THURLOW,
J.:—This
is
an
appeal
from
income
tax
reassessments
in
respect
of
the
appellant’s
income
for
each
of
the
years
1950
to
1954
inclusive.
The
matter
began
as
five
separate
appeals
taken
in
respect
of
the
assessments
for
each
of
the
years
mentioned,
but
by
order
of
the
Court
made
prior
to
the
filing
of
the
Minister’s
reply,
these
appeals
were
consolidated
into
one
cause.
The
problem
in
each
year
is
the
same,
namely
the
extent,
if
any,
to
which
the
appellant
is
entitled
to
a
deduction
from
income
tax
in
respect
of
tax
levied
by
the
United
States
on
interest
which
became
payable
to
the
appellant
in
the
United
States.
In
each
of
these
years,
a
deduction
from
income
tax
in
respect
of
tax
paid
to
a
foreign
government
was
permitted
by
the
statute
in
certain
situations,
but
the
wording
of
the
applicable
provisions
was
not
precisely
the
same
for
all
of
the
years
under
review.
For
the
years
1950
and
1951
Section
35(1)
of
The
Income
Tax
Act,
Statutes
of
Canada
1948,
c.
52,
provided
as
follows:
"
‘38.
(1)
A
taxpayer
who
was
resident
in
Canada
at
any
time
in
a
taxation
year
may
deduct
from
the
tax
for
the
year
otherwise
payable
under
this
Part
an
amount
equal
to
the
lesser
of
(a)
the
tax
paid
by
him
to
the
government
of
a
country
other
than
Canada
on
his
income
from
sources
therein
for
the
year,
or
(b)
that
proportion
of
the
tax
for
the
year
otherwise
payable
under
this
Part
that
(1)
that
part
of
the
taxpayer’s
income
(A)
for
the
year,
if
section
28
is
not
applicable,
or
(B)
if
section
28
is
applicable,
for
the
period
or
periods
in
the
year
referred
to
in
paragraph
(a)
thereof,
from
sources
in
that
country
that
was
not
exempt
from
income
tax
in
that
country
minus
amounts
that
are
deductible
for
the
year
or
such
period
or
periods,
as
the
case
may
be,
under
paragraph
(d)
of
subsection
(1)
of
section
27,
is
of
(ii)
the
taxpayer
‘s
income
(A)
for
the
year,
if
section
28
is
not
applicable,
or
(B)
if
section
28
is
applicable,
for
the
period
or
periods
in
the
year
referred
to
in
paragraph
(a)
thereof,
minus
amounts
that
are
deductible
for
the
year
or
such
period
or
periods,
as
the
case
may
be,
under
section
27.’’
Section
38(1)
was
amended
by
Statutes
of
Canada
1952,
c.
9,
Section
14(1),
applicable
to
the
1952
taxation
year,
so
as
to
make
clause
(a)
read
as
follows:
“(a)
the
tax
paid
by
him
to
the
government
of
a
country
other
than
Canada
on
that
part
of
his
income
from
sources
therein
for
the
year
upon
which
he
is
subject
to
tax
under
this
Part
for
the
year,
or’?
Section
38,
as
so
amended,
appears
in
the
same
form
(save
for
changes
in
the
numbering
of
the
sections
therein
referred
to)
as
Section
41(1)
of
the
Income
Tax
Act,
Revised
Statutes
of
Canada
1952,
c.
148,
applicable
to
the
years
1953
and
1954.
The
Part
referred
to
in
the
amendment
above
quoted
is
Part
I
of
The
Income
Tax
Act,
by
Section
3
of
which
the
income
of
a
taxpayer
is
declared
to
be
his
income
from
all
sources
inside
or
outside
Canada
and
to
include
income
from
all
businesses
and
property.
The
interest
in
question
accrued
to
the
appellant
on
demand
notes
and
certain
bonds
of
Lakehead
Pipe
Line
Co.
Inc.
a
wholly-owned
United
States
subsidiary
of
the
appellant,
hereinafter
referred
to
as
Lakehead,
and
on
United
States
Treasury
bills
which
the
appellant
held,
and
it
was
subjected
in
the
United
States
to
a
tax
of
15
per
cent,
calculated
on
the
gross
amount
of
such
interest.
For
each
of
the
years
in
question,
the
appellant,
in
computing
its
income
for
income
tax
purposes,
included
in
its
receipts
the
whole
amount
of
such
interest
but
claimed
even
greater
amounts
as
deductions
for
interest
paid
on
its
funded
debt.
Then,
after
arriving
at
its
profit
for
the
year
and
computing
the
tax
on
it,
the
appellant,
in
each
year,
claimed
credits
pursuant
to
the
provisions
above
mentioned
in
respect
of
the
15
per
cent
tax
so
paid
to
the
United
States.
The
Minister,
in
reassessing
the
appellant,
disallowed
the
foreign
tax
credits
so
claimed
on
the
ground
that
the
appellant
bad
received
no
net
income
from
such
bonds,
notes
and
Treasury
bills
and,
consequently,
was
entitled
to
no
tax
credits
pursuant
to
the
provisions
above
mentioned
in
respect
of
the
tax
paid
in
the
United
States
on
the
interest
from
them.
In
support
of
his
position,
the
Minister
relies
on
the
provisions
of
Section
4,
which
was
the
same
in
both
The
Income
Tax
Act
and
the
Income
Tax
Act,
and
on
the
definition
of
"‘income
from
a
source”
which
was
contained
in
Section
127(1)
(av)
of
The
Income
Tax
Act,
now
Section
139(1)
(az)
of
the
Income
Tax
Act,
These
provisions
are
as
follows:
"‘4.
Subject
to
the
other
provisions
of
this
Part,
income
for
a
taxation
year
from
a
business
of
property
is
the
profit
therefrom
for
the
year.
‘
"127.
(1)
In
this
Act,
(av)
a
taxpayer’s
income
from
a
business,
employment,
property
or
other
source
of
income
or
from
sources
in
a
particular
place
means
the
taxpayer’s
income
computed
in
accordance
with
this
Act
on
the
assumption
that
he
had
during
the
taxation
year
no
income
except
from
that
source
or
those
sources
of
income
and
was
entitled
to
no
deductions
except
those
related
to
that
source
or
those
sources;
.
.
.’’
The
appeal
involves
two
main
questions;
the
first,
a
question
of
law
as
to
what
is
meant
by
income
in
the
expressions
‘‘income
from
sources
therein
for
the
year
and
that
part
of
the
taxpayer’s
income
.
.
from
sources
in
that
country’’
in
Section
38(1)
of
The
Income
Tax
Act
and
in
the
expression
‘‘income
from
sources
therein
for
the
year
upon
which
he
is
subject
to
tax
under
this
Part
for
the
year"
in
Section
38(1)
as
amended
and
as
carried
into
Section
41
of
the
Income
Tax
Act;
and
the
second,
a
question
of
fact
as
to
whether
or
not
the
appellant
had
any
such
income
from
sources
in
the
United
States
in
any
of
the
years
under
review.
The
appellant
was
incorporated
by
Statutes
of
Canada
1949
(1st
Sess.),
c.
34,
its
purpose
in
general
being
to
construct
and
operate
a
pipe
line
system
for
the
transportation
of
crude
oil.
Following
its
incorporation,
the
appellant
proceeded
to
construct
a
pipe
line
from
Redwater,
Alberta
through
Edmonton
and
thence
through
Regina
and
other
points
for
a
total
distance
of
703
miles
to
the
Canadian-United
States
border
at
Gretna,
some
75
miles
south
of
Winnipeg.
At
the
same
time,
its
United
States
subsidiary,
Lakehead,
constructed
a
connecting
pipe
line
from
the
Canadian-United
States
border
at
Gretna
for
a
distance
of
324
miles
to
Superior,
Wisconsin,
whence
oil
could
be
taken
by
tanker
to
Sarnia
and
Toronto.
By
October,
1950,
oil
was
being
delivered
by
the
appellant’s
pipe
line
as
far
east
as
Regina,
and
by
the
end
of
December
of
the
same
year
the
whole
line
from
Redwater
to
Superior
was
in
operation.
The
funds
required
to
pay
for
this
pipe
line
system
and
to
provide
the
appellant
with
working
capital
totalled
in
amount
approximately
$90,000,000
and
were
raised
by
the
sale
of
shares,
debentures,
and
bonds
of
the
appellant.
In
August
and
October,
1949
the
appellant
sold
a
total
of
20,012
shares
of
its
capital
stock,
from
which
it
realized
$1,000,600.
On
October
18,
1949,
the
appellant
sold
$17,000,000
principal
amount
of
4%
convertible
debentures
and
in
January,
April,
and
July,
1950
it
sold
a
total
of
$37,000,000
principal
amount
of
its
31%
first
mortgage
and
collateral
trust
bonds,
series
A,
and
$35,000,000
principal
amount
of
its
314%
first
mortgage
and
collateral
trust
bonds,
series
B,
the
latter
being
payable
in
American
funds
and
both
maturing
January
1,
1970.
Pursuant
to
the
terms
of
the
indenture
securing
the
first
mortgage
bonds,
the
proceeds
of
the
sale
of
the
debentures
and
of
the
first
mortgage
bonds
constituted
a
fund
known
as
the
Pipe
Line
Construction
Fund
and
were
held
by
the
Royal
Trust
Company
as
trustee
and
disbursed
to
the
appellant
or
pursuant
to
its
directions
in
accordance
with
the
provisions
of
the
indenture.
Under
these
provisions,
the
proceeds
of
the
sale
of
the
debentures
could
be
withdrawn
by
the
appellant
from
time
to
time
as
obligations
in
connection
with
the
construction
of
the
pipe
line
were
incurred.
