THURLOW,
J.:—This
is
an
appeal
by
the
Minister
of
National
Revenue
from
a
judgment
of
the
Income
Tax
Appeal
Board
dated
November
22,
1957
(18
Tax
A.B.C.
208),
allowing
an
appeal
by
William
Robert
Grieve
against
income
tax
re-assessments
for
the
years
1953
and
1954.
Mr.
Grieve
died
on
August
8,
1958,
and
at
the
opening
of
the
trial
by
consent
Norman
LeFevre
Grieve
and
the
Toronto
General
Trusts
Corporation,
the
executors
named
in
his
will,
were
made
parties
respondent,
and
the
proceedings
were
continued
against
them.
The
matter
in
issue
is
whether
Mr.
Grieve
was
entitled,
in
computing
his
income
for
income
tax
purposes
for
the
years
in
question,
to
deduct
the
whole
of
his
farming
losses
for
those
years
or
was
limited
to
a
deduction
of
half
of
them
by
Section
13
of
the
Income
Tax
Act.
For
1953
there
is
a
further
issue
of
whether
or
not
he
was
entitled
to
average
his
income
pursuant
to
Section
42
of
the
Act.
Section
13
of
the
Income
Tax
Act,
R.S.C.
1952,
c.
148,
as
applicable
to
the
years
1953
and
1954,
was
as
follows
:
“13.
(1)
Where
a
taxpayer’s
chief
source
of
income
for
a
taxation
year
is
neither
farming
nor
a
combination
of
farming
and
some
other
source
of
income,
his
income
for
the
year
shall
be
deemed
to
be
not
less
than
his
income
from
all
sources
other
than
farming
minus
the
lesser
of
(a)
one-half
his
farming
loss
for
the
year,
or
(b)
$5,000.
(2)
For
the
purpose
of
this
section,
the
Minister
may
determine
that
a
taxpayer’s
chief
source
of
income
for
a
taxation
year
is
neither
farming
nor
a
combination
of
farming
and
some
other
source
of
income.
(3)
For
the
purpose
of
this
section,
a
‘farming
loss’
is
a
loss
from
farming
computed
by
applying
the
provisions
of
this
Act
respecting
computation
of
income
from
a
business
mitt
at
is
mutandis
except
that
no
deduction
may
be
made
under
paragraph
(a)
of
subsection
(1)
of
section
11.”
Section
42
provides
a
right
for
a
taxpayer
to
elect
to
average
his
income
‘‘where
a
taxpayer’s
chief
source
of
income
has
been
farming
or
fishing
during
a
taxation
year
(in
this
section
referred
to
as
the
‘year
of
averaging’)
and
the
four
immediately
preceding
years
(in
this
section
referred
to
as
the
‘preceding
years’).”
William
Robert
Grieve
was
a
farmer
who
had
carried
on
farming
operations
for
many
years
prior
to
1953
and
1954.
Farming
was
his
sole
occupation.
In
some
years
these
operations
had
yielded
a
profit.
In
others,
notably
in
1953
and
1954,
they
resulted
in
a
loss.
The
following
figures
relating
to
his
income
were
put
in
evidence:
|
Investment
|
Farming
|
Farming
|
Year
|
Income
ncome
|
Profit
|
Loss
|
1942
|
$15,706.00
|
$
565,67
|
|
1948
|
15,030.24
|
|
$
528.98
|
1944
_.
|
15,187.38
|
1,570.08
|
|
1945
|
......
14,784.56
|
2,616.61
|
|
1946
|
15,264.97
|
170.29
|
|
1947
|
16,726.04
|
314.72
|
1948
|
17,278.57
|
238.04
|
1949
|
16,541.47
|
1,386.19
|
1950
|
15,800.71
|
260.60
|
1951
|
14,878.89
|
3,674.32
|
1952
|
14,238.12
|
4,898.80
|
1953
|
9,297.23
|
6,539.19
|
1954
|
11,062.64
|
4,851.77
|
In
computing
his
income
for
1953
and
1954
for
the
purposes
of
the
Income
Tax
Act,
Mr.
Grieve
deducted
his
farming
losses
for
these
years
from
his
other
income,
the
bulk
of
which
was
income
which
he
received
as
life
beneficiary
of
an
estate.
For
1953
he
also
claimed,
pursuant
to
Section
42,
to
elect
to
average
his
income
in
accordance
with
the
provisions
of
that
section.
His
returns
for
the
years
1953
and
1954
were
dated
April
8,
1954
and
April
12,
1955,
respectively.
In
the
return
for
1953,
gross
farming
revenue
was
reported
at
$2,255.93
and
farming
expenses
at
$8,795.12,
including
$424.19
for
capital
cost
allowances,
and
a
tax
refund
of
$509.23
was
claimed
as
a
result
of
the
averaging
under
Section
42.
In
the
return
for
1954,
the
farming
revenue
was
reported
at
$2,542.42,
the
expenses
claimed
amounted
to
$7,394.19,
including
$411.69
for
capital
cost
allowances,
and
tax
was
computed
at
$487.50.
By
notices
of
assessment
dated
May
91,
1954
and
May
18,
1955
respectively,
the
Minister
advised
Mr.
Grieve
that
tax
levied
for
1953
resulted
in
a
credit
of
$509.23
and
that
the
tax
levied
for
1954
was
$487.50,
these
amounts
being
exactly
as
computed
in
Mr.
Grieve’s
returns.
On
or
about
January
7,
1955,
by
a
letter
directed
on
behalf
of
the
Chief
Assessor
for
the
Vancouver
Taxation
District
to
a
firm
of
chartered
accountants
who
acted
for
Mr.
Grieve,
the
latter
was
informed
that
his
income
tax
returns
for
1953
and
earlier
years
were
under
review
and
information
was
requested
on
a
number
of
details
pertaining
to
his
farming
operations.
