THURLOW,
J.:—This
is
an
appeal
from
a
judgment
of
the
Tax
Appeal
Board,
22
Tax
A.B.C.
120,
allowing
the
appeal
of
the
respondent
from
re-assessments
of
income
tax
for
the
years
1946
to
1954
inclusive.
By
its
judgment
the
Board
held
that
certain
discounts
realized
by
the
respondent
on
mortgages
and
agreements
of
sale
which
had
been
included
in
the
Minister’s
computation
of
the
respondent’s
income
for
the
years
in
question
were
not
income
and
it
also
held
that
the
re-assessments
for
the
years
1946
to
1951
inclusive
were
invalid
and
void
by
reason
of
their
having
been
made
later
than
the
time
permitted
therefor
by
the
statute.
In
this
Court
counsel
for
the
respondent
admitted
the
right
of
the
Minister
to
make
the
re-assessments
when
they
were
made
and
the
only
issue
raised
was
that
of
whether
the
respondent
is
liable
to
tax
in
respect
of
the
discounts.
The
amounts
of
such
discounts
have
been
agreed
between
the
parties
as
follows,
these
amounts
being
for
each
of
the
years
except
1946
and
1949
somewhat
less
than
the
amount
which
the
Minister
included
in
his
computations
of
the
respondent’s
income:
For
the
years
1946,
1947
and
1948
the
applicable
statute
was
the
Income
War
Tax
Act,
R.S.C.
1927,
c.
97,
by
Section
3
of
which
income
was
defined
as
meaning
‘‘the
annual
net
profit
or
gain
or
gratuity,
whether
ascertained
and
capable
of
computation
as
being
wages,
salary,
or
other
fixed
amount,
or
unascertained
as
being
fees
or
emoluments
or
as
being
profits
from
a
trade
or
commercial
or
financial
or
other
business
or
calling,
directly
or
indirectly
received
by
a
person
from
any
office
or
employment,
or
from
any
profession
or
calling,
or
from
any
trade,
manufacture
or
business,
as
the
case
may
be
whether
derived
from
sources
within
Canada
or
elsewhere;
and
shall
include
the
interest,
dividends
or
profits
directly
or
indirectly
received
from
money
at
interest
upon
any
security
or
without
security,
or
from
stocks,
or
from
any
other
investment,
and,
whether
such
gains
or
profits
are
divided
or
distributed
or
not,
and
also
the
annual
profit
or
gain
from
any
other
source
including,
etc.”.
The
words
‘‘trade’’
and
‘‘business’’
were
not
defined
in
the
statute
and
it
will
be
noted
that
the
definition
of
“income”
particularly
included
the
interest
received
from
money
at
interest
‘‘upon
any
security’’
or
from
any
other
‘‘investment’’.
It
is
not
contended
that
the
discounts
in
question
for
the
years
to
which
the
Income
War
Tax
Act
applies
were
‘‘interest’’
within
the
meaning
of
this
provision
and
the
liability
of
the
respondent
to
tax
in
respect
of
the
discounts
realized
by
him
in
those
years
must
stand
or
fall
on
the
issue
of
whether
or
not
they
were
profits
or
gains
from
any
‘‘trade’’
or
‘‘business’’
within
the
meaning
of
Section
3
of
the
Act.
1946
|
$
|
750.00
|
1947
|
|
968.23
|
1948
|
|
1,523.17
|
1949
|
|
711.73
|
1950
|
|
1,397.00
|
1951
|
|
5,798.11
|
1952
|
|
8,212.72
|
1953
|
_.
|
8,703.35
|
1954
|
10,667.67
|
|
$38,731.98
|
For
the
years
1949,
1950,
1951
and
1952
the
applicable
statute
was
the
Income
Tax
Act,
S.
of
C.
1948,
c.
52,
and
for
the
years
1953
and
1954
the
Income
Tax
Act,
R.S.C.
1952,
c.
148.
The
relevant
provisions
of
these
statutes
were
Sections
3
and
4
which
were
the
same
in
both
statutes
and
Section
127(1)
(e)
of
the
1948
Act
which
was
merely
renumbered
as
Section
139(1)
(e)
in
the
1952
Act.
These
provisions
were
as
follows:
“3.
The
income
of
a
taxpayer
for
a
taxation
year
for
the
purposes
of
this
Part
is
his
income
for
the
year
from
all
sources
inside
or
outside
Canada
and,
without
restricting
the
generality
of
the
foregoing,
includes
income
for
the
year
from
all
(a)
businesses,
(b)
property,
and
(c)
offices
and
employments.
4.
Subject
to
the
other
provisions
of
this
Part,
income
for
a
taxation
year
from
a
business
or
property
is
the
profit
therefrom
for
the
year.
127.
(1)
[later
139(1)].
In
this
Act,
(e)
‘business’
includes
a
profession,
calling,
trade,
manufacture
or
undertaking
of
any
kind
whatsoever
and
includes
an
adventure
or
concern
in
the
nature
of
trade
but
does
not
include
an
office
or
employment.’’