Moneys
could
also
be
withdrawn
from
the
trustee
for
the
purpose
of
purchasing
shares
of
Lakehead
or
of
making
advances
to
Lakehead
(other
than
in
respect
of
the
first
mortgage
bonds
of
Lakehead)
or
to
reimburse
the
appellant
for
moneys
used
to
make
such
purchases
or
advances.
A
feature
of
the
terms
of
the
indenture
was
the
right
of
the
appellant
to
receive
from
the
trustee
up
to
$5,000,000
of
the
debenture
proceeds
as
working
capital
without
having
spent
or
obligated
itself
to
spend
this
sum
on
construction
of
the
pipe
line
or
in
purchases
of
Lakehead
shares
or
in
advances
to
Lakehead.
By
April
5,
1950
the
whole
of
the
proceeds
of
the
sale
of
these
debentures
had
been
withdrawn
by
the
appellant.
The
debentures
were
convertible
at
the
option
of
the
holder
at
their
principal
amount
into
shares
of
the
appellant’s
capital
stock.
In
the
meantime,
until
converted
or
until
called
for
redemption
they
bore
interest
at
four
per
cent,
payable
half-
yearly
on
April
1
and
October
1
in
each
year.
By
one
of
the
terms
it
was
provided
that,
on
conversion
of
a
debenture,
there
should
be
no
payment
or
adjustment
by
the
company
or
by
the
debenture
holder
on
account
of
any
accrued
interest
on
the
debenture
or
on
account
of
any
dividends
on
the
shares
issuable
upon
such
conversion.
Ultimately,
the
whole
$17,000,000
debenture
issue
was
converted
into
shares
and
became
part
of
the
capital
of
the
appellant
company.
Most
of
the
debentures
were
converted
during
the
year
1952
when,
prior
to
the
October
1
interest
date,
$13,584,000
had
been
converted.
By
the
end
of
January,
1953,
all
but
$18,000
had
been
converted
into
shares.
Interest
payments
on
the
debentures
were
considerably
reduced
during
1952
as
a
result
of
such
conversions
and
ceased
entirely
from
January
15,
1953,
when
the
outstanding
debentures
were
called
for
redemption.
The
proceeds
of
sale
of
the
312%
first
mortgage
and
collateral
trust
bonds,
series
A
and
series
B,
were
also
paid
over
from
time
to
time
by
the
trustee
to
the
appellant
or
in
accordance
with
its
directions,
but
in
each
instance
on
receipt
of
a
certificate
from
the
appellant
that
it
had
acquired
gross
property
additions
to
the
extent
of
the
sum
requested.
One
kind
of
property
addition
in
respect
of
which
sums
could
be
withdrawn
from
the
trustee
under
the
terms
of
the
indenture
was
first
mortgage
bonds
of
Lakehead.
It
was
also
a
term
of
the
indenture
that
none
of
the
proceeds
of
sale
of
the
bonds
should
be
withdrawn
until
all
of
the
proceeds
of
sale
of
the
debentures
had
been
withdrawn
from
the
trustee.
Withdrawal
of
the
proceeds
of
these
bonds
commenced
on
April
6,
1950
and
was
completed
on
July
9,
1952.
Funds
to
finance
the
construction
of
the
portion
of
the
pipe
line
system
in
the
United
States
were
provided
by
the
appellant’s
purchases
of
shares
and
first
mortgage
bonds
of
Lakehead
and
advances
to
Lakehead
on
the
security
of
demand
notes
to
the
total
extent
of
$24,156,000.
These
were
made
as
follows
:
September
1,
1949
to
|
|
February
9,
1950
|
Purchase
of
shares
|
_…$
|
206,000
|
December
12,
1949
to
|
|
March
29,
1950
|
Advances
on
4%
demand
|
|
|
notes
|
|
5,200,000
|
January
23,
1950
to
|
|
May
28,
1951
|
Purchases
of
3%%
Lakehead
|
|
|
first
mortgage
bonds
due
in
|
|
|
1970
|
18,750,000
|
|
$24,156,000
|
The
4%
demand
notes
were
paid
on
December
29,
1952.
I
shall
return
to
these
purchases
and
advances
in
greater
detail
later
in
this
judgment,
when
considering
the
evidence
as
to
the
source
of
the
funds
used
by
the
appellant
in
making
them.
In
1953
an
extension
of
the
pipe
line
system
was
constructed
from
Superior,
Wisconsin,
to
Sarnia,
Ontario,
a
distance
of
some
650
miles,
of
which
seven
miles
were
in
Canada
and
the
remainder
in
the
United
States.
Funds
for
financing
this
extension
and
some
further
improvements
to
the
Canadian
line
were
raised
by
the
appellant
by
the
sale
of
shares
of
its
capital
stock
from
which
it
realized
nearly
twenty-six
million
dollars
and
by
the
sale
of
its
4%
first
mortgage
and
collateral
trust
bonds,
series
C,
in
the
principal
amount
of
$60,000,000.
In
the
same
year,
the
appellant
purchased
shares
of
Lakehead
to
the
extent
of
$15,000,000
and
4%
third
series
Lakehead
bonds
to
the
extent
of
$55,000,000.
I
shall
deal
with
the
latter
purchases,
as
well,
in
greater
detail
later
in
this
Judgment,
when
considering
the
source
of
the
moneys
used
to
make
them.
In
1954
further
improvements,
notably
looping
in
portions
of
the
system
and
construction
of
additional
pumping
stations,
were
made,
and
for
the
purpose
of
financing
these
improvements
the
appellant
sold
its
354%
first
mortgage
and
collateral
trust
bonds,
series
D,
in
the
principal
amount
of
$30,000,000.
In
the
same
year,
the
appellant
purchased
$5,000,000
principal
amount
of
4%
third
series
Lakehead
bonds
and
$8,000,000
principal
amount
of
354%
fourth
series
Lakehead
bonds,
which
purchases
will
also
be
considered
in
greater
detail
later
in
this
judgment.
In
its
income
tax
returns
for
the
years
in
question,
the
appellant
reported
operating
revenues
and
claimed
deductions
including
the
following
:
|
Interest
from
|
Interest
|
|
|
Bonds
and
|
on
U.S.
|
|
|
Notes
of
|
Treasury
|
|
|
Lakehead
|
bills
|
|
|
included
in
|
included
|
Interest
on
|
|
Total
|
in
Total
|
Funded
Debt
|
|
Total
Revenue
|
Revenue
|
Revenue
|
Claimed
as
|
Year
|
Receipts
|
Receipts
|
Receipts
|
a
Deduction
|
1950
|
1,396,666.29
|
400,724.92
|
|
641,684.36
|
1951
_
_
11,722,213.60
|
831,827.07
|
51,671.27
|
2,849,841.71
|
1952
____
15,021,946.46
|
844,150.57
|
29,481.55
|
2,715,893.35
|
1953
|
_
17,767,308.72
|
1,664,475.72
|
21,615.57
|
3,493,867.94
|
1954
|
._.
22,909,514.01
|
3,053,117.80
|
49,364.38
|
4,973,008.89
|
The
interest
on
funded
debt,
so
claimed
as
a
deduction
in
each
year,
was
not
broken
down
so
as
to
show
how
much
of
it
had
accrued
on
the
portion
of
the
borrowed
moneys
included
in
the
funded
debt
which
the
appellant
had
invested
in
Lake-
head
securities
and
United
States
Treasury
bills.
Nor
was
any
such
breakdown
given
in
evidence.
In
reassessing
the
appellant’s
income,
the
Minister
did
not
disallow
any
portion
of
the
interest
so
claimed
in
any
year
as
a
deduction
in
computing
income,
and
no
question
is
raised
in
this
appeal
as
to
the
right
of
the
appellant
to
deduct
the
whole
of
such
interest
in
computing
its
income
for
income
tax
purposes.
But,
as
stated
in
the
reply
to
the
notices
of
appeal,
the
Minister
disallowed
the
appellant’s
claim
for
foreign
tax
credit
in
respect
of
the
tax
paid
by
the
appellant
to
the
United
States
on
interest
which
accrued
on
the
Lakehead
bonds
and
notes
and
United
States
Treasury
bills
in
each
of
the
years
in
question
because
he
"‘assumed
that
the
money
in
respect
of
which
the
amount
of
interest
was
receivable
by
the
Appellant
was
money
that
was
borrowed
by
the
Appellant
and
included
as
part
of
its
‘funded
debt’
and
that
there
was
payable
by
the
Appellant
in
respect
of
that
money
in
[the]
taxation
year
an
amount
of
interest
equal
to
or
in
excess
of
the
amount
of
interest
that
was
receivable
by
the
Appellant
in
respect
of
that
money
in
that
year.’’
In
the
reply,
the
Minister
then
went
on
to
plead
and
submit
that
the
appellant
was
not
entitled
to
foreign
tax
credit
in
any
of
the
years
in
question
(beyond
certain
amounts
which
were
allowed
and
which
are
not
in
issue
in
this
appeal)
because,
for
the
purposes
of
the
provisions
respecting
foreign
tax
credits,
the
appellant’s
income
from
sources
in
the
United
States
must
be
computed
on
the
assumption
that
the
appellant
had
no
income
except
from
sources
in
the
United
States
and
was
entitled
to
no
deductions
except
deductions
related
to
those
sources,
and
only
that
part
of
the
amount
payable
to
the
appellant
in
each
year
as
interest
on
its
money
in
the
United
States
that
remains
after
deducting
from
that
amount
the
amount
payable
by
the
applicant
in
that
year
as
interest
on
that
money
and
any
other
properly
deductible
amounts
related
to
that
money
is
profit
or
income
from
its
money
in
the
United
States
that
is
subject
to
tax
under
Part
I
of
the
applicable
Act.
