KEARNEY,
J.:—This
is
an
appeal
from
a
decision
of
the
Tax
Appeal
Board
(24
Tax
A.B.C.
375)
dated
June
21,
1960
allowing
the
appeal
of
the
respondent
and
vacating
a
re-assessment
wherein
the
appellant
sought
to
add
$40,000
to
the
gross
profit
of
$50,464.10
reported
by
the
taxpayer
for
the
taxation
year
1955
and
which
the
appellant
now
seeks
to
have
restored.
During
the
year
in
question,
the
respondent,
formerly
known
as
Consolidated
Oka
Sand
&
Gravel
Limited,
made
a
disposition
of
its
entire
sand
business
by
way
of
a
bulk
sale
or
slump
transaction
which,
immediately
prior
to
the
sale,
included
40,000
tons
of
unsold
sand
in
respect
of
which
it
received
in
the
slump
transaction
$1
a
ton.
The
issue
in
this
case
turns
on
the
manner
in
which
the
$40,000
thus
received
and
the
costs
incurred
in
producing
it
should
be
treated
in
the
determination
of
the
respondent’s
taxable
income
for
the
year.
It
was
agreed
by
the
parties
that
the
record
as
constituted
before
the
Tax
Appeal
Board,
including
the
transcript
of
argument,
should
form
part
of
the
record
in
this
Court.
Counsel
for
the
respondent
called
no
witnesses
but
relied
on
the
evidence
of
Blanche
Manning,
Lucien
Danis,
Secretary
and
Treasurer
respectively
of
the
respondent
company,
and
Gordon
S.
Payne,
C.A.,
its
auditor,
which
was
adduced
before
the
Tax
Appeal
Board.
A
reverse
procedure
was
followed
by
the
appellant—on
whose
behalf
no
witnesses
had
been
heard
before
the
Tax
Appeal
Board.
Before
this
Court,
however,
counsel
for
the
appellant
called
Omer-
Georges-S.
Vaillancourt,
Accountant
with
the
Department
of
National
Revenue,
Taxation
Division,
and
Gordon
McHale,
C.A.
It
is
not
the
facts
themselves
but
the
interpretation
to
be
given
to
them
which
is
in
dispute.
The
following
is
a
brief
history
of
the
respondent
company
(hereinafter
sometimes
called
‘‘the
taxpayer’’
or
‘‘the
company
’
’
)
and
a
summary
in
chronological
order
of
the
main
events
which
are
relevant
to
the
instant
issue.
The
company
was
incorporated
by
Letters
Patent
of
the
Province
of
Quebec
under
the
name
of
“Oka
Sand
&
Gravel
Co.
Limited”.
During
the
first
few
years
of
its
existence
it
acquired
a
property
in
the
city
of
Montreal,
just
off
McCord
Street,
close
to
a
shipping
basin
abutting
the
Lachine
Canal,
where
it
stored
and
disposed
of
sand
which
it
had
pumped
and
transported
by
its
own
equipment
and
marine
fleet
from
the
Lake
of
Two
Mountains,
in
the
neighbourhood
of
the
Town
of
Oka.
The
respondent
possessed
deep
water
lots
in
the
Lake
of
Two
Mountains
which
it
leased
from
the
Minister
of
Hydraulic
&
Resources
of
the
Province
of
Quebec
and
where
it
also
held
a
mining
concession,
covering
certain
lots
forming
part
of
the
said
lake,
in
virtue
of
a
grant
issued
by
the
Minister
of
Colonization
and
Mines
of
the
Province
of
Quebec.
In
1928,
Oka
Sand
&
Gravel
Co.
Ltd.
merged
with
a
company
called
‘‘Consolidated
Sand’’
and
these
two
companies
were
absorbed
by
a
new
company
called
‘‘Consolidated
Oka
Sand
&
Gravel
Co.
Limited”.
While
retaining
its
McCord
Street
property,
which
had
large
storage
facilities
and
on
which
the
respondent
had
later
constructed
a
garage
and
a
commercial
building
from
which
it
was
in
receipt
of
rentals,
it
decided
to
move
its
sand
business
to
Ville
LaSalle,
in
the
Parish
of
Lachine,
where
it
leased
a
property
on
St.
Patrick
Street
from
Raymond
Marroni,
and
certain
further
contiguous
lands
from
the
Minister
of
Transport
and
on
which
it
later
constructed,
inter
alia,
an
office
building.