For
each
of
the
years
1949
to
1954
the
issue
turns
on
whether
or
not
the
discounts
were
income
from
a
business
within
the
meaning
of
these
provisions.
This
issue
is
the
same
as
that
which
arose
on
the
same
statutory
provisions
in
a
number
of
eases
in
this
Court
having
facts
somewhat
similar
to
those
of
the
present
case
including
Cohen
v.
M.N.R.,
[1957]
Ex.
C.R.
236;
[1957]
C.T.C.
251;
M.N.R.
v.
Spencer,
[1961]
C.T.C.
107;
Scott
v.
M.N.R.,
[1961]
C.T.C.
451;
and
M.N.R.
v.
Minden,
[1962]
C.T.C.
79;
but
while
principles
for
resolving
such
an
issue
are
discussed
in
these
cases
in
the
end
each
of
them
in
my
opinion
is
simply
a
judgment
on
its
particular
facts,
for
as
the
President
of
this
Court
observed
in
the
Spencer
case
at
page
125
:
‘‘Indeed
there
is
no
rule
of
general
application
in
cases
of
the
kind
referred
to
except
that
in
every
case
the
question
whether
the
profits
realized
by
a
person
who
has
purchased
mortgages
at
a
discount
or
acquired
them
with
a
bonus
are
enhancements
of
the
value
of
investments
or
gains
made
‘in
an
operation
of
business
in
a
scheme
for
profit
making’
or
profits
from
an
adventure
or
adventures
in
the
nature
of
trade
and
therefore
income
within
the
meaning
of
Sections
3
and
4
of
the
Income
Tax
Act
is
a
question
of
fact
and
its
determination
must
depend
on
the
facts
and
surrounding
circumstances
of
the
case
and
the
true
nature
of
the
transactions
from
which
the
profits
were
realized.’’
In
Californian
Copper
Syndicate
(Limited
and
Reduced)
v.
Harris
(1904),
5
T.C.
159,
the
Lord
Justice
Clerk
in
a
passage
which
has
been
referred
to
and
quoted
with
approval
in
many
subsequent
cases
explained
the
distinction
between
gains
that
are
assessable
to
income
tax
and
those
that
are
not
and
posed
the
test
to
be
applied
in
determining
on
which
side
of
the
line
particular
gains
may
fall
as
follows
at
page
165
:
"It
is
quite
a
well
settled
principle
in
dealing
with
questions
of
assessment
of
Income
Tax,
that
where
the
owner
of
an
ordinary
investment
chooses
to
realise
it,
and
obtains
a
greater
price
for
it
than
he
originally
acquired
it
at,
the
enhanced
price
is
not
profit
in
the
sense
of
Schedule
D
of
the
Income
Tax
Act
of
1842
assessable
to
Income
Tax.
But
it
is
equally
well
established
that
enhanced
values
obtained
from
realisation
or
conversion
of
securities
may
be
so
assessable,
where
what
is
done
is
not
merely
a
realisation
or
change
of
invest-
ment,
but
an
act
done
in
what
is
truly
the
carrying
on,
or
carrying
out,
of
a
business.
The
simplest
case
is
that
of
a
person
or
association
of
persons
buying
and
selling
lands
or
securities
speculatively,
in
order
to
make
gain,
dealing
in
such
investments
as
a
business,
and
thereby
seeking
to
make
profits.
There
are
many
companies
which
in
their
very
inception
are
formed
for
such
a
purpose,
and
in
these
cases
it
is
not
doubtful
that,
where
they
make
a
gain
by
a
realisation,
the
gain
they
make
is
liable
to
be
assessed
for
Income
Tax.
What
is
the
line
which
separates
the
two
classes
of
cases
may
be
difficult
to
define,
and
each
case
must
be
considered
according
to
its
facts;
the
question
to
be
determined
being—
Is
the
sum
of
gain
that
has
been
made
a
mere
enhancement
of
value
by
realising
a
security,
or
is
it
a
gain
made
in
an
operation
of
business
in
carrying
out
a
scheme
for
profitmaking
?
’
’
I
turn
now
to
the
facts
as
given
in
evidence
by
the
respondent
who
was
the
only
witness
called
at
the
hearing
of
the
appeal.
At
that
time
he
was
in
his
83rd
year
and
he
impressed
me
as
being
a
man
of
extraordinary
intelligence
and
alertness,
who
expressed
himself
in
a
ready
and
accurate
flow
of
language.
Despite
his
interest
in
the
result
of
the
proceedings,
I
think
he
was
perfectly
frank
and
honest
in
his
answers
and
I
neither
discount
nor
doubt
any
of
his
testimony.
In
the
course
of
his
lifetime
the
respondent
has
had
experience
in
a
number
of
fields.
Following
his
graduation
from
high
school
in
1895,
he
worked
first
for
a
Montreal
firm
buying
hay,
then
for
the
Canadian
Pacific
Railway
for
several
years
and
later
came
to
Vancouver
where
he
became
the
manager
of
a
firm
dealing
in
securities
and
a
member
of
the
Vancouver
Stock
Exchange.
