DUMOULIN,
J.:—This
is,
in
name
only,
an
appeal
from
a
decision
of
the
Tax
Appeal
Board,
dated
the
20th
day
of
November
1958,
dismissing
Dmytro
Ruzesky’s
objections
to
a
re-assessment
by
the
Minister
of
National
Revenue
of
his
taxable
income
for
fiscal
years
1949
to
1954
inclusively.
There
was
filed
before
the
Tax
Appeal
Board
‘‘an
agreement
signed
by
the
appellant
to
withdraw
his
notices
of
objection
for
the
years
1949
and
1951
to
1954,
conditionally
upon
his
income
for
the
year
1953
being
reduced
by
$827.
90’’,
hence
the
perfunctory
dismissal.
At
trial,
the
appellant
struck
out
paragraph
1
of
the
statement
of
facts
and
subparagraphs
(a)
and
(b)
of
paragraph
2;
the
respondent,
conversely
indicating
his
consent
to
have
the
matter
‘‘decided
on
the
merits’’,
and
that
‘‘.
.
.
the
eleven
items
under
section
2(c)
were
properly
before
the
Court”
(c/.
Respondent’s
Summary
of
Arguments,
page
1).
.
In
the
course
of
the
hearing,
appellant
also
deleted
items
(V),
(VI)
and
(XI)
of
his
stated
facts;
the
respondent
conceding
item
(X),
viz.:
‘‘That
the
actual
cost
of
Fargo
truck
in
September
28,
1953.
was
$2,613.50
and
not
$2,952.40
since
$260.50
represents
the
finance.’
For
the
six
taxation
years
hereafter
reviewed,
net
worth
statements
were
drawn
up
by
respondent’
S
assessors.
The
items
left
for
determination
are
listed
in
the
Statement
of
Facts,
or
Notice
of
Appeal,
as
(I),
(II),
(III),
(IV),
(VII),
(VIII)
and
(IX).
I
must,
at
the
outset,
say
that
this
litigation
could
have
been
avoided,
had
Ruzesky
reasonably
co-operated
with
the
local
income
tax
officials,
or
even
at
the
very
least,
correctly
informed
his
own
advisers,
legal
and
financial.
The
only
way
of
probing
this
more
or
less
involved
matter
is
to
review
in
separate
groups
the
seven
items
mentioned
above.
Item
(1)
Dmytro
Ruzesky,
the
appellant,
for
the
period
extending
from
1922
up
to
the
latter
part
of
1954,
owned
and
exploited
a
farm
at
Borden,
Saskatchewan.
He
now
resides
in
the
city
of
Saskatoon.
In
a
conflicting
testimony,
Ruzesky
relates
he
borrowed
from
his
brother
John,
prior
to
December
31,
1954,
ultimate
date
of
the
net
worth
statement,
exhibit
5,
a
sum
of
$2,500,
that
he
repaid
in
the
fall
of
1955.
In
substantiation,
a
written
statement;
exhibit
6,
is
adduced,
dated
at
Vancouver,
June
15,
1956,
with
the
signature
of
John
Ruzesky,
since
deceased,
the
first
and
only
relevant
paragraph
of
which
reads:
“To
District—Tax
Office
Saskatoon,—Sask.
To
whomever
it
may
concern.
For
the
information
of
Tax-Office
in
Saskatoon,
Sask.
here
by
I
declare
that
in
year
1954,
in
Month
of
Feb.
when
my
brother
Dmytro
Ruzesky
was
visiting
me
in
City
of
Vancouver
B.C.
with
his
wife,
He
asked
for
a
small
loan
of
sum
$2,000
which
he
needed
cash
on
hand
to
buy
some
property
in
province
of
Sask.
I
have
complied
with
his
recquest,
loaned
to
him
above-
mentioned
sum
of
money.’
In
cross-examination,
Ruzesky’s
recollections
seemed
rather
blurred
since
he
inclined
to
hold
that
he
owed
his
brother
no
money
at
the
close
of
1954.
Some
confusion
may
have
crept
in
the
witness’s
mind
between
the
initial
$2,500
loan
and
a
much
smaller
one
of
$350,
again
obtained
from
John
Ruzesky
in
1954,
evidenced
by
a
solemn
declaration,
as
per
March
5,
1957
(exhibit
C)
about
which
the
appellant
writes:
‘‘I
think
I
paid
it
off
by
the
end
of
1954.”
Another
source
of
difficulty
next
appears
in
exhibit
B,
a
balance
sheet
dated
May
12,
1956,
prepared
either
in
the
office
of
Mr.