It
may
here
be
noted
that
neither
in
the
plea
above
quoted
nor
elsewhere
in
the
reply
nor
at
the
trial
was
any
contention
advanced
that
any
deduction
claimed
by
the
appellant
in
computing
its
income
other
than
"‘interest
on
funded
debt”
was
in
any
way
related
to
the
sources
in
the
United
States
from
which
interest
receipts
accrued.
The
problem
is
thus
restricted
to
the
relationship
of
the
deduction
of
interest
on
funded
debt
to
the
United
States
sources,
and
none
of
the
other
deductions
claimed
by
the
appellant
need
be
considered.
The
respondent’s
first
contention
in
answer
to
the
Minister’s
plea
raises
the
question
as
to
what
is
meant
by
‘‘income’’
in
the
expressions
^his
income
from
sources
therein
for
the
year
and
that
part
of
the
taxpayer’s
income
from
sources
in
that
country"
in
Section
38(1)
of
The
Income
Tax
Act.
Counsel
for
the
appellant
contended
that,
since
the
15%
tax
imposed
in
the
United
States
was
imposed
on
the
gross
amount
of
the
interest
which
accrued
in
the
United
States
and
since,
under
Section
6(b)
of
The
Income
Tax
Act,
interest
must
be
included
in
computing
income,
the
word
‘‘income’’
in
the
expressions
above
mentioned
should
be
interpreted
as
referring
to
the
income
on
which
the
foreign
tax
was
levied
;
that
is
to
say,
in
the
case
of
the
interest
in
question,
the
gross
amount.
In
support
of
this
position,
he
referred
to
the
fact
that,
by
Sections
106
and
108
(which
it
may
be
noted
are
in
Part
3
of
the
Income
Tax
Act,
rather
than
Part
1),
income
tax
is
imposed
in
Canada
on
interest
payable
to
nonresidents
on
the
gross
amount
of
such
interest
as
income,
and
to
the
several
provisions
of
the
Convention
and
Protocol
between
Canada
and
the
United
States
for
the
Avoidance
of
Double
Taxation,
as
well
as
the
provisions
of
The
Canada-United
States
of
America
Tax
Convention
Act
1943,
Statutes
of
Canada
1943-
1944,
c.
20
(as
amended
by
Statutes
of
Canada
1950,
ce.
27),
by
which
the
Convention
and
Protocol
were
ratified
and
declared
to
have
the
force
of
law
in
Canada,
and
particularly
to
Section
3
of
that
Act,
by
which
it
is
provided
that,
in
a
case
of
inconsistency
between
the
Convention
and
Protocol
and
any
other
law,
the
provisions
of
the
Convention
and
Protocol
shall
prevail.
In
my
opinion,
despite
the
claim
that
the
reassessments
result
in
double
taxation
of
the
interest
in
question,
and
despite
the
purpose
of
the
Convention,
as
declared
in
it,
of
avoiding
double
taxation,
the
Convention
goes
no
further
in
avoiding
double
taxation
than
what
is
set
out
in
its
several
Articles,
none
of
which,
in
my
opinion,
affords
in
the
present
situation
relief
to
any
greater
extent
than
what
is
to
be
found
in
the
provisions
of
The
Income
Tax
Act.
Article
XV
of
the
Convention
as
amended,
effective
January
1,
1949,
provides
that
"1.
As
far
as
may
be
in
accordance
with
the
provisions
of
The
Income
Tax
Act,
Canada
agrees
to
allow
as
a
deduction
from
the
Dominion
income
and
excess
profits
taxes
on
any
income
which
was
derived
from
sources
within
the
United
States
of
America
and
was
there
taxed,
the
appropriate
amount
of
such
taxes
paid
to
the
United
States
of
America.”
This
Article
refers
to
The
Income
Tax
Act
as
it
was
on
January
1,
1949
and
the
extent
of
Canada’s
agreement
under
it
to
give
credit
for
taxes
paid
to
the
United
States
is
limited
to
what
was
included
in
the
expression,
"‘As
far
as
may
be
in
accordance
with
the
provisions
of
The
Income
Tax
Act’’.
In
my
opinion,
Article
XV
operates
as
an
agreement
by
Canada
not
to
abolish
or
decrease
the
foreign
tax
credits
provided
for
in
The
Income
Tax
Act
so
far
as
they
are
credits
for
taxes
paid
to
the
United
States
of
America.
For
the
purposes
of
this
case,
the
utmost
that
can
be
claimed
as
tax
credit
pursuant
to
the
Convention
and
Protocol
is
thus
that
was
provided
for
in
The
Income
Tax
Act
on
January
1,
1949,
and
in
that
Act
the
applicable
provision
for
such
a
tax
credit
was
Section
38.
By
Section
4
of
The
Income
Tax
Act,
however,
income
for
a
taxation
year
from
a
business
or
property
is
declared,
subject
to
the
other
provisions
of
Part
1,
to
be
the
profit
therefrom
for
the
year
and,
since
the
source
of
the
interest
in
question
on
which
tax
was
paid
to
the
United
States
was
clearly
either
a
business
or
property
and
no
other
provision
of
Part
1
declares
that
interest
earnings
are
to
be
brought
into
the
computation
of
income
or
taxed
on
any
other
basis,
it
follows,
in
my
opinion,
that
what
is
to
be
regarded
for
the
purposes
of
Part
1
of
The
Income
Tax
Act
as
the
income
from
such
business
or
property
is
not
the
gross
amount
of
such
interest
for
each
year
but
the
profit
from
such
property
or
business
for
the
year.
If
there
is
no
profit
from
a
business
or
property
for
any
year,
there
is
no
income
therefrom
for
that
year.
Section
38(1)
of
The
Income
Tax
Act
can
thus
afford
a
tax
credit
only
in
the
year
in
which
the
appellant
had
a
profit
for
the
year
from
the
business
or
property
in
the
United
States
from
which
the
interest
in
question
flowed.
Moreover,
in
my
opinion,
the
amendment
to
Section
38(1)
made
in
1952,
as
applied
to
the
present
situation,
does
not
change
the
provision.
It
merely
expresses
the
same
meaning
in
clearer
and
more
definite
language.
This
brings
me
to
the
second
of
the
two
main
questions
mentioned
earlier
in
this
judgment,
that
of
whether
or
not
the
appellant
had
any
income
from
sources
in
the
United
States
in
any
of
the
years
in
question.
Before
dealing
with
the
evidence
on
this
question,
however,
I
think
I
should
set
out
my
view
as
to
what
the
source
of
the
interest
in
question
was
for
the
purposes
of
Section
127(1)
(av)
and
what
portion
of
the
interest
on
funded
debt
claimed
by
the
appellant
in
computing
its
income
I
regard
as
related
to
the
source
of
such
interest.
Under
Section
127(1)
(av),
income
from
sources
in
a
particular
place
is
to
be
computed
in
accordance
with
the
Act
on
the
assumption
that
the
appellant
had
no
income
from
any
other
source
and
was
entitled
to
no
deductions
except
those
related
to
those
sources.
The
Act
in
Section
3
declares
that
a
taxpayer’s
income
for
the
purposes
of
Part
1
is
his
income
from
all
sources
and
includes
income
from
all
(a)
businesses,
(b)
property,
(c)
offices
and
employments.
From
this
it
appears
to
me
that
what
is
contemplated
as
sources
of
income
for
the
purposes
of
Part
1
are
such
things
as
businesses—of
which
the
taxpayer
may
have
one
or
more—or
offices—of
which
he
may
have
one
or
more.
Each
business
is
thus
a
source.
Each
office
is
a
source.
A
taxpayer
may
also
have
one
or
more
income-producing
properties,
and
each
of
them
may
be
a
source.
The
word
"‘source''
has,
I
think,
the
same
meaning
in
Section
127(1)
(av).
The
definition
refers
to
‘‘income
from
a
business,
property
employment
or
other
source
of
income”
and
directs
that
income
from
such
a
source
is
to
be
computed
in
accordance
with
the
Act,
which,
I
take
it,
means
by
following
the
provisions
of
the
Act
applicable
to
the
computation
of
income
from
such
a
source
on
the
assumption
that
the
taxpayer
had
no
income
except
from
that
business,
employment,
property,
or
other
source.
By
the
same
reasoning,
when
Section
127(1)
(av)
refers
to
sources
in
a
particular
place,
it
refers,
in
my
opinion,
to
the
business
or
businesses,
employment
or
employments,
office
or
offices,
property
or
properties,
or
other
sources
in
that
place
from
which
the
taxpayer
derives
income.
Now,
in
my
opinion,
the
appellant
had
one
and
only
one
business,
and
that
business
was
its
sole
source
of
income.
From
the
time
of
its
incorporation,
the
appellant’s
activities
were
directed
to
the
carrying
out
of
a
project
for
the
construction
and
operation
of
a
pipe
line
system
for
the
transportation
of
crude
oil
from
Western
Canada
to
more
easterly
points
in
Canada
and
the
United
States.
The
appellant
carried
out
this
project
by
constructing
a
pipe
line
system
in
Canada
and
by
organizing
and
financing
a
subsidiary
company
to
construct
and
operate
the
United
States
portion
of
the
line.
The
United
States
portion
of
the
line
was
a
necessary
and
integral
part
of
the
project
as
a
whole.
The
appellant’s
undertaking,
in
my
opinion,
comprehended
the
doing
of
all
things
which
the
appellant
did
to
carry
out
this
project.
It
included
the
investment
of
capital
in
the
pipe
line
in
Canada
and
in
shares,
bonds
and
notes
of
Lakehead,
and
it
included
as
well
the
incidental
and
temporary
investment
of
capital
funds
in
short
term
investments
pending
the
need
to
use
them
in
constructing
the
line
or
in
making
further
investments
in
Lakehead.
These
investments
of
capital
made
by
the
appellant
in
shares,
bonds
and
notes
of
Lakehead
were
not
casual
investments
of
idle
funds
but
were
as
much
a
part
of
the
project
as
were
the
investments
in
its
Canadian
pipe
line.
