DUMOULIN,
J.:—This
is
an
appeal
from
a
decision
of
the
Minister
of
National
Revenue,
dated
October
5,
1954,
confirming
the
previous
income
tax
assessment
of
the
above
taxpayer,
Oxford
Motors
Limited,
for
the
year
1952.
The
case
was
heard
in
Vancouver,
B.C.,
on
April
15
and
16,
1957.
I
would
immediately
note
that
matters
concerning
Plimley
Automobile
Company
Ltd.,
will
be
dealt
with
as
a
distinct
issue
bearing
record
No.
98065,
one
reference
only
will
be
made
to
it
presently.
At
all
times
material,
Oxford
Motors
limited
was
an
importer
and
distributor
of
Morris
(British)
motor
cars
purchased
from
the
overseas
manufacturers,
Nuffield
Exports
Limited
(hereinafter
referred
to
as
Nuffield),
of
Cowley,
Oxford,
England.
On
October
1,
1951,
appellant
and
Plimley
Automobile,
thereafter
conducting
their
respective
business
jointly,
entered
upon
a
partnership
agreement
(Exhibit
1),
especially
with
a
view
to
reduce
their
operational
costs.
Section
6
of
this
covenant
reads:
“6.
The
net
profits
of
the
business
shall
be
divided
between
the
partners
equally
and
they
shall,
in
like
proportion,
bear
all
losses
including
loss
of
capital.??
The
partnership’s
commercial
name
and
style
was:
British
Car
Centre.
Prior
to
September
30,
1951,
Oxford
Motors
had
on
hand
something
like
3,749
Morris
cars
bought
from
Nuffield.
Since
the
said
date
coincided
with
the
end
of
appellant’s
fiscal
year,
its
balance
sheet
revealed
an
indebtedness
of
£513,295:18:5,
to
the
vendors,
or
the
Canadian
monetary
equivalent
of
$1,540,789.26.
It
is
said
that
official
credit
restrictions
and
controls
imposed
periodically
from
October
25,
1950,
on
(see
Exhibits
47,
48,
49,
51),
seriously
hampered
the
automobile
trade
with
the
unfortunate
result
that
appellant
became
overstocked,
carrying
a
heavy
load
of
unsold
cars.
Insistence
on
maturing
payments
of
the
overdue
instalments
would
have
forced
Oxford
Motors
into
bankruptcy,
and
ensured
a
meagre
measure
indeed
of
satisfaction
to
Nuffield,
who
appraised
this
situation
in
quite
a
businesslike
manner.
In
September,
1951,
two
representatives
of
the
creditor
firm
visited
Vancouver
and
after
investigating
the
appellant’s
financial
position,
offered,
as
a
way
out
of
this
quandry,
very
helpful
terms,
clearly
outlined
in
para.
(b),
hereunder,
of
Exhibit
A,
an
extract
from
Minutes
of
Morris
Motors
Ltd.
(Nuffield),
of
a
meeting
held
September
7,
1951
:
“(b)
To
give
Canadian
distributors
a
rebate
(italics
are
mine)
of
$250
each
on
the
vehicles
which
were
to
remain
in
Canada,
estimated
at
a
total
of
3,749
at
the
end
of
August.
This
rebate
would
be
effective
from
September
1st,
1951,
and
would
not
be
passed
on
to
customers.
’
This
proposal,
upon
acceptance
by
Nuffield’s
Board
of
Directors,
was
then
notified
to
Oxford
Motors
Ltd.,
in
a
letter
(Exhibit
20)
dated
September
18,
1951,
essential
excerpts
of
which
are
:
“With
reference
to
the
rebate
scheme
already
explained
to
you
by
Mr.
Ian
Hay,
I
have
now
received
cable
instructions
from
England
how
this
will
operate
and
this
is
as
follows:
1.
Returns
to
be
made
fortnightly,
subject
at
our
option
to
periodical
check
by
local
Nuffield
representative.
2.
Model,
chassis
number,
engine
number,
date
of
sale
and
name
of
purchaser
to
be
advised
to
the
undersigned.
3.
Credit
will
be
allowed
only
on
receipt
of
advice
from
our
bankers
of
payment
by
distributor
of
bills
corresponding
in
amount
to
at
least
C.I.F.
value
of
cars
on
which
rebate
claimed.