Hawrish,
appellant’s
solicitor,
or
in
the
Income
Tax
premises,
and
labelled
thus:
“The
following
are
the
changes
which
I
submit
on
behalf
of
my
proposed
Net
Worth
Statement.
7
Duly
signed
by
Dmytro
Ruzesky
and
made
out
in
accordance
with
information
vouchsafed
by
him,
it
contains,
inter
alia,
this
entry:
‘‘Private
loans
to
(2.
e.,
due
to)
John
Ruzesky
is
$1300
not
$300.”
Those
tentative
changes
though
requested
in
May,
1956,
relate
to
exhibit
5,
the
departmental
net
worth
statement
for
the
period
December
31,
1948,
to
December
31,
1954.
Now
the
statement
of
facts,
in
Section
2(c)
(I),
flatly
ignores
Ruzesky’s
suggested
correction
on
exhibit
B,
estimating
at
$1,300
his
indebtedness
to
John,
and
bluntly
asserts:
‘‘that
there
was
a
liability
of
$2,500
to
John
Ruzesky
of
Vancouver,
B.
C.,
as
of
December
31,
1954.”
I
incline
to
believe
that
appellant
could
have
elucidated
the
approximate
date
on
which
the
$2,500
debt
was
extinguished.
He
stated
this
advance
of
money,
in
February
1954,
was
intended
to
facilitate
the
purchase
of
a
house
in
Victoria,
B.
C.,
a
project
that
did
not
eventuate
and
possibly
brought
about
an
immediate
reimbursement.
At
all
events,
the
appellant
shoulders
the
onus
of
disproving
in
law
and
fact
the
presumed
correctness
of
the
assessment,
an
obligation
he
completely
failed
to
discharge.
Consequently,
the
loan
owing
to
John
Ruzesky
remains
at
the
figure
of
$300
listed
on
page
5
of
exhibit
5.
Item
(IT)
This
section
of
the
notice
of
appeal,
claiming
there
were
no
receivable
notes
totalling
$1,900,
as
of
December
31,
1954,
was
settled
by
the
testimony
of
Mr.
Latimer
S.
MacMillan,
a
departmental
assessor,
who
remembered
seeing
a
$900
note,
payable
to
Dmytro
Ruzesky
within
the
material
period,
signed
by
Eddie
and
George
Ruzesky,
two
of
the
appellant’s
sons.
I
was
told
in
Court
by
respondent’s
counsel,
Mr.
Hughes,
Q.C.,
that
a
re-assessment
on
May
21,
1957,
reduced
this
entry
to
$900
entailing
a
$1,000
rebate
of
the
calculated
net
income
set
out
in
exhibit
5
at
$42,861.42.
Items
(III)
and
(IV)
The
respondent,
on
page
3
of
his
summary
of
argument,
submits
both
these
items
can
be
considered
together,
an
opinion
in
which
I
readily
concur.
It
appears
in
the
net
worth
memorandum
(exhibit
5)
that
during
1949,
appellant
would
have
made
to
his
son,
Napoleon,
a
gift
of
land
and
farm
buildings
worth
$4,565
and,
in
1950
or
thereabouts,
another
donation,
valued
at
some
$1,200
to
his
daughter,
Sophie,
since
married.
Dmytro
Ruzesky
unabashedly
spun
a
most
contradictory
tale
with
the
expectation,
one
might
presume,
of
affording
these
presents
the
unassessable
rating
of
salaries.
He
claims
that
Sophie,
now
Mrs.
Webb,
attended
to
the
daily
chores
on
the
paternal
farm.
Each
year,
in
the
fall,
he
allegedly
put
aside
$200
in
Sophie’s
name
for
wages
to
be
paid
when
she
married,
an
event
occurring
in
1950.
Napoleon
Ruzesky
is
also
supposed
to
have
worked
on
the
farm
from
1947
to
1952
without
any
remuneration.
On
May
20,
1957,
a
$5,000
farm,
purchased
in
the
name
of
Napoleon
Ruzesky,
was
paid
for
by
his
father,
Dmytro,
so
the
latter
tells
us.
But
that
is
far
from
ending
the
matter.
In
1952,
the
appellant
asserts
he
bought
back
this
land
from
his
son,
allowing
him
$2,900
in
lieu
of
wages.
In
cross-
examination,
Ruzesky
cuts
down
to
$1,600
instead
of
$2,900
the
wages
thus
allotted.
He
must
also
agree
that
from
1949
onwards,
Napoleon
became
a
full
time
clerk
in
a
local
branch
of
the
Nova
Scotia
Bank,
and
is
at
a
loss
to
explain
why
he
should
have
subsequently
allotted
to
this
boy
$400
in
yearly
wages.
