THURLOW,
J.:—This
is
an
appeal
from
a
judgment
of
the
Tax
Appeal
Board
by
which
appeals
by
the
appellant
from
re-assess-
ments
of
income
tax
for
the
years
1952
and
1953
were
allowed
in
part.
There
is
also
a
cross-appeal
by
which
the
Minister
seeks
to
have
the
re-assessments
restored.
The
issue
in
the
appeal
is
whether
certain
sums
received
by
the
appellant
and
which
are
referred
to
in
the
outline
of
the
facts
which
follows,
were
properly
included
by
the
Minister
in
computing
the
appellant’s
income
for
income
tax
purposes.
The
applicable
statute
for
1952
was
the
Income
Tax
Act,
8.C.
1948,
c.
52,
and
for
1953
was
the
Income
Tax
Act,
R.S.C.
1952,
c.
148,
but
there
is
no
difference
in
the
applicable
provisions.
The
issue
raised
by
the
cross-appeal
is
whether
in
the
circumstances
sums
not
received
by
the
appellant
but
by
A.M.I.
Distributing
Co.
Ltd.
are
taxable
as
income
of
the
appellant
under
Section
16
of
the
applicable
statute.
The
appellant,
who
at
one
time
had
been
engaged
in
manufacturing
clothing
and
later
was
a
part-time
employee
of
a
clothing
firm,
in
or
about
1938
became
interested
in
parking
meters
and
commenced
acquiring
information
about
them.
Some
years
later,
while
still
a
part-time
employee
of
the
clothing
firm,
he
began
operating
a
parking
lot.
In
1949
or
1950,
he
contacted
McGee-Hale
Park-O-Meter
Company,
a
United
States
firm
which
held
the
Canadian
patent
on
a
type
of
parking
meter,
and
succeeded
in
getting
that
firm
interested
in
granting
a
licence
under
the
patent
to
manufacture
and
sell
the
meters
in
Canada.
He
then
contacted
some
fifty
or
more
persons
in
an
endeavour
to
interest
someone
with
the
necessary
means
in
joining
in
an
undertaking
for
that
purpose
and
ultimately,
in
August,
1950,
concluded
a
contract
with
one
David
A.
McGowan
by
which
the
latter,
with
the
appellant’s
consent,
which
was
necessary
in
view
of
an
earlier
contract
between
them,
undertook
to
negotiate
for
the
patent
licence
and,
upon
obtaining
it,
to
appoint
the
appellant
as
exclusive
sales
representative
for
the
Province
of
Quebec
and
the
portion
of
Ontario
lying
east
of
Fort
William
and
Port
Arthur.
By
the
contract,
McGowan
retained
the
right
to
set
and
change
prices
and
to
control
the
form
of
sales
contracts
and
the
credit
arrangements
under
which
the
meters
would
be
sold,
and
it
was
also
provided
that
he
should
not
be
liable
to
the
appellant
for
failure
to
perform
a
contract
with
a
purchaser
by
reason
of
labour
trouble
or
any
other
cause
not
within
his
control,
but
he
reserves
no
express
right
to
refuse
orders
secured
by
the
appellant.
The
appellant,
on
his
part,
among
other
things,
undertook
to
sell
a
minimum
of
375
meters
by
June
30,
1951,
and
a
minimum
of
750
meters
each
year
thereafter,
and
there
were
provisions
for
termination
of
the
agreement
if
he
failed
to
meet
this
undertaking.
His
remuneration
was
to
be
a
commission
at
specified
rates
on
the
price
of
meters
sold
by
him
or
his
salesmen,
and
it
was
also
provided
in
paragraph
12
that
“Miller
shall
not
be
entitled
to
commissions
on
Park-O-Meters
which
have
not
been
contracted
for
in
writing
by
a
purchaser
prior
to
the
termination
of
this
contract
or
any
extension
thereof.
Provided
that
in
any
case
where
Miller
has
commenced
negotiations
for
the
sale
of
Park-O-Meters
which
are
not
concluded
by
the
date
of
such
termination,
Miller
shall
be
allowed
30
days
from
such
date
to
conclude
such
sale,
and
upon
obtaining
a
firm
order
in
writing
within
such
30
day
period,
will
be
entitled
to
commission
thereon
as
hereinbefore
provided.”
By
a
further
term
of
the
agreement,
the
appellant
agreed
to
provide
a
sales
office
in
Toronto
and
McGowan
undertook
to
contribute
$500
per
year
towards
the
cost
of
such
office.
By
paragraph
8'
it
was
also
provided
that
if
the
appellant
should
become
unable
to
carry
out
his
undertaking
or
if
the
agreement
were
terminated
prior
to
the
expiration
of
the
licence
under
the
patent,
he
should
have
no
further
obligation
under
the
contract
but
would
“in
consideration
of
the
introduction
by
him
to
McGee-
Hale
and
the
information
and
assistance
freely
given
and
to
be
freely
given
by
Miller
to
McGowan”,
be
entitled
to
a
commission
of
21%
per
cent
of
the
selling
price
of
meters
thereafter
sold
by
McGowan
in
the
territory
so
assigned
to
Miller,
for
so
long
as
Miller
should
live
and
the
licence
remain
in
force
provided
always
that
Miller
should
not
in
the
meantime
become
interested
in
the
manufacture
or
sale
of
any
other
parking
meter.
McGowan
assigned
the
contract
to
Park-O-Meter
Co.
of
Canada
Ltd.,
a
company
which
he
had
had
incorporated,
obtained
the
patent
licence
and
began
manufacture
of
the
meters,
but
ran
into
difficulties
in
obtaining
steel
and
was
also
hampered
by
a
patent
infringement
proceeding
brought
when
he
sold
a
number
of
meters
to
the
City
of
Vancouver.