In
the
period
between
1900
and
the
commencement
of
the
Great
War
he
also
bought
and
sold
real
estate
consisting
of
building
lots
in
Vancouver.
During
the
war
he
and
an
associate
had
an
agency
for
a
tire
company
and
operated
a
retail
tire
business.
From
1918
to
1925
he
was
Civil
Service
Commissioner
for
the
Province
of
British
Columbia
and
later
was
Official
Administrator
of
the
County
of
Vancouver.
He
lost
his
position
following
a
change
of
government
and
thereafter
joined
a
firm
engaged
in
the
wholesale
grocery
business.
This
business,
however,
did
not
succeed
and
in
the
mid-thirties
it
was
closed.
In
1937
he
began
doing
business
as
a
soap
manufacturer
under
the
trade
name
of
Western
Soap
Company
and
he
continued
to
operate
this
business
as
his
own
until
the
end
of
1954
when
he
had
reached
75.
It
was
then
taken
over
by
a
corporation
of
which
he
was
the
chief
shareholder
and
president.
Since
then
the
share
control
of
the
company
and
most
of
the
responsibility
for
its
operations
have
passed
to
his
son
but
he
remains
president
and
still
takes
an
active
part
in
the
business.
The
respondent
began
this
business
after
others
had
failed
in
it
and
he
managed
to
make
it
a
successful
enterprise
by
dint
of
much
work
on
his
own
part
and
the
reduction
of
overhead
to
the
barest
minimum.
He
regularly
or
frequently
worked
from
9:30
a.m.
to
1:30
a.m.
the
following
day,
attending
personally
to
the
buying
and
selling
and
the
invoicing,
bookkeeping
and
correspondence
as
well
as
the
supervising
of
the
manufacturing
operation.
He
employed
from
10
-to
15
men
in
the
plant
including
a
foreman
but
had
no
buyer,
salesman,
bookkeeper,
stenographer
or
clerk
and
no
office
at
the
plant.
The
office
work
was
done
at
his
home
until
the
take-over
by
the
company
when
a
small
office
was
built
at
the
plant
and
a
stenographer
employed
on
a
part
time
basis.
Having
thus
eliminated
excessive
overhead
and
having
concentrated
on
selling
his
product
to
institutions
and
other
users
of
soap
in
large
quantities
who
were
not
attracted
by
expensive
packaging—which
he
also
avoided—he
was
able
to
compete
successfully
with
the
largest
producers
of
soap
and
to
earn
substantial
profits
but
at
the
cost
of
prodigious
personal
effort.
While
prior
to
the
incorporation
the
soap
business
and
its
profits
belonged
entirely
to
him,
for
accounting
purposes
he
always
treated
the
business
as
a
separate
entity,
charging
a
salary
for
himself
and
accumulating
in
it
a
reserve
against
the
time
when
it
might
be
needed
for
change
or
expansion
of
the
business.
By
1954
the
amount
which
he
had
accumulated
and
earmarked
as
such
reserve
was
approximately
$80,000
and
this
reserve
was
transferred
to
the
company
as
part
of
the
assets
of
the
undertaking.
At
that
time
the
reserve
was
invested
in
mortgages
and
agreements
of
sale
as
was
the
rest
of
the
respondent’s
savings.
The
respondent
is
a
man
of
simple
and
frugal
personal
habits.
He
neither
drinks
nor
smokes
nor
gambles,
he
has
lived
in
the
same
home
since
the
early
thirties
and
despite
his
means
he
drives
a
1948
Plymouth
car.
He
has
an
unusual
and
favourable
arrangement
with
his
banks
in
respect
of
exchange
charges.
He
has
always
managed
to
live
within
his
income
and
save
something.
It
is
not
surprising
that
such
a
man
would
have
from
time
to
time
moneys
which
he
would
want
to
put
to
work
and
he
had
not
the
slightest
hesitation
in
saying
so
and
that
he
wanted
the
utmost
return
from
them
that
he
could
get
without
undue
risk
of
loss.
In
his
early
years
he
liked
power
stocks
and
invested
money
in
them
and
later
after
coming
to
Vancouver
he
also
invested
in
building
lots
until
the
beginning
of
the
Great
War
when
the
market
for
them
collapsed.
He
said
he
both
made
and
lost
money
in
real
estate
during
that
period.
At
the
time
when
he
ceased
to
be
Official
Administrator
of
the
County
of
Vancouver
there
were
two
or
three
estates
the
administration
of
which
had
not
been
completed
and
the
heirs
arranged
for
him
to
continue
as
administrator.
Some
of
these
people
wanted
money
earlier
than
it
was
available
and
at
their
request
he
purchased
assets
of
the
estates
consisting
of
several
properties
which
had
been
quit
claimed
by
the
mortgagor
or
purchaser
and
about
ten
long
term
mortgages
and
agreements
of
sale.
In
the
case
of
a
number
of
the
mortgages
and
agreements
of
sale,
the
land
was
ultimately
quite
claimed
to
him.
