THURLOW,
J.:—This
is
an
appeal
by
the
Minister
from
a
judgment
of
the
Tax
Appeal
Board
(
(1966),
40
Tax
A.B.C.
105)
allowing
the
respondent’s
appeal
from
re-assessments
of
income
tax
for
the
years
1961
and
1962.
In
computing
the
respondent’s
income
for
the
years
in
question
the
Minister
disallowed
deductions
of
$4,727.42
for
the
year
1961
and
$6,543.99
for
the
year
1962
which
the
respondent
had
claimed
in
respect
of
what
will
be
referred
to
as
the
‘‘Sutherland’’
property
and
the
sole
issue
in
the
appeal
is
whether
the
respondent
was
entitled
to
these
deductions.
The
respondent’s
appeal
to
the
Tax
Appeal
Board
also
raised
the
question
of
his
right,
in
computing
his
income
for
1962,
to
deduct
the
expenses
of
certain
litigation
in
which
he
had
engaged
and
the
Board
held
him
entitled
to
deduct
them
but
this
matter
is
not
in
issue
in
the
present
appeal.
The
respondent
is
a
physician
who
during
the
years
in
question
as
well
as
both
before
and
since
then
resided
and
practised
his
profession
at
Dartmouth,
Nova
Scotia.
He
earned
a
substantial
income
from
his
practice
and
prior
to
1961
had
acquired
five
rental
producing
properties
in
Dartmouth.
These
were
multiple
family
dwellings
and
represented
an
investment
of
about
$146,000.
As
reported
in
the
respondent’s
income
tax
return
for
1961
they
showed
a
loss
of
about
$5,000
after
deducting
expenses
and
capital
cost
allowances
from
gross
revenues
of
$20,325.
All
of
these
properties
were
managed
by
the
respondent
personally
rather
than
by
an
agent.
The
“Sutherland”
property
was
acquired
by
the
respondent
on
or
about
November
1,
1961
for
$38,000
of
which
$34,000
was
the
price
of
real
property
and
$4,000
the
price
of
furniture
and
furnishings.
To
pay
for
the
property
the
respondent
provided
$3,000
from
his
own
resources
and
borrowed
the
remaining
$35,000
from
his
bank
at
6%
interest.
In
each
of
the
years
in
question
interest
paid
on
this
loan
is
one
of
the
items
making
up
the
amount
in
dispute.
The
property
is
situated
at
Cookville
some
three
to
four
miles
north
of
Bridgewater,
Nova
Scotia,
on
the
highway
leading
from
Bridgewater
to
New
Germany.
It
comprises
about
80
acres
of
land,
part
of
which
lies
west
of
the
highway
and
has
a
frontage
of
about
1,000
feet
on
the
La
Have
River.
The
other,
and
much
larger
portion
lies
east
of
the
highway.
On
it
stands
a
modern
and
rather
lavish
three
bedroom
single
family
dwelling
house
which
was
said
to
have
been
built
by
Fred
Sutherland
about
fifteen
years
ago.
On
acquiring
this
property
the
respondent
had
the
telephone
service
continued
and
thereafter
he
visited
the
property
from
time
to
time
during
the
winter,
staying
over-night
on
one
occasion.
The
heat
was
left
on,
but
unfortunately
in
January
some
of
the
plumbing
froze
and
flooding
ensued
in
the
dining
and
living
room
areas.
In
the
spring
the
leaks
were
repaired
and
the
respondent’s
wife
and
three
children
later
moved
to
the
property
and
spent
the
months
of
July
and
August
there.
During
this
period,
probably
in
August,
the
respondent
himself
spent
a
week
or
two
there.
At
the
end
of
August
the
family
moved
back
to
Dartmouth.
A
dishwater
purchased
for
the
property
in
June
was
then
taken
to
Dartmouth
where
it
remained
until
the
following
summer
when
it
was
returned
to
the
property.
The
cost
of
transporting
it
to
Dartmouth
is
among
the
items
in
dispute.