In
the
meantime,
the
appellant
gave
up
his
part-time
employment
with
the
clothing
firm
and
set
up
a
small
sales
office
in
Toronto.
He
had
no
employees
engaged
at
this
office
and
after
some
months
it
was
discontinued.
Thereafter,
he
conducted
his
operations
from
his
home.
In
this
operation
he
contacted
a
number
of
municipal
authorities
in
Ontario
and
Quebec,
and
he
spent
time
and
effort
in
connection
with
a
prospective
sale
to
the
City
of
Toronto
of
some
1,300
meters.
In
this
connection,
a
tender
by
Park-O-Meter
Co.
of
Canada
Ltd.
was
submitted
on
June
11,
1951,
but
it
had
not
been
accepted
when
on
July
13,
1951,
the
appellant
was
formally
notified
by
McGowan
of
the
termination
of
his
agency
in
30
days
because
of
his
failure
to
sell
375
meters
by
June
30,
1951.
The
matter
did
not,
however,
rest
there.
The
appellant
contacted
McGowan,
blamed
his
own
failure
to
sell
375
meters
on
McCowan’s
difficulties
and
the
latter’s
inability
or
unwillingness
to
permit
him
to
promise
definite
delivery
dates
or
to
quote
firm
prices,
and
asked
for
a
further
opportunity
to
make
the
sales
provided
for
in
the
agreement.
McGowan
declined
to
accede
to
this
request
but
offered
the
appellant
a
different
territory
in
which
to
operate
and
the
appellant
being
dissatisfied
with
this
proposal
later
put
the
matter
in
his
solicitor’s
hands
and
threatened
suit.
In
the
period
of
30
days
which
followed
the
30
day
period
mentioned
in
the
notice
of
termination,
Miller
secured
an
order
for
meters
from
the
City
of
Kitchener
and
a
further
order
from
the
City
of
Hamilton.
Ultimately,
by
an
agreement
dated
October
1,
1951,
a
settlement
was
concluded.
This
agreement,
after
referring
to
the
earlier
agreement,
recited
that
Miller
had
sold
no
meters
except
as
hereinafter
mentioned,
that
McGowan
on
July
13,
1951,
had
given
Miller
30
days’
notice
of
cancellation
of
the
agreement
and
that
Miller
disputed
the
validity
of
the
notice.
By
this
agreement,
the
termination
of
the
earlier
agreement
as
of
August
13,
1951,
was
confirmed,
but
McGowan
and
Park-O-Meter
Company
of
Canada
agreed
to
pay
Miller
$3,750
in
certain
instalments
extending
over
a
period
of
six
months,
$200
for
costs,
commission
at
the
rate
of
$13.63
per
meter
for
each
meter
that
should
be
sold
to
the
City
of
Toronto
pursuant
to
the
tender
already
mentioned,
and
commission
as
provided
in
the
earlier
agreement
in
respect
of
the
sales
to
the
City
of
Kitchener
and
the
City
of
Hamilton
of
meters
for
which
the
appellant
had
obtained
orders
prior
to
September
13,
1951.
It
was
also
provided
that
Miller
should
have
the
right
to
continue
to
represent
McGowan
and
his
company
in
the
negotiations
connected
with
the
tender
made
to
the
City
of
Toronto
and
that
McGowan
and
Park-O-Meter
would
co-operate
and
render
him
every
reasonable
assistance.
Miller
was
also
given
a
similar
right
in
connection
with
the
order
he
had
obtained
from
the
City
of
Kitchener.
At
the
time
of
the
making
of
this
agreement,
the
tender
made
to
the
City
of
Toronto
had
been
approved
by
the
City
Engineer,
the
City
Treasurer
and
the
Police
Department,
but
it
was
not
approved
by
the
Board
of
Control
until
October
15,
1951.
The
provision
of
the
earlier
agreement
whereby
Miller
would
be
entitled
on
termination
of
his
agency
to
214
per
cent
commission
on
sales
made
thereafter
in
his
territory
remained
in
force
with
an
alteration
in
respect
of
the
sales
which
might
be
concluded
to
the
Cities
of
Toronto,
Hamilton
and
Kitchener
after
August
13,
1951,
on
which
commission
was
to
be
paid
as
provided
in
the
agreement
of
settlement,
and
with
a
further
alteration
extending
Miller’s
right
to
such
commissions
on
sales
made
in
the
defined
territory
so
long
as
McGowan
or
Park-O-Meter
of
Canada
Ltd.
or
any
subsidiary
thereof,
or
any
person
or
company
in
which
McGowan
or
Park-O-Meter
of
Canada
might
be
interested
either
directly
or
indirectly,
should
have
the
right
to
manufacture
or
distribute
meters
in
the
defined
territory
during
the
life
of
the
patent.
Of
the
$3,750,
payments
totalling
$2,000
were
received
by
the
appellant
in
1951
and
were
later
reported
by
him
as
income
for
that
year.
The
remaining
$1,750
was
received
in
1952,
and
it
is
the
first
of
the
amounts
in
issue
which
the
Minister
has
assessed
and
which
the
appellant
contends
were
not
income
but
capital.
Shortly
after
the
conclusion
of
this
agreement
and
before
he
had
engaged
in
any
further
enterprise
or
employment,
the
appellant
suffered
a
heart
attack
and
was
an
invalid
for
several
months
thereafter.
