of
the
legal
firm,
all
of
whom
were
named
in
the
letters
patent
as
first
directors.
At
the
time
of
entering
into
the
agreement
of
September
1956
(Exhibit
5)
the
application
for
incorporation
of
Armley
had
been
made.
A
letter
dated
September
27,
1956
was
sent
by
the
legal
firm
of
Lewis,
Marrus
and
Finkler
to
all
members
of
the
group
setting
out
a
schedule
of
further
payments
required
of
each
member
to
make
up
the
amount
of
$50,000,
and
costs
to
be
paid
on
closing
under
the
agreement
of
September
1956.
By
letter
dated
September
28,
1956
the
firm
of
Lewis,
Marrus
&
Finkler
requested
the
solicitor
for
the
vendors
to
make
the
conveyance
in
the
transaction,
entered
into
with
them
by
Maxwell
S.
Lewis,
as
trustee,
to
Armley
Investments
Limited.
On
October
1,
1956
an
agreement
was
entered
into
between
Armley
and
all
members
of
the
group
which
agreement
was
filed
in
evidence
as
Exhibit
11.
The
agreement
recites
that
Maxwell
S.
Lewis,
as
trustee
for
a
company
to
be
incorporated,
had
entered
into
an
agreement
to
purchase
a
60
per
cent
interest
in
the
land
in
the
Township
of
Toronto,
that
Armley
had
been
incorporated
and
that
the
members
of
the
group
had
agreed
the
land
was
to
be
purchased
in
the
name
of
Armley
as
trustee
for
them
in
their
individual
capacities.
The
operative
portion
of
the
agreement
then
provided
that
the
members
agreed
to
contribute
such
sums
as
were
required
to
complete
the
purchase
in
the
proportions
stipulated
in
the
agreement
and
that
Armley
held
the
land
as
trustee
only
for
the
members
of
the
group
and
undertook
to
convey
the
land
to
the
members
of
the
group
in
accordance
with
their
respective
proportionate
interest
therein
as
and
when
called
upon
to
do
so
by
them.
As
requested
in
the
letter
from
Lewis,
Marrus
&
Finkler
dated
September
28,
1956
to
the
vendors’
solicitor,
the
vendors
conveyed
an
undivided
60
per
cent
interest
in
the
land
to
Armley
“to
have
and
to
hold
to
and
for
its
sole
and
only
use
forever’’
by
deed
dated
October
9,
1956
and
on
the
same
date
a
mortgage
of
the
land
securing
payment
of
the
unpaid
balance
of
the
purchase
price
was
given
by
Armley
to
the
vendors.
The
amount
of
$50,000
agreed
to
be
paid
on
closing
was
so
paid
by
a
cheque
dated
October
9,
1956
drawn
on
the
trust
account
of
Lewis,
Marrus
&
Finkler
payable
to
the
vendors.
The
total
amount
contributed
and
paid
by
the
group
was
$92,213.76
made
up
of
(1)
the
deposit
of
$40,000
paid
on
April
25,
1956,
(2)
$50,000
paid
on
closing
the
transaction
on
October
9,
1956
and
(8)
$2,316.76
for
legal
fees
and
disbursements.
This
amount
was
apportioned
among
the
members
of
the
group
in
the
following
percentages
and
amounts:
Brookview
Investments
Limited
-
|
3314
—
$30,848.67
|
Leon
E.
Weinstein
|
|
138%
|
12,839.46
|
|
13⅕
-
|
|
Wilson
Brothers
|
.
|
134%,
|
12,339.46
|
|
13⅕
-
|
|
Posluns
Brothers
—
|
|
13%
|
12,339.46
|
|
13⅕
-
|
|
Ellendale
Investments
Limited
|
131/3
|
12,339.46
|
|
13⅕
-
|
|
Lewis,
Marrus
&
Finkler
|
|
131/3
|
12,110.25
|
|
13⅕
-
|
|
TOTAL
|
|
100%
—
$92,316.76
|
The
transaction
with
respect
to
the
land
was
considered
subsequently
by
the
group
as
likely
to
be
unsuccessful.
The
land
was
not
developed
or
sold
as
contemplated
in
paragraph
3
of
the
agreement
of
September
1956
(Exhibit
5)
between
the
vendors
and
Maxwell
S.