And,
as
I
view
it,
the
temporary
investment
of
surplus
capital
funds
in
short
term
securities
pending
the
use
of
them
in
carrying
out
the
project
was
also
an
incident
of
and
included
in
the
project
itself.
The
holding
of
these
investments
both
in
Lakehead
and
in
short
term
securities
and
the
controlling
of
Lakehead
were,
in
my
view,
part
of
the
original
scheme.
They
constituted
but
some
of
the
ways
by
which
revenues
and
profits
from
the
undertaking
as
a
whole
were
to
be
obtained.
In
this
view,
the
appellant’s
income-producing
process
or
activities
included
the
transportation
of
oil
in
Canada,
the
controlling
of
its
subsidiary,
the
holding
of
its
investments
in
that
subsidiary,
and
the
holding
of
its
short
term
investments,
as
well.
The
interest
from
these
investments
was,
accordingly,
revenue
from
the
appellant’s
business
and
was
properly
included
in
the
computation
of
profit
from
that
business
for
each
of
the
years
in
question.
In
this
situation
when,
for
the
purposes
of
Section
38,
one
seeks
to
ascertain
how
much
of
the
appellant’s
income
was
income
from
sources
in
the
United
States,
it
becomes
necessary,
if
any
of
its
income
can
be
regarded
as
having
been
derived
from
sources
in
that
country,
to
ascertain
the
extent,
if
any,
to
which
the
appellant’s
business
was
carried
on
there
and
to
make
a
division
of
it
so
as
to
obtain
an
answer
to
the
question,
‘‘
How
much
of
the
profit
or
income
from
the
business
came
from
the
portion
of
it
carried
on
there
?"
The
portion
of
the
appellant’s
income-producing
process
which
I
think
can
be
regarded
as
carried
on
in
the
United
States
consisted
of
the
holding
of
its
investments
in
Lakehead
and
in
United
States
Treasury
bills
and
the
controlling
of
Lakehead.
Certain
other
incidental
operations,
such
as
the
maintenance
of
a
bank
account
through
the
depositing
of
funds
in
it
and
the
payment
of
current
obligations
from
it,
also
serve
to
show
that
some
of
the
business
was
carried
on
in
the
United
States,
but
they
indicate
nothing
as
to
the
extent
to
which
for
this
purpose
the
business
can
be
regarded
as
carried
on
there.
By
Section
127(1)
(av)
the
profit
from
the
appellant’s
business
in
the
United
States
must
be
ascertained
by
assuming
that
there
was
no
income—that
is
to
say,
no
profit—
from
the
business
in
Canada.
It
is
not
easy
to
envisage
a
division
of
the
appellant’s
business
on
such
lines,
but
it
is
clear
that
the
revenues
from
the
appellant’s
investments
in
Lakehead
and
in
United
States
Treasury
bonds
accrued
to
the
appellant
in
the
United
States,
and
taking
the
holding
of
these
investments
as
the
portion
of
the
business
carried
on
there
and
the
revenue
from
them
as
the
revenue
from
that
portion
of
the
business,
one
has
a
starting
point
for
the
necessary
computation.
It
is
not
difficult
to
ascertain
the
gross
revenue
from
that
portion
of
the
business,
and
the
problem
immediately
becomes
one
of
ascertaining
what
deductions,
if
any,
are
related
to
that
portion
of
it,
as
contemplated
by
Section
127(1)
(av).
It
is
not
necessary,
however,
for
the
purposes
of
this
appeal
to
consider
or
define
exhaustively
what
is
meant
by
deductions
related
to
a
source
for,
as
previously
mentioned,
of
the
deductions
claimed
by
the
appellant
the
only
one
that
needs
to
be
considered
in
this
connection
is
that
claimed
by
the
appellant
in
each
year
for
interest
on
funded
debt.
Now
interest
on
borrowed
money,
if
it
is
deductible
at
all
in
computing
income
for
income
tax
purposes,
is
deductible
pursuant
to
Section
11(1)
(c),
which
permits
the
deduction
of
interest
on
borrowed
money
used
to
earn
income
from
the
taxpayer’s
business
or
property.
Interest
on
borrowed
money
used
by
the
appellant
to
make
the
investments
which
yielded
the
interest
with
which
the
appeal
is
concerned
is
thus
deductible
in
computing
income
from
its
business
not
because
the
money
used
was
borrowed
money,
but
by
reason
of
the
fact
that,
since
it
was
used
to
make
such
investments,
in
was
in
that
way
used
to
earn
income
from
the
appellant’s
business.
And
where
such
investments
have
been
acquired
with
borrowed
money
or
with
temporary
investments
which
were
themselves
purchased
with
borrowed
money,
I
think
it
is
manifest
that
the
interest
payable
on
such
borrowed
money
is
a
deduction
related
to
the
investments
so
obtained,
because
it
is
an
expense
incident
to
the
money
or
capital
used
to
acquire
them.
Moreover,
if,
as
here,
the
holding
of
investments
so
acquired
is
part
of
a
business
which
is
a
source
of
income,
I
think
it
is
equally
clear
that
the
interest
paid
on
the
borrowed
money
is
a
deduction,
not
merely
related
to
the
business
as
a
whole,
but
is
also
a
deduction
related
to
that
part
of
the
business
which
is
concerned
with
the
holding
of
the
investments.
That
the
interest
paid
by
the
appellant
on
the
portion
of
the
borrowed
moneys
included
in
its
funded
debt
which
were
used
to
acquire
investments
in
Lakehead
and
in
United
States
Treasnry
bills
as
a
deduction
related
to
such
investments
and
to
the
holding
of
them
and
thus
to
the
portion
of
the
appellant’s
business
in
the
United
States
is,
to
my
mind,
quite
clear.
The
borrowed
money
having
been
employed
in
purchasing
the
investments,
the
relationship
of
the
interest
deduction
to
them
and
the
holding
of
them
is
a
direct
one.
That
there
may
also
have
been
an
indirect
or
remote
relationship
between
such
interest
deductions
and
other
phases
or
portions
of
the
business
is,
In
my
opinion,
immaterial.
What
I
have
said
is
subject,
however,
to
the
limitation
that
it
is
not
all
the
interest
on
borrowed
money
which
the
appellant
was
obliged
to
pay
that
can
be
said
to
be
related
to
its
investments
in
shares,
bonds,
and
notes
of
Lakehead
and
United
States
Treasury
bills.
As
I
see
it,
only
the
interest
on
borrowed
money
which,
directly
or
indirectly,
was
used
to
pay
for
such
investments
can
be
said
to
be
related
to
them
or
to
the
holding
of
them.
And
where
temporary
investments
were
purchased
with
borrowed
money
and
later
used
to
buy
Lakehead
bonds,
the
amount
of
borrowed
money
the
interest
on
which
can
be
said
to
be
related
to
such
bonds
is
not
necessarily
equivalent
to
the
principal
amount
of
the
bonds.
Indeed,
there
will
usually
be
some
difference.
The
temporary
investment
may
have
risen
or
fallen
in
value
and
part
of
its
value,
when
it
was
used
to
purchase
a
new
investment,
may
have
been
due
to
interest
or
increment
which
accrued
after
the
temporary
investment
was
purchased.
Neither
interest
nor
increment
nor
rise
in
value
is
borrowed
money
and,
to
the
extent
that
such
increase
forms
part
of
the
value
at
which
a
temporary
investment
is
taken
on
account
of
the
purchase
price
of
another
investment,
the
latter
cannot
be
said
to
have
been
purchased
entirely
with
borrowed
money
or
with
funds
representing
borrowed
money.
It
is
purchased
with
funds
representing
borrowed
money
to
the
extent
and
only
to
the
extent
that
borrowed
money
went
into
the
purchasing
of
the
temporary
investment,
and
it
is
only
the
interest
on
so
much
and
no
more
borrowed
money
that
can
be
said
to
be
related
to
the
investment.
On
the
other
hand,
if
the
temporary
investment,
when
used
to
purchase
another
investment,
was
worth
less
than
the
borrowed
money
that
went
into
it,
it
nevertheless
represents
borrowed
money
to
the
extent
that
borrowed
money
went
into
it,
and
the
interest
on
that
amount
of
borrowed
money
is,
I
think,
related
to
the
investment
acquired
with
such
temporary
investment.
In
the
present
case,
this
feature
complicates
the
computation
of
the
amount
of
interest
on
funded
debt
which
can
be
said
to
be
related
to
an
investment
in
Lakehead
in
every
case
where
temporary
investments
such
as
United
States
Treasury
bills
were
used
to
pay
for
such
investments
in
Lakehead
and
makes
it
impossible
in
such
cases
to
say,
from
any
mere
comparison
of
the
rate
receivable
with
the
rate
payable,
whether
or
not
the
interest
payable
would
or
would
not
equal
or
exceed
the
interest
receivable.
In
order
to
determine
how
much
of
the
interest
on
funded
debt
was
related
to
that
portion
of
the
appellant’s
business
which
was
carried
on
in
the
United
States,
it
is
necessary,
in
my
opinion,
to
ascertain
what
funds
were
used
by
the
appellant
in
making
each
of
the
advances
to
Lakehead
and
each
of
the
purchases
of
Lakehead
bonds
and
United
States
Treasury
bills
from
the
holding
of
which
the
revenues
in
question
were
derived,
and
the
extent
to
which
the
funds
so
used
were
or
represented
borrowed
moneys.