During
this
period,
the
City
of
Toronto
accepted
the
tender
and
on
November
21,
1951,
entered
into
a
formal
contract
with
Park-O-Meter
of
Canada
Ltd.
for
the
purchase
and
installation
of
some
1,300
meters,
but
by
the
terms
of
the
contract
the
City
had
the
right
after
a
six-months’
trial
period
to
return
the
meters
at
any
time
during
a
further
period
of
six
months.
Early
in
February
1952,
the
appellant,
being
in
need
of
money,
assigned
to
A.M.I.
Distributing
Co.
Ltd.
all
moneys
and
commissions
that
might
be
or
become
payable
to
him
under
the
agreement
of
settlement
with
McGowan
and
Park-O-Meter
Co.
of
Canada
Ltd.
on
the
sale
of
the
meters
to
the
City
of
Toronto
and
in
the
assignment
he
warranted
that
the
commissions
payable
to
him
were
at
the
rate
of
$13.63
on
each
meter
and
that
the
number
of
meters
so
sold
was
not
less
than
1,339.
The
consideration
for
this
assignment
was
$12,000
to
be
paid
at
once
and
42
per
cent
of
the
moneys
received
pursuant
to
it
by
A.M.I.
Distributing
Co.
Ltd.
in
excess
of
$12,000.
The
remaining
58
per
cent
was
to
be
retained
by
A.M.I.
Distributing
Co.
Ltd.
The
$12,000
so
received
by
the
appellant
in
1952
and
the
moneys
he
received
in
1952
and
1953
representing
42
per
cent
of
the
surplus
have
been
included
in
his
income
by
the
Minister
in
making
the
assessments
and
together
make
a
second
group
of
amounts
in
respect
of
which
the
liability
of
the
appellant
to
tax
iS
In
issue
in
the
appeal.
For
the
1952
taxation
year,
the
amount
included
by
the
Minister
was
the
$12,000
and
$1,500.
It
is
now
conceded
by
the
Minister
that
the
amount
actually
received
by
the
appellant
in
1952
representing
the
42
per
cent
was
$1,470—
an
amount
which
the
appellant
had
reported
as
income
in
his
return.
It
is
not,
however,
conceded
that
the
appellant
is
entitled
to
relief
in
respect
of
the
tax
on
the
difference
of
$30.
In
reassessing
the
tax
following
the
appellant’s
notice
of
objections,
the
Minister
had
(erroneously)
assumed
that
the
$1,500
represented
the
whole
amount
paid
by
Park-O-Meter
of
Canada
Ltd.
to
A.M.I.
Distributing
Co.
Ltd.
and
had
assessed
the
appellant
on
the
assumption
that
he
was
liable
to
tax
on
the
whole
of
such
amount.
In
the
Tax
Appeal
Board
the
appellant
succeeded
in
respect
of
the
taxation
in
his
hands
of
amounts
representing
A.M.I.’s
58
per
cent
of
the
amounts
received
from
Park-O-Meter
of
Canada
Ltd.
but
by
his
cross-appeal
the
Minister
seeks
to
have
the
assessment
in
respect
of
this
amount
restored.
This
item
of
$30
is
thus
in
issue
on
the
Minister’s
cross-appeal
for
1952.
For
the
1953
taxation
year,
the
amount
included
by
the
Minister
aS
representing
the
commissions
paid
by
Park-O-Meter
of
Canada
Ltd.
was
$2,110.16,
but
it
is
now
conceded
by
the
Minister
that
this
amount
should
be
reduced
to
$896.27,
which
represents
only
the
42
per
cent
received
by
the
appellant
in
the
year
and
which
was
reported
by
him
as
income
in
his
income
tax
return.
The
appellant
is
accordingly
entitled
to
relief
from
the
tax
imposed
in
respect
of
$1,213.89
of
the
income
as
assessed
and
his
appeal
for
1953
succeeds
to
that
extent.
The
amount
of
$896.27
is,
however,
still
in
issue,
the
appellant
contending
that
it
was
not
income
for
the
purposes
of
the
Income
Tax
Act.
As
a
result
of
the
concession
mentioned,
no
issue
remains
on
the
crossappeal
in
respect
of
the
year
1958.
Some
time
after
his
recovery
from
his
illness,
the
appellant
began
selling
coin
vending
machines
under
an
arrangement
with
another
firm
and
in
1953
decided
to
buy
some
of
the
machines
to
operate
on
his
own.
Requiring
money
for
this
purpose,
he
contacted
McGowan
and
offered
to
release
all
his
rights
to
payments
accruing
in
the
future
under
the
agreements
already
mentioned
for
$5,000.
The
offer
was
accepted,
the
appellant
received
$5,650,
made
up
of
the
$5,000
and
$650
for
amounts
already
accrued
and
payable,
and
he
executed
a
release
dated
October
14,
1953
of
his
right
to
214
per
cent
in
respect
of
sales
made
in
his
former
territory
and
further
covenanted
not
to
engage
or
be
concerned
in
manufacturing
or
disposing
of
parking
meters
in
Canada
for
seven
and
a
half
years.
The
$5,650
so
received
was
included
by
the
Minister
in
his
computation
of
the
appellant’s
income
for
1953.
The
appellant
did
not
dispute
his
liability
to
tax
on
the
$650
but
issue
arises
in
respect
of
the
$5,000
which
the
appellant
contends
was
not
income
but
capital.
To
recapitulate,
the
amounts
received
by
the
appellant
on
which
issue
arises
in
the
appeal
and
cross-appeal
are:
For
1952
(1)
$1,750
received
by
appellant
in
1952
from
Park-O-Meter
of
Canada
Ltd.
as
part
of
the
$3,750
payable
under
the
settlement
agreement
of
October
1,
1951.