He
later
sold
these
properties
taking
agreements
of
sale
or
mortgages
to
secure
the
unpaid
balance
of
the
selling
price
and
the
proceeds
provided
some
of
the
funds
with
which
he
later
bought
other
mortgages
and
agreements
of
sale
but
none
of
the
discounts
in
question
arose
from
transactions
in
which
he
sold
property
which
he
himself
had
owned.
These
arose
in
a
different
way.
In
the
course
of
his
experience
as
official
administrator
of
the
County
of
Vancouver,
he
had
been
surprised
to
find
how
well
a
certain
type
of
what
were
regarded
as
substandard
mortgages
had
been
paid
and
that
these
had
a
better
record
than
some
kinds
of
mortgages
which
the
mortgage
companies
regarded
as
superior.
He
observed
that
where
a
working
couple
had
bought
a
home
at
a
price
that
was
commensurate
with
their
income,
which
gave
them
the
accommodation
they
needed,
and
had
paid
a
substantial
down
payment,
barring
marital
trouble,
they
would
pay
for
it.
With
this
knowledge
he
was
of
a
mixed
mind
when
in
1943
or
1944
some
such
mortgages
and
agreements
of
sale
were
offered
to
him
by
a
friend
of
his
who
was
in
the
real
estate
business.
He
regarded
them
as
pretty
risky’’.
In
his
experience
buoyant
conditions
were
usually
followed
by
depressions
and
he
did
not
expect
the
boom
conditions
which
were
generated
by
the
war
to
last
as
they
did.
But
he
was
interested
in
finding
investments
that
would
yield
more
than
the
3
or
4
per
cent
obtainable
cn
government
and
other
securities
and
when
reminded
of
his
experience
he
decided
to
try
some
of
these
mortgages.
Later
when
they
turned
out
well
he
decided
to
put
more
money
into
similar
mortgages
and
agreements.
By
buying
them
at
a
suitable
discount
these
securities
though
carrying
a
rate
of
6
per
cent
would
yield
7
per
cent
or
higher
on
his
investment
over
their
term
and
the
risk
of
loss
on
particular
mortgages
or
agreements
would
be
protected
and
spread
by
the
discounts.
Ultimately
he
disposed
of
the
whole
of
his
other
investments
and
invested
the
proceeds
together
with
all
his
current
savings
and
the
soap
business
reserve
into
mortgages
and
agreements
of
sale
of
this
type.
From
the
time
of
his
first
purchase
in
1943
or
1944
to
the
end
of
1954
he
purchased
309
of
these
securities
of
which
in
the
meantime
113
had
been
paid
off
giving
rise
to
the
receipt
of
the
sums
in
question
which
have
been
referred
to
as
discounts.
These
mortgages
and
agreements
of
sale
(which
I
shall
refer
to
simply
as
mortgages)
were
regarded
as
substandard
for
two
reasons.
They
all
constituted
first
charges
on
property,
but
the
principal
amount
represented
up
to
two-thirds
of
the
value
of
the
property,
rather
than
45
to
50
per
cent
which
mortgage
companies
were
prepared
to
advance.
To
the
extent
that
the
amount
exceeded
45
to
50
per
cent
of
the
value,
the
risk
was,
therefore,
similar
to
that
attaching
to
a
second
mortgage.
The
other
feature
was
that
they
were
all
small
mortgages
ranging
for
the
most
part
between
$1,500
and
$3,000
and
the
mortgage
companies
preferred
larger
loans
which
entailed
proportionately
less
bookkeeping
and
expense.
All
but
two
of
the
mortgages
which
were
paid
off
during
the
years
in
question
carried
an
interest
rate
of
6
per
cent
and
they
were
all
repayable
in
monthly
payments
ranging
from
$22
to
$75
consisting
in
part
of
accrued
interest
and
the
remainder
on
account
of
principal.
As
the
respondent
purchased
all
of
these
mortgages
at
a
discount
the
effective
return
of
interest
on
the
amount
which
he
paid
was
in
each
case
higher
than
6
per
cent.
In
55
cases
it
was
7
per
cent,
in
22
cases
more
than
7
per
cent
and
in
23
cases
between
6
and
7
per
cent.
In
no
case
did
it
reach
8
per
cent.
He
also
enjoyed
the
advantage
of
having
his
interest
paid
monthly
and,
therefore,
available
for
investment
earlier
than
if
it
had
been
payable
quarterly
or
half
yearly.
Throughout
the
years
in
question,
economic
conditions
were
buoyant
and
the
mortgages
were
all
paid
at
maturity
or
earlier
and
he
continued
to
invest
and
reinvest
the
proceeds
in
mortgages
of
this
kind.
By
the
time
of
the
trial,
however,
a
number
of
them
had
gone
into
default.
He
had
sustained
some
losses
and
could
foresee
others
and
had
commenced
to
invest
in
some
other
kinds
of
securities
as
well.
The
evidence
indicates
that
in
general
the
size
of
the
principal
amounts
of
the
mortgages
acquired
by
the
respondent
increased
as
time
went
by,
the
earlier
ones
being
for
the
most
part
less
than
$2,000
and
the
later
ones
higher
than
that
amount,
the
largest
being
$4,900.