He
was
also
informed
that,
as
the
farming
losses
incurred
in
the
averaging
period
amounted
to
$16,074.31
and
were
offset
only
by
the
1950
profit
of
$260.60,
while
during
the
same
period
investment
and
other
income
totalled
$17,851.42
(sic),
his
chief
source
of
income
did
not
appear
to
be
from
farming
and
therefore
the
averaging
“privilege”
could
not
be
“extended”
to
him.
The
accountants
answered
the
questions
and
on
March
8,
1955
a
further
letter
was
addressed
on
behalf
of
the
Chief
Assessor
to
Mr.
Grieve.
In
this
letter
he
was
again
informed
that
his
returns
for
1952
and
1953
were
under
review
and,
after
setting
out
Section
13
verbatim,
the
letter
went
on
to
state
that
it
was
proposed
to
recommend
to
the
Deputy
Minister
that
he
make
a
determination
under
Section
13(2)
that
Mr.
Grieve’s
chief
source
of
income
for
1952
and
1953
was
neither
farming.
nor
a
combination
of
farming
and
some
other
source
of
income.
In
the
final
paragraph,
Mr.
Grieve
was
informed
that
any
representations
he
might
wish
to
make
should
be
made,
preferably
in
writing,
within
two
weeks,
after
which
time
the
matter
would
be
referred
to
head
office.
Some
further
correspondence,
in
which
the
accountants
offered
representations
on
his
behalf,
followed,
and
later,
on
December
16,
1955,
a
notice
of
re-assessment
was
sent
to
him
in
which
his
tax
for
the
year
was
computed
at
$835.74.
Some
two
months
later,
a
letter
was
sent
to
him
referring
to
the
letter
of
March
8,
1955,
and
stating
that
the
Deputy
Minister
had
determined
that
Mr.
Grieve’s
chief
source
of
income
for
1953
was
neither
farming
nor
a
combination
of
farming
and
some
other
source
of
income.
The
re-assessment
had
been
made
on
that
basis,
and
in
it
one-half
only
of
the
farm
loss
for
the
year
(after
deducting
therefrom
the
capital
cost
allowances
claimed)
was
allowed
as
a
deduction.
The
election
to
average
income
pursuant
to
Section
42
was
also
rejected,
because
‘‘the
chief
source
of
income
during
the
averaging
period
does
not
appear
to
have
been
derived
from
‘farming’
as
required
by
s.
42(1)
of
the
Income
Tax
Act.’’
A
notice
of
objection
was
given
by
Mr.
Grieve,
and
subsequently,
on
July
26,
1956,
the
Minister,
per
the
Deputy
Minister
(as
to
which
see
Section
116(1)),
confirmed
the
re-assessment
as
having
been
made
‘‘in
accordance
with
the
provisions
of
the
Act
and
in
particular
on
the
ground
that
under
the
provision
of
s-s.
(2)
of
s.
13
of
the
Act
the
Minister
has
determined
that
the
taxpayer’s
chief
source
of
income
is
not
farming
or
a
combination
of
farming
and
some
other
source
of
income;
that
the
taxpayer’s
chief
source
of
income
was
not
farming
within
s-s.
(2)
of
s.
41
of
the
Act.”
It
appears
from
the
notice
of
objection
to
the
re-assessment
for
1954
that
on
January
5,
1956
a
letter,
setting
out
Section
13
and
‘‘advising
of
intended
reduction
of
farm
loss
claimed”
was
sent
by
the
District
Taxation
Office
to
Mr.
Grieve
in
respect
of
his
1954
income.
To
this
letter
Mr.
Grieve
made
no
reply
‘‘as
the
same
point
was
being
dealt
with
at
that
time
in
respect
of
a
1953
assessment.’’
This,
I
assume,
refers
to
a
proposed
reference
to
the
Deputy
Minister
to
obtain
his
determination
under
Section
13(2)
with
respect
to
the
1954
taxation
year.
In
any
case,
on
January
26,
1956,
notice
of
re-assessment
for
1954
was
sent
to
Mr.
Grieve,
accompanied
by
a
letter
stating
that
the
Deputy
Minister
had
determined
that
Mr.
Grieve’s
chief
source
of
income
for
1954
was
neither
farming
nor
a
combination
of
farming
and
some
other
source
of
income.
By
this
re-assessment,
as
well,
only
half
of
the
farm
loss
claimed
(after
deducting
capital
cost
allowance)
was
allowed
as
a
deduction
from
other
income.
Following
a
notice
of
objection
given
by
Mr.
Grieve,
this
re-assessment
was
also
confirmed
by
the
Minister,
per
the
Deputy
Minister,
as
having
been
‘‘made
in
accordance
with
the
provisions
of
the
Act
and
in
particular
on
the
ground
that
under
the
provisions
of
subsection
(2)
of
Section
13
of
the
Act
the
Minister
has
determined
that
the
taxpayer’s
chief
source
of
income
is
not
farming
or
a
combination
of
farming
and
some
other
source
of
income.
’
’
Notice
of
appeal
to
the
Income
Tax
Appeal
Board
from
both
re-assessments
was
then
given,
and
on
the
matter
coming
before
the
Board
the
appeal
was
allowed
by
a
judgment
the
effect
of
which
was
to
vacate
the
re-assessments
for
both
years.
The
Minister
thereupon
appealed
to
this
Court
and,
in
his
notice
of
appeal,
set
out
as
allegations
the
deduction
by
Mr.
Grieve
of
amounts
representing
farm
losses
in
calculating
his
income
for
the
1953
and
1954
taxation
years,
the
original
assessments,
and
the
re-assessments,
and
went
on
to
state
in
paragraph
4
as
follows
:
“4.
Before
the
making
of
the
re-assessments
referred
to
in
paragraph
3
hereof,
determinations
were
made
under
subsection
2
of
Section
13
of
the
Income
Tax
Act,
that
the
Respondent’s
chief
source
of
income
for
the
1953
and
1954
taxation
years
was
neither
farming
nor
a
combination
of
farming
and
some
other
source
of
income.”