(2)
$12,000
received
by
appellant
in
1952
from
A.M.I.
Distributing
Co.
Ltd.
being
part
of
the
consideration
for
the
assignment
made
in
1952
of
amounts
payable
by
Park-O-
Meter
of
Canada
Ltd.
under
the
settlement
agreement
of
October
1,1951.
(3)
$1,470
received
by
the
appellant
in
1952
from
A.M.I.
Distributing
Co.
Ltd.
representing
the
42%
payable
to
him
under
the
assignment
referred
to
in
(2)
above.
(4)
$30
not
received
by
the
appellant
but
representing
part
of
the
58%
to
be
retained
by
A.M.I.
Distributing
Co.
Ltd.
under
the
assignment
referred
to
in
(2)
above.
For
1953
(5)
$896.27
received
by
appellant
in
1953
from
A.M.I.
Distributing
Co.
Ltd.
representing
the
42%
payable
to
him
under
the
assignment
referred
to
in
(2)
above.
(6)
$5,000
received
by
appellant
in
1953
from
Park-O-Meter
of
Canada
Ltd.
pursuant
to
the
release
of
October
14,1953.
The
case
put
forward
on
behalf
of
the
appellant
consisted
of
three
main
submissions.
First,
it
was
said
that
the
settlement
agreement
of
October
1,
1951,
was
in
fact
a
settlement
of
a
claim
for
damages
for
breach
of
the
agency
agreement,
that
the
sums
payable
to
the
appellant
pursuant
to
the
settlement
agreement
were
in
substance
and
in
fact
damages
for
loss
of
the
agency
contract
and
that
therefore
they
were
capital
and
not
income.
Secondly,
it
was
contended
that
even
if
the
sums
payable
under
the
settlement
agreement
and
referred
to
therein
as
commissions
were
of
an
income
nature
the
right
to
them
was
contingent
on
the
contract
between
Park-O-Meter
of
Canada
Ltd.
and
the
City
of
Toronto
being
consummated
by
ultimate
purchase
of
the
meters,
and
that
because
the
appellant’s
right
to
such
sums
at
the
time
he
assigned
it
to
A.M.I.
Distributing
Co.
Ltd.
was
contingent
the
amount
paid
by
A.M.I.
to
him
for
assignment
must
be
regarded
as
capital
and
not
as
income.
Finally,
it
was
submitted
that
the
$5,000
received
by
the
appellant
from
Park-O-Meter
of
Canada
Ltd.
pursuant
to
the
agreement
of
October
14,
1953,
was
received
in
exchange
for
his
right
to
21%
per
cent
on
sales
made
in
his
former
territory,
under
the
agreement
of
August
1950,
which
was
a
capital
asset
and
that
the
sum
so
received
was
therefore
capital
as
well
and
not
taxable
as
income.
In
advancing
these
submissions,
Mr.
Dryden
treated
it
as
immaterial
whether
the
relationship
between
McCowan
and
the
appellant
evidenced
by
the
agreement
of
August
29,
1950,
was
one
of
employer
and
employee
or
one
of
principal
and
agent
wherein
the
agent
was
engaged
in
carrying
on
a
business
of
his
own.
Mr.
Goodman
on
behalf
of
the
Minister
took
the
position
that
the
appellant
was
not
an
employee
but
was
carrying
on
a
business
of
his
own.
Indeed,
in
the
Minister’s
amended
reply,
it
is
pleaded
as
the
basis
of
the
taxation
that
the
appellant
in
1952
and
1953
was
in
the
business
of
selling
parking
meters
to
the
City
of
Toronto
and
elsewhere
in
Ontario
and
that
the
profit
from
the
business
in
1952
and
1953
was
not
less
than
$13,500
and
$2,110.16,
respectively.
It
is
also
pleaded
as
the
basis
for
taxation
of
the
$5,650
that
it
was
received
for
the
cancellation
of
an
agency
agreement
entered
into
by
the
appellant
in
the
course
of
his
business
and
was
therefore
income
by
virtue
of
the
provisions
of
Sections
3
and
5
of
the
Income
Tax
Act.
Mr.
Goodman’s
submission
with
respect
to
the
$1,750
paid
under
the
agreement
of
settlement
of
October
1,
1951,
was
that
while
the
agreement
does
not
show
how
the
payment
was
calculated
or
what
it
represented,
in
the
circumstances,
it
would
be
proper
to
regard
it
as
a
quantum
meruit
for
services
which
had
been
rendered
up
to
the
time
of
termination
of
the
agency,
and
that
it
would
accordingly
be
income.
With
respect
to
the
$12,000
and
the
42
per
cent
of
the
sum
over
that
amount
paid
by
Park-O-Meter,
his
submission
was
that
the
$13.63
per
meter
sold
to
the
City
of
Toronto
was
commission
in
fact
as
well
as
in
name
and
represented
profit
from
the
carrying
on
of
the
agency,
that
in
fact
what
the
agreement
of
settlement
did
was
not
to
completely
terminate
the
agency
but
to
preserve
it
in
respect
of
the
negotiations
with
the
City
of
Toronto
with
alterations
in
the
commission
arrangement,
and
that
such
amounts
accrued
from
the
carrying
on
of
the
agency
relationship
under
such
altered
arrangements
and
were
accordingly
income;
and
further
that
the
assignment
of
the
appellant’s
rights
to
such
sums
to
A.M.I.
Distributing
Co.
Ltd.
has
no
effect
on
their
character
as
income.