The
cost
of
the
dishwasher
itself
is
also
included
in
an
amount
claimed
in
respect
of
repairs,
but
this
was
said
to
be
an
error
made
by
the
respondent’s
accountant
and
it
was
not
contended
that
this
amount
was
deductible
as
an
expense.
From
the
end
of
August
to
the
end
of
the
year
1962,
that
is
to
say,
to
the
end
of
the
second
of
the
taxation
years
involved
in
the
appeal,
the
property
remained
unoccupied.
Shortly
before
or
shortly
after
the
end
of
the
year
Earl
Johnson
of
Halifax,
who
was
expecting
to
move
to
Bridgewater
to
live
and
was
looking
for
a
residence
in
or
near
the
town,
visited
the
property
one
day.
He
saw
indications
that
the
property
had
been
broken
into
and
after
reporting
this
to
the
R.C.M.P.
contacted
the
respondent
in
Dartmouth,
both
for
the
purpose
of
reporting
the
discovery
and
of
inquiring
if
the
property
was
for
sale.
He
was
told
that
it
was
not
for
sale
but
that
it
was
for
rent
and
this
led
to
Johnson
taking
a
lease
of
the
property
for
three
and
one-half
months
commencing
on
March
1,
1963
at
$200
a
month.
It
was
a
term
of
the
lease
that
the
respondent
should
have
the
right
to
inspect
the
property
and
according
to
Johnson
the
respondent
exercised
the
right
often
and
on
average
twice
a
month
during
his
occupancy.
At
the
end
of
the
term,
in
midJune,
the
Johnsons
moved
out
and
during
July
and
August
the
respondent’s
wife
and
family
again
occupied
the
premises,
the
respondent
himself
again
spending
a
week
or
two
with
them
during
the
period.
In
fact,
the
property
has
been
occupied
by
the
respondent’s
family
each
summer
since
the
respondent
acquired
it.
It
has
not
been
let
to
any
tenant
since
Johnson
vacated
and
in
the
period
of
about
five
years
has
produced
no
revenue
beyond
the
$700
which
Johnson
paid
as
rent.
In
December
1962
the
telephone
service,
which
formerly
had
been
on
a
regular
basis
costing
$12.15
monthly,
was
changed
to
an
absentee
basis
costing
.50
monthly
and
thereafter
(save
during
Mr.
Johnson’s
occupancy)
this
was
the
basis
on
which
the
service
was
continued
except
during
the
months
of
July
and
August
in
each
year
when
the
service
was
restored
to
the
regular
basis.
In
support
of
the
position
taken
by
his
counsel
that
the
property
was
acquired
for
the
purpose
of
earning
income
therefrom,
the
respondent
stated
in
evidence
that
he
had
seen
a
newspaper
advertisement
that
the
property
was
for
sale,
that
he
and
his
wife
thought
it
to
be
in
a
very
nice
location
and
that
after
seeing
it
he
felt
that
it
was
worth
much
more
than
the
$38,000
which
he
later
paid
for
it.
He
said
that
Dr.
Robertson,
from
whom
he
bought
it,
felt
it
was
worth
$80,000
-
$90,000.
He
also
said
that
when
he
decided
to
buy
it,
he
intended
ultimately
to
build
about
ten
cottages
on
the
river
frontage
to
let
to
salmon
fishermen
and
to
build
and
operate
a
convalescent
unit
near
the
existing
house
using
it
as
an
office
structure
in
which
nursing
staff
might
be
accommodated.
He
pointed
out
a
number
of
features
of
the
property
which
he
suggested
made
him
feel
that
these
projects
would
be
feasible
as
profit
making
enterprises,
said
they
would
involve
investment
of
a
large
amount
of
money,
that
he
had
in
mind
ten
or
fifteen
years
in
which
to
carry
out
these
projects
and
was,
in
the
meantime,
building
up
his
financial
resources
for
that
purpose
and
that
he
had
not
abandoned
either
of
them.