The
principal
of
13
of
the
mortgages
was
less
than
$1,500
and
of
21
of
them
was
over
$3,000.
The
discounts
at
which
they
were
acquired
ranged
from
6
to
22
per
cent
but
in
52
of
the
113
mortgages
which
were
paid
off
during
the
years
in
question
it
was
exactly
15
per
cent.
The
terms
of
these
mortgages
were
as
follows:
3
years
and
under
4
years
|
11
|
4
years
and
under
9
years
|
11
|
5
years
and
under
6
years
|
24
|
6
years
and
under
7
years
|
19
|
1
years
and
under
8
years
|
17
|
8
years
and
over
|
26
|
One
was
as
short
as
2
years
and
it
was
the
lone
case
wherein
the
discount
was
as
low
as
6
per
cent.
The
longest
term
was
13
years.
In
general
the
shorter
terms
were
in
the
mortgages
purchased
in
the
earlier
years
and
longer
in
those
acquired
in
the
later
years.
A
rough
calculation
indicates
that
in
mortgages
carrying
6
per
cent
interest
with
a
5
year
repayment
term
a
discount
of
15
per
cent
is
only
slightly
less
in
amount
than
the
total
interest
payable
over
the
term.
In
the
case
of
some
of
the
respondent’s
purchases
the
amount
of
the
discount
must
have
been
greater
than
the
total
interest
to
be
paid
over
the
term
while
in
others
it
was
obviously
much
less.
The
mortgages
in
question
were
all
selected
by
the
respondent
from
those
offered
to
him
by
real
estate
agents.
He
never
solicited
them
nor
had
he
any
arrangements
with
the
agents
to
find
them
for
him.
During
the
same
period
he
was
offered
second
mortgages
at
much
higher
discounts
and
higher
rates
of
interest,
but
he
turned
them
down
as
he
also
did
the
numerous
offerings
of
other
kinds
of
securities
which
arrived
in
his
mail
and
were
committed
to
his
waste
basket.
He
knew
precisely
the
kind
of
security
that
he
was
interested
in
and
was
too
busy
with
his
soap
business
to
study
and
consider
others.
As
the
number
of
these
mortgages
grew,
the
work
of
keeping
track
of
the
payments
increased,
and
from
1948
to
1952
a
real
estate
agent
in
whom
he
had
particular
confidence,
collected
the
payments
for
him
pursuant
to
an
arrangement
under
which
the
agent
was
to
receive
90
cents
for
each
payment
collected.
Ultimately
the
agent
found
this
arrangement
unprofitable
and
it
was
discontinued.
Thereafter
the
respondent
attended
to
the
work
himself.
Most
of
the
payments
were
received
by
post
and
he
said
that
it
took
him
as
much
as
a
half
hour
some
days
to
make
the
entries,
compute
the
interest,
write
the
receipts
and
put
them
in
the
mail.
The
respondent
was
not
the
lender
in
any
of
these
transactions.
Without
exception
what
he
agreed
to
do
was
to
purchase
from
the
person
entitled
thereto
the
obligation
of
a
borrower
together
with
the
security
therefor
which
the
holder
of
the
obligation
had.
In
some
cases
where
the
transaction
occurred
as
part
of
the
arrangements
on
the
sale
of
a
property,
the
agent
would,
in
order
to
save
conveyancing
costs,
arrange
to
have
the
mortgage
made
directly
to
him
rather
than
to
the
vendor
and
then
assigned,
but
this
was
a
mere
convenience.
The
respondent
never
agreed
to
lend
money
to
the
borrower
and
in
these
transactions
never
dealt
with
anyone
but
the
agent
acting
on
behalf
of
the
vendor
or
mortgagee.
Throughout
the
years
in
question
he
never
sold
or
disposed
of
any
of
the
mortgages
and
has
not
sold
any
of
them
held
since
then
except
when
it
became
necessary
for
him
to
realize
some
of
them
in
1957
or
thereabouts
to
pay
income
tax
assessments
and
some
which
he
transferred
as
gifts
to
charitable
institutions.
All
the
rest
were
not
however
held
to
maturity
for
it
frequently
happened
that
a
mortgage
was
paid
off
ahead
of
time
either
on
a
sale
of
the
property
being
made
or
for
other
reasons.
In
a
very
few
such
instances
and
for
special
reasons
the
respondent
acceded
to
the
request
of
the
mortgagee
and
allowed
a
small
discount
but
in
the
great
majority
of
cases
the
principal
and
interest
were
paid
in
full.
The
following
summary
shows
the
number
and
amount
of
the
respondent’s
purchases
of
mortgages
from
1944
to
the
end
of
1954
together
with
the
discounts
recovered.