He
also
submitted
that
the
whole
sum
representing
the
$13.63
per
meter
was
income
of
the
appellant
and
taxable
in
his
hands
under
Section
16(1)
of
the
Income
Tax
Act
since
the
assignment
to
A.M.I.
Distributing
Company
amounted
to
the
conferring
of
a
benefit
on
the
assignee
within
the
meaning
of
that
subsection.
He
conceded,
however,
that
if
Section
16(1)
was
inapplicable,
the
cross-appeal
must
fail.
Finally,
he
submitted
that
the
right
to
214
per
cent
on
sales
of
parking
meters
in
Eastern
Ontario
and
Quebec
which
the
appellant
was
to
receive
for
his
life
or
so
long
as
the
patent
licence
was
held
by
Park-O-Meter
of
Canada
Ltd.
was
granted
for
services
which
he
had
rendered
and
was
to
render
and
was
therefore
of
an
income
nature
and
that
the
amount
of
$5,000
which
he
received
in
consideration
for
the
release
of
such
right
was
income
as
well.
In
my
opinion,
the
evidence
clearly
establishes
that
the
appellant
was
never
an
officer
or
employee
in
the
service
of
McGowan
or
of
Park-O-Meter.
As
I
view
it,
from
the
time
of
the
establishment
of
the
relationship,
the
appellant
simply
had
an
agency
contract
with
McGowan
and
Park-O-Meter
of
Canada
Ltd.
and
was
independent
of
and
not
subject
to
regulation
by
McGowan
or
that
company
in
carrying
out
his
activities
within
the
limits
which
the
contract
prescribed.
The
sums
in
question
are
accordingly
not
taxable
as
income
from
an
office
or
employment
and
if
income
at
all
are
taxable
as
income
from
his
business.
I
turn
now
to
the
sums
which
became
payable
under
the
settlement
agreement
of
October
1,
1951.
The
question
of
when
sums
payable
in
connection
with
the
termination
of
business
arrangements
are
to
be
regarded
as
profits
of
a
business
and
when
as
capital
receipts
has
been
considered
in
a
number
of
English
and
Scottish
cases
which
were
referred
to
in
the
course
of
the
argument
and
the
principles
applied
in
them
appear
from
the
following
extracts.
In
C.Z.R.
v.
Fleming
&
Co.
(Machinery
),
Lid.,
33
T.C.
57,
Lord
Russell
stated
the
matter
thus,
at
page
63
:
“The
sum
received
by
a
commercial
firm
as
compensation
for
the
loss
sustained
by
the
cancellation
of
a
trading
contract
or
the
premature
termination
of
an
agency
agreement
may
in
the
recipient’s
hands
be
regarded
either
as
a
capital
receipt
or
as
a
trading
receipt
forming
part
of
the
trading
profit.
It
may
be
difficult
to
formulate
a
general
principle
by
reference
to
which
in
all
cases
the
correct
decision
will
be
arrived
at
since
in
each
case
the
question
comes
to
be
one
of
circumstance
and
degree.
When
the
rights
and
advantages
surrendered
on
cancellation
are
such
as
to
destroy
or
materially
to
cripple
the
whole
structure
of
the
recipient’s
profit-making
apparatus,
involving
the
serious
dislocation
of
the
normal
commercial
organisation
and
resulting
perhaps
in
the
cutting
down
of
the
staff
previously
required,
the
recipient
of
the
compensation
may
properly
affirm
that
the
compensation
represents
the
price
paid
for
the
loss
or
sterilisation
of
a
capital
asset
and
is
therefore
a
capital
and
not
a
revenue
receipt.
Illustrations
of
such
cases
are
to
be
found
in
Van
Den
Berghs,
Ltd.,
[1935]
A.C.
431,
and
Barr,
Crombie
&
Co.,
Ltd.,
[1945]
S.C.
271.
On
the
other
hand
when
the
benefit
surrendered
on
cancellation
does
not
represent
the
loss
of
an
enduring
asset
in
circumstances
such
as
those
above
mentioned—where
for
example
the
structure
of
the
recipient’s
business
is
so
fashioned
as
to
absorb
the
shock
as
one
of
the
normal
incidents
to
be
looked
for
and
where
it
appears
that
the
compensation
received
is
no
more
than
a
surrogatum
for
the
future
profits
surrendered—the
compensation
received
is
in
use
to
be
treated
as
a
revenue
receipt
and
not
a
capital
receipt.
See
e.g.,
Short
Brothers,
Lid.,
12
T.C.
955;
Kelsall
Persons
&
Co.,
[1938]
S.C.
238.”
In
Anglo-French
Exploration
Co.,
Lid.
v.
Clay
son,
[1956]
1
All
E.R.
762,
Lord
Evershed,
M.R.,
said
at
page
766
:
“If
the
matter
were
res
integra,
I
think
there
is
much
to
be
said
for
the
simple
view
that
a
sum
of
money
received
in
consideration
for
the
giving
up
or
destruction
of
an
agreement
under
which
one
looks
to
earn
an
annual
sum
is
capital
and
not
income;
for
in
such
case
the
sum
received
might
be
fairly
described
as
the
capitalised
equivalent
at
the
present
time
of
income
prospects.
The
question
remains,
however,
not
whether
that
sum
in
some
cases
or
in
some
contexts
might
sensibly
be
called
a
capital
payment,
but
whether
it
is
a
profit
or
gain
arising
from
the
trade
of
the
recipient
within
the
terms
of
Sch.
D.
The
matter
is
not
in
any
case
res
integra.
The
line
of
cases
starting
from
the
well
known
trilogy
in
12
Tax
Cas.,
of
Inland
Revenue
Comrs.
v.
Newcastle
Breweries,
Ltd.