Lewis,
as
trustee.
The
group
concluded
the
venture
had
been
a
mistake
and
therefore
resolved
to
put
no
further
monies
into
it.
This
conclusion
began
to
be
formed
between
the
negotiation
of
the
first
agreements
of
sale
and
purchase
by
Mr.
Lewis
as
trustee
dated
April
25,
1956,
which
uncertainty
prompted
the
group
to
acquire
the
lesser
interest
of
60
per
cent
in
the
land
rather
than
a
100
per
cent
interest.
This
doubt
became
a
certainty
shortly
after
closing
the
transaction
on
October
9,
1956.
Accordingly
no
payments
were
made
under
the
mortgage
delivered
to
the
vendors
to
secure
the
balance
of
the
purchase
price.
By
letter
dated
May
9,
1957
the
vendors’
solicitor
advised
Armley
of
its
default
of
interest
and
principal
pursuant
to
the
terms
of
the
mortgage
and
demanded
payment
by
May
13,
1957.
This
letter
was
unanswered.
A
further
letter
was
written
by
the
vendors’
solicitor,
dated
May
30,
1957,
to
Armley
reiterating
the
demand
for
payment
and
intimating
if
payment
was
not
received
by
June
3,
1957
further
action
would
be
taken.
This
letter
was
also
ignored.
A
writ
of
foreclosure
was
then
issued
on
September
13,
1957
on
behalf
of
the
vendors
as
plaintiffs
against
Armley
as
defendant
to
recover
payment
due
under
‘the
covenant,
to
recover
immediate
possession
of
the
mortgaged
premises
and
claiming
the
balance
of
the
monies
under
the
mortgage.
On
September
18,
1957
Lewis,
Marrus
&
Finkler,
as
solicitors
for
Armley,
the
defendant
in
the
mortgage
action
filed
a
notice
of
desire
to
redeem,
which
was
a
step
taken
on
the
initiative
of
Mr.
Lewis
to
obtain
further
time
although
it
was
admitted
the
group
had
no
intention
of
redeeming.
A
final
order
of
foreclosure
was
issued
on
May
8,
1958.
Meanwhile
the
corporate
proceedings
of
Armley
were
cavalierly
disregarded.
No
organization
meeting
was
held
following
the
incorporation
of
the
company
on
September
25,
1956,
but
it
could
function
as
a
legal
entity
by
reason
of
Section
295
of
the
Ontario
Corporations
Act,
S.O.
1953,
c.
19,
subsection
(2)
of
which
reads
as
follows:
‘
'The
first
directors
of
the
corporation
have
all
the
powers
and
duties
and
are
subject
to
all
the
liabilities
of
directors.’’
Armley
took
title
to
the
land
on
October
9,
1956.
It
executed
a
mortgage
to
the
vendors,
Bruce
A.
Finkler
signing
the
instrument
as
president
and
it
also
entered
an
appearance
in
the
foreclosure
action
through
its
solicitors
on
September
18,
1957.
Armley
also
entered
into
the
agreement
with
all
members
of
the
group
on
October
1,
1956.
However,
no
officers
were
appoinited,
no
shares
were
issued,
no
meetings
of
shareholders
or
directors
were
held
and
no
minute
book
was
begun.
A
corporate
seal
was
obtained
but
no
meeting
was
held
authorimng
the
adoption
of
a
seal.
On
November
19,
1956,
Lewis,
Marrus
and
Finkler
in
response
to
‘an
inquiry
from
the
Department
of
National
Revenue,
advised
that
Armley
Investments
Limited
had
not
commenced
carrying
on
active
business,
but
that
when
it
did
returns
would
be
filed.
On
September
11,
1958
the
Deputy
Provincial
Secretary
wrote
to
Armley
pointing
out
its
failure
to
file
Annual
Returns
of
Information
for
the
years
1957
and
1958.
On
November
13,
1958
the
Deputy
Provincial
Secretary
‘again
brought
this
omission
to
Armley’s
attention
and
pointed
out
the
statutory
penalties.
Both
such
letters
were
ignored.
On
April
2,
1959
the
Comptroller
of
Revenue
for
Ontario
wrote
to
Mr.