Both
of
these
above-mentioned
properties
were
located
on
or
near
the
Lachine
Canal.
The
respondent
continued
to
operate
its
sand
business
through
the
medium
of
its
Ville
LaSalle
and
the
Lake
of
Two
Mountains
properties,
and
the
McCord
Street
property
became
a
real
estate
investment
from
which
gross
profits—which
are
not
in
issue—were
realized.
As
appears
by
Exs.
A-l
and
A-2
filed
before
the
Tax
Appeal
Board,
one
Raymond
Miron,
acting
for
and
on
behalf
of
Oka
Sand
&
Gravel
Inc.,
a
company
in
the
process
of
being
incorporated,
made
in
two
separate
documents
a
conditional
offer
to
purchase
as
a
going
concern
the
entire
sand
business
of
the
respondent
company,
with
the
exception
of
its
property
located
on
McCord
Street
for
a
total
consideration
of
$375,000.
By
Ex.
A-l
Mr.
Miron
offered
$27,000
for
all
the
respondent’s
interests
relating
to
its
Ville
LaSalle
and
Lake
of
Two
Mountains
properties
and
appurtenances
upon
its
simultaneous
acceptance
of
a
second
offer
(Ex.
A-2),
wherein
he
offered
to
purchase
the
respondent’s
marine
vessels
and
accessories
for
$308,000,
payable
$158,000
upon
the
signature
of
the
deed
and
$150,000
by
promissory
note
falling
due
six
months
from
the
signing
of
the
deed
and
secured
by
a
statutory
mortgage
in
favour
of
the
vendor
on
the
said
marine
vessels.
Exhibit
A-1,
inter
alia,
required
that
the
respondent
undertake
to
change
its
name
so
as
not
to
include
any
of
the
words
‘‘Oka’’,
‘‘Sand’’
and/or
‘‘Gravel’’
and
to
permit
the
purchaser
to
cause
to
be
incorporated
a
company
to
be
known
as
“Oka
Sand
&
Gravel
Inc.”.
The
offer
also
states
that
in
the
event
of
its
acceptance
the
purchaser
shall
purchase
all
the
vendor’s
stock
of
sand
on
the
leased
premises
at
Ville
LaSalle
at
a
price
of
one
dollar
a
ton.
The
quantity
thereof
was
to
be
determined
by
the
certificate
of
a
surveyor
acceptable
to
both
parties,
but,
as
appears
later,
this
became
unnecessary.
On
March
10,
by-laws
were
passed
at
a
meeting
of
directors
of
the
company
and
ratified
at
subsequent
meetings
of
its
shareholders
whereby
the
offer
contained
in
Exs.
A-1
and
A-2
were
accepted
and
two
of
the
respondent’s
officers
were
authorized
to
sign
the
necessary
deeds
of
sale,
and,
at
the
same
meetings,
appropriate
by-laws
were
passed
to
have
the
name
of
the
respond-
ent
changed
to
McCord
Street
Sites
Limited
(see
Exs.
A-3
and
A-4).
By
March
14,
1955
Oka
Sand
&
Gravel
Inc.
had
been
incorporated
but
apparently
the
Letters
Patent
authorizing
the
change
of
name
of
the
respondent
had
not
yet
been
issued.
Two
deeds
of
sale,
on
the
above
date,
were
executed
(see
Exs.
A-5
and
A-6)
between
Consolidated
Oka
Sand
&
Gravel
Ltd.
as
vendor
to
Oka
Sand
&
Gravel
Co.
Inc.
as
purchaser.
As
appears
in
Ex.
A-5,
which
I
might
call
‘the
offer
for
Ville
LaSalle
and
Lake
of
Two
Mountains
properties’’,
the
parties
waived
the
necessity
for
a
future
survey
and
agreed
that
the
quantity
of
sand
on
hand
at
that
date
should
be
considered
as
consisting
of
40,000
tons.
As
a
consequence,
on
the
signing
of
the
deed,
apart
from
receiving
$27,000
for
its
Ville
LaSalle
and
Lake
of
Two
Mountains
assets
of
the
company,
the
latter
received
$40,000
for
the
sand
then
on
hand.
In
short,
the
respondent,
for
the
assets
mentioned
in
Ex.
5
received
on
its
execution
the
sum
of
$67,000
and
the
purchaser
undertook
to
fulfil
the
obligations
of
the
respondent
under
the
leases
included
in
the
sale.
