DUMOULIN,
J.:—This
is
an
appeal
from
a
decision
of
the
Income
Tax
Appeal
Board,
dated
April
12,
1956,
dismissing
William
G.
Briggs’
prior
appeal
from
a
ruling
of
the
Minister
of
National
Revenue
in
respect
of
appellant’s
income
tax
assessment
for
taxation
year
1951.
The
material
facts
are
quite
simple.
William
G.
Briggs,
the
appellant,
on
October
1,
1947,
entered
into
partnership
with
other
members
of
the
chartered
accountants
firm
known
as
Gunderson,
Stokes,
Peers,
Walton
&
Company,
whose
business
operations
were
carried
on
in
the
City
of
Vancouver.
The
requisite
agreement
evidences
the
rights
and
obligations
of
the
parties
thereto
and
those,
especially,
of
the
appellant.
This
indenture
was
filed
as
Exhibit
1.
Clause
8
of
this
covenant
mentions
that
the
second
party,
i.e.,
W.
G.
Briggs,
purchases
a
one-tenth
(1/10)
interest
in
the
capital
and
goodwill
of
the
partnership
for
a
sum
of
$5,000,
also
outlining
the
instalment
plan
set
up
for
payment.
Of
greater
importance
is
clause
10
providing
for
three
contingencies
of
dissolution,
and
particularly
determining
the
monies
to
which
a
partner,
either
upon
voluntary
retirement
or
consequent
to
his
exclusion
from
the
firm,
would
be
entitled.
Since
clause
10
contains
the
crucial
point
of
disagreement,
it
should
be
reproduced
at
length.
10.
in
the
event
that
any
partner
shall
die
or
shall
retire
from
the
partnership,
or
in
the
event
that
the
partnership
is
dissolved
in
order
to
effect
the
removal
of
one
of
the
partners
and
the
remaining
partners
desire
to
carry
on
business
in
partnership
then
the
partner
so
retiring
or
excluded
or
his
estate,
as
the
case
may
be,
shall
be
entitled
to
receive
the
following
monies
but
shall
not
otherwise
participate
in
any
of
the
capital
or
profits
of
the
partnership:
(1)
His
share
of
the
capital
of
the
partnership
as
shown
at
the
end
of
the
last
fiscal
year
plus
his
share
of
any
additional
capital
invested
since
that
date.
(2)
His
share
of
the
profits
since
the
last
fiscal
period
consisting
of
:
(a)
The
cash
net
income
received
since
the
end
of
the
last
fiscal
year,
(b)
Accounts
receivable,
and
(ce)
50%
of
the
accrued
time
charges.
From
his
share
of
the
capital
and
profits
as
above
stated
shall
be
deducted
any
withdrawals
since
the
last
fiscal
year.”
This
association,
for
reasons
undivulged,
was
dissolved
on
October
31,
1950.
The
relevant
memorandum
dated
October
31,
1950,
is
noted
in
the
record
as
Exhibit
2.
The
conditions
agreed
upon
do
not
depart
in
any
manner,
shape
or
form,
from
the
stipulations
found,
and
mutually
accepted,
in
the
partnership
covenant
of
October
1,
1947,
Exhibit
1.
Clauses
2
and
3
of
Exhibit
2
clearly
settle
the
terms
to
obtain
in
the
event
of
a
dissolution,
none
of
which
are
at
variance
with
clause
10
of
Exhibit
1,
the
Memorandum
of
Agreement.
A
summary
of
the
firm’s
(a)
profits
and
losses
for
the
month
of
October
1950,
and
(b)
its
balance
sheet
as
at
October
31,
1950,
also
form
part
of
Exhibit
2.
These
instruments
reveal
that
the
outgoing
partner,
W.
G.
Briggs,
is
being
refunded
of
or
paid
back
his
proportionate
share
in
the
joint
capital,
his
ratio
of
the
profits
for
October
1950,
$523.96,
and
lastly
$3,255.51
for
accounts
receivable.
Appellant
reported
as
income
for
October
1950,
this
amount
of
$523.96.
It
then
seems
rather
odd
that
he
thereafter
objected
to
the
assessment
levied
by
respondent
on
the
further
amount
of
$3,255.51,
in
respect
of
taxation
year
1951.
At
first
glance,
both
sums:
$523.96,
appellant’s
profits
for
October
1950,
and
$3,255.51
allotted
to
him
for
accounts
receivable,
appear
to
flow
from
a
self-same
source,
namely,
the
earnings
realized
by
the
partnership,
with
merely
the
incidental
difference
that
payment
was
immediately
forthcoming
in
the
first
case,
and
would
be
collected
periodically
by
the
continuing
partners
in
the
second
instance.
The
grounds
of
appeal
appear
in
para.
B2(b)
and
(c)
of
appellant’s
Statement
of
Facts
hereafter
quoted
:
“2.