Still,
more
is
to
come.
Cited
by
the
respondent,
Donald
M.
Ackerman,
an
income
tax
assessor
for
the
preceding
twelve
years,
relates
an
interview,
occurring
at
his
office,
April
26,
1957,
between
himself,
the
appellant
and
his
daughter,
Mrs.
Sophie
Webb,
an
intelligent
young
woman,
pursues
the
witness,
and
perfectly
conversant
with
English.
At
this
conference,
Ruzesky
wished
the
land
grants
to
his
children
to
be
considered
payments
for
farming
operations
carried
on
by
both
of
them,
an
interpretation
strenuously
opposed
by
Mrs.
Webb
“so
as
to
leave
undisturbed
her
husband’s
Income
Tax
exemptions’’.
The
moot
question
of
wages
or
gifts
was
discussed
also
in
the
Ukrainian
language,
continues
Mr.
Ackerman.
Eventually,
Dmytro
Ruzesky
yielded
to
Sophie’s
insistence
and
consented
to
look
upon
the
matter
as
outright
donations.
Ackerman’s
suggestion
to
type
an
instrument
relating
the
agreement
was
accepted.
The
appellant
and
his
daughter
affixed
their
signatures
to
this
document,
now
exhibit
D,
hereunder
recited:
Statement
Of
Dmytro
Ruzesky,
Farmer,
Borden
and
Saskatoon
and
daughter
Mrs.
Sophie
Webb,
Housewife,
Shaunavon.
Be
it
known
that
Dmytro
Ruzesky
purchased
the
SW
12-42-10
W3
in
or
about
the
year
1934
for
approximately
$900.00
and
that
additional
breaking
and
brushing
as
well
as
fencing
brought
the
cost
of
this
land
in
total
up
to
the
sum
of
$1200.00.
In
1950,
shortly
after
her
marriage
daughter
Sophie
was
given
this
quarter
section
of
land
outright
as
a
gift
without
reservation,
by
her
father
Dmytro
Ruzesky.
The
land
was
subsequently
sold
by
Mrs.
Sophie
Webb
in
1951.”
Mr.
Latimer
MacMillan,
the
other
assessor,
who
is
quite
familiar
with
the
Ukrainian
vernacular,
asserted
Ruzesky
definitely
told
him
those
real
estate
grants
were
made
to
Sophie
as
a
wedding
present
and
as
a
donation
to
Napoleon.
It
is
hardly
necessary
to
note
that
Walter
Ruzesky’s
corroboration
of
the
wage
version
does
not
refute
the
overwhelming
evidence
to
the
contrary.
Items
(III)
and
(IV)
must
stand
in
the
exact
amounts
of
respectively
$4,565
and
$1,200
and
with
the
qualifications
appearing
in
the
net
worth
statement,
exhibit
5.
Items
(VII),
(VIII),
(IX)
These
sections
can
be
disposed
of
together;
item
(VIII),
furthermore,
having
no
material
significance
in
the
case.
To
begin
with,
reference
should
be
had
to
Mr.
Robert
J.
Webb’s
evidence
for
the
respondent.
A
practising
public
accountant
in
Saskatoon,
Mr.
Webb’s
professional
services
were
retained
by
Dmytro
Ruzesky
at
whose
request
he
prepared
exhibit
E,
a
'■
net
worth
statement
of
appellant’s
assets
for
the
period
December
31,
1941
to
December
31,
1948.
The
list
of
properties,
real
and
personal,
and
all
information
pertaining
thereto,
specifies
the
witness,
were
given
him
by
his
client
aforesaid.
On
page
2
of
exhibit
E,
appellant’s
accountant
affixed,
as
of
December
31,
1948,
a
$540
book
value
to
a
truck
purchased
in
1945
for
$2,700,
and
also
an
$800
residuary
value,
on
the
same
closing
date,
to
a
‘combine”
bought
in
1945
for
a
price
of
$4,000.
Exception
is
now
taken
to
this
statement
(exhibit
E)
by
Ruzesky
who
contends
(statement
of
facts),
Section
2(c)
(IX)
that:
‘‘the
truck
listed
on
the
net
worth
statement
as
purchased
in
1945
for
$2,700
was
actually
purchased
on
November
8,
1948,
for
$2,697.13,
and
the
book
value
as
of
December
31,
1948,
shall
be
$2,623
(as
amended)
and
not
$540.’’
A
like
challenge
is
directed
against
the
‘‘combine’’,
which,
allegedly,
was
bought
on
April
8,
1948,
for
$3,845.90
(cf.