All
the
prior
conditions
having
been
fulfilled,
the
down
payment
of
$158,000
was
made
and
the
transfer
of
the
respondent’s
marine
fleet
was
effected,
thus
completing
the
bulk
sale
of
its
entire
sand
business.
Thereafter
the
only
portion
of
the
business
previously
carried
on
by
the
respondent
which
it
retained
and
continued,
after
March
14,
1955,
to
operate,
consisted
in
the
ownership
and
administration
of
its
property
and
buildings
located
on
McCord
Street
and
from
which
it
derived
rentals,
which,
in
1955,
amounted
to
$16,737
(see
statement
of
operations
filed
at
the
instant
hearing
by
Mr.
Vaillancourt
as
Ex.
A).
It
is
admitted
by
the
parties
that
Section
85E
of
the
Act,
whereby
it
is
provided,
inter
alia,
that
the
sale
of
an
inventory
shall
be
deemed
to
have
been
sold
in
course
of
carrying
on
a
taxpayer’s
business
missed
by
a
narrow
margin
being
applicable
to
the
bulk
sale
effected,
in
the
present
case,
on
March
14,
1955,
since
it
applies
only
to
sales
made
after
April
5,
1955.
It
would
appear,
indeed,
that,
when
on
September
19,
1955
the
respondent
filed
its
original
income
tax
return
for
its
taxation
year
terminating
on
April
30,
1955,
it
was
under
the
impression
that
Section
85E
had
been
made
applicable
as
of
January
1,
1955;
hence
the
variations
in
the
respondent’s
tax
return,
as
mentioned
in
paragraph
1
and
2
of
the
notice
of
appeal.
Legally
speaking,
the
estimates
of
his
taxable
income
made
by
a
taxpayer
in
form
T2
return
is
of
little
or
no
concern.
On
the
contrary,
the
Minister’s
re-assessment
of
such
return
and
the
validity
of
the
objections
thereto,
relied
upon
by
the
tax-
payer,
are
of
the
utmost
importance.
While
taking
exception
to
the
re-assessment
of
its
taxable
income
made
by
the
Minister,
amounting
to
$90,464.10,
the
taxpayer
acknowledges
that
it
amounted
to
$50,464.10
(see
Ex.
A-7,
dated
April
19,
1960,
filed
by
Mr.
Payne;
also
Ex.
A,
a
comparative
statement,
dated
November
16,
1961,
prepared
by
Mr.
Vaillancourt).
It
follows,
therefore,
that
$40,000,
being
the
difference
between
the
two
above-mentioned
figures,
constitutes
the
only
amount
in
dispute.
The
appellant
has
also
altered
the
position
which
he
originally
adopted.
As
appears
at
page
2
of
the
re-assessment
referred
to
in
his
notice
of
appeal,
the
$40,000
in
issue
was
added
as
‘
‘
profit
on
the
sale
of
sand’’
included
in
the
slump
sale
in
question.
In
his
argument,
as
I
understood
it,
counsel
for
the
appellant
submitted
that
the
Minister
no
longer
seeks
to
tax
the
said
$40,000
as
a
sale,
because,
for
reasons
which
I
shall
refer
to
later,
he
acknowledges
that
it
should
be
regarded
as
a
capital
receipt.
Instead,
he
takes
the
position
that
the
said
$40,000
being
the
proceeds
from
an
inventory
sold
as
part
of
its
business
should
serve
to
cancel
out
pro
tanto
the
costs
incurred
by
the
taxpayer
in
respect
of
all
the
sand
extracted
in
the
course
of
its
business
during
1955.
Briefly,
it
is
said
for
the
respondent
that
the
appellant
is
endeavouring
to
impose
a
tax
indirectly
which
he
is
prevented
by
legal
precedents
from
imposing
directly.
Mr.
Vaillancourt
produced
as
Exhibit
A
a
comparative
statement
of
operations
for
the
year
ended
April
30,
1955,
purporting
to
show
the
appellant’s
computation
on
one
side
of
the
sheet
and
the
respondent’s
on
the
other.
As
mentioned
previously,
the
gross
profit
derived
in
the
form
of
rents
from
the
McCord
Street
property,
as
set
out
in
the
said
exhibit,
can
be
disregarded
and
the
exhibit
need
not
be
considered
beyond
the
point
where
the
Department’s
figures
show
taxable
income
or
gross
revenue
from
the
sand
business
at
$90,464.10
and
where
a
corresponding
figure
shown
by
the
taxpayer
amounts
to
$50,464.10.
Mr.