In
this
connection,
I
am
of
the
opinion
that
neither
the
purpose
for
which
moneys
were,
from
time
to
time,
borrowed
by
the
appellant—which,
in
the
case
of
the
appellant’s
debentures,
included
both
the
making
of
advances
to
Lakehead
and
the
reimbursement
of
the
appellant
for
moneys
expended
in
making
such
advances
and,
in
the
case
of
the
appellant’s
bonds,
included
the
purchase
of
Lakehead
bonds
and
the
reimbursement
of
the
appellant
for
moneys
expended
in
making
such
purchases—nor
the
withdrawal
of
borrowed
moneys
from
the
trustee
by
certificates
requesting
reimbursement
for
moneys
already
used
to
make
advances
to
or
to
purchase
bonds
of
Lakehead
is
sufficient
to
stamp
such
advances
as
having
been
made
or
such
bonds
as
having
been
purchased
with
such
borrowed
funds.
Nor,
to
put
it
the
other
way,
are
such
facts
sufficient
to
establish
that
borrowed
moneys
or
funds
representing
borrowings
were
used
to
make
such
advances
or
to
purchase
such
bonds.
What,
in
my
view,
must
be
ascertained
in
each
case
is
that
money
or
funds
were
in
fact
used
to
make
an
advance
or
to
pay
for
a
bond.
Was
it
borrowed
money
or
investments
acquired
with
borrowed
money,
or
was
it
money
or
investments
acquired
with
money
which
the
appellant
had
realized
on
sale
of
its
shares
or
as
receipts
or
profits
from
its
operations?
The
fact
that
the
appellant,
subsequent
to
making
an
advance
to
Lakehead
or
purchasing
and
paying
for
a
Lakehead
bond,
may
have
used
the
demand
note
securing
the
advance
or
the
Lakehead
bond
so
purchased
to
withdraw
borrowed
moneys
from
the
trustee
and
may
have
pledged
the
bond
or
note
with
the
trustee
pursuant
to
the
terms
of
the
trust
deed,
in
my
opinion,
adds
nothing
one
way
or
the
other
to
the
determination
of
the
material
fact.
Nor
is
the
determination
advanced
by
the
fact
that
the
appellant
in
some
years
charged
to
Lakehead
stand-by
fees
equal
to
the
proportion
which
sums
borrowed
in
the
year
by
the
appellant
and
subsequently
loaned
to
Lakehead
bore
to
the
total
stand-by
fees
paid
by
the
appellant
in
respect
of
such
borrowings.
The
making
of
such
a
charge
in
such
a
proportion
to
the
whole
confirms
the
fact
that
the
appellant
borrowed
the
moneys
with
the
intention
of
lending
a
portion
of
them
to
Lakehead,
but
the
question
is
what
moneys
were,
in
fact,
loaned
to
Lakehead,
rather
than
what
was
the
appellant’s
purpose
or
intention
in
borrowing
money.
On
the
other
hand,
the
Minister,
in
making
the
assessment,
has
assumed
that
all
of
the
moneys
which
the
appellant
used
to
make
advances
to
Lakehead
and
to
make
purchases
of
Lake-
head
bonds
and
United
States
Treasury
bills
were
borrowed
moneys,
forming
part
of
the
appellant’s
funded
debt,
and
it
was
for
the
appellant
to
disprove
that
assumption,
if
it
could.
Johnston
v.
M.N.R.,
[1948]
S.C.R.
486;
[1948]
C.T.C.
195.
For
this
purpose,
mere
evidence
that
the
funds
used
to
make
an
advance
or
to
pay
for
particular
purchases
came
from
the
appellant’s
general
funds,
rather
than
from
funds
in
the
hands
of
the
trustee,
is,
In
my
opinion,
inconclusive,
for
while
the
money
and
funds
in
the
hands
of
the
trustee
represented,
almost
in
their
entirety,
borrowed
money,
it
does
not
follow
that
the
amount
in
the
appellant’s
general
funds
was
not
or
did
not
also
represent
borrowed
money
either
in
whole
or
in
part.
Indeed,
as
will
appear,
it
is
my
opinion
that,
on
some
material
occasions,
what
was
in
the
appellant’s
general
funds
was
almost
entirely
borrowed
money
or
funds
representing
borrowed
money.
F'or
borrowed
money,
or
temporary
investments
purchased
by
the
trustee
with
borrowed
money,
when
transferred
by
the
trustee
to
the
appellant,
did
not
by
such
transfer
lose
their
character
as
being
or
representing
borrowed
money
but,
in
my
view,
retained
that
character
when
they
found
their
way
into
the
appellant
‘s
general
funds,
and
this
notwithstanding
the
fact
that
such
moneys
or
investments
had
been
received
from
the
trustee
on
the
strength
of
certificates
of
property
additions
(for
which
the
appellant
had
already
paid)
of
the
kind
required
by
the
particular
bond
or
debenture
indenture.
Moreover,
in
instances
where
moneys
were
advanced
to
Lakehead
or
bonds
of
Lake-
head
were
purchased
with
moneys
or
temporary
investments
from
the
appellant’s
general
funds
at
times
when
such
general
funds
contained
a
mixture
of
borrowed
moneys
or
investments
representing
borrowed
money
and
capital
or
receipts
from
operations
or
both
and,
on
the
evidence,
the
character
of
the
moneys
or
investments
used
by
the
appellant
to
purchase
such
bonds
or
notes
is
left
in
uncertainty,
the
burden
on
the
appellant
of
showing
that
the
advances
were
not
made
with
borrowed
money
or
that
the
bonds
were
not
purchased
with
borrowed
money
is
not
discharged.
The
standard
of
proof
required
in
these
cases
is
not
that
applicable
in
criminal
cases.
A
preponderance
of
evidence
is
sufficient.
But
the
Court
will
not
speculate
as
to
the
facts,
and
it
will
neither
disturb
an
assessment
nor
refer
it
back
to
the
Minister
unless
there
is
put
in
evidence
sufficient
material
to
satisfy
the
Court
that
the
facts
are
such
that
the
appellant
not
merely
may
be
entitled
but
is
entitled
to
relief
against
some
or
all
of
the
tax
as
assessed.
The
Minister,
in
making
the
reassessments,
has
also
assumed
a
further
fact
which
it
was
for
the
appellant
to
disprove
if
it
could.
This
was
the
assumption
that
there
was
payable
in
respect
of
the
borrowed
moneys
representing
funded
debt
that
were
used
to
purchase
the
Lakehead
bonds
and
notes
and
the
United
States
Treasury
bills
sums
of
interest
equal
to
or
in
excess
of
the
sums
which
became
receivable
by
the
appellant
on
such
securities.
This
is,
l.
think,
the
more
critical
assumption
of
the
two,
for
if
it
is
Shown
to
be
incorrect
in
fact
there
would
be
a
profit,
and
the
appellant
would
be
entitled
to
some
tax
credit.
On
the
other
hand,
if
this
assumption
is
not
shown
to
be
incorrect
in
fact,
there
could
be
no
profit
whether
or
not
the
other
assumption
were
entirely
true.
With
these
considerations
in
mind,
I
proceed
to
consider
the
facts
applicable
to
each
of
the
years
under
review.
In
1950
interest
accrued
to
the
appellant
in
the
United
States
on
the
following
Lakehead
securities
:
|
31
%
Bonds
due
|
|
4%
Demand
Notes
|
Jan.
1,
1970
|
Purchased
|
200,000
|
|
Dee.
12,
1949
|
|
250,000
|
Jan.
23,
1950
|
500,000
|
|
Jan.
26,
1950
|
4,500,900
|
|
Mar.
29,
1950
|
|
9,900,000
|
June
1,
1950
|
|
4,500,000
|
Sept.
21,
1950
|
At
the
times
of
these
purchases
the
appellant’s
pipe
line
was
not
yet
in
operation
and
shares
of
its
capital
stock
had
been
sold
to
the
extent
of
only
slightly
more
than
$1,000,000.
At
the
close
of
business
on
September
27,
1949,
the
appellant
had
in
its
general
funds
a
total
of
$164,121.11,
which
presumably
(since
no
debentures
or
bonds
had
yet
been
sold)
was
the
unexpended
balance
of
the
proceeds
of
the
sale
of
the
shares.
The
debentures
were
sold
on
October
18,
1949,
and
on
October
31,
1949,
prior
to
the
first
of
the
above
purchases,
the
appellant
had
already
drawn
on
the
proceeds
of
the
sale
of
the
debentures
to
the
extent
of
$3,166,514.80,
of
which
sum
$1,000,000
was
withdrawn
on
account
of
the
$5,000,000
which
the
appellant
was
permitted
to
withdraw
for
working
capital.
At
the
close
of
business
on
the
day
before
the
first
of
the
above
purchases,
the
funds
available
in
the
appellant’s
general
funds
totalled
$488,735.66
in
cash,
and
having
regard
to
what
it
was
that
the
appellant
was
doing,
namely,
acquiring
materials
and
rights
and
constructing
the
pipe
line,
as
well
as
to
the
sequence
of
events—sale
of
shares
to
the
extent
of
about
$1,000,000,
reduction
of
the
balance
on
hand
to
$164,121.11,
subsequent
withdrawal
of
$3,166,514.80,
of
which
nearly
two
million
was
for
expenditures
for
which
the
appellant
had
committed
itself,
$220,000
was
for
shares
of
Lake-
head,
and
$1,000,000
was
for
working
capital—I
think
the
inference
is
plain
that
the
$488,735.66
on
hand
at
the
close
of
business
on
December
11,
1949
was,
with
the
exception
of
$100
received
for
shares
sold
on
November
29,
1949,
in
fact
part
of
the
$1,000,000
in
borrowed
money
so
withdrawn
from
the
proceeds
of
the
debenture
issue.
On
December
12,
1949,
the
appellant
withdrew
from
the
trustee
$221,000,
with
which
it
purchased
200,000
United
States
dollars,
and
it
used
these
dollars
to
make
the
advance
secured
by
the
$200,000
4%
Lakehead
demand
note
which
is
the
first
of
the
above
items.