Section
2(c)
(VII)),
traded
for
a
new
one
on
October
30,
1950
for
$3,100
(cf.
Section
2(c)
(VII)),
with
a
book
value
of
$1,113
on
December
31,
1948,
the
closing
day
of
exhibit
E
(J.
R.
Webb’s
net
worth
statement),
but
also
the
opening
one
of
exhibits
5
and
11,
the
two
departmental
net
worth
estimates.
In
despite
of
the
book
value,
$800,
attributed
to
this
combine,
on
December
31,
1948,
by
his
own
accountant
(7.e.,
R.
J.
Webb
in
exhibit
E),
the
notice
of
appeal
lays
claim
to
a
book
value
of
$3,269
on
December
31,
1948,
thereby
considerably
increasing
the
initial
capital
assets
at
the
start
of
the
official
net
worth
statements.
The
evidence
submitted
in
support
of
such
a
change
of
front
consisted
in
two
sale
slips,
exhibits
7
and
9,
respectively
dated
April
8
and
November
8,
1948,
relating
the
first
to
a
“combine”
priced
at
$3,845.90,
the
second
to
a
Reo
L.B.D.
114
ton
truck
the
‘‘full
price”
of
which
reads
$2,697.13.
Since
then,
the
two
firms
concerned
have
discontinued
business
operations.
Serious.
doubts
arising
from
the
tardiveness
of
these
submissions
and
the
irreconcilable
information
previously
proffered
by
appellant,
were
aired
at
page
6
of
the
respondent’s
written
argument
in
the
following
self-explanatory
words:
‘When
the
suggested
schedule
of
changes
was
submitted
by
the
appellant
to
the
Department
of
National
Revenue
no
mention
was
made
that
there
was
anything
wrong
in
the
schedule
of
assets
relating
to
the
combine
and
the
truck.
Likewise
when
the
Notices
of
Objection
were
filed
nothing
was
mentioned
to
suggest
that
these
two
assets
were
not
in
existence.
Once
these
proceedings
were
launched
in
the
Exchequer
Court
of
Canada
the
appellant
came
forward
with
invoices
to
show
that
a
combine
was
purchased
in
April,
1948,
and
that
the
truck
in
question
was
purchased
in
November,
1948.
These
documents
were
not
produced
to
the
assessors
at
any
time
prior
to
the
appeal
being
launched
in
the
Exchequer
Court.
The
two
companies
from
whom
the
alleged
purchases
were
made
in
1948
are
no
longer
in
business.’’
Intrinsically,
this
belated
proof
may
after
all
suffice
since
it
met
with
no
rebuttal,
but
the
lateness
of
its
production
is
far
from
satisfactory,
and
albeit
corresponding
rectifications
of
exhibit
o
seem
in
order,
no
costs
will
be
allowed
the
appellant.
Item
(X)
As
noted
above,
respondent
conceded
this
claim.
giving
rise
to
a
$338.90
rebate
of
the
over-all
income,
the
difference
between
$2,952.40
and
$2,613.50.
The
partial
revisions
allowed
of
the
“calculated
Net
Income
for
years
1949
to
1954
inel.’’
figured
at
$42,861.42
in
exhibit
5,
may
be
summarized
in
the
breakdown
hereafter:
Item
(II)
|
reduced
from
$1,900
to
$900,
|
|
|
a
rebate
of
|
-$1,000.00
|
Item
(VII)
|
to
read
$3,269,
instead
of
$800,
|
|
|
a
rebate
of
|
$2,469.00
|
Item
(IX)
|
to
read
$2,623.02,
instead
of
$540,
|
|
|
a
rebate
of
|
$2,083.02
|
Item
(X)
|
to
read
$2,613.50,
instead
of
$2,952.40,
|
|
|
a
rebate
of
|
$
338.90
|
|
A
total
of
|
$5,890.92
|
When
subtracted
from
$42,861.42,
the
deductions
above
leave
an
assessable
revenue
of
$36,970.50
for
the
material
period
in
question.
Again,
I
feel
convinced
that
the
appellant
has
none
but
himself
to
blame
if
these
rectifications
necessitated
such
time
and
trouble;
therefore,
he
will
not
be
entitled
to
costs.
For
the
reasons
outlined,
this
Court
orders
the
appellant’s
net
calculated
income
of
$42,861.42
be
reduced
to
$36,970.50;
directs
the
record
of
the
case
be
returned
to
the
Minister
and
a
re-assessment
made
in
keeping
with
the
decisions
herein.
Judgment
accordingly.