(at
p.
927),
Short
Bros.,
Lid.
v.
Inland
Revenue
Comrs.
(at
p.
955)
and
Inland
Revenue
Comrs.
v.
North
fleet
Coal
&
Ballast
Co.
Ltd.
(at
p.
1102),
in
1927,
seem
to
me
to
emphasise
that
sums
received
for
the
cancellation
of
an
agency
or
of
other
similar
agreement
which
has
been
entered
into
by
the
recipient
in
the
ordinary
course
of
its
trade
will
themselves,
prima
facie,
be
regarded
as
received
in
the
ordinary
course
of
trade
unless
the
transaction
involves
a
parting
by
the
recipient
with
a
substantial
part
of
its
business
undertaking.
Barr,
Crombie
&
Co.
v.
Inland
Revenue
(26
Tax
Cas.
406),
was
a
case
of
that
exceptional
character.’’
In
Wiseburgh
v.
Domville,
[1956]
1
All
E.R.
754,
where
the
payment
in
question
was
one
of
an
agreed
amount
of
wages,
Lord
Evershed,
M.R.,
said
at
page
758
:
‘‘In
Kelsall
Parsons
&
Co.
v.
Inland
Revenue
(21
Tax
Cas.
608),
Lord
Normand
(Lord
President),
said
(ibid.,
at
p.
619)
:
‘.
.
.
no
infallible
criterion
emerges
from
a
consideration
of
the
case
law.
Each
case
depends
upon
its
own
facts
.
.
.’
That
case
is
perhaps
very
much
at
one
end
of
the
line
and
Barr,
Crombie
&
Co.
v.
Inland
Revenue
(26
Tax
Cas.
406),
very
much
at
the
other.
In
the
former
the
business
of
the
taxpayer
company
was
that
of
agents
for
manufacturers.
At
the
relevant
date
they
had
far
more
agency
contracts
than
the
taxpayer
here,
however,
and
the
sum
under
consideration
by
the
Inner
House
was
paid
for
cancellation
of
a
contract
which
would
have
determined
in
any
event
in
a
relatively
short
time
and
in
regard
to
which,
as
Lord
Normand
says,
the
taxpayer
had
no
reasonable
expectation
of
its
further
continuance.
However,
junior
counsel
for
the
taxpayer
points
out
that
the
present
case
is
really
distinguishable
in
a
significant
degree
on
its
facts.
First,
the
taxpayer
here
held
but
two
agencies.
Secondly,
although
the
present
agency
was
expressed
to
be
determinable
at
relatively
short
notice,
there
would
have
been
no
reason
to
suppose
that
it
would
have
been
if
all
had
gone
well.
And
thirdly,
as
the
commissioners
pointed
out,
the
effect
of
the
loss
of
this
contract,
quoad
the
taxpayer’s
agency
business
was
very
substantially
to
depreciate
his
earnings
:
whereas
in
Kelsall
Parsons
&
Co.
v.
Inland
Revenue
(21
Tax
Cas.
608),
the
court
pointed
out
that
the
taxpayer’s
earnings
out
of
the
agency
business
were
not
much
different
from
what
they
had
been
before
the
cancellation
of
the
material
contract.
I
agree
that
this
case
differs
in
these
respects
from
Kelsall
Parsons
&
Co.
v.
Inland
Revenue.
But
I
am
unable
to
agree
that
those
differences
are
of
such
significance
as
to
bring
it
from
the
territory,
so
to
speak,
of
Kelsall
Parsons
&
Co.
v.
Inland
Revenue
into
that
of
Barr,
Crombie
&
Co.
v.
Inland
Revenue
(26
Tax
Cas.
406).
On
its
facts,
the
present
case
more
closely
resembles
Inland
Revenue
v.
Fleming
&
Co.
(Machinery
),
Lid.
(33
Tax
Cas.
57),
and,
as
already
indicated,
I
must
resist
counsel’s
invitation
to
refuse
to
follow
the
Scottish
line
of
authority.
To
bring
the
case
within
the
Barr,
Crombie
territory
the
taxpayer
must
be
shown
to
have
parted
in
truth
and
in
substance,
not
merely
with
his
rights
and
expectations
under
a
contract
entered
into
in
the
ordinary
course
of
his
trade,
but
with
one
of
his
enduring
capital
assets,
as
it
is
called.
On
that
sort
of
consideration
this
case
might
well
have
been
different
if
the
£4,000
had
been
paid
because
the
taxpayer’s
goodwill
had
been
damaged.
In
Barr,
Crombie
&
Co.
v.
Inland
Revenue
the
agency
cancelled
amounted
to
the
substance
of
the
whole
business
of
the
taxpaying
company.
Its
receipts
accounted
for
nearly
nine-tenths
of
the
total
earnings
and
its
loss
necessitated
the
complete
reorganisation
of
the
company’s
business,
a
reduction
in
their
staff,
and
the
taking
of
new
and
smaller
premises.
In
effect,
a
substantial
part
of
the
business
undertaking
had
gone.”
In
the
present
case
there
are
a
number
of
facts
which
appear
to
me
to
point
to
the
conclusion
that
the
$3,750
which
the
appellant
received
under
the
agreement
of
settlement
should
not
be
regarded
as
income
from
the
appellant’s
business.
First,
it
is
apparent
that
the
agency
contract
between
the
appellant
and
McGowan
or
Park-O-Meter
Co.
of
Canada
was
not
one
of
a
number
of
agency
contracts
but
was
the
only
one
which
the
appellant
had.