Lewis
at
his
home
address
pointing
out
the
failure
of
Armley
Investments
Limited
to
file
its
corporation
tax
return
for
December
31,
1957.
Mr.
Lewis
was
advised
that
the
obligation
to
file
such
return
existed
whether
the
company
was
operating
or
not
and
that
penalties
were
imposed
on
the
directors
personally.
This
letter
elicited
a
reply
from
Mr.
Lewis
dated
April
8,
1959
that
the
company
had
been
incorporated
for
the
purpose
of
holding
a
title
to
certain
lands,
but
after
the
acquisition
thereof
a
finial
order
of
foreclosure
had
issued
pursuant
to
foreclosure
proceedings
and
accordingly
the
company
was
without
assets.
The
Comptroller
of
Revenue
for
Ontario
then
suggested
by
letter
dated
April
27,
1959
that
the
letters
patent
be
forwarded
to
him
with
an
affidavit
of
an
officer
of
the
company
that
it
had
ceased
carrying
on
business,
was
entirely
without
assets
and
no
distribution
had
been
made
to
its
shareholders.
When
such
material
was
received
it
was
suggested
that
consideration
would
be
given
to
cancelling
the
letters
patent.
A
statutory
declaration
in
such
terms
was
completed
by
William
Slater,
as
secretary-treasurer
of
the
company
and
forwarded
to
the
Comptroller
of
Revenue
for
Ontario
under
cover
of
a
letter
dated
April
20,
1959.
On
August
3,
1960
the
Deputy
Provincial
Secretary
advised
that
by
order
of
the
Provincial
Secretary
dated
July
25,
1960
the
letters
patent
had
been
cancelled
for
default
in
filing
annual
returns
and
the
company
was
dissolved
as
of
August
29,
1960.
In
compiling
their
income
tax
returns
for
their
taxation
years
ending
March
31,
1958
each
appellant
claimed
as
a
deduction
from
other
income
their
respective
proportion
of
the
amount
of
$92,316.76
as
a
loss
incurred
in
the
real
estate
transaction
described
except
in
the
case
of
the
appellant,
Brookview
Investments
Limited,
where
the
deduction
was
claimed
in
its
income
tax
return
for
the
taxation
year
ending
March
31,
1959.
By
notices
of
assessment
and
re-assessment
issued
to
the
appellants,
the
Minister
disallowed
their
respective
claims
for
deduction.
It
is
from
these
assessments
that
appeals
are
brought
to
this
Court.
The
sole
issue
for
determination
is
whether
the
appellants
are
entitled
to
deduct
from
other
income
their
respective
proportions
of
the
loss
incurred
in
the
real
estate
transaction.
The
determination
of
this
issue
is,
in
turn,
dependent
upon
whether
the
transaction
constituted
a
business
or
an
adventure
or
concern
in
the
nature
of
trade.
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
inside
and
outside
Canada
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
classical
test
of
such
an
issue
is
that
stated
in
Californian
Copper
Syndicate
v.
Harris
(1904),
5
T.C.
159
at
165
as
follows:
4
‘It
is
quite
a
well
settled
principle
in
dealing
with
questions
of
assessment
of
Income
Tax,
that
where
the
owner
of
an
ordinary
investment
chooses
to
realize
it,
and
obtains
a
greater
price
for
it
than
he
originally
acquired
it
at,
the
enhanced
price
is
not
profit
in
the
sense
of
Schedule
D
of
the
Income
Tax
Act
of
1842
assessable
to
Income
Tax.
But
it
is
equally
well
established
that
enhanced
values
obtained
from
realization
or
conversion
of
securities
may
be
so
assessable,
where
what
is
done
is
not
merely
a
realization
or
change
of
investment,
but
an
act
done
in
what
is
truly
the
carrying
on
or
carrying
out,
of
a
business.
The
simplest
case
is
that
of
a
person
or
association
of
persons
buying
and
selling
lands
or
securities
speculatively,
in
order
to
make
gain,
dealing
in
such
investments
as
a
business,
and
thereby
seeking
to
make
profits.
There
are
many
companies
which
in
their
very
inception
are
formed
for
such
a
purpose,
and
in
these
cases
it
is
not
doubtful
that,
where
they
make
a
gain
by
a
a
realization,
the
gain
they
make
is
liable
to
be
assessed
for
Income
Tax.