Year
|
Purchases
Amount
|
Principal
of
|
N
o.
paid
Discount
|
|
mortgages
|
off
off
realized
|
|
purchased
|
|
1944
|
3
|
$
|
4,144.50
|
$
|
4,860.00
|
|
1945
|
1
|
|
914.00
|
|
975.00
|
|
1946
|
23
|
|
46,577.66
|
|
51,592.02
|
~~4
|
$
|
750.00
|
1947
|
25
|
|
50,169.83
|
|
62,529.97
|
6
|
|
968.23
|
1948
|
22
|
|
49,063.70
|
|
60,743.57
|
8
|
|
1,523.17
|
1949
|
30
|
|
72,096.06
|
|
85,423.63
|
3
|
|
711.73
|
1950
|
31
|
|
78,922.09
|
|
96,787.38
|
5
|
|
1,397.00
|
1951
|
36
|
|
89,790.68
|
|
115,802.80
|
17
|
|
5,798.11
|
1952
|
60
|
170,068.41
|
|
212,590.07
|
23
|
|
8,212.72
|
1953
|
34
|
115,835.07
|
|
148,365.76
|
18
|
|
8,703.35
|
1954
|
44
|
148,394.86
|
|
212,714.51
|
29
|
10,667.67
|
|
309
|
$825,976.86
|
$1,052,384.71
|
113
|
$38,731.98
|
At
the
end
of
1954
he
had
on
hand
196
mortgages
with
unrealized
discounts
amounting
to
$187,675.87
most
if
not
all
of
which
has
since
been
realized
and
he
has
also
continued
to
buy
additional
mortgages
at
a
discount.
I
have
no
hesitation
in
reaching
the
conclusion
that
the
discounts
totalling
$750
realized
by
the
respondent
in
1946
were
not
profits
from
a
trade
or
business
within
the
meaning
of
Section
3
of
the
Income
War
Tax
Act.
As
I
see
it
these
discounts
resulted
simply
from
the
trial
investments
in
mortgages
which
the
respondent
had
made
in
earlier
years
and
I
do
not
think
it
would
have
occurred
to
anyone
to
think
at
that
time
that
in
buying
and
holding
them
to
maturity
he
was
engaged
in
a
trade
or
business
rather
than
merely
investing
his
money
and
holding
the
investments.
Nor
can
what
he
did
in
1946
and
later
in
buying
more
mortgages
of
the
same
type
change
the
nature
of
what
he
had
done
earlier
for
even
if
his
subsequent
purchases
and
conduct
were
considered
to
amount
to
a
business
within
the
meaning
of
the
statute
that,
in
my
opinion,
would
at
most
be
evidence
from
which
an
inference
might
be
drawn
that
the
earlier
transactions
were
also
transactions
in
the
course
of
the
same
trade
or
business,
an
inference
which
in
my
view
should
not
be
drawn
in
view
of
the
respondent’s
evidence
as
to
how
he
came
to
make
his
first
purchases
of
the
mortgages.
For
1946
I
am
accordingly
of
the
opinion
that
the
judgment
appealed
from
insofar
as
it
holds
the
discounts
not
subject
to
tax
is
correct
and
should
be
affirmed.
With
respect
to
the
sums
of
$968.23
and
$1,523.17
in
discounts
realized
in
1947
and
1948
the
result
is
perhaps
not
quite
so
plain
but
I
have
little
difficulty
in
reaching
the
conclusion
that
these
sums
as
well
were
not
income
from
a
trade
or
business
within
the
meaning
of
Section
3
of
the
Income
War
Tax
Act.
Granting
that
in
1946
the
respondent
had
begun
changing
his
other
investments
into
mortgages
of
this
kind
and
had
bought
23
mortgages
at
a
cost
of
$46,577.66,
and
in
1947
a
further
295
mortgages
at
a
cost
of
$50,169.83
from
the
payment
of
which
the
sums
of
$968.23
and
$1,528.17
were
probably
for
the
most
part
realized
and
also
taking
into
account
that
in
1948
as
well
he
had
bought
another
22
mortgages
at
a
cost
of
$49,063.70
and
that
he
continued
to
buy
mortgages
on
a
substantial
scale
in
later
years,
I
am
unable
to
see
what
there
was
about
the
respondent’s
purchases,
holding
and
receiving
of
the
amounts
accruing
on
these
mortgages
to
characterize
what
he
did
as
a
trade
or
business
rather
than
as
a
mere
investing
of
his
funds
in
mortgages
and
the
holding
of
such
investments.
The
case
for
characterizing
what
he
did
as
a
trade
or
business
appears
to
me
to
be
weaker
than
that
in
Argue
v.
M.N.R.,
[1948]
S.C.R.
469;
[1948]
C.T.C.
235,
where
the
taxpayer
besides
acting
as
a
manager
of
a
loan
company
which
brought
him
in
close
contact
with
mortgage
transactions
and
gave
him
a
special
knowledge
of
that
field
invested
his
own
money
in
mortgages
and
agreements
of
sale
of
an
average
principal
of
$1,300—to
a
total
extent
of
$102,379.24,
also
loaned
some
money
on
the
security
of
promissory
notes
and
combined
with
these
activities
that
of
a
fire
insurance
agent—a
business
capable
of
being
carried
on
as
an
incident
or
side
line
of
a
business
in
mortgages,
yet
the
Supreme
Court
held
that
the
taxpayer’s
income
from
the
mortgages
was
not
profit
from
“carrying
on
one
or
more
businesses,
as
defined
in
Section
3
of
the
Income
War
Tax
Act’’
within
the
meaning
of
Section
2
(1)
(g)
of
the
Excess
Profits
Tax
Act,
1940,
S.
of
C.