He
also
said
that
in
deciding
to
buy
the
property
he
felt
it
was
opportune
to
do
so
because
the
price
was
less
than
the
property
was
worth
and
that
he
planned
to
rent
it
to
obtain
enough
to
maintain
it
until
he
was
able
to
build.
Relying
on
his
understanding
of
real
estate
in
Dartmouth,
he
felt
there
would
be
people
willing
to
rent
it
and
that
he
would
be
able
to
get
$200
a
month
which
would
be
sufficient
revenue
to
carry
it.
He
also
said
that
he
had
no
intention
of
selling
it
at
any
time
or
of
using
it
as
a
summer
cottage,
that
after
buying
it
he
verbally
let
it
be
known,
though
to
whom
was
not
specified,
that
he
wanted
a
tenant
but
that
he
did
not
have
much
hope
because
it
was
winter,
that
after
the
plumbing
froze
and
the
flooding
ensued
the
house
was
not
rentable
and
took
a
long
time
to
dry,
that
his
wife
and
children
moved
there
in
July
in
order
to
help
clean
the
house
and
let
it
dry
and
that
until
the
summer
he
did
not
attempt
to
find
a
tenant,
but
that
during
the
summer
months
he
let
it
be
known
that
he
was
interested
in
renting
the
property.
One
person
he
said
he
told
was
a
bank
manager
in
Bridgewater.
No
others
were
specified.
He
said
he
did
not
advertise
in
the
newspapers
because
he
felt
that
if
he
did
so
he
would
spend
too
much
time
going
back
and
forth
to
show
the
property.
In
the
summer
of
1963
when
the
Johnson
lease
was
already
completed
and
he
was
spending
some
time
with
his
family
at
the
property,
he
contacted
two
real
estate
agents
in
Bridgewater
and
made
arrangements
for
them
to
look
for
a
tenant
at
$200
per
month
for
a
full
year
and
failing
that
at
$500
per
month
for
July
and
August.
This
brought
no
results
and
it
does
not
appear
that
these
agents
so
much
as
advertised
the
property
in
a
newspaper.
He
says
they
thought
renting
would
be
difficult
because
rentals
in
Bridge
water
were
much
lower
than
those
which
he
had
set.
Several
of
the
agents
were
interested
in
listing
the
property
for
sale
and
several
persons
have
from
time
to
time
inquired
whether
it
was
for
sale
either
through
them
or
directly.
In
February
or
March
of
1964
the
respondent
listed
the
property
for
rent
with
another
real
estate
agent
who
advertised
the
property
in
his
office
window
at
Lunenburg,
in
Halifax
and
Lunenburg
County
newspapers
and
through
a
province-wide
multiple
listing
service.
This
agent
received
at
least
one
enquiry
from
another
agency
and
he
showed
the
property
to
a
person
who
was
interested
in
buying
rather
than
in
renting,
but
he
has
been
unable
to
secure
a
tenant
for
it.
It
appears
from
the
evidence
of
this
agent
that
he
still
has
the
property
listed
for
letting
but
that
its
location
does
not
enjoy
popularity
with
persons
in
a
financial
position
to
afford
so
high
a
rent.
The
property
was
characterized
by
another
of
the
witnesses
as
a
‘‘white
elephant”.
The
deductions
claimed
by
the
respondent
which
with
the
exception
of
the
cost
of
the
dishwasher
included
in
the
item
for
repairs
and
maintenance,
make
up
the
amounts
in
dispute
in
the
present
appeal
are
as
follows
:
|
1961
|
1962
|
Capital
cost
allowance
|
|
Building
|
$3,200.00
|
$2,880.00
|
Furniture
|
800.00
|
640.00
|
Interest
on
loan
|
297.29
|
1,702.99
|
Taxes
|
50.72
|
314.64
|
Insurance
|
360.45
|
|
Sundry
|
18.96
|
|
Heat
|
|
249.20
|
Light
|
|
105.74
|
Repairs
and
maintenance
|
|
477.07
|
Telephone
|
|
174.35
|
|
$4,727.42
|
$6,543.99
|
With
respect
to
all
of
these,
the
Minister’s
position
is
that
the
property
was
not
acquired
for
the
purpose
of
gaining
or
producing
income,
but
as
a
summer
residence
for
the
respondent
and
his
family
and
that
the
amounts
are
therefore
not
deductible
in
computing
the
respondent’s
income.