What
is
the
line
which
separates
the
two
classes
of
cases
may
be
difficult
to
define,
and
each
case
must
be
considered
according
to
its
facts;
the
question
to
be
determined
being—
Is
the
sum
of
gain
that
has
been
made
a
mere
enhancement
of
value
by
realizing
a
security,
or
is
it
a
gain
made
in
an
operation
of
business
in
carrying
out
a
scheme
for
profit-making
?
’
’
Applying
the
foregoing
test
to
the
facts
in
the
present
appeals
as
outlined
herein,
I
have
no
hesitation
in
finding
that
the
undivided
60
per
cent
interest
in
the
lands
in
question
was
purchased
for
sale
in
the
course
of
‘‘an
operation
of
business
in
carrying
out
a
scheme
of
profit
making”.
In
my
view
Armley
held
no
beneficial
interest
in
the
lands
or
the
transaction.
The
agreements
for
purchase
and
sale
dated
April
25,
1956
and
the
agreement
of
September
1956
(Exhibit
5),
entered
into
by
Lewis
as
trustee
for
a
company
to
be
incorporated
enured
to
the
benefit
of
Armley
by
reason
of
Section
285
of
Ontario
Corporations
Act,
1953,
reading
as
follows
:
“Every
corporation
shall,
upon
its
incorporation,
be
in.
vested
with
all
the
property
and
rights,
real
and
personal,
theretofore
held
by
or
for
it
under
any
trust
created
with
a
view
to
its
incorporation.
’
’
The
partnership
contemplated
in
paragraph
3
of
the
agreement
of
September
1956
did
not
come
into
effect.
An
agreement
to
carry
on
business
at
a
future
time
does
not
render
the
parties
to
it
partners
before
they
actually
carry
on
business
since
the
test
of
partnership
is
the
carrying
on
business
and
not
the
agreement
to
carry
it
on.
Authority
for
the
foregoing
proposition
is
found
in
Lindley
on
Partnership,
1962
ed.,
at
p.
17.
Therefore,
what
Armley
held
was
title
to
an
undivided
60
per
cent
interest
in
the
land.
It
is
manifest
from
the
evidence
that
the
function
of
Armley
was
to
take
and
hold
title
to
the
land,
give
a
mortgage
back
to
the
vendors,
and
to
convey
the
property
at
the
direction
of
the
group.
This
arrangement
is
recorded
in
the
agreement
dated
October
1,
1956
between
Armley
and
the
members
of
the
group.
The
land
was
purchased
with
money
supplied
by
the
group.
Accordingly
I
conclude
that
the
land
was
held
by
Armley
as
a
bare
trustee
for
the
group
and
subject
to
the
obligation
to
convey
it
at
the
direction
of
the
group.
Assuming
that
a
profit
had
been
realized,
such
profit
would
not
represent
taxable
income
of
Armley,
for
as
Thorson,
P.
said
in
Kenneth
B.
S.
Robertson
v.
M.N.R.,
[1944]
Ex.
C.R.
170
at
184;
[1944]
C.T.C.
75
at
92
and
approved
by
Taschereau,
J.,
as
he
was
then,
in
delivering
the
unanimous
decision
in
Sura
v.
M.N.R.,
[1962]
S.C.R.
65
at
68;
[1962]
C.T.C.
1.
cé
it
lacks
the
essential
quality
of
income,
namely,
that
the
recipient
shall
have
an
absolute
right
to
it
and
be
under
no
restriction,
contractual
or
otherwise,
as
to
its
disposition,
use
or
enjoyment.’’
Conversely
it
follows
that
the
loss
incurred
is
clearly
deductible
as
a
loss
from
a
business
or
adventure
or
concern
in
the
nature
of
trade
and
it
further
follows
that
the
loss
is
that
of
the
appellants
in
the
proportion
of
their
respective
contributions,
the
true
nature
and
substance
of
the.
transaction
being
that
it
was
a
business
transaction
in
the
nature
of
trade
conducted
on
their
behalf
through
the
interposition
of
Armley.
Therefore,
in
my
opinion,
the
amounts
claimed
by
way
of
deductions
are
so
deductible.
Accordingly
the
appeals
herein
are
allowed
with
costs.
Judgment
accordingly.