All
of
these
allegations,
as
well
as
allegations
relating
to
the
‘notices
of
objection,
confirmation
of
the
re-assessments
by
the
Minister,
and
the
appeal
to
the
Income
Tax
Appeal
Board
were
admitted
in
the
reply
filed
on
behalf
of
Mr.
Grieve.
In
subsequent
paragraphs
of
the
reply,
however,
reasons
(the
truth
of
which
on
the
evidence
there
is
no
reason
to
doubt)
were
given
accounting
for
the
1953
and
1954
farming
losses
as
being
the
result
of
marketing
conditions
and
severe
frosts
which
killed
many
of
the
taxpayer’s
apple
trees,
and
it
was
objected
that
the
determinations
made
by
the
Minister
under
Section
13(2)
-were
subject
to
review
by
this
Court,
that
the
taxpayer’s
chief
-source
of
income
for
1953
and
1954
was
either
farming
or
a
combination
of
farming
and
some
other
source
of
income,
and
alternatively,
that,
in
view
of
the
original
assessments,
the
Minister
was
functus
officio
and
had
no
power
to
make
the
re-assessments.
Under
the
last-mentioned
plea,
it
was
submitted
that
it
must
be
presumed
that
the
Minister
exercised
his
power
to
make
a
determination
as
provided
by
Section
13(2)
prior
to
or
at
the
time
of
the
making
of
the
first
assessment
for
each
of
the
years
in
question
and
that
thereafter
he
was
functus
officio
and
without
power
to
make
the
later
determinations
which
were
referred
to
in
the
notice
of
appeal
in
the
paragraph
above
quoted.
If
this
contention
is
sound,
it
goes
to
the
root
of
both
re-assessments.
As
there
was
no
direct
or
other
evidence
that
the
Minister
had
made
a
determination
for
either
year
under
Section
13(2)
prior
to
giving
the
first
notice
of
assessment
for
that
year,
the
substantial
question
raised
by
the
submission
is
that
of
what
is
to
be
inferred
as
to
the
exercise
by
the
Minister
of
his
power
from
the
giving
of
the
first
notices
of
assessment.
In
approaching
the
problem,
it
is,
I
think,
important
to
note
that,
while
both
the
function
of
assessing
the
tax
under
the
authority
of
Section
46
and
that
of
making
a
determination
under
Section
13(2)
are
by
the
Act
committed
to
the
Minister,
they
are
separate
and
different
functions
and
their
effects
are
not
the
same.
The
first,
that
of
assessing
the
tax,
is
strictly
an
administrative
function.
It
involves
simply
the
application
by
the
Minister
of
the
substantive
law
to
the
facts
as
they
appear.
Liability
for
the
tax
imposed
by
the
statute
is
not
affected
by
the
assessment
so
made
being
incorrect
or
incomplete
or
by
the
fact
that
no.
assessment
has
been
made,
and,
within
the
times
limited
by
Section
46(4),
the
assessing
function
may
be
reexercised
to
realize
the
full
amount
of
the
tax
imposed
by
the
statute.
If
there
is
any
dispute
between
the
taxpayer
and
the
Minister,
both
the
facts
and
the
law,
as
well
as
the
application
of
the
law
to
the
facts,
are
left
to
be
determined
by
the
Court
on
an
appeal
as
provided
by
the
statute.
The
second
function,
that
of
making
a
determination
under
Section
13(2),
is
a
judicial
function.
The
subsection
constitutes
the
Minister
the
judge,
for
the
purpose
of
Section
13,
of
the
material
fact
on
which
the
application
of
Section
13(1)
depends
and,
subject
to
his
decision
being
not
contrary
to
“
sound
and
fundamental
principles”,
empowers
him
to
bind
the
taxpayer
by
such
determination.
I
do
not
think,
however,
that
it
follows
that
a
determination
pursuant
to
Section
13(2)
is
necessary
in
every
case
to
which
the
rule
of
Section
13(1)
may
apply.
For
example,
if
a
taxpayer
files
a
return
and,
in
doing
so,
correctly
computes
his
income
by
applying
the
rule
of
Section
13(1),
I
can
see
no
occasion
for
the
Minister
to
make
a
determination
of
the
fact
under
Section
13(2)
before
making
an
assessment
of
tax
for,
in
such
a
case.
there
is
no
issue
to
be
determined.
Nor
do
I
think
it
would
follow
from
the
fact
of
an
assessment
having
been
made
that
the
Minister
must
necessarily
have
made
a
determination
under
Section
13(2)
and
become
functus
officio
and,
therefore,
powerless
to
vary
the
assessment
if
it
subsequently
appeared
that
Section
13(1)
was
in
fact
inapplicable
and
that
the
computation
was
thus
wrong,
for
until
the
matter
was
raised
by
someone
there
would
have
been
no
issue
to
be
determined.
As
I
see
it,
this
power
is
provided
for
and
is
to
be
exercised
by
the
Minister
in
situations
where
an
issue,
whether
raised
by
the
taxpayer
or
the
Minister,
exists
as
to
the
material
fact
on
which
the
application
of
Section
13(1)
depends.
The
power
conferred
by
Section
13(2)
is
substantially
different
from
that
which
the
Minister
had
under
Section
13(2)
as
it
was
prior
to
the
repeal
and
substitution
of
Section
13
by
S.
of
C,
1952,
c.
29,
s.
4.
For
a
review
of
the
history
of
this
legislation,
see
M.N.R.
v.
Robertson,
[1954]
Ex.
C.R.
321
at
328;
[1954],
C.T.C.
110
at
117.
Formerly,
the
power
was
to
determine
what
the
chief
Source
of
income
was.