Payne
filed
as
Exhibit
7
an
explanatory
computation
in
support
of
the
figure
of
$50,464.10
which
I
propose
to
make
use
of,
as
it
shows
more
clearly
than
Ex.
A
how
the
item
of
$50,464.10
was
arrived
at.
Mr.
McHale
filed
as
Ex.
B
a
letter
which
sets
out
his
opinion
and
reasons
for
agreeing
in
principle
with
Mr.
Vaillancourt’s
conclusion.
The
following
extracts
from
Exs.
A,
A-7
and
B,
I
think,
are
sufficiently
inclusive
to
bring
into
relief
the
conflicting
views
of
the
parties.
“STATEMENT
OF
OPERATIONS
FOR
THE
YEAR
ENDED
APRIL
30,
1955
APPELLANT’S
FIGURES
EXHIBIT
A
Sales
(1)
|
|
$305,803.71
|
Cost
of
Sand
|
|
Inventory
of
sand
April
30,
1954
|
$
15,562.28
|
Cost
of
sand
extracted
in
1955
|
$239,777.33
|
Cost
of
sand
sold
during
1955
(2)
|
$255,339.61
|
deduct:
cost
of
sand
sold
in
|
|
bulk
|
$52,808.09
|
|
less:
reduction
to
market
|
|
value
|
$12,808.09
|
|
Market
value
of
sand
sold
in
bulk
|
$
40,000.00
|
Gross
profit
|
|
$215,339.61
|
|
$
90,464.10
|
(1)
Does
not
include
$40,000
received
on
bulk
sale.
|
(2)
Includes
cost
of
sand
sold
in
bulk.
|
|
RESPONDENT’S
FIGURES
Exhibit
A-7
MCCORD
STREET
SITES
LIMITED
(formerly
Consolidated
Oka
Sand
&
Gravel
Co.
Limited)
1955
Income
Tax
Appeal
Outline
of
Taxpayer’s
Contention
If
the
sale
of
the
sand
business
had
occurred
after
Section
85E
became
effective,
the
figures
would
have
been
as
follows
:
But
as
Section
85E
was
not
in
effect,
we
eliminate
the
$40,000
from
the
calculation,
on
the
grounds
that
‘no
part
of
the
receipts
from
the
sale
was
a
receipt
from
the
taxpayer’s
business’,
so
that
the
Gross
Profit
(profit
before
deducting
operating
expenses)
on
which
the
taxpayer
claimed
to
be
taxable,
is
as
follows:
Sales
during
operation
of
the
sand
business
|
|
$305,803.71
|
4
‘Slump”
sale
of
inventory
|
|
40,000.00
|
Total
Sales
of
Sand
|
|
$345,803.71
|
Cost
of
Sand
|
|
Inventory
April
30,
1954
|
$
15,562.28
|
Cost
of
Sand
Produced
|
239,777.33
|
|
$255,339.61
|
Inventory,
April
30,
1955
|
nil
|
$255,339.61
|
Gross
Profit
as
it
would
be
if
Section
85E
were
in
effect
__$
90,464.10
|
Sales
while
in
the
sand
business
|
$305,803.71
|
Cost
of
Sand
|
|
Inventory
April
30,
1954
|
$
15,562.29
|
Cost
of
Sand
Produced
|
239,777.33
|
|
$255,339.61
|
Inventory,
April
30,
1955
|
$255,339.61
|
Gross
Profit
reported
by
taxpayer
|
$
50,464.10”
|
Mr.
McHale,
in
his
letter
of
November
17,
1961
(Ex.
B),
addressed
to
counsel
for
the
appellant,
stated
in
part:
You
have
asked
me
to
express
an
opinion
on
the
accounting
principles
followed
in
preparing
the
financial
statements
of
the
above
company
for
its
year
ended
30th
April
1955.
It
is
a
basie
and
generally
accepted
accounting
principle
that
in
order
to
determine
the
profit
arising
from
any
transaction,
the
cost
of
the
items
sold
must
be
matched
against
the
proceeds
of
sale.
This
is
true
whether
the
transaction
is
of
a
capital
or
a
revenue
nature
The
profit
arising
from
the
normal
sales
of
the
company
would
therefore
be
as
follows:
Sales
|
$305,803.71
|
Cost
of
sales—inventory
April
1,
1954
|
$
15,562.28
|
Cost
of
production
|
239,777.33
|
Less:
cost
of
inventory
on
hand
14th
March
|
|
1955,
i.e.
immediately
before
the
bulk
|
|
sale
|
52,808.09
202,531.52
|
Profit
arising
in
normal
course
of
business
|
$103,272.19
|
Less:
reduction
to
market
value
as
required
by
s.