1940,
c.
32.
The
Minister’s
case
with
respect
to
the
discounts
realized
in
1947
and
1948
accordingly
fails
as
well
though
as
will
appear
what
I
shall
have
to
say
with
respect
to
the
discounts
realized
in
the
years
1949-1954
applies
with
equal
effect
with
respect
to
1947
and
1948
for
while
the
definition
in
Section
127
(l)(e)
of
the
Income
Tax
Act
expanded
the
ordinary
meaning
of
the
word
‘‘business”
so
as
to
include
‘‘an
adventure
or
concern
in
the
nature
of
trade’’,
it
appears
to
me
that
this
has
little
effect
in
this
particular
case
because
in
view
of
the
number
of
transactions
involved
it
would
seem
to
me
that
if
the
case
is
not
one
falling
within
the
ordinary
meaning
of
the
word
“trade”
it
is
outside
the
scope
of
the
expression
‘‘adventure
or
concern
in
the
nature
of
trade’’
as
well.
After
lengthy
consideration
of
the
facts
I
am
of
the
opinion
that
the
discounts
realized
in
the
years
1949
to
1954
were
not
profits
from
a
business
within
the
meaning
of
that
term
as
defined
in
the
applicable
statutes.
In
my
view
there
is
nothing
in
the
case
which
characterizes
what
the
respondent
did
as
anything
but
mere
investment
of
funds
which
he
had
available
for
investment.
What
the
respondent
did
in
the
years
in
question
was
simply
to
buy
mortgages,
hold
them
to
maturity
and
receive
the
payments
when
made.
He
undoubtedly
had
a
more
than
ordinary
ability
to
appraise
the
several
factors
entering
into
a
Judgment
of
when
to
buy
and
when
to
refuse
what
was
offered
and
he
knew
how
to
select
with
a
minimum
of
effort
the
mortgages
he
would
buy.
But
any
investor
who
proposes
to
obtain
a
revenue
from
his
means
while
at
the
same
time
protecting
his
capital
must
have
some
knowledge
of
what
he
is
about
or
he
is
not
likely
to
be
an
investor
for
long.
Nor
was
there
in
my
view
anything
about
the
way
in
which
he
acquired
them
which
is
not
as
consistent
with
mere
investment
of
funds
as
with
the
carrying
on
of
a
business.
Moreover,
he
did
not
buy
the
mortgages
to
sell
and
did
not
sell
them.
No
doubt
he
held
them
to
cet
from
them
all
that
he
could
including
the
discounts
but
it
would
I
think
be
unrealistic
to
look
upon
what
he
did
as
a
course
of
conduct
or
scheme
directed
primarily
to
the
making
of
profit
by
realizing
such
discounts.
The
interest
return
was
of
greater
importance
and
the
most
that
could
be
said
on
this
score
is
that
his
object
was
to
get
both.
But
that
is
the
same
object
which
anyone
has
who
buys
a
bond
at
a
discount
intending
to
hold
it
to
maturity.
And
in
any
case
the
matter
is
not
governed
by
the
intention
to
make
a
gain
or
profit.
Intention
to
make
a
profit
in
a
particular
way
is
no
doubt
an
important
fact
to
be
considered
in
cases
of
this
kind
but
like
many
of
the
other
features
which
are
from
time
to
time
referred
to
in
such
cases
as
pointing
to
one
conclusion
or
another
its
importance
depends
on
the
context
of
the
particular
case.
In
the
present
case
I
do
not
regard
it
as
having
much
significance.
Nor
does
the
fact
that
he
kept
records
of
the
mortgages
and
wrote
receipts
for
the
payments
and
that
this
in
later
years
took
some
of
his
time
each
day
in
my
opinion
make
any
difference.
Secondly,
investment
in
first
mortgages
of
real
estate
is
a
well
known
and
recognized
way
of
investing
money
to
obtain
an
income
return.
Here
the
mortgages
were
substandard—in
the
sense
that
mortgage
companies
were
not
interested
in
them—but
the
matter
is
not
dependent
on
the
standards
of
mortgage
companies
which
may
be
as
high
or
low
as
they
see
fit
to
adopt
within
such
restrictions
as
the
law
imposes
upon
them.
That
these
mortgages
as
a
class
were
in
fact
good
securities
is
demonstrated
by
the
result
and
though
each
involved
some
risk
and
at
that
possibly
a
somewhat
greater
risk
than
the
types
in
which
the
mortgage
companies
were
interested,
I
see
nothing
so
unusual
about
them
as
to
suggest
that
the
respondent
chose
them
in
the
course
of
a
gamble
or
adventure
looking
to
the
realization
of
a
speculative
profit.