That
power
and
the
rule
for-computing
income
contained
in
subsection
(1),
as
it
then
was,
applied
to
the
right
of
taxpayers
to
deduct
losses
not
related
to
the
taxpayer’s
chief
source
of
income,
while
the
present
section
is
concerned
only
with
the
right
to
deduct
farming
losses.
The
power
contained
in
the
applicable
Section
13(2)
is
not
a
power
to
determine
what
the
chief
source
of
income
was,
nor
is
it
a
power
to
determine,
in
any
general
sense,
what
it
was
not.
It
is
limited
to
determining
that
the
chief
source
of
income
was
neither
of
two
things,
namely
farming
or
a
combination
of
farming
and
some
other
source
of
income.
The
making
of
such
a
determination
results
only
in
a
negative
conclusion
of
fact,
and
the
absence
of
such
a
conclusion
cannot
imply
a
positive
determination
that
the
chief
source
of
income
was
one
thing
or
another.
At
most,
the
absence
of
such
a
conclusion
can
imply
only
one
of
two
things,
either
that
the
Minister
has
not
exercised
the
power,
or
that
he
has
considered
the
matter
judicially,
pursuant
to
Section
13(2),
and
has
come
to
the
conclusion
that
the
facts
do
not
warrant
such
a
determination.
Only
in
the
latter
case
could
there
be
any
possible
application
of
the
principle
that,
having
exercised
the
power,
the
Minister
had
become
functus
officio.
Now
it
is,
I
think,
also
important
to
observe
that,
in
the
present
ease,
the
first
assessments
for
1953
and
1954
were
predicated
not
on
the
basis
of
the
rule
of
Section
13(1)
being
applicable,
but
on
the
basis
of
the
rule
of
Section
13(1)
being
inapplicable.
This
suggests
that
the
Minister
had
not
made
a
determination
that
the
taxpayer’s
chief
source
of
income
was
neither
farming
nor
a
combination
as
set
out
in
Section
13(2),
for
the
assessments
do
not
reflect
the
application
of
the
rule
of
Section
13(1).
It
1s,
accordingly,
consistent
with
the
assessments
to
infer
that
the
applicability
of
Section
13(1)
was
not
considered
at
all—in
which
case
it
would,
in
my
opinion,
remain
the
duty
of
the
Minister
to
consider
it
and
to
re-assess
acordingly,
if
necessary—
or
that
the
Minister,
acting
through
his
subordinates
engaged
in
carrying
out
the
administrative
duty
of
assessing,
considered
the
matter
but
came
to
the
conclusion
that
the
facts
did
not
warrant
raising
an
issue
between
himself
and
the
taxpayer
on
the
point.
In
the
latter
event
as
well,
I
think
that
it
would
be
the
duty
of
the
Minister,
in
view
of
Section
46(3)
and
(4),
and
that
it
would
remain
open
to
him,
to
review
the
assessment
and,
if
necessary,
raise
the
issue
at
a
later
time
within
the
periods
limited
by
Section
46(4).
Since
these
explanations
are
not
inconsistent
with
the
assessments,
it
cannot,
in
my
opinion,
be
said
that
the
raising
of
an
issue
and
the
exercise
of
the
power
to
determine
it
under
Section
13(2)
are
necessarily
to
be
inferred
where
all
that
has
happened
is
that
a
taxpayer
in
his
return
has
proceeded
to
calculate
his
income
and
his
tax
on
the
basis
of
Section
13(1)
being
inapplicable
and
an
assessment
of
tax
has
been
made
which
apparently
proceeds
on
the
same
basis,
and
I
think
this
is
so
even
though
both
the
taxpayer’s
and
the
Minister’s
computations
may
be
quite
wrong
and
even
though
it
was
the
Minister’s
duty
in
his
administrative
capacity
before
making
the
assessment
to
examine
the
taxpayer’s
return
and
to
consider
and
apply
all
relevant
provisions
of
the
statute.
I
doubt
that
any
inference
can
ever
be
drawn
from
a
mere
assessment
of
tax
as
to
the
making
of
a
determination
pursuant
to
Section
13(2),
but
whether
it
can
in
some
instances
or
not,
unless
an
issue
for
determination
under
that
provision
has
been
raised
prior
to
the
making
of
the
assessment,
I
am
of
the
opinion
that
the
mere
making
of
the
assessment
implies
nothing
as
to
whether
or
not
the
power
to
determine
such
an
issue
has
been
exercised.
In
M.N.R.
v.
Robertson,
[1954]
Ex.
C.
R.
321;
[1954]
C.T.C.,
110,
Potter,
J.,
on
the
evidence
before
him,
drew
an
inference;
that
the
power
conferred
on
the
Minister
by
Section
13
had
in
fact
been
exercised.
There,
however,
both
the
provisions
of
Section
13
and
the
power
of
determination
given
by
subsection
(2)
were
widely
different
from
those
applicable
to
the
years
1953‘
and
1954,
the
computation
on
which
the
assessment
in
question
was
based
was
at
variance
with
the
taxpayer’s
computation,
and
Potter,
J.,
appears
to
have
drawn
his
conclusion
that
the
determination
had
been
made
not
merely
from
the
notice
of
assessment
and
a
a
letter
referring
to
subsections
(3)
and
(4)
of
Section
13,
though
not
to
subsection
(2),
which
had
accompanied
the
notice
of
assessment,
but
as
well
from
the
Minister’s
decision
(following
the
appellant’s
notice
of
objection),
in
which
it
was
stated
that
the
appellant’s
chief
source
of
income
was
neither
farming
nor
a
combination
of
farming
and
some
other
source
of
income
within
the
meaning
of
subsection
(3)
of
Section
13
of
the
Act.
In
the
present
case,
the
original
assessments
being
in
conformity
with
the
taxpayer’s
computations,
there
was,
in
my
opinion,
no
issue
for
determination
by
the
Minister
under
Section
13(2)
until
such
an
issue
was
opened
in
the
respective
letters
whereby
the
taxpayer
was
informed
that
it
was
proposed
to
refer
the
matter
to
the
Deputy
Minister
for
his
determination,
and
the
taxpayer
was
invited
to
submit
representations
thereon.