Not
only
that
but
the
contract
was
fundamental
to
the
appellant’s
operation
for
there
was
no
operation
except
what
was
to
be
done
pursuant
to
the
contract.
Nor
can
the
contract
be
properly
characterized
as
one
entered
into
in
the
ordinary
course
of
trade
or
as
an
incident
of
the
carrying
on
of
the
appellant’s
business.
On
the
contrary,
the
making
of
it
appears
to
have
been
a
preliminary
step
prior
to
engaging
in
a
trade.
And
when
that
contract
finally
ceased
the
appellant’s
operation
was
at
an
end.
Nor
did
he
afterwards
engage
in
any
business
in
any
way
connected
with
or
related
to
the
manufacture
or
distribution
of
parking
meters.
Secondly,
it
was
a
long
term
contract
which
might
have
continued
for
the
duration
of
the
patent
licence
and
which
was
not
subject
to
cancellation
except
for
reasons
and
on
terms
particularly
defined.
The
contract
thus
appears
to
fall,
initially,
at
any
rate,
in
what
Lord
Evershed,
M.R.,
referred
to
as
“the
Barr,
Crombie
territory’’.
Next,
while
the
agreement
of
settlement
does
not
state
what
the
$3,750
was
being
paid
for,
it
does
appear
that
there
were
no
arrears
of
commissions
due
to
the
appellant
nor
was
there
anything
due
or
recoverable
by
him
on
a
quantum
meruit
basis
for
any
services
which
he
had
rendered
in
endeavouring
to
promote
the
sale
of
meters.
The
only
sales
in
prospect
at
the
time
appear
to
have
been
those
to
the
Cities
of
Kitchener,
Hamilton
and
Toronto,
and
these
were
elsewhere
particularly
dealt
with
in
the
agreement
of
settlement.
From
these
facts
I
would
conclude
that
the
$3,750
to
which
the
appellant
became
entitled
under
the
agreement
of
settlement
was
not
a
settlement
or
surrogatum
for
commissions
which
he
might
have
expected
to
reap
from
the
activities
which
he
had
carried
out
but
was
referable
to
the
loss
of
the
contract
itself
which
was
not
one
of
a
number
of
similar
contracts
entered
into
in
the
course
of
his
business
but
was
the
“fixed
framework’’
within
which
he
operated.
Having
regard
to
these
features
of
the
situation,
I
am
of
the
opinion
that
the
$3,750
so
received
was
not
a
profit
from
the
appellant’s
business
but
a
capital
receipt.
The
appeal
accordingly
succeeds
in
so
far
as
the
$1,750
included
in
the
appellant’s
income
for
the
year
1952
is
concerned
and
the
assessment
for
that
year
must
be
varied
accordingly.
It
is
otherwise,
however,
with
respect
to
the
$13.63
per
meter
provided
for
by
the
agreement
of
settlement
with
respect
to
meters
which
might
be
sold
to
the
City
of
Toronto
pursuant
to
the
tender.
The
agency
contract
itself
contemplated
the
possibility
of
sales
being
made
within
30
days
after
termination
of
the
agency
as
a
result
of
negotiations
initiated
prior
to
its
termination
and
I
think
there
could
be
no
doubt
that
commissions
earned
on
such
sales
would
have
been
income.
What
the
agreement
of
settlement
appears
to
me
to
provide
is
that
in
the
case
of
the
tender
to
the
City
of
Toronto
the
30-day
limit
provided
in
the
agency
contract
is
waived
and
the
appellant
is
to
have
the
right
to
pursue
the
matter
to
a
conclusion
but
is
to
have
a
commission
of
$13.68
for
each
meter
sold
pursuant
to
the
tender
rather
than
the
commission
provided
for
in
the
agency
contract.
Such
an
alteration
in
my
opinion
has
no
effect
on
the
income
nature
of
the
amount
to
which
the
appellant
was
to
be
entitled
for
his
services
as
agent
and
the
amount
was
accurately
referred
to
as
“commission”
in
the
agreement
of
settlement.
Nor,
in
my
opinion,
did
the
amount
received
by
the
appellant
from
A.M.I.
Distributing
Co.
Ltd.
in
exchange
for
his
right
to
such
commissions,
partake
of
any
other
character.
I
am
quite
unable
to
see
what
difference
it
can
make
that
there
was
still
a
possibility
that
no
commission
would
become
payable.
What
the
appellant
had
at
the
time
of
the
assignment
was
a
contingent
right
of
an
income
nature.
He
exchanged
it
for
$12,000
and
a
certain
proportion
of
the
commissions
over
that
amount.
If
the
City
of
Toronto
had
cancelled
the
purchase
he
would
have
been
under
obligation
to
return
the
$12,000
and
any
other
sums
which
he
had
received
in
which
case
the
receipts
would
have
been
offset
by
the
deduction
of
what
he
would
have
to
repay.
But
this
did
not
happen
and
I
can
see
no
reason
why
in
the
circumstances
the
amount
received
by
the
appellant
should
for
income
tax
purposes
be
regarded
as
having
a
different
nature
from
the
income
right
which
he
exchanged
for
it.
In
respect
of
the
sums
of
$12,000
and
$1,470
in
1952
and
$896.27
in
1953
received
by
the
appellant
from
A.M.I.
Distributing
Co.
Ltd.,
the
appeal
accordingly
fails.
Turning
now
to
the
cross-appeal—because
it
arises
out
of
the
facts
which
I
have
been
discussing—as
previously
mentioned
this
turns
entirely
on
whether
Section
16(1)
of
the
Income
Tax
Act
applies
to
render
the
58
per
cent
of
the
commissions
retained
by
A.M.I.
Distributing
Co.