In
no
case
was
he
subjecting
the
whole
amount
invested
to
risk
of
the
sort
assumed
by
a
second
mortgagee
who
may
lose
his
whole
investment
if
the
value
of
the
property
declines
below
the
amount
of
the
prior
incumbrance.
Moreover
when
buying
at
a
discount
of
15
per
cent
a
mortgage
with
a
principal
amount
equal
to
two-thirds
of
the
value
of
the
property
he
was
investing
in
it
only
to
the
extent
of
56%4
per
cent
of
the
value
of
the
property
and
under
the
repayment
terms
that
would
be
reduced
as
each
month
went
by.
What
he
paid
for
these
mortgages
was
no
doubt
as
much
as
anyone
would
pay
and
represented
what
they
were
worth
to
any
prudent
investor
seeking
a
high
income
return
who
knew
their
characteristics
and
took
into
account
such
risk
as
attached
to
them.
Moreover
except
in
a
few
cases,
they
were
not
short
term
mortgages
nor
is
there
any
occasion
to
infer
that
they
were
acquired
in
the
expectation
that
they
would
be
paid
before
maturity.
To
my
mind
the
only
features
about
this
case
which
tend
to
suggest
that
what
the
respondent
did
amounted
to
a
business
are
the
multiplicity
of
the
transactions
and
the
systematic
course
of
conduct
which
the
respondent
pursued
in
investing
and
reinvesting
in
these
mortgages.
As
I
see
it
nothing
about
the
acquiring,
holding
or
realization
of
any
one
of
the
mortgages
indicates
a
business
and
it
is
only
if
the
number
of
transactions
and
the
system
pursued
make
a
difference—when
viewed
with
the
other
facts—that
there
is
any
basis
for
the
suggestion
that
this
was
a
business
within
the
meaning
of
the
definition.
On
this
question
I
have
had
a
good
deal
of
doubt
because
of
the
large
total
number
of
transactions
but
it
appears
to
me
that
in
a
case
of
this
kind,
that
is
to
say
a
case
of
purchases
of
mortgages
by
a
person
whose
principal
activity
is
not
dealing
in
mortgages
or
other
securities
but
soap
manufacturing,
the
number
of
transactions
is
so
largely
a
matter
of
how
much
money
the
particular
individual
has
available
to
invest
that
I
am
unable
to
attribute
much
weight
or
effect
to
it,
and
the
same
applies
with
respect
to
the
system
for
given
the
fact
of
a
desire
to
invest
his
system
indicates
nothing
but
a
repetition
of
the
event
as
often
as
is
necessary
to
accomplish
the
object
of
keeping
his
money
invested
and
no
more.
To
my
mind
in
the
circumstances
of
this
case,
these
features
do
not
indicate
that
the
respondent
was
engaged
in
a
commercial
enterprise
or
trade.
Over
the
six-year
period
1949-1954
the
purchases
averaged
3.4
transactions
per
month.
In
1949
the
average
was
2.5
per
month.
In
1952
the
average
was
5
per
month,
and
in
1954
3.6
per
month.
A
person
who
in
transactions
similarly
numerous
and
whenever
he
happened
to
have
money
available
bought
government
and
corporation
bonds
at
a
discount
from
several
dealers
intending
to
hold
them
to
maturity
would
not
in
my
opinion
be
regarded
as
engaged
in
a
trade
or
business
merely
because
of
the
number
of
purchases
involved
or
the
fact
that
he
pursued
a
policy
of
buying
as
often
as
he
had
money
available
to
do
so
but
only
at
a
discount.
The
conclusion
can
I
think
also
be
tested
by
putting
a
converse
case.
Suppose
the
purchaser
of
bonds
in
the
case
suggested
or
the
respondent
in
buying
mortgages
instead
of
buying
at
a
discount
in
each
case
paid
a
premium.
In
neither
case
can
I
conceive
of
his
being
regarded
as
engaged
in
a
business
so
as
to
enable
him
to
deduct
the
premiums
from
interest
for
the
purpose
of
computing
his
profit.
The
Minister’s
submission
with
respect
to
the
year
1949
to
1954
accordingly
fails
as
well.
In
the
result
I
am
of
the
opinion
that
the
discounts
realized
by
the
respondent
in
these
years
as
well
as
in
the
earlier
years
were
mere
enhancements
of
value
on
the
realization
of
investments
and
not
gains
made
in
an
operation
of
business
in
carrying
out
a
scheme
for
profit
making.
The
judgment
appealed
from
will
be
varied
by
setting
aside
the
Board’s
declaration
that
the
re-assessments
for
the
years
1946-1951
inclusive
were
void
ab
initio
and
restoring
the
reassessments
but
subject
to
variation
in
accordance
with
these
reasons
by
omitting
from
the
computation
of
income
the
discounts
realized
by
the
respondent
in
those
years.
Subject
to
this
the
judgment
of
the
Tax
Appeal
Board
with
respect
to
all
the
years
under
appeal
will
be
affirmed
and
this
appeal
will
be
dismissed
with
costs.
Judgment
accordingly.