In
this
situation,
there
is,
in
my
opinion,
no
foundation
for
an
inference
that
the
Minister
had
made
determinations
or
had
exhausted
his
power
prior
to
or
when
making
the
first
assessments,
and
I
am
therefore
of
the
opinion
that
the
Minister
was
not
functus
officio
at
the
time
of
making
the
determinations
which
were
admitted
in
the
taxpayer’s
reply.
It
was
also
submitted
that
the
Minister’s
determinations
were
open
to
review
on
this
appeal
and
that
they
were
not
justified
by
the
facts.
In
my
opinion,
a
determination
by
the
Minister
under
Section
13(1)
is
reviewable
on
appeal
to
this
Court,
but
only
within
the
limits
indicated
in
the
M.N.R.
v.
Wright’s
Canadian
Ropes,
[1947]
C.T.C.
1.
There
Lord
Greene,
M.R.,
said
at
p.
13:
“This
right
of
appeal
must,
in
their
lordships’
opinion,
have
been
intended
by
the
legislature
to
be
an
effective
right.
This
involves
the
consequence
that
the
Court
is
entitled
to
examine
the
determination
of
the
Minister
and
is
not
necessarily
to
be
bound
to
accept
his
decision.
Nevertheless
the
limits
within
which
the
Court
is
entitled
to
interfere
are
in
their
lordships’
opinion
strictly
circumscribed.
It
is
for
the
taxpayer
to
show
that
there
is
ground
for
interference
and
if
he
fails
to
do
so
the
decision
of
the
Minister
must
stand.
Moreover,
unless
it
be
shown
that
the
Minister
has
acted
in
contravention
of
some
principle
of
law
the
Court,
in
their
lordships’
opinion,
cannot
interfere
:
the
section
makes
the
Minister
the
sole
judge
of
the
fact
of
reasonableness
or
normalcy
and
the
Court
is
not
at
liberty
to
substitute
its
own
opinion
for
his.
But
the
power
given
to
the
Minister
is
not
an
arbitrary
one
to
be
exercised
according
to
his
fancy.
To
quote
the
language
of
Lord
Hals-
bury
in
Sharp
v.
Wakefield,
[1891]
A.C.
173
at
p.
179,
he
must
act
‘according
to
the
rules
of
reason
and
justice,
not
according
to
private
opinion;
according
to
law
and
not
humour.
It
is
to
be
not
arbitrary,
vague
and
fanciful,
but
legal
and
regular’.
Again
in
a
case
under
another
provision
of
this
very
sec.
6
[sec.
5(1)
(a)—Ed.]
where
a
discretion
to
fix
the
amount
to
be
allowed
for
depreciation
is
given
to
the
Minister,
Lord
Thankerton
in
delivering
the
judgment
of
the
Board
said
‘
The
Minister
has
a
duty
to
fix
a
reasonable
amount
in
respect
of
that
allowance
and,
so
far
from
the
decision
of
the
Minister
being
purely
administrative
and
final,
a
right
of
appeal
is
conferred
on
a
dissatisfied
taxpayer;
but
it
is
equally
clear
that
the
Court
would
not
interfere
with
the
decision
unless—
as
Davis,
J.
states—‘‘it
was
manifestly
against
sound
and
fundamental
principles’
’’.
(Pioneer
Laundry
and
Dry
Cleaners
Ltd.
v.
Minister
of
National
Revenue,
[1938-39]
C.T.C.
411
at
pp.
416-417.)
”
In
the
present
case,
there
was
no
agreement
between
the
parties
nor
was
there
any
oral
evidence
as
to
what
was
in
fact
before
the
Minister
or
his
Deputy
when
the
two
determinations
were
made,
though
a
number
of
documents
were
offered
on
behalf
of
the
Minister
and
admitted
in
evidence
by.
consent.
These
included
copies
of
the
taxpayer’s
returns
for
the
years
in
question,
the
notices
of
the
re-assessments
and
accompanying
documents,
the
taxpayer’s
notices
of
objection,
which
included
copies
of
the
correspondence
and
representation
made
on
the
taxpayer’s
behalf,
and
a
statement
showing
the
taxpayer’s
investment
income
and
farm
profits
and
losses
as
previously
set
out
for
the
years
1942
to
1954
inclusive.
I
think
it
may
fairly
be
assumed
that
the
taxpayer’s
income
tax
returns
for
the
years
in
question
and
copies
of
the
notices
of
re-assessment
and
accompanying
documents,
as
well
as
the
taxpayer’s
notices
of
objection
with
accompanying
documents,
were
before
the
Deputy
Minister
when
he
decided
to
confirm
the
re-assessments.
Indeed,
it
is
stated
in
the
decisions
that
he
-has
reconsidered
the
re-assessments
and
considered
the
facts
and
reasons
set
forth
in
the
notices
of
objection.
But
whether
or
not
the
figures
relating
to
the
taxpayer’s
investment
income
and
his
farming
profits
and
losses
for
earlier
years
were
before
the
Deputy
Minister
was
not
established.
Nor
was
any
evidence
offered
as
to
what
was
before
him
when
the
determinations,
as
admitted,
were
made.
In
this
situation,
since
‘‘it
is
for
the
taxpayer
to
show
that
there
is
ground
for
interference
and
if
he
fails
to
do
so
the
decision
of
the
Minister
must
stand’’,
no
ground
has
been
shown
for
interfering
with
the
Minister’s
determinations.
But
even
assuming
that
the
Deputy
Minister
had
before
him
the
material
set
out
in
the
taxpayer’s
returns
and
the
correspondence
which
preceded
the
re-assessments
and
reviewing
the
matter
on
the
basis
of
that
having
been
the
material
which
was
before
the
Deputy
Minister,
I
am
of
the
opinion
that
there
was
in
it
ample
material
to
support
the
determinations
and
that
no
good
ground
has
been
shown
for
disturbing
either
of
them.