14(2)
of
|
the
Income
Tax
Act
|
12,808.09
|
Profit
as
determined
by
the
Tax
Department
|
$
90,464.10
|
However,
when
we
examine
the
accounts
of
the
company,
we
find
that
against
the
proceeds
of
sales
in
the
normal
course
of
business
(166,874
tons)
were
charged
the
costs
of
extraction
of
210,384
tons,
while
against
the
proceeds
of
the
bulk
sale
(43,510
tons)
were
charged
no
costs
whatever.
In
my
opinion,
costs
of
$52,808.09
should
be
charged
against
the
bulk
sales
proceeds
of
$40,000.”
When
it
happens,
as
in
a
ease
like
this,
that
by
a
fiction
of
law
something
which
clearly
constituted
stock-in-trade,
without
undergoing
any
physical
change,
suddenly
becomes
a
capital
asset,
I
believe
such
an
occurrence
is
almost
bound
to
create
anomalies
insofar
as
generally
accepted
accountancy
practice
is
concerned.
Even
if
it
were
taken
for
granted
that
Mr.
McHale’s
method
of
computation
is
more
in
accordance
with
good
commercial
accounting
practice
than
the
one
adopted
by
the
respondent,
this
would
not
put
an
end
to
the
issue.
In
my
opinion,
usually
accepted
accounting
principles
must
give
way
to
unusual
situations,
more
particularly
when
they
arise
not
only
from
the
statutory
provisions
of
the
Income
Tax
Act
but
from
the
dictates
of
jurisprudence
as
well.
In
comparing
the
two
methods
of
computation,
it
should
be
borne
in
mind,
I
think,
that
where
income
tax
is
concerned
it
is
the
law
and
not
accounting
practice
which
must
prevail.
It
is
important
to
note
that
the
parties
agree
that
for
the
year
ended
April
30,
1955,
the
respondent’s
sales
amounted
to
$305,-
803.71
and
both
have
excluded
therefrom
the
sum
of
$40,000
received
as
a
result
of
the
bulk
sale.
One
does
not
have
to
seek
far
for
the
reason
which
prompted
this
exclusion;
it
is
to
be
found
in
the
judgment
of
our
Supreme
Court
in
Frankel
Corporation
Lid.
v.
M.N.R.,
[1959]
S.C.R.
713;
[1959]
C.T.C.
244,
a
case
concerned
with
the
effect
of
a
bulk
sale
made
in
1952
which
in
many
respects
is
similar
to
the
instant
one.
Martland,
J.,
at
pp.
725
and
726
[
[1959]
C.T.C.
258],
set
out
a
long
extract
from
the
judgment
of
the
learned
trial
judge
(Thurlow,
J.)
which
contains
the
latter’s
reasons
for
reaching
the
following
conclusions
:
‘.
.
It
follows,
in
my
opinion,
that
no
part
of
the
receipts
from
this
sale
was
a
receipt
from
the
appellant’s
business.”
At
the
bottom
of
page
726
[[1959]
C.T.C.
258],
Martland,
J.,
makes
the
following
statement:
“I
agree
with
these
conclusions.
In
my
opinion
the
evidence
establishes:
(1)
that
the
appellant
ceased
its
trading
in
nonferrous
metals
by
December
31,
1951;
and
(2)
that
the
sale
of
the
inventory
of
non-ferrous
metals
as
a
part
of
the
assets
sold
by
the
agreement
of
December
19,
1951,
by
the
appellant
to
Federated
was
not
a
sale
in
the
business
of
the
appellant,
but
was
made
as
a
part
of
a
sale
of
a
business
of
the
appellant,
and
consequently
the
proceeds
of
that
sale
were
not
income
from
a
business
within
the
meaning
of
Section
4
of
the
Income
Tax
Act.
’
Having
previously
stated
at
p.
723
[[1959]
C.T.C.
255]
that
“Section
85E
of
the
Act
has
no
application
to
this
case,
as
it
became
effective
in
respect
of
sales
made
after
April
5,
1955,”
Mr.
Justice
Martland
at
p.
728
[[1959]
C.T.C.
260]
observed:
.
.