The
Appellant
intends
to
submit
the
following
reasons:
(b)
The
said
sum
of
$3,255.51
was
not
received
by
the
Appellant
as
income
or
profit
from
or
in
the
course
of
carrying
on
the
practice
of
his
profession
but
rather
was
received
by
the
Appellant
in
part
satisfaction
of
the
monies
payable
to
the
Appellant
pursuant
to
the
dissolution
agreement
and
in
consideration
of
the
matters
set
out
in
paragraph
A
3
of
this
Notice
of
Appeal.
(c)
The
said
sum
of
$3,255.51
was
a
capital
payment
received
by
the
Appellant
in
a
capital
transaction,
namely,
the
acquisition
by
the
remaining
partners
of
the
said
partnership
of
all
of
the
Appellant’s
interest
in
the
said
partnership,
other
than
certain
doubtful
accounts
receivable.”
In
para.
6,
appellant
also
mentions
the
fact
that,
at
all
material
times,
he
reported
his
income
on
a
cash
received
basis.
As
for
the
relevant
law,
The
1948
Income
Tax
Act,
appellant
relies
upon
Sections
3,
6(c),
14(1)
and
15(1),
whilst
respondent
rests
its
case
upon
Sections
3,
4,
6(¢)
and
15.
Respondent
did
not
assess
the
capital
payment
made
by
W.
G.
Briggs,
but
only
the
sum
of
$3,255.51
representing
appellant’s
share
in
the
accounts
receivable.
The
matter
to
be
decided
then
narrows
down
to
this:
should
the
above
amount
be
considered,
as
contended,
in
the
light
of
a
capital
transaction,
namely
the
purchase
price
of
Mr.
Briggs’
interest
in
the
partnership,
or
as
instalments
of
accrued
corporate
income?
The
event,
whatever
it
may
be,
that
brought
to
an
end
this
association
after
only
three
years
had
nonetheless
been
provided
for
in
the
Memorandum
of
Agreement.
Clause
10
of
this
document
does
not
even
allude
to
an
eventual
sale
of
share
or
interest
by
a
retiring
partner,
and
all
conditions
according
to
which
the
dissolution
will
be
carried
out
are
plainly
stipulated.
Neither
of
the
partners
can
alter
or
vary
the
governing
factors
therein
contained.
The
usual
basic
essentials
of
a
sale,
that
is,
the
determination
by
the
vendor
of
a
selling
price,
his
complete
freedom
of
selling
to
A
instead
of
B
or
C,
are
lacking.
Conversely,
a
seller
cannot
force
a
sale
upon
a
reluctant
party
while,
pursuant
to
clause
10
of
the
association
covenant,
Briggs
could
enforce
its
terms
upon
his
former
associates.
Possibly,
it
should
be
said
that
some
very
special
species
of
transactions
are
also
devoid
of
these
characteristic
traits,
such
as,
for
instance,
in
the
civil
law
that
particular
sale
known
as
‘‘vente
à
réméré’’
(sale
with
a
redemption
clause)
C.C.
1547
et
seq.,
in
derogation
to
the
ordinary
principles
regulating
sales.
Mr.
Briggs,
in
para.
B
2(b),
agrees
that
he
received
his
share
of
recoverable
accounts
‘‘in
part
satisfaction
of
the
monies:
payable
to
the
Appellant
pursuant
to
the
dissolution
agreement
and
in
consideration
of
the
matters
set
out
in
paragraph
A
3
of
this
Notice
of
Appeal”.
As
previously
mentioned,
there
is
but.
slight
oround,
if
any,
for
construing
clause
10
of
Exhibit
1
(the
October
1,
1947
indenture),
as
implementing
a
regular
sale
of
a
partnership
share.
For
argument’s
sake,
let
us
suppose
that
the
instant
firm,
after
paying
out
to
its
several
members
their
pro
rata
dues
of
Joint
earnings,
had,
for
one
reason
or
another
suspended
operations
during
a
year
and
then
decided
to
wind-up.
No
receivable
accounts
would
exist
at
the
time,
for
the
evident
reason
that
none
would
have
been
earned
during
that
period
of
inactivity.
Accounts
receivable
and
accounts
collected,
it
is
trite
to
say,
are
nothing
but
the
returns
yielded
by
the
fruitful
business
ventures
of
a
firm,
company
or
association,
in
other
words,
income
or
profit.
If
the
appellant’s
opinion
were
the
proper
one,
it
would
follow
that
any
partnership,
at
the
expiry
of
a
fiscal
year,
by
resorting
to
some
form
of
dissolution
and
allotting
its
accounts
receivable,
might
thereby
become
immune
to
income
tax.
Had
this
association
endured,
appellant
assuredly
would
have
found
no
fault
with
the
propriety
of
an
assessment
upon
his
share
of
such
earnings
when
paid
to
him.