In
my
opinion,
this
clearly
establishes
that
the
funds
used
to
make
this
particular
advance
represented
borrowed
money,
being
part
of
the
proceeds
of
the
debenture
issue
on
which
the
appellant
was
then
obliged
to
pay
interest
at
four
per
cent
per
annum.
Moreover,
during
the
whole
of
the
year
1950
the
appellant
sold
shares
in
its
capital
stock
to
the
extent
of
only
$400,
and
it
is
my
opinion
that,
at
the
times
in
that
year
when
the
remaining
advances
to
Lakehead
and
purchases
of
its
bonds
as
above
mentioned
were
made,
the
appellant
had,
with
the
possible
exception
of
some
interest
earned
on
short
term
investments,
no
funds
but
moneys
and
investments
representing
proceeds
of
the
debentures
and
bond
issues
with
which
to
make
them.
It
had
no
capital
funds
remaining
in
its
hands,
and
it
had
not
yet
begun
operating
its
pipe
line,
and
in
my
view
it
follows
that,
except
to
the
extent
that
interest
or
increment
on
short
term
investments
may
have
entered
into
the
picture,
all
of
these
Lakehead
securities
must
have
been
purchased
with
funds
derived
from
the
proceeds
of
the
sale
of
the
appellant’s
debentures
and
bonds.
Having
regard
to
the
times
when
the
purchases
were
made
and
the
times
when
the
debenture
proceeds
were
withdrawn,
I
conclude
that
all
of
the
advances
making
up
the
$9,200,000
secured
by
4%
demand
notes
and
the
purchase
on
January
23,
1950
of
the
$250,000
in
314%
Lakehead
bonds
due
January
1,
1970
were
made
with
moneys
which
were
part
of
the
proceeds
of
sale
of
the
appellant’s
4%
convertible
debentures.
These
advances
were
made
in
cash,
and
the
bonds
were
purchased
for
cash,
and
there
is
no
evidence
that
any
of
the
money
so
advanced
or
used
was
interest
or
increment
earned
on
short
term
investments.
The
principal
amount
of
the
investments
is
expressed
in
United
States
dollars,
and
the
cost
of
the
investments
to
the
appellant
was
some
ten
per
cent
higher
in
Canadian
dollars,
on
which
interest
at
four
per
cent
was
payable.
In
its
income
tax
return
for
1950,
the
appellant
converted
the
interest
receivable
on
these
investments
from
United
States
to
Canadian
dollars
at
an
exchange
rate
of
105.9375.
Having
regard
to
these
differences,
as
well
as
to
the
fact
that
on
the
$250,000
in
314%
Lakehead
bonds
the
rate
of
interest
receivable
was
lower
than
the
four
per
cent
payable
by
the
appellant
on
the
money
used
to
buy
it,
I
think
the
correct
inference
is
that
there
was
no
profit
but
a
loss
in
1950
on
these
investments.
The
other
$14,000,000
of
314%
Lakehead
bonds
due
January
1,
1970,
purchased
in
1950,
were
bought
after
the
proceeds
of
the
debenture
issue
had
been
exhausted,
and
the
inference
that
they
were
purchased
with
borrowed
funds
representing
part
of
the
proceeds
of
the
sale
of
the
appellant’s
314%
series
A
and
B
bonds
is
reinforced
by
evidence
that
in
the
case
of
each
of
the
purchases
the
funds
used
to
pay
for
them
passed
directly
from
the
trustee
of
the
appellant’s
series
A
and
series
B
bond
mortgage
to
the
trustee
of
the
Lakehead
bond
mortgage
and
in
fact
represented
part
of
the
proceeds
of
sale
of
the
series
B
bonds.
In
this
case,
there
is
no
complication
from
exchange
differences,
since
the
series
B
bonds
were
sold
for
United
States
dollars
and
were
payable
both
as
to
principal
and
interest
in
United
States
dollars,
and
the
rate
payable
on
them
was
the
same
as
that
receivable
on
the
$14,000,000
in
Lakehead
bonds
so
purchased.
But
the
latter
were
paid
for
almost
entirely
with
United
States
Treasury
bills
in
which
the
proceeds
of
sale
of
the
appellant’s
series
B
bonds
had
been
invested
by
the
trustee,
and
some
portion
of
the
value
at
which
these
Treasury
bills
were
taken
in
payment
for
the
$14,000,000
in
Lakehead
bonds
may
have
been
due
to
the
increment
which
had
accrued
on
the
Treasury
bills
since
the
trustee
bought
them.
This
would
suggest
that
a
profit
equal
to
the
314%
interest
on
the
amount
of
such
increment
should
result
from
this
investment.
But,
while
I
think
it
is
probable
that
there
was
some
element
of
increment
involved,
on
the
evidence
I
am
neither
able
to
ascertain
the
amount
of
it.
nor
to
satisfy
myself
that
it
would
have
had
sufficient
effect
in
producing
a
profit
in
1950
on
these
$14,000,000
in
Lakehead
bonds
to
offset
the
loss
which
I
think
must
have
resulted
from
the
other
$5,450,000
invested
in
Lakehead.
No
figures
showing
what
such
increment
amounted
to
were
put
in
evidence,
nor
was
evidence
given
of
the
amounts
of
interest
which
became
payable
by
the
appellant
on
the
borrowed
moneys
which
the
investments
made
in
1950
represented.
In
this
situation,
the
evidence
does
not
satisfy
me
that
a
profit
resulted
in
1950
from
the
interest
which
accrued
on
these
investments
as
a
whole
and,
as
I
see
it,
I
have
no
alternative
but
to
hold
that,
while
the
Minister’s
assumption
‘that
the
money
in
respect
of
which
the
amount
of
interest
so
receivable
by
the
appellant
was
money
that
was
borrowed
by
the
appellant
and
included
as
part
of
its
‘funded
debt’
’’
has
been
shown
to
be
erroneous
to
some
slight
but
indefinite
extent,
the
critical
assumption
“that
there
was
payable
by
the
appellant
in
respect
of
that
money
in
the
1950
taxation
year
an
amount
of
interest
equal
to
or
in
excess
of
the
amount
of
interest
that
was
receivable
by
the
appellant
in
respect
of
that
money
in
that
year’’
is
not
disproved
because
it
has
not
been
shown
that
the
interest
payable
on
the
portion
of
the
funded
debt
moneys
which
went
into
the
investments,
and
which
I
think
is
related
to
them,
did
not
exceed
the
interest
receivable
on
them.
The
appeal
against
the
reassessment
for
1950
accordingly
fails.
What
I
have
already
said
with
respect
to
the
situation
in
1950
applies
as
well
to
1951.
During
1951
the
appellant
continued
to
hold
the
$5,200,000
in
4%
Lakehead
demand
notes
and
the
$250,000
in
344%
Lakehead
bonds
purchased
with
proceeds
of
the
sale
of
the
appellant’s
4%
debentures
and
the
$14,000,000
in
31/2
%
Lakehead
bonds
purchased
for
the
most
part
with
funds
representing
proceeds
of
sale
of
the
appellant’s
314%
series
B
bonds.
In
addition,
on
May
18,
1951
the
appellant
purchased
another
$4,500,000
in
314%
Lakehead
bonds
which
were
paid
for
by
the
trustee
of
the
appellant’s
series
A
and
B
bond
mortgages
with
funds
representing,
in
my
opinion,
proceeds
of
the
sale
of
the
appellant’s
series
B
bonds
except
to
the
extent
that
increment
on
United
States
Treasury
bills
in
which
the
borrowed
moneys
had
been
invested
may
have
entered
the
picture.
For
the
same
reasons
already
given
with
respect
to
1950,
I
am
unable
to
conclude
that
there
was
any
profit
from
these
investments
as
a
whole
in
1951,
For
1951
the
appellant
also
reported
revenue
from
United
States
Treasury
bills
held
during
the
year,
and
the
Minister’s
plea
applies
to
this
revenue
as
well
as
to
that
which
accrued
from
securities
of
Lakehead.
As
to
this,
there
is,
in
my
opinion,
no
evidence
whatever
that
any
of
the
United
States
Treasury
bills
held
by
the
appellant
in
1951
or
in
1952,
1953,
or
1954
were
in
fact
paid
for
with
funds
other
than
borrowed
moneys
forming
part
of
the
appellant’s
funded
debt,
and
accordingly
I
think
the
Minister’s
assumption
as
to
this
fact
must
be
taken
as
correct.
Nor
is
there
any
evidence
as
to
the
principal
amount
of
such
Treasury
bills
or
as
to
the
rate
earned
on
them
or
as
to
the
length
of
time
they
were
held.
Interest
on
the
appellant’s
funded
debt
was
accruing
in
each
of
the
years
1951,
1952,
1953,
and
1954
at
314%
per
cent
or
more,
and
I
am
unable
to
conclude
that
the
interest
so
payable
did
not
equal
or
exceed
the
interest
earned
on
such
Treasury
bills.
Even
if
I
were
satisfied
(which,
as
above
stated,
I
am
not)
that
some
profit
resulted
in
1951
from
the
appellant’s
investments
in
Lakehead
notes
and
bonds
taken
by
themselves,
I
would
be
unable
on
the
evidence
to
conclude
that
there
was
profit
from
the
notes,
bonds,
and
Treasury
bills
as
a
whole,
and
in
this
situation
the
Minister’s
assumption
that
there
was
no
profit
has
not
been
disproved.
In
my
opinion,
the
appellant
has
shown
no
sufficient
ground
for
disturbing
the
reassessment
for
1951.
The
situation
was
somewhat
different
in
1952.
In
that
year
there
were
no
new
purchases
of
bonds
the
interest
on
which
is
in
issue
in
this
appeal.