The
issue
here
is
not
as
to
what
amount
should
be
deemed
to
be
received
by
the
appellant
for
those
goods,
but
whether
the
actual
amount
received
was
income
from
the
appellant’s
business,
.
.
.”
It
is
of
some
significance,
I
think,
that
there,
like
in
the
Frankel
case,
Section
85E
had
not
come
into
effect;
yet,
as
appears
by
Ex.
A-7,
the
appellant’s
computed
figure
of
$90,464.10
is
exactly
the
same
as
if
it
did
apply.
To
avoid
unnecessary
confusion,
I
will
here
add
a
comment
on
the
following
discrepancy
in
the
figures
presented
on
behalf
of
the
respective
parties.
It
appears
from
the
exhibits
and
evidence
adduced
before
the
Tax
Appeal
Board
that
the
parties
used
the
figure
of
40,000
tons
and
$40,000.
Mr.
McHale,
whose
evidence
was
first
heard
before
this
Court,
makes
use
of
the
figure
“43,510
tons’’
while
retaining
the
figure
of
$40,000.
I
do
not
know
how
this
arose.
It
may
be
that
one
set
of
figures
was
based
on
estimate
and
the
other
after
the
sand
had
been
surveyed;
but,
because
of
the
conclusion
I
have
reached,
any
discrepancy
in
calculation
resulting
therefrom
cannot,
in
my
opinion,
affect
the
issue.
It
is
worth
noting,
however,
that
other
computations
made
in
the
appellant’s
Exhibits
A
and
B
differ
somewhat
inter
se
and
both
are
radically
different
in
respect
of
treatment
of
“inventory”
from
what
is
found
in
the
respondent’s
Exhibit
7.
Mr.
Vaillancourt,
in
his
report,
has
added
back
the
figure
of
$40,000,
being
the
proceeds
of
the
bulk
sale,
under
the
title
of
‘‘
Market
value
of
sand
sold
in
bulk’’.
In
Exhibit
B,
Mr.
McHale,
except
by
way
of
comment,
makes
no
mention
of
the
sum
of
$40,000
but
both
witnesses
regard
the
40,000
tons
of
sand
as
inventory
which
should
be
made
subject
to
Section
14(2)
of
the
Act;
it
provides:
‘
For
the
purpose
of
computing
income,
the
property
described
in
an
inventory
shall
be
valued
at
its
cost
to
the
taxpayer
or
its
fair
market
value,
whichever
is
lower,
or
in
such
other
manner
as
may
be
permitted
by
regulation.”
In
doing
so
Mr.
McHale
mentions
that
he
is
giving
effect
to
Section
14(2)
as
of
March
14,
1955,
but
before
the
bulk
sale.
No
such
mention
appears
in
the
Vaillancourt
statement.
I
might
here
interject
that
I
doubt
very
much
whether
the
appellant
was
justified
in
adopting
an
unmistakable
slump
sale,
at
one
dollar
or
less
a
ton,
and
far
below
cost,
as
being
synony-
mous
with
or
a
proper
criterion
for
determining
the
fair
market
value
of
the
goods
in
question.
However,
because
of
the
conclusions
I
have
reached
on
other
grounds,
this
point
is
of
no
importance
and
may
be
disregarded.
In
Exhibit
7
Mr.
Payne,
because
the
company’s
taxable
year
ended
on
April
30,
1955,
at
which
date
it
had
no
inventory,
inserts
a
“nil”
report
in
respect
of
it.
Moreover,
it
is
his
opinion
that,
since
the
$52,808.09
was
expended
in
order
to
gain
income
within
the
meaning
of
Section
12(1)
(a)
of
the
Act
and
although
it
never
attained
its
purpose,
this
amount
of
$52,808.09
should
be
charged
against
$305,803.71
and
not
against
the
bulk
sale
proceeds,
which
he
eliminates
from
his
calculation
on
the
grounds
that
‘‘no
part
of
the
receipts
from
the
sale
was
a
receipt
from
the
taxpayer’s
business’’.
Let
us
first
consider
whether
in
law
and
in
fact
it
can
be
said
that
the
expenditure
in
question
was
for
the
purpose
of
gaining
income?
Section
12(1)
(a)
of
the
Income
Tax
Act,
R.S.C.
1952,
c.
148,
states:
“12.
(1)
In
computing
income,
no
deduction
shall
be
made
in
respect
of
(a)
an
outlay
or
expense
except
to
the
extent
that
it
was
made
or
incurred
by
the
taxpayer
for
the
purpose
of
gaining
or
producing
income
from
property
or
a
business
of
the
taxpayer.’’