I
am
also
of
the
opinion
that,
if
the
figures
for
earlier
years
were
before
him,
the
determinations
are
equally
unassailable,
for
if
the
figures
have
any
effect,
it
is
simply
to
confirm
the
determinations.
Nor
was
anything
further
shown
in
the
notices
of
objection
which
would,
in
my
opinion,
afford
ground
for
disturbing
the
determinations.
It
was
conceded
in
the
course
of
argument,
and
I
think
quite
properly
so,
that
the
taxpayer’s
chief
source
of
income
was
not
farming,
and
the
case
was
thus
narrowed
down
to
a
submission
that
the
taxpayer’s
chief
source
of
income
was
in
fact
a
combination
of
farming
and
investments.
However,
on
the
whole
of
the
material,
including
that
put
forward
on
behalf
of
Mr.
Grieve,
there
does
not
appear
to
have
been
any
connection
or
relation
whatever
between
his
farming
as
a
source
of
income
in
any
year
and
the
estate
or
investments
from
which
the
bulk
of
his
income
was
derived
upon
which
one
could
say
that
his
chief
source
of
income
was
a
combination
of
the
two,
beyond
the
mere
fact
that
he
w
as
the
recipient
or
owner
of
the
estate
or
investment
income
and
was
also
the
recipient
or
owner
of
the
farming
profits
or
the
sufferer
of
the
farming
losses.
That
fact
alone
does
not,
in
my
opinion,
inevitably
lead
to
the
conclusion
that
Mr.
Grieve’s
chief
source
of
income
was
a
combination
of
such
sources
of
income
within
the
meaning
of
Section
13(1),
and
I
can,
therefore,
see
no
reason
for
disagreeing
with
the
Deputy
Minister’s
determinations
for
either
1953
or
1954
that
Mr.
Grieve’s
chief
source
of
income
was
neither
farming
nor
a
combination
of
farming
and
some
other
source
of
income.
There
remains
the
issue
under
Section
42(1);
a
matter
which
is
not
affected
by
the
Minister’s
determination
under
Section
13(2)
since
that
determination
is
merely
for
the
purpose
of
Section
13.
On
this
issue,
it
was
accordingly
open
to
the
respondents
on
the
trial
of
this
appeal
to
prove,
if
they
could,
that
Mr.
Grieve’s
chief
source
of
income
for
the
five
averaging
years
was
GLENORA
SECURITIES
INC.,
Appellant,
and
MINISTER
OF
NATIONAL
REVENUE,
Respondent.
Exchequer
Court
of
Canada
(Dumoulin,
J.),
September
17,
1959,
on
appeal
from
assessment
by
Minister
of
National
Revenue.
Income
tax—Federal—Income
Tax
Act,
R.S.C.
1952,
c.
148—Sections
4
and
41(1)
(a)—Calculation
of
foreign
tax
credit.
Appellant
company
had
dividends
from
U.S.
sources
totalling
$53,946.50
in
the
1957
taxation
year.
It
incurred
expense
in
earning
the
dividends
in
the
amount
of
$10,081.48,
leaving
a
net
dividend
income
of
$43,865.02.
U.S.
withholding
tax
was
paid
to
the
U.S.
government
in
the
amount
of
$8,092.01,
being
15%
of
the
gross
dividends
of
$53,946.50.
The
appellant
claimed
foreign
tax
credit
for
the
full
$8,092.01
U.S.
tax
paid,
but
the
Minister
allowed
only
$6,579.75,
which
was
15%
of
the
net
income
figure
of
$43,865.02.
On
appeal
to
the
Exchequer
Court,
HELD:
(i)
That
the
amount
of
$6,579.75
allowed
by
the
Minister
was
the
correct
allowance
for
foreign
tax
credit
under
Section
41(1)
(a)
of
the
Income
Tax
Act;
(ii)
That
the
appeal
be
dismissed.
EDITORIAL
NOTE:
Section
41(1)
(a)
provides
for
deduction
from
tax
otherwise
payable
of
an
amount
equal
to
the
“tax
paid
by
(the
taxpayer)
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”
in
Canada.
The
learned
Judge
finds
that
the
appellant’s
income
(in
the
sense
of
profit,
as
provided
by
Section
4)
from
U.S.
sources
was
the
net
figure
of
$43,865.02.
All
of
that
income
of
$43,865.02
was
taxable
in
Canada,
so
appellant
claimed
the
full
amount
of
foreign
tax
paid,
on
the
basis
that
if
100%
of
its
income
($43,865.02)
was
taxable
in
Canada,
then
there
was
no
limitation
on
the
deduction
of
the
full
amount
of
the
tax
actually
paid
to
the
U.S.
government.
In
rejecting
this
contention,
the
judgment
amounts
to
a
finding
that
where
foreign
tax
was
charged
on
gross
receipts,
but
only
net
income
is
taxed
in
Canada,
the
tax
credit
allowed
by
Section
41(1)
(a)
is
only
an
amount
equal
to
the
gross
tax
rate
applied
to
the
amount
of
net
income
taxable
in
Canada.
The
appellant’s
contention
that
it
paid
out
the
greater
amount
of
U.S.
tax
in
order
to
obtain
the
income
subject
to
tax
in
Canada
was
rejected.
This
decision
would
appear
to
have
been
overruled
by
the
judgment
of
the
Supreme
Court
of
Canada
in
Interprovincial
Pipe
Line
Company
v.
M.N.R.,
[1959]
C.T.C.
339.
P.
N.
Thorsteinsson,
for
the
Appellant.
Guy
Fauvreau,
Q.C.,
and
Paul
Boivin,
Q.C.,
for
the
Respondent.