From
the
beginning
of
the
year
to
Decem-
ber
29,
1952,
the
appellant
held
$5,200,000
in
Lakehead
4%
demand
notes
and
throughout
the
year
it
held
$250,000
in
314%
Lakehead
bonds,
all
of
which
had
been
purchased
with
proceeds
of
the
sale
of
the
debenture
issue.
That
$17,000,000
issue,
however,
was
in
1952
largely
converted
into
shares
of
the
appellant’s
capital
stock,
with
the
result
that,
instead
of
the
appellant
being
obliged
to
pay
$679,960
for
interest
which
would
accrue
on
the
debenture
issue
as
it
had
been
obliged
to
do
in
1951,
the
interest
which
accrued
on
the
issue
in
1952
was,
on
a
rough
calculation
based
on
figures
in
Exhibit
3
and
the
appellant’s
income
tax
return,
less
than
$240,000.
This
reduction
in
interest
payable
by
the
appellant
is,
in
my
view,
applicable
to
the
debenture
issue
as
a
whole,
for
I
know
of
no
principle
which
enables
the
Minister
to
assert
that
the
portion
of
the
debenture
proceeds
loaned
to
Lakehead
must
be
taken
as
the
last
portion
of
the
debenture
issue
to
be
converted,
nor,
on
the
other
hand,
is
there
any
principle
which
enables
the
appellant
to
assert
that
the
portion
loaned
to
Lakehead
must
be
taken
as
the
earliest
portion
or
as
any
other
particular
portion
of
the
debenture
issue
to
be
converted.
In
this
situation,
the
appellant
would,
in
my
opinion,
be
entitled
to
attribute
a
proportion
of
the
reduction
of
interest
payable
on
the
debenture
issue
in
respect
of
1952
to
the
interest
payable
on
the
portion
of
the
debenture
proceeds
which
had
been
used
to
make
the
advances
totalling
$5,200,000
in
United
States
dollars
to
Lakehead
and
to
buy
the
first
$250,000
in
314%
Lakehead
bonds.
This
would
lead
to
the
conclusion
that
there
was
less
interest
payable
by
the
appellant
in
1952
on
the
money
used
to
acquire
these
particular
investments
than
the
interest
which
accrued
on
them,
because
for
a
substantial
part
of
the
year
no
interest
was
payable
any
longer
by
the
appellant
on
a
large
proportion
of
the
money
so
used
to
buy
them.
With
respect
to
the
other
$18,500,000
in
314%
Lakehead
bonds
held
by
the
appellant
in
1952,
the
situation
was
that
31%
per
cent
accrued
on
$18,500,000
for
the
whole
year,
while
the
interest
payable
by
the
appellant
was
314%
on
a
sum
somewhat
less
than
$18,500,000,
the
difference
being
the
amount
of
the
increment
on
United
States
Treasury
bills
which
had
been
used
in
1950
and
1951
to
pay
for
these
bonds.
This
would
indicate
and
satisfy
me
that
the
interest
which
accrued
in
1952
on
the
$5,200,000
in
4%
demand
notes
and
the
$18,750,000
in
314
%
Lakehead
bonds
was
not
equalled
by
the
interest
payable
by
the
appellant
on
the
borrowed
money
represented
by
these
investments,
and
there
would
thus
be
some
profit
in
respect
of
the
holding
of
them.
But
what
I
have
said
in
relation
to
interest
on
United
States
Treasury
bills
held
in
1951
applies
as
well
to
interest
on
United
States
Treasury
bills
held
in
1952.
On
the
evidence,
IJ
am
unable
to
determine
whether
the
revenue
from
Treasury
bills
was
exceeded
or
not
by
the
interest
payable
on
the
borrowed
money
used
to
buy
them.
Nor
am
I
able
because
of
this
to
find
that
there
was
profit
for
the
year
1952
from
the
holding
of
the
Lakehead
bonds
and
notes
and
the
United
States
Treasury
bills
taken
as
a
whole.
The
Minister’s
assumption
with
respect
to
1952
has
thus
not
been
disproved,
and
it
follows
that
the
reassessment
for
that
year
must
be
upheld.
The
situation
changed
again
in
1953.
At
the
beginning
of
the
year,
the
appellant’s
United
States
holdings—apart
from
Treasury
bills—consisted
of
the
$250,000
in
314%
Lakehead
bonds
which
had
been
purchased
on
January
23,
1950
with
debenture
proceeds
and
$15,500,000
Lakehead
314%
bonds
which
had
been
purchased
with
proceeds
of
the
appellant’s
314%
series
B
bonds.
From
January
15,
1953
onward
no
interest
accrued
on
any
of
the
debenture
issue,
since
practically
all
of
it
had
been
converted
and
the
remainder
had
been
called
for
redemption.
The
money
used
to
purchase
the
$250,000
in
314%
Lakehead
bonds
was,
therefore,
no
longer
borrowed
money.
It
was
no
longer
part
of
the
appellant’s
funded
debt,
nor
was
any
interest
whatever
payable
on
it.
Nor,
in
my
opinion,
could
either
the
withdrawal
of
a
like
amount
from
the
trustee
of
the
series
A
and
B
bond
proceeds
on
the
strength
of
a
certificate
that
the
appellant
had
acquired
this
investment,
nor
the
pledging
of
the
investment
with
the
trustee
as
security
for
the
series
A
and
B
bonds
either
serve
to
alter
the
character
of
the
moneys
which
were
used
to
buy
the
investment
or
afford
a
sufficient
relationship
between
this
investment
or
the
holding
of
it
and
the
appellant’s
expenditure
of
interest
on
its
funded
debt
to
enable
it
to
be
said
that
in
1953
or
1954
interest
was
payable
on
the
money
used
to
buy
this
investment.
The
fact
is,
no
interest
was
payable
in
1953
or
1954
on
the
money
used
to
buy
this
investment,
because
the
money
used
to
buy
it
represented
part
of
the
appellant’s
capital
stock.
The
Minister’s
first
assumption
for
1953
is,
therefore,
disproved
insofar
as
it
relates
to
the
interest
accruing
to
the
appellant
on
these
bonds.
Moreover,
as
previously
indicated,
I
think
there
would
be
some
slight
profit
on
the
other
$18,500,000
in
Lakehead
314%
bonds
equal
to
the
314%
interest
on
the
increment
on
United
States
Treasury
bills
which
had
been
used
to
purchase
them.
Thus,
so
far
as
these
314%
bonds
alone
are
concerned,
there
would,
in
my
opinion,
be
a
profit
for
the
year.
In
addition
to
the
appellant’s
holdings
at
the
beginning
of
the
year,
the
appellant
in
1953
made
purchases
of
4%
third
series
Lakehead
bonds
due
March
25,
1973,
as
follows:
As
to
the
first
two
of
these
purchases,
the
appellant
had
on
April
30,
1953,
sold
$15,000,000
of
its
4%
first
mortgage
and
collateral
trust
bonds,
series
C,
and
on
July
29,
1953
had
sold
$30,000,000
of
the
same
series,
and
in
each
case
the
proceeds
of
such
sales
were
paid
directly
by
the
trustee
under
the
indenture
securing
the
appellant’s
bonds
to
the
trustee
under
the
indenture
securing
the
Lakehead
bonds.
There
is
thus
no
doubt
that
the
Minister’s
assumption
that
the
first
two
of
these
purchases
were
made
with
moneys
included
in
the
appellant’s
funded
debt
is
correct.
With
respect
to
the
remaining
purchase,
the
evidence
is
also
quite
clear.
It
appears
that
on
October
9
the
appellant
sold
$15,000,000
principal
amount
of
its
4%
series
C
bonds
and
that
on
October
15
the
trustee
invested
all
but
$146.02
of
this
sum
in
United
States
Treasury
bills
due
January
14,
1954.
On
October
23,
by
three
net
property
addition
certificates,
the
appellant
withdrew
from
the
trustee
the
whole
of
the
funds
representing
the
$15,000,000,
and
when
the
$10,000,000
in
4%
Lakehead
third
series
bonds
were
purchased
on
October
30,
1953,
the
appellant
paid
for
them
with
$10,025,000
in
United
States
Treasury
bills
due
January
14,
1954,
valued
at
$9,998,-
197.05
and
$1,802.95
in
cash
to
make
up
the
$10,000,000.
The
United
States
Treasury
bills
so
used
were
some
of
the
bills
purchased
by
the
trustee
on
October
15,
1953
with
proceeds
of
sale
of
the
appellant’s
4%
bonds.
With
respect
to
the
$1,802.95
paid
in
cash,
since
the
appellant
had
had
substantial
revenue
from
its
operations
for
more
than
a
year
and
in
that
time
had
not
withdrawn
and
put
into
the
general
funds
any
borrowed
money
except
the
$146.02,
I
think
it
is
apparent
that
the
difference
was
not
borrowed
money.
But
to
the
extent
of
$146.02
the
evidence
does
not
satisfy
me
that
the
sum
in
question
was
not
borrowed
money
which
was
included
in
the
appellant’s
funded
debt.
Accordingly,
I
find
that,
except
for
the
difference
between
$1,802.95
and
$146.02
and
except
for
whatever
increment
had
accrued
on
the
United
States
Treasury
bills,
the
funds
used
to
purchase
the
$10,000,000
in
4%
Lakehead
third
series
bonds
on
October
30,
1953
represented
borrowed
money
which
w
as
included
in
the
appellant’s
funded
debt,
being
part
of
the
proceeds
of
the
sale
of
the
appellant’s
4%
series
C
bonds.
On
the
evidence,
I
think
it
is
clear
that
there
could
be
no
profit
from
the
interest
on
the
$45,000,000
in
4%
Lakehead
bonds,
though
there
would
have
been
some
profit
in
respect
of
the
4%
interest
on
$1,656.93
of
the
sum
paid
in
cash
and
on
the
increment
from
Treasury
bills
used
in
paying
for
the
$10,000,000
in
4%
Lake-
head
bonds.