That
the
answer
must
be
in
the
affirmative,
in
my
opinion,
is
self-evident,
because
during
years
and
years
the
company
had
been
making
identical
expenditures
for
no
other
purpose
and
by
March
14,
1955
the
entire
amount
of
$52,808.09
had
been
expended.
I
think
a
reasonable
conclusion
to
be
drawn
from
the
evidence
is
that,
had
the
taxpayer
foreseen
that
the
sand
in
question
was
destined
to
be
sold
in
a
slump
sale
at
a
considerable
loss,
the
expenditure
made
in
extracting
it
would
never
have
been
incurred.
A
recent
decision
of
our
Court
in
respect
of
Section
12(1)
(a)
is
that
of
Cameron,
J.,
in
Wilson
Wilson
Ltd.
v.
M.N.R.,
[1960]
Ex.
C.R.
205
at
217;
[1960]
C.T.C.
1
at
13:
“.
.
.
it
is
not
now
necessary
to
establish
that
the
expense
was
made
or
incurred
for
the
purpose
of
earning
the
income
of
the
year
in
which
it
was
made
or
incurred.
It
is
sufficient
to
show
that
it
was
made
for
the
purpose
of
gaining
or
producing
income
from
the
business.’’
Mr.
Justice
Cameron
refers
to
a
statement
of
the
President
of
this
Court,
which
is
found
in
The
Royal
Trust
Co.
v.
M.N.R.,
[1957]
C.T.C.
32
at
44,
reading
thus:
“The
essential
limitation
in
the
exception
expressed
in
Section
12(1)
(a)
is
that
the
outlay
or
expense
should
have
been
made
by
the
taxpayer
‘for
the
purpose’
of
gaining
or
producing
income
‘from
the
business’.
It
is
the
purpose
of
the
outlay
or
expense
that
is
emphasized
but
the
purpose
must
be
that
of
gaining
or
producing
income
‘from
the
business’
in
which
the
taxpayer
is
engaged.
If
these
conditions
are
met
the
fact
that
there
may
be
no
resulting
income
does
not
prevent
the
deductibility
of
the
amount
of
the
outlay
or
expense.
Thus,
in
a
case
under
the
Income
Tax
Act
if
an
outlay
or
expense
is
made
or
incurred
by
a
taxpayer
in
accordance
with
the
principles
of
commercial
trading
or
accepted
business
practice
and
it
is
made
or
incurred
for
the
purpose
of
gaining
or
producing
income
from
his
business
its
amount
is
deductible
for
income
tax
purposes.’’
I
consider
that
the
cost
of
the
40,000
tons
in
question,
which
was
incurred
in
the
course
of
the
company’s
business,
should
be
deducted
from
sales
realized
in
the
same
manner.
Because
the
proceeds
of
the
slump
sale
do
not
fall
into
the
above-mentioned
category,
and
for
reasons
immediately
following,
such
proceeds,
in
my
opinion,
should
not
be
charged
against
the
cost
of
the
said
tonnage.
With
respect
to
the
question
of
inventory,
it
can
be
said,
I
think,
that
the
difference,
amounting
to
$40,000,
between
the
appellant’s
and
respondent’s
figures
of
taxable
income
arises
because
the
appellant,
while
admitting
that
the
slump
sale
receipt
of
$40,000
must
be
eliminated
from
the
company’s
profit
and
loss
account,
considers
that
it
ought
to
be
brought
into
and
taken
into
consideration
as
inventory
and
applied
against
the
cost
thereof
as
of
March
14,
1955.
The
respondent,
on
the
other
hand,
submits
that
the
Minister,
in
effect,
is
attempting
to
disallow
a
sum
of
$40,000
(costs
amounting
to
$52,808.09,
scaled
down
by
$12,808.09,
as
required
by
Section
14(2)
of
the
Act)
(supra)
which
is
non-taxable
as
a
receipt,
by
erroneously
treating
the
status
of
‘‘inventory’’
as
of
March
14
instead
of
April
30,
1955.
On
a
strict
interpretation
of
the
following
relevant
provisions
of
the
Act,
which
I
think
is
the
only
appropriate
one
in
the
circumstances,
I
believe
the
status
of
inventory
should
be
determined
as
of
the
last
day
of
the
company’s
fiscal
year.
Nowhere
in
the
Act
is
there
a
provision
requiring
a
taxpayer,
under
any
circumstances,
to
report
his
inventory
prior
to
the
end
of
his
fiscal
year.