In
the
alternative
the
Minister
takes
the
position
that
even
if
the
property
was
acquired
for
the
purpose
of
gaining
or
producing
income
there
was
a
change
in
such
purpose
by
July
1962
when
the
respondent’s
family
occupied
the
property
and
that
from
that
time
on
the
property
was
not
held
or
used
to
produce
income.
The
right
of
a
taxpayer
to
deduct
capital
cost
allowance
in
computing
income
arises
under
Section
11(1)
(a)*
of
the
Income
Tax
Act
and
Section
1100
of
the
Regulationsf
made
pursuant
thereto
which
provide
for
the
right
and
prescribe
how
much
allowance
may
be
claimed.
The
right
is,
however,
limited
by
Section
1102
which
provides:
“1102.
(1)
The
classes
of
property
described
in
this
Part
and
in
Schedule
B
shall
be
deemed
not
to
include
property
9
9
(c)
that
was
not
acquired
by
the
taxpayer
for
the
purpose
of
gaining
or
producing
income,
2
2
The
right
of
a
taxpayer
to
deduct
interest
in
computing
income
arises
under
Section
11(1)
(c)
which
provides:
“11.
(1)
Notwithstanding
paragraphs
(a),
(b)
and
(h)
of
subsection
(1)
of
section
12,
the
following
amounts
may
be
deducted
in
computing
the
income
of
a
taxpayer
for
a
taxation
year
:
(c)
an
amount
paid
in
the
year
or
payable
in
respect
of
the
year
(depending
upon
the
method
regularly
followed
by
the
taxpayer
in
computing
his
income),
pursuant
to
a
legal
obligation
to
pay
interest
on
(i)
borrowed
money
used
for
the
purpose
of
earning
income
from
a
business
or
property
(other
than
borrowed
money
used
to
acquire
property
the
income
from
which
would
be
exempt),
or
(ii)
an
amount
payable
for
property
acquired
for
the
purpose
of
gaining
or
producing
income
therefrom
or
for
the
purpose
of
gaining
or
producing
income
from
a
business
(other
than
property
the
income
from
which
would
be
exempt),
or
a
reasonable
amount
in
respect
thereof,
whichever
is
the
lesser
;’’
The
right
of
a
taxpayer
to
deduct
other
expenses
incurred
in
connection
with
property
depends
first
on
whether,
on
accepted
principles
for
computing
income
from
property,
they
would
properly
be
taken
into
account
in
computing
the
profit
from
the
property,
but
even
if
admissible,
having
regard
to
such
principles,
they
are
deductible
only
in
so
far
as
they
fall
within
the
exception
of
Section
12(1)
(a)
which
provides
that:
“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,”
(Italics
added
in
each
of
the
foregoing.
)
Though
the
test
is
stated
negatively
in
Section
1102,
the
critical
question
in
the
present
appeal
with
respect
to
all
three
types
of
deductions
is
whether
the
property
was
acquired,
or
the
expenditure
was
incurred
‘for
the
purpose
of
gaining
or
producing
income
’
’
from
the
property
or
from
a
business
and
the
onus
of
satisfying
the
Court
that
the
answer
should
be
in
the
affirmative
rested
on
the
respondent.
It
would,
of
course,
fortify
the
opposite
conclusion
if
it
manifestly
appeared
that
the
property
was
purchased
simply
as
a
summer
home
for
the
respondent
and
his
family,
as
counsel
for
the
Minister
contended,
but
it
does
not
appear
to
me
that
such
a
finding
is
essential
'to
the
Minister’s
case.