The
year
1953,
however,
was
another
in
which
the
appellant
reported
revenue
from
United
States
Treasury
bills
and,
for
the
reasons
already
given
with
respect
to
1951
and
1952,
I
am
unable
to
find
on
the
evidence
that
the
revenue
from
the
appellant’s
holdings
in
1953
in
Lakehead
314%
and
4%
bonds
and
United
States
Treasury
bills
as
a
whole
exceeded
the
interest
payable
on
the
borrowed
money
used
to
acquire
them.
The
reassessment
for
1953
must,
accordingly,
stand.
May
1,1953
_.
|
_.
$15,000,000
|
July
31,1953
|
$30,000,000
|
October
30,
1953
|
$10,000,000
|
In
1954
the
appellant
continued
to
hold
the
$250,000
in
314%
Lakehead
bonds,
the
$18,500,000
in
314%
Lakehead
bonds
(except
to
the
extent
that
they
had
been
redeemed
pursuant
to
sinking
fund
provisions),
and
the
$55,000,000
in
4%
Lakehead
bonds
purchased
in
1953.
What
I
have
said
about
these
holdings
in
1953
applies
as
well
to
1954.
It
indicates
that,
taken
by
themselves,
there
would
be
some
excess
of
interest
receivable
over
what
was
payable
by
the
appellant
on
the
borrowed
money
used
to
acquire
them.
In
addition,
two
more
purchases
of
Lakehead
securities
were
made.
The
first
of
these
was
a
purchase
on
June
11,
1954
of
$5,000,000
of
Lakehead
4%
third
series
bonds
due
March
25,
1973.
The
appellant
on
April
28,
1954
had
sold
$15,000,000
of
its
354%
first
mortgage
and
collateral
trust
bonds,
series
D,
and
on
April
29,
1954,
had
withdrawn
from
the
trustee
$10,000,-
000
of
the
proceeds
in
cash.
On
the
evidence,
I
would
infer
that
this
sum
was
deposited
in
the
appellant’s
account
with
the
Agency
Bank
of
Montreal
in
New
York.
On
May
5,
1954,
the
trustee
invested
the
remaining
$5,000,000
in
United
States
Treasury
bills
due
July
29,
1954,
which
were
withdrawn
from
the
trustee
by
the
appellant
on
May
21.
The
appellant
had
previously
invested
some
$6,000,000
of
its
funds
in
United
States
Treasury
bills
maturing
on
the
same
day,
some
or
all
of
which
funds
may
on
the
evidence
have
been
part
of
the
$10,000,000
so
withdrawn
in
cash.
When,
on
June
11,
1954,
the
purchase
of
the
$9,000,000
in
Lakehead
4%
bonds
above
mentioned
was
made,
the
appellant
paid
for
them
with
United
States
Treasury
bills
due
July
29,
1954
in
the
amount
of
$4,500,000,
valued
at
$4,496,508.75,
and
by
a
cheque
for
$503,491.25
drawn
on
the
appellant’s
account
at
the
Agency
Bank
of
Montreal
at
New
York.
There
is
evidence
that
the
United
States
Treasury
bills
used
may
have
been
the
same
ones
transferred
to
the
appellant
by
the
trustee.
They
may,
I
think,
also
have
been
United
States
Treasury
bills
purchased
with
part
of
the
$10,000,000
withdrawn
in
cash
from
the
trustee.
In
either
case,
they
would
have
been
funds
representing
borrowed
money.
Or
they
may
have
been
wholly
or
partly
United
States
Treasury
bills
purchased
with
moneys
that
had
not
been
borrowed.
In
this
situation,
however,
the
onus
resting
on
the
appellant
to
show
that
the
funds
used
to
make
the
purchase
were
not
borrowed
moneys
or
investments
representing
borrowed
moneys
has
not
been
discharged.
The
same
observation
applies
to
the
$503,491.25
which
was
paid
in
cash,
there
being
no
evidence
to
show
that
it
was
not
borrowed
money
which
the
appellant
had
withdrawn
from
the
trustee.
Accordingly,
I
find
that
these
$5,000,000
in
4%
Lakehead
bonds
were
purchased
with
funds
included
in
the
appellant’s
funded
debt,
except
to
the
extent
that
the
value
of
such
United
States
Treasury
bills
may
have
been
due
to
increment
accruing
since
their
purchase.
On
this
money,
however,
the
rate
of
interest
payable
by
the
appellant
was
35%
per
cent,
which
is
not
equal
to
the
four
per
cent
which
accrued
on
the
Lakehead
bond
so
purchased.
It
follows
that
there
could
be
some
small
amount
of
profit
resulting
from
the
difference
in
the
rate
and
from
the
four
per
cent
on
the
portion
of
the
$5,000,000
representing
increment
on
Treasury
bills
used
to
pay
for
the
bonds.
In
the
other
purchase,
the
appellant
on
August
12,
1954,
bought
$8,000,000
of
Lakehead
854%
fourth
series
bonds.
Three
weeks
earlier,
on
July
21,
1954,
the
appellant
had
sold
an
additional
$15,000,000
of
its
354%
first
mortgage
and
collateral
trust
bonds,
series
D,
and
on
the
same
day
had
withdrawn
from
the
trustee
sums
of
the
proceeds
totalling
$12,185,472.11.
This
sum
was
deposited
in
the
appellant’s
account
at
the
Agency
Bank
of
Montreal
in
New
York.
On
the
same
day,
the
appellant
bought
United
States
Treasury
bills
due
October
21,
1954
in
the
amount
of
$10,300,000,
and
on
August
12,
1954
it
used
$7,715,000
of
the
same
Treasury
bills
valued
at
$7,701,113
and
a
cheque
on
its
account
at
the
Agency
Bank
of
Montreal
at
New
York
for
$298,887
to
pay
for
the
$8,000,000
of
354%
Lakehead
bonds
purchased
as
above
mentioned.
While
it
is
conceivable
that
funds
other
than
those
withdrawn
from
the
trustee
may
have
been
used
by
the
appellant
to
purchase
the
United
States
Treasury
bills,
on
the
evidence
as
a
whole
I
see
nothing
to
indicate
that
any
other
moneys
were
used
to
purchase
them
or
that
any
other
moneys
which
might
have
been
used
were
not
borrowed
moneys
which
had
been
withdrawn
from
the
trustee
on
some
earlier
occasion,
and
the
onus
of
demonstrating
that
the
$8,000,000
in
Lakehead
bonds
was
not
paid
for
with
borrowed
money
and
investments
representing
borrowed
money
which
was
included
in
the
appellant’s
funded
debt
is
not
discharged.
In
this
situation,
I
find
that
the
$8,000,000
in
Lakehead
354%
bonds
were
purchased
with
borrowed
money
on
which
the
appellant
was
obliged
to
pay
interest
at
354
per
cent
except
to
the
extent,
if
any,
to
which
increment
which
accrued
on
United
States
Treasury
bills
used
by
the
appellant
to
pay
for
the
Lakehead
bonds
entered
into
the
picture.
There
could
thus
be
profit
in
the
case
of
this
$8,000,000
in
354%
Lakehead
bonds
to
the
extent
of
352%
interest
on
such
increment.
However,
despite
the
indications
that
there
may
have
been
some
amount
of
profit
from
the
Lakehead
holdings
by
themselves
in
1954,
the
appellant
in
this
year
as
well
reported
revenue
from
United
States
Treasury
bills
and,
viewing
such
Lakehead
holdings
and
holdings
of
United
States
Treasury
bills
as
a
whole,
I
am
unable,
for
the
reasons
already
given
with
respect
to
1951,
1952
and
1953,
to
conclude
that
the
revenue
from
such
holdings
exceeded
the
interest
payable
by
the
appellant
on
borrowed
money
used
to
acquire
them.
It
follows
that
the
reassessment
for
1954
must
also
be
allowed
to
stand.
The
appellant
also
made
an
alternative
submission
that,
as
it
had
never
received
the
15
per
cent
of
the
interest
which
was
deducted
in
payment
of
the
tax
in
the
United
States,
only
85
per
cent
of
the
interest
which
accrued
in
the
United
States
should
have
been
included
in
the
computation
of
its
income
for
each
year.
However,
such
information
as
appears
in
the
record
respecting
the
15%
tax
suggests
that
it
was
an
obligation
that
arose
after
the
interest
had
accrued
and
upon
its
being
paid
to
the
person
entitled
to
receive
it.
While
it
may
be
that
the
appellant
could
not
obtain
or
recover
the
money
representing
the
15
per
cent
because,
as
a
result
of
the
statute
imposing
the
tax,
the
15
per
cent
had
at
some
stage
been
lawfully
diverted
to
payment
of
such
tax,
the
fact
is
that
the
whole
of
the
interest
accrued
to
and
belonged
to
the
appellant.
But
for
the
taxing
statute
it
was
receivable
by
the
appellant
and,
when
diverted,
it
paid
a
tax
levied
on
what
belonged
to
the
appellant;
that
is
to
say,
the
interest
which
had
accrued
to
it.
Accordingly,
I
think
the
whole
amount
of
such
interest
must
be
brought
into
the
computation
of
the
appellant’s
income
for
the
purposes
of
The
Income
Tax
Act
and
the
15%
tax
paid
on
it
can
be
brought
into
such
computation
only
if
it
can
qualify
as
an
allowable
deduction.
In
my
opinion,
it
does
not
qualify
as
such
a
deduction
because
it
was
not
an
incident
of
the
process
or
means
by
which
income
was
produced
but
was
an
application
or
use—though
an
involuntary
one—of
so
much
of
such
interest
after
it
had
been
earned.
In
my
opinion,
the
appeal
fails
as
to
all
of
the
years
under
review,
and
it
will
be
dismissed
with
costs.
Judgment
accordingly.