Section
4
states
that,
‘‘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’’.
Section
139(2)
(a)
of
the
Act
defines
“taxation
year’’
as
follows
:
“
(2)
For
the
purpose
of
this
Act,
a
taxation
year’
is
(a)
in
the
case
of
a
corporation,
a
fiscal
period,
.
.
.”?
When
subsection
(3)
was
added
to
Section
14
by
Statutes
of
Canada
1959,
c.
45,
it
continued
to
speak
of
a
“taxation
year’’:
“14.
(3)
Notwithstanding
subsection
(2),
for
the
purpose
of
computing
income
for
a
taxation
year
the
property
described
in
an
inventory
at
the
commencement
of
the
year
shall
be
valued
at
the
same
amount
as
the
amount
at
which
it
was
valued
at
the
end
of
the
immediately
preceding
year
for
the
purpose
of
computing
income
for
that
preceding
year.”
(Italics
are
mine.)
Turning
to
Section
139(1)
(w),
we
find
that
‘‘inventory’’
is
defined
as
follows
:
“
(w)
‘inventory’
means
a
description
of
property
the
cost
or
value
of
which
is
relevant
in
computing
a
taxpayer’s
income
from
a
business
for
a
taxation
year;’’
(Italics
are
mine.)
Subsection
(1)
of
Section
125,
which
speaks
of
books
and
records,
states:
“125.
(1)
Every
person
carrying
on
business
and
every
person
who
is
required,
by
or
pursuant
to
this
Act,
to
pay
or
collect
taxes
or
other
amounts
shall
keep
records
and
books
of
account
(including
an
annual
inventory
kept
in
prescribed
manner)
at
his
place
of
business
or
residence
in
Canada
.
.
.”’
(Italics
are
mine.)
I
think
that
the
foregoing
statutory
provisions
(to
which
no
exceptions
are
to
be
found
in
the
Act)
make
it
clear
that,
insofar
as
inventory
is
concerned,
the
only
obligation
which
rested
on
the
respondent
was
to
open
and
close
out
its
inventory
at
the
beginning
and
at
the
end
of
its
taxation
year
1955,
and,
in
my
opinion,
the
evidence
undoubtedly
shows
the
respondent,
in
this
respect,
fully
complied
with
the
Act.
I
might
add
that
in
the
Frankel
case
(supra),
at
page
727
[[1959]
C.T.C.
258],
it
was
submitted
on
behalf
of
the
Minister
as
an
alternative
argument
H
.
.
that,
even
if
the
sale
of
the
inventory
of
non-ferrous
metals
was
a
part
of
the
sale
of
a
business,
nevertheless,
to
effect
such
sale,
such
inventory
was
removed
or
‘diverted’
from
the
appellant’s
stock-in-trade
before
it
was
sold
and
such
removal
or
diversion
required
that
there
be
placed
in
the
appellant’s
trading
account
the
market
value
of
the
goods
so
sold,
thus
giving
rise
to
a
trading
receipt
equal
to
the
amount
realized
upon
such
sale.”
(Italics
are
mine.)
In
other
words,
the
Minister
(who
was
the
respondent
in
the
above
case)
in
effect
was
seeking
to
remove
the
inventory
of
nonferrous
metals
from
stock-in-trade
and
bring
it
back
as
a
closing
inventory
as
of
the
moment
before
it
was
sold.
But
Mr.
Justice
Martland,
at
page
728
[[1959]
C.T.C.
258],
held
that
‘‘the
con-
tion
of
the
respondent
on
this
point
also
fails’’.
It
is
admitted
that
we
are
here
dealing
with
an
exceptional
type
of
case
and
one
which,
in
my
opinion,
was
not
envisaged
taxwise
until
Section
85E
was
introduced
into
the
Act.
Because
of
the
Frankel
case,
as
I
interpret
it,
and
on
a
strict
reading
of
the
provisions
of
the
Act
previously
referred
to,
I
think
it
can
be
said
the
respondent
has
successfully
discharged
the
burden
of
establishing
that
the
re-assessment
in
question,
as
made
by
the
appellant,
is
unjustified
and
that
the
respondent’s
taxable
income
should
be
reduced
by
$40,000.
I
would,
therefore,
dismiss
the
appeal
with
costs
and
refer
the
record
back
to
the
Minister
for
re-assessment
accordingly.
Judgment
accordingly.