DUMOULIN,
J.:—This
is
an
appeal
from
the
income
tax
assessment,
dated
July
22,
1958,
for
the
taxation
year
1957,
of
Glenora
Securities
Inc.,
of
Montreal,
Province
of
Quebec,
levying
for
the
above
fiscal
year,
a
tax
in
the
sum
of
$10,382.18.
Glenora
Securities
Inc.,
a
limited
company,
with
an
office
in
the
City
of
Montreal,
was
resident
in
Canada
throughout
the
whole
of
its
taxation
year
1997.
The
instant
appeal
was
argued
in
law,
both
parties
having
submitted
an
Agreed
Statement
of
Facts
and
filed
elaborate
factums.
The
factual
components
of
the
controversy
are
quite
simple
:
(a)
In
1957,
appellant
received
dividends
from
sources
in
the
United
States
totalling
|
$53,946.50
|
(b)
Expenses
incurred,
or
carrying
charges,
were
|
|
in
the
amount
of
$9,324.59
((all
monetary
|
|
figures
computed
in
Canadian
currency)
with,
|
|
also,
a
depletion
claim
for
$756.89,
a
total
of
.
|
10,081.48
|
(c)
Therefore
appellant’s
profit
or
income
accru
|
|
ing
from
American
sources,
during
1957,
con
|
|
sisted
in
|
43,865.02
|
(d)
Appellant
paid
to
the
Government
of
the
|
|
United
States,
for
1957,
a
withholding
tax
of
|
8,092.01
|
Such
are
the
basic,
uncontroverted,
facts.
|
|
The
legal
issue
can
also
be
stated
briefly:
the
appellant
claims
a
deduction
under
Section
41(1)
(a)
of
the
Income
Tax
Act
(R.S.C.
1952,
e.
148)
of
the
full
amount
of
the
tax
paid
to
United
States
fiscal
authorities:
$8,092.01,
whereas
the
assessment
objected
to
allows
only
a
15%
deduction
computed
on
an
income
of
$43,865.02,
namely
an
amount
of
$6,579.75.
Both
litigants
mention,
as
the
relevant
provisions
of
our
Income
Tax
Act,
Sections
2,
3,
4
and
41.
Section
4
identifies
‘‘income’’
with
“profit”,
that
is
net
profit;
any
different
meaning
would
seem
practically
unsound.
The
United
States
withholding
tax,
at
a
rate
of
15%,
was
levied
upon
the
gross
receipts
of
$53,946.50,
permitting
of
no
deductions
on
the
score
of
earning
expenses
or
depletion
of
capital
sources,
whilst,
Canadian
legislation
contemplates
taxing
merely
the
net
profit
of
$48,865.02,
calculated,
might
I
say,
conformably
to
Earl
Loreburn’s
speech
in
Usher’s
Wiltshire
Brewery
Ltd.
v.
Bruce,
[1915]
A.C.
483
at
444,
“.
.
.
on
ordinary
principles
of
commercial
trading,
by
setting
against
the
income
earned
the
cost
of
earning
it’’.
A
first
point
worthy
of
note
is
the
difference
between
the
taxing
instruments
concerned:
the
foreign
one
levies
tax
on
gross
receipts
or
total
dividends,
the
Canadian
law
deducting
earning
expenditure
and
depletion,
thereby
exempting
a
portion,
$10,081.48,
of
the
revenue
from
sources
in
the
United
States.
Admittedly
the
moot
text
under
review
is
none
other
than
Section
41
of
the
Act,
more
particularly
subsection
(1),
paragraphs
(a)
and
(if
applicable)
(b)
hereunder
recited.
“41.
(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
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
(b)
that
proportion
of
the
tax
for
the
year
otherwise
payable
under
this
Part
that
(i)
that
part
of
the
taxpayer’s
income
(A)
for
the
year,
if
section
29
is
not
applicable,
or
(B)
if
section
29
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
28,
is
of
(11)
the
taxpayer’s
income
(A)
for
the
year,
if
section
29
is
not
applicable,
or
(B)
if
section
29
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
28.’’
I
may
dispose,
as
irrelevant,
of
this
long
and
somewhat
confusing
subsection
(b),
since
none
of
the
conjectures,
provided
for—or
against,
by
Sections
29
and
28,
arise
in
this
case.
More-
over,
I
have
no
recollection
that
either
party
contended
it
was
of
any
account.
Section
41(1)
(a)
remained
throughout
the
subject-matter
of
the
argument,
or
as
paragraph
8
of
appellant’s
notes
and
authorities
puts
it:
‘The
whole
issue
in
this
appeal
turns
upon
the
meaning
of
the
word
‘income’
in
Section
41(l)(a).”
The
nature
of
this
difficulty
makes
it
advisable
to
summarize
in
their
own
words
litigants’
respective
view-points.
Reverting
to
the
‘‘Notes
of
Argument
and
Authorities
cited
on
behalf
of
Appellant”,
the
second
paragraph,
on
page
3,
goes
thus:
‘‘Section
41
thus
provides
for
deduction
of
foreign
tax
paid
on
foreign
income,
subject
to
two
limitations:
(1)
if
any
part
of
the
income
(in
the
proper
sense
of
‘profit’)
from
the
foreign
source
is
not
subject
to
tax
in
Canada,
there
is
no
credit
in
respect
of
tax
paid
to
the
foreign
government
on
that
part,
and
(2)
the
credit
cannot
in
any
case
exceed
the
proportionate
Canadian
tax
on
the
foreign
income.
Neither
of
those
limitations
has
application
in
this
case.”
With
the
exception
of
its
last
and
negative
sentence:
‘‘
Neither
of
those
limitations,
etc.”,
this
presentation
of
the
issue
would
seem
quite
correct;
my
opinion
is
that
no
other
one
could
be
reasonably
entertained.
Let
us
look
more
closely
at
those
“two
limitations”,
which
may
very
likely
paint
a
true
picture
of
this
affair.