Property
may,
I
think,
be
acquired
and
expenses
may
be
incurred
in
respect
thereof
in
the
pursuit
of
a
purpose
which
is
neither
the
gaining
of
income
nor
personal
enjoyment
(for
example
simply
as
a
hedge
against
inflation)
but
what
appears
to
me
to
be
essential
to
success
on
the
part
of
the
respondent
in
the
present
appeal
is
a
positive
finding
that
the
property
was
acquired
and
the
expenses
incurred
‘‘for
the
purpose
of
gaining
or
producing
income’’.
The
evidence
does
not
satisfy
me
that
that
was
the
respondent’s
purpose.
While
I
regard
it
as
unlikely
that
he
would
have
invested
$38,000
in
such
a
property
simply
to
use
it
as
a
summer
home
for
two
months
of
each
year,
I
think
that
one
of
the
things
he
had
in
mind
was
that
he
might
use
it
for
that
purpose
and
as
a
year
round
resort
as
well.
These,
in
fact,
were
the
only
purposes
which
the
property
served
in
the
14-month
period
involved
in
the
appeal
and
save
for
the
period
of
three
and
one-half
months
in
the
spring
of
1963
when
the
property
was
let
to
Earl
Johnson,
they
were
the
only
purposes
which
the
property
served
during
the
period
of
nearly
five
years
from
the
time
it
was
purchased
to
the
time
of
the
trial.
In
the
whole
of
that
period
nothing
whatever
was
done
with
the
property
to
further
either
the
scheme
for
building
and
operating
cottages
or
the
scheme
for
developing
a
convalescent
centre,
though
in
the
latter
case
the
respondent
did
say
that
he
had
acquired
additional
information
on
such
establishments.
To
my
mind
the
most
that
can
be
said
of
these
is
that
they
were
ideas
for
possible
use
of
the
property
and
that
by
acquiring
it
when
he
did
and
holding
it
the
respondent
put
himself
in
a
position
to
undertake
either
or
both
of
them
if
at
some
future
time
it
should
be
expedient
to
do
so.
In
such
circumstances
I
do
not
think
it
can
be
said
that
his
purpose
in
acquiring
the
property
was
to
carry
out
these
schemes.
Nor
do
I
think
the
respondent
acquired
the
property
to
earn
income
by
letting
it
either
pending
his
embarkation
on
either
scheme,
or
generally.
He
said
he
hoped
to
be
able
to
realize
$200
per
month
as
rent,
but
to
my
mind
no
one
vaguely
familiar
with
what
would
be
a
reasonable
income
return
on
an
investment
of
$38,000
in
such
a
property,
and
least
of
all
a
person
of
the
intelligence
and
astuteness
of
the
respondent,
would
have
made
so
large
an
investment
for
the
income
he
could
get
from
it
at
$200
a
month
and
a
fortiori
when
there
was
no
tenant
in
sight
he
would
be
likely
to
pay
even
that
amount.
That
he
did
not
expect
to
earn
income
in
this
way
during
the
period
here
in
question
is,
I
think,
apparent
from
the
feebleness
or
utter
lack
of
any
effort
in
find
a
tenant
immediately
after
he
bought
the
property
and
throughout
the
year
that
followed
and
from
the
fact
that
he
had
the
regular
telephone
service
continued
for
the
better
part
of
a
year,
not
for
the
purpose
of
helping
to
get
a
tenant,
but
to
ensure
that
he
could
be
contacted
by
his
office
in
Dartmouth
whenever
he
was
at
the
Cookville
property.
I
would
infer
moreover
that
one
of
the
more
important
considerations
which
he
had
in
mind
in
deciding
to
buy
the
property
was
that
he
might
obtain
a
deduction
for
capital
cost
allowance
which
would
not
represent
an
actual
outlay
of
money,
but
would,
because
of
his
large
income
from
his
practice
and
the
rate
of
taxation
applicable
thereto,
afford
a
saving
in
income
tax
of
about
half
the
amount
of
such
allowance.