The
only
distinguishing
factor
then
is
that
the
disputed
sum
was
received
by
appellant
upon
retirement
from,
instead
of,
during
the
partnership.
I
am
unable
to
perceive
in
that
alone
a
sufficiently
pertinent
reason
in
law
to
justify
appellant’s
contention.
Section
6(c)
of
the
Act
reads
as
follows:
6.
Without
restricting
the
generality
of
section
3,
there
shall
be
included
in
computing
the
income
of
a
taxpayer
for
a
taxation
year
(c)
the
taxpayer’s
income
from
a
partnership
or
syndicate
for
the
year
whether
or
not
he
has
withdrawn
it
during
the
year,”
Section
3,
according
to
its
extensive
scope,
comes
closer
to
the
disputed
question
when
enacting
that:
‘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.
”
It
was
argued,
if
I
remember
well,
that:
‘‘.
.
.
income
for
the
year
from
all
(a)
businesses
.
.
.’’
excluded
profits
distributed
outside
the
fiscal
or
taxation
year
they
were
earned.
I
cannot
admit
of
so
restrictive
an
interpretation
which,
if
allowed,
would
provide
an
even
easier
way
of
thwarting
the
normal
functioning
of
the
Act
than
was
pointed
out
above
in
connection
with
periodical
dissolutions
of
partnership.
As
a
correct
interpretation
of
Section
3,
first
paragraph,
I
would
rather
hold
that
accounts
receivable
accrued
to
appellant
as
income
for
the
taxation
year
they
were
paid
to
him
albeit
such
profits
were
made
during
the
preceding
fiscal
period.
I
therefore
reach
the
conclusion
that
the
assessment,
on
the
sum
of
$3,255.51
objected
to,
must
be
considered
as
correctly
levied
upon
monies
constituting
a
proportionate
share
of
partnership
earnings
up
to
October
31,
1950.
Mention
was
made
by
both
parties
of
several
precedents
amongst
which
those
of
Purchase
v.
Stainer
s
Executors,
32
T.C.
367;
[1951]
2
All
E.R.
1071,
Bennett
v.
Ogston,
15
T.C.
378,
and
Rankine
v.
Commissioners
of
Inland
Revenue,
32
T.C.
520-530.
These
pronouncements
of
high
authority
would
lend
valuable
support
to
appellant’s
view
of
the
case
if
only
we
were
dealing
with
the
English
Income
Tax
Act
instead
of
the
Canadian
Act.
The
former
law
has
many
schedules
that
are
not
included
in
our
own
income
tax
Act.
Moreover,
the
language
of
our
Sections
3,
4
and
6,
paragraph
(c),
militates
in
favour
of
a
different
solution.
Two
other
cases
quoted
as
No.
333
v.
M.N.R.,
14
Tax
A.B.C.
440
and
Wilson
v.
M.N.R.,
15
Tax
A.B.C.
24
are
clear
instances
of
partners
selling
their
partnership
interest
by
means
of
regular
and
unmistakable
sales
and
therefore
should
be
distinguished
from
the
issue
at
bar.
A
more
appropriate
precedent
is
that
of
Commissioner
of
Income-Tax,
Madras
v.
P.R.A.L.M.
Muthukaruppan
Chettiar,
Gordon’s
Digest
of
Income
Tax
Cases
139,
p.
757.
Upon
dissolution
of
a
partnership,
the
Commissioner
of
Income
Tax
purported
to
assess
interest
received
by
the
respondent
on
capital
employed
in
business.
On
appeal
Lord
Atkin
held
that:
.
.
Being
profits
of
the
respondent
up
to
May
31,
1930,
how
did
they
alter
their
character
by
dissolution?
The
account
taken
on
dissolution
ascertains
what
is
due
to
the
partners
for
profits,
and
what
is
due
for
capital.
It
can
hardly
be
suggested
that
the
partners
share
according
to
their
capital
proportions
in
the
whole
assets
of
the
partnership.
The
sum
due
for
undrawn
profits
was
and
remains
a
sum
due
by
the
partners
to
each
partner,
and
necessarily
ranks
first
before
the
sums
due
for
capital
can
be
distributed.
In
other
words,
on
dissolution
of
a
partnership
an
outgoing
partner
has
the
right
to
receive
not
as
in
the
case
of
a
shareholder
in
winding-up
a
company
only
a
share
of
the
assets,
but
to
receive
payment
of
his
profits,
profits
which
were
his
before
dissolution
and
do
not
cease
to
be
his
on
dissolution
”
For
the
reasons
preceding,
the
income
tax
levied
for
taxation
year
1951,
on
the
sum
of
$3,255.51
received
by
appellant,
was
made
conformably
to
law
;
the
appeal
is
therefore
dismissed
and
respondent
is
entitled
to
taxable
costs.
Judgment
accordingly.