One
part
‘‘of
the
income
from
the
foreign
source
is
not
subject
to
tax
in
Canada
.
.
.”
namely
carrying
expenses
and
depletion
totalling,
as
seen
above:
$10,081.48.
Then,
if
the
following
proposition
No.
(2)
is
true,
and
it
does
appear
to
be
the
clear
purport
of
the
law,
‘‘.
.
.
credit
(ï.e.,
tax
relief
or
deduction
sought)
cannot
in
any
case
exceed
the
proportionate
Canadian
tax
on
the
foreign
income’’.
And
such
was
respondent’s
decision
in
respect
of
the
tax
levied
at
the
proportionate
rate
of
15%
on
the
foreign
‘‘income’’,
which
in
the
United
States,
no
more
and
no
less
than
in
Canada,
can
mean
nothing
but
net
profit,
actually:
$43,865.02,
entitling
to
tax
credit
of
$6,579.75.
It
would
appear
that
appellant
confuses
exemption
with
taxing
ratios,
the
former
refused
in
the
foreign
country,
but
granted
pro
tanto
in
Canada
;
the
latter,
operating
at
similar
percentages
of
15%,
here
and
in
the
United
States,
but
as
against
different
ingredients
of
the
total
yield.
Appellant
next
proceeds
with
its
analysis
of
the
law
as
follows
(cf.
Notes
of
Argument
and
Authorities,
paragraph
10)
:
“10.
Section
41(1)
(a)
entitles
the
Appellant
to
deduct
the
tax
paid
[all
italics
are
found
in
the
text]
to
the
Government
of
the
United
States
($8,092.01),
subject
to
the
limitation
that
the
tax
must
have
been
paid
on
that
part
of
its
income
from
sources
in
the
United
States
on
which
it
was
subject
to
tax
under
Part
I
of
the
Income
Tax
Act.
The
Section
provides
for
the
deduction
of
the
tax
actually
paid,
on
that
part
of
the
income
from
the
United
States
which
was
taxable
in
Canada
N
This
first
portion
of
paragraph
10
is,
if
I
apprehend
it
correctly,
a
repetition
of
the
tentative
interpretation
previously
commented
upon,
and
a
similar
remark
applies
to
the
remainder.
I
need
do
no
more
than
refer
parties
to
my
notes
above.
Paragraph
13
of
the
‘‘Notes
of
Argument
and
Authorities
cited
on
behalf
of
Appellant”,
summarizes
the
legal
construction
it
would
attach
to
Section
41(1)
(a)
of
our
Act.
I
quote:
“13.
It
is
to
be
noted
that
the
Section
allows
a
deduction
of
the
tax
paid,
which
in
this
case
was
$8,092.01.
It
does
not
provide
for
a
deduction
of
the
amount
arrived
at
by
applying
the
rate
of
foreign
tax
to
the
income
subject
to
tax
in
Canada,
which
is
what
the
Respondent
has
done
in
this
case
by
allowing
only
15%
(the
United
States
withholding
tax
rate)
of
the
income
amount
of
$48,865.02.
The
Appellant
had
income
from
sources
in
the
United
States
of
$43,865.02,
and
on
that
income
it
paid
a
tax
of
$8,092.01.
The
rate
or
method
of
computation
used
by
the
United
States
Government
in
imposing
a
tax
of
$8,092.01
is
immaterial
:
the
only
thing
of
any
significance
for
Canadian
tax
purposes
that
the
Appellant
received
from
the
United
States
in
1957
was
an
income
of
$43,865.02—on
that
income
it
paid
a
tax
of
$8,092.01.”
A
careful
reading
of
the
law
is
irreconcilable
with
the
meaning
that
appellant
seeks
to
convey.
The
Court
could
agree,
since
Section
41(1)
(b)
is
out
of
question,
only
if
Section
41(1)
(a),
instead
of
its
present
context,
read
:
“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
.
.
.
(a)
the
tax
paid
by
him
to
the
government
of
a
country
other
than
Canada
.
.
.”’
Thus
amputated
of
its
actual
and
operative
purview,
an
amount
equal
to
that
paid
to
a
foreign
authority,
would
become
automatically
deductible
from
foreign
dividends
by
a
resident
of
this
country.
Quite
in
line
with
this
reasoning
is
the
respondent’s
reply
appearing
at
page
3,
second
paragraph,
of
its
Factum.
“As
under
section
41(1)
the
tax
credit
may
be
claimed
only
for
the
tax
paid
to
the
United
States
on
income
from
sources
therein
and
subject
to
tax
in
Canada,
i.e.
on
income
computed
by
applying
the
provisions
of
our
own
income
tax
legislation
regarding
the
computation
of
income,
it
follows
that
where
income
tax
is
required
to
be
paid
to
the
United
States
under
the
income
tax
legislation
of
that
country
on
an
amount
of
money
or
income
which
is
not
subject
to
tax
in
Canada
under
our
own
income
tax
legislation
(as
for
instance
where
the
difference
between
gross
income
and
net
income
is
taxed
in
the
United
States),
such
amount
of
money
cannot
be
taken
into
consideration
for
the
determination
of
the
tax
credit
that
may
be
claimed
under
either
paragraph
(a)
or
paragraph
(b)
of
section
41(1).”’
Such
is,
I
believe,
the
intent
of
Section
41(1)
(a).
It
provides
the
basic
elements
for
any
fixation
of
tax
credit
which,
in
the
instant
case,
was
properly
allowed
in
a
sum
of
$6,579.75,
or
15%
on
a
net
profit
(“income”
as
outlined
in
Section
4)
of
$43,865.02.
For
the
reasons
above,
appellant’s
income
tax
assessment
for
1957,
to
an
amount
of
$10,382.18,
was
levied
in
accordance
with
the
provisions
of
the
pertinent
law.
Therefore
this
appeal
is
dismissed,
with
taxable
costs
going
in
favour
of
the
respondent.