On
the
whole
the
conclusion
which
I
reach
is
that
the
respondent
acquired
the
property
largerly
because,
at
the
price
at
which
it
was
available,
he
regarded
it
as
a
very
good
bargain.
In
deciding
to
buy
it
I
think
he
had
in
mind
several
uses
to
which
he
thought
it
might
conceivably
be
put
some
day,
including
the
schemes
to
build
and
let
cottages
and
to
build
and
operate
a
convalescent
centre,
that
he
also
had
in
mind
that
he
would
let
it,
if
he
could,
to
reduce
the
expense
of
holding
it
and
that
when
and
so
long
as
it
remained
unoccupied
he
would
make
such
use
of
it
for
his
own
private
purposes
as
occasion
might
suggest
being
confident
that
having
bought
at
a
low
price
he
would
ultimately
turn
the
property
to
account
and
be
ahead
whether
it
produced
income
in
the
meantime
or
not.
This,
in
my
opinion,
is
not
acquiring
a
property
‘‘for
the
purpose
of
gaining
or
producing
income”
within
the
meaning
of
any
of
the
three
statutory
provisions
to
which
I
have
referred
and
by
which
the
respondent’s
right
to
the
deductions
in
question
is
governed
and
as
the
property
was
neither
acquired
for
the
purpose
of
gaining
or
producing
income
nor
actually
used
for
that
purpose
at
any
time
during
either
of
the
taxation
years
involved
in
the
appeal,
I
can
see
no
basis
for
holding
the
respondent
entitled
to
any
of
the
deductions
in
question.
It
follows
that
they
were
properly
disallowed.
In
view
of
this
conclusion
it
is
unnecessary
to
consider
the
Minister’s
alternative
position
beyond
observing
that
apart
from
the
fact
of
occupancy
of
the
property
by
the
respondent’s
wife
and
family
in
July
of
1962,
which
was
explained
on
the
ground
that
they
moved
there
for
the
purpose
of
cleaning
and
drying
the
house,
there
is
in
my
view,
nothing
in
the
evidence
to
indicate
any
change
or
alteration
during
the
material
time
of
the
purpose
for
which
the
property
was
acquired
and
if
I
had
been
persuaded
that
the
property
was
acquired
for
the
purpose
of
gaining
or
producing
income,
I
should
not
have
thought
that
this
occupancy
alone
in
the
circumstances
indicated
a
change
of
purpose
and
use
for
the
property.
I
should
add,
in
case
it
may
be
of
some
importance
in
the
event
of
an
appeal,
that
I
observed
nothing
about
the
demeanour
of
the
respondent
while
giving
evidence
which
would
have
induced
me
to
discredit
his
testimony,
but
I
have
the
impression
that
he
has
persuaded
himself
(1)
that
mere
ideas
which
he
may
have
had
at
the
time
of
the
purchase
as
to
possible
uses
for
the
property
were,
in
fact,
his
purposes;
(2)
that
in
the
period
here
in
question
steps
were
taken
to
find
a
tenant
when
in
fact
nothing
that
could
fairly
be
so
characterized
was
done;
and
(3)
that
the
expenses
claimed
were
incurred
for
the
purpose
of
earning
income
from
the
property
when,
in
fact,
they
had
nothing
to
do
with
the
earning
of
income
therefrom.
The
appeal
accordingly
succeeds
and
it
will
be
allowed
with
costs.
The
re-assessment
for
the
year
1961
will
be
restored
and
the
re-assessment
for
the
year
1962
will
be
referred
back
to
the
Minister
for
re-assessment
on
the
basis
that
the
respondent
is
not
entitled
to
any
of
the
deductions
in
question
in
this
appeal
and,
subject
to
this
alteration,
on
the
basis
of
the
judgment
of
the
Tax
Appeal
Board.