Ltd.
pursuant
to
the
assignment
agreement
taxable
as
income
of
the
appellant.
This
section
provides
that
“A
payment
or
transfer
of
money,
rights
or
things
made
pursuant
to
the
direction
of,
cr
with
the
concurrence
of,
a
taxpayer
to
some
other
person
for
the
benefit
that
the
taxpayer
desired
to
have
conferred
on
the
other
person
shall
be
included
in
computing
the
taxpayer’s
income
to
the
extent
that
it
would
be
if
the
payment
or
transfer
had
been
made
to
him.’’
It
was
argued
that
the
payment
of
the
commissions
by
Park-O-
Meter
of
Canada
Ltd.
to
A.M.I.
Distributing
Co.
Ltd.
was
made
pursuant
to
the
direction
of
the
appellant
within
the
meaning
of
this
subsection
as
a
benefit
which
he
desired
to
have
conferred
on
A.M.I.
Distributing
Co.
Ltd.
In
my
opinion,
Section
16(1)
is
intended
to
cover
cases
where
the
taxpayer
seeks
to
avoid
receipt
of
what
in
his
hands
would
be
income
by
arranging
to
have
the
amount
received
by
some
other
person
whom
he
wishes
to
benefit
or
by
some
other
person
for
his
own
benefit.
The
scope
of
the
subsection
is
not
obscure
for
one
does
not
speak
of
benefiting
a
person
in
the
sense
of
the
subsection
by
making
a
business
contract
with
him
for
adequate
consideration.
Here,
I
see
no
reason
to
think
that
the
58
per
cent
which
A.M.I.
Distributing
Co.
Ltd.
was
to
retain
was
anything
but
the
consideration
for
the
risk
which
it
took
in
paying
out
$12,000
to
the
appellant
on
the
strength
of
a
contract
which
might
be
cancelled
and
the
mere
liability
of
the
appellant
to
repay
it
if
that
event
occurred.
In
my
opinion,
Section
16(1)
has
no
application
to
such
a
transaction
and
the
cross-appeal
accordingly
fails.
There
remains
the
issue
respecting
the
$5,000
received
by
the
appellant
on
the
release
of
his
right
to
214
per
cent
on
sales
to
be
made
after
termination
of
the
agency
contract.
As
previously
mentioned,
the
basis
for
the
taxation
of
this
sum
put
forward
by
the
Minister
in
his
reply
was
that
it
was
received
for
the
partial
cancellation
of
an
agency
agreement
entered
into
by
the
appellant
in
the
course
of
his
business.
If
the
sum
in
question
had
in
fact
been
received
for
the
partial
cancellation
of
the
agency
agreement,
it
would
in
my
opinion
be
of
the
same
nature
as
the
$3,750
which,
as
already
stated,
I
regard
as
a
capital
receipt.
But
on
the
evidence,
I
do
not
think
the
sum
can
be
said
to
have
been
received
for
the
cancellation
or
the
partial
cancellation
of
the
agency
agreement.
The
214
per
cent
was
provided
for
in
the
first
agreement
and
was
to
accrue
only
in
the
event
of
premature
termination
of
the
contract
and
then
not
on
sales
which
the
appellant
might
make
but
on
sales
which
others
might
make
after
he
had
ceased
operating.
The
nature
of
the
appellant’s
right
to
such
commissions
in
my
opinion
appears
from
the
agreement
of
August,
1950,
and
the
circumstances
attending
its
execution.
In
that
agreement,
the
consideration
for
these
commissions
is
stated
as
‘the
introduction
of
McGowan
to
McGee-
Hale,
and
the
information
and
assistance
already
freely
given
and
to
be
given
by
Miller
to
McGowan”.
The
agreement
is
silent
as
to
Just
what
“the
assistance
already
freely
given’’
was,
but
it
does
appear
that
McGowan
could
not
obtain
the
patent
licence
without
the
appellant’s
consent
whether
because
McGee-Hale
was
protecting
his
position
in
that
respect
of
because
of
McCowan’s
undertaking
which
is
referred
to
in
the
second
recital
of
the
agency
contract,
not
to
negotiate
with
McGee-Hale
for
a
period
of
five
years,
or
both.
Nor
does
it
appear
what
was
to
be
included
in
‘‘assistance
to
be
rendered’’.
Provision
was
made
in
the
agreement
for
commissions
at
specified
rates
for
making
sales
of
meters
and
so
it
appears
to
me
that
this
is
not
included
in
the
consideration
for
the
214
per
cent
commissions.
The
substantial
consideration
for
the
214
per
cent
commissions,
in
my
Opinion,
was
the
waiver
by
the
appellant
of
his
rights
under
the
earlier
agreement
with
McGowan
and
his
consent
to
McGowan
negotiating
for
a
licence
under
the
patent
and
this,
I
think,
was
the
giving
up
by
the
appellant
of
a
right
of
a
capital
nature
in
exchange
for
the
right
to
the
agency
and
the
214
per
cent
commissions.
In
this
view,
the
right
to
such
commissions
was
also
a
right
of
a
capital
nature
whether
or
not
the
commissions
when
actually
paid
would
have
been
income—a
question
which
does
not
arise
in
these
proceedings—and
the
$5,000
received
by
the
appellant
for
the
release
of
such
right
was
also
capital
and
not
income.
The
appeal
accordingly
succeeds
with
respect
to
this
item
as
well.
In
the
result,
the
appeal
will
be
allowed
with
costs
and
the
re-assessments
varied
to
the
extent
indicated
in
these
reasons.
The
cross-appeal
will
be
dismissed
with
costs.
Judgment
accordingly.