4.
All
rebates
will
be
applied
exclusively
towards
liquidation
of
further
outstanding
bills.
W.
S.
Kennah,
Representative,
Nuffield
Exports
Limited.’’
The
terms
alluded
to
are
expressed
as
follows
in
Section
12
of
appellant’s
Statement
of
Facts:
“12.
As
a
matter
of
procedure
it
was
arranged
that
credit
be
given
the
Appellant
on
its
unpaid
accepted
drafts
then
held
by
Nuffield
as
payments
were
from
time
to
time
made
by
the
Appellant.
At
the
beginning
credit
was
given
against
payments
made
from
the
proceeds
of
sales
of
Morris
cars
then
on
hand,
but
after
a
short
period
credit
was
given
against
payments
regardless
of
source.”
This
last
assertion,
which
I
underlined,
refers
to
Exhibit
40,
a
written
communication
of
February
11,
1952,
from
Nuffield
to
H.
Plimley,
President
of
Oxford
Motors,
intimating
a
new
policy
or
rather
the
discontinuance
of
the
rebate
scheme
as
per
March
31,
1952.
In
part,
this
document
entitled
‘‘Rebates’’
reads:
‘“When
the
rebate
arrangement
now
in
operation
was
originally
announced
it
was
made
clear
that
it
could
be
withdrawn
at
any
time.”
To
this
inference
of
a
sudden
cessation
of
rebate
grants,
at
Nuffield’s
option,
Mr.
Horace
Plimley
took
exception
in
the
course
of
his
evidence.
Reverting
to
Exhibit
40,
it
goes
on
to
say
:
The
basis
of
the
arrangement
was
that
you
would
qualify
for
a
rebate
of
$250
for
each
Morris
vehicle
sold
retail,
either
by
you
or
one
of
your
Dealers,
from
stocks
existing
at
the
time
of
the
original
announcement,
to
be
credited
to
you
upon
receipt
by
us
of
a
remittance
corresponding
in
value
to
that
of
the
c.1.f.
price
of
the
car
sold,
and
that
such
credit
would
be
applied
by
us
in
retiring
other
outstanding
bills.
It
is
felt
that
the
time
has
now
come
when
this
arrangement
should
be
reviewed,
and
we
therefore
give
you
notice
that
we
intend
to
discontinue
the
granting
of
rebates
after
March
31,
1952.
.
.
.
In
order
to
make
the
arrangement
more
flexible
during
the
remainder
of
its
term
of
operation
we
propose
(1)
to
dissociate
the
granting
of
the
rebate
from
actual
sales.
Between
now
and
the
end
of
March
you
will
be
allowed
to
qualify
for
the
rebate
upon
payment
of
drafts,
regardless
of
whether
the
funds
used
for
such
purposes
arise
from
sales
or
not’’
(underlinings
appear
in
the
text).
Nuffield’s
second
departure,
then,
obtained
merely
during
the
intervening
period:
February
11
to
March
31,
1952,
when
the
arrangement
of
September,
1951,
definitely
lapsed.
Dealing,
as
we
are,
with
the
appellant’s
income
tax
assessment
for
1952,
it
is
essential
to
ascertain
in
which
year
the
disputed
transactions,
evidenced
by
payment
of
credit
bearing
drafts,
arose.
Mr.
Horace
Plimley,
President
of
Oxford
Motors
Ltd.,
testified
that:
On
September
30,
1951,
Appellant
owed
drafts
in
the
total
sum
of
$1,540,789.26,
for
debts
all
incurred
in
the
year
ending
September
30,
1951.
These
drafts
were
drawn
by
Nuffield
Exports
for
ears
delivered
to
Oxford
Motors’’.
“In
the
fiscal
year
of
1952,
by
Sept.
30,’’
adds
this
witness,
‘‘that
indebtedness
had
subsided
to
$198,216.30;
such
reduction
resulting
from
the
25%
abatement
plan.
Credits
of
$483,185.91,
as
per
Sept.
30,
1952,
represented
the
aggregate
car
allowances
of
$250.00
per
($1,000.00)
unit.”
Mr.
Plimley
also
tells
us
that:
“No
new
cars
had
been
ordered
from
Nuffield
in
1952”,
and
‘‘
all
these
debits
or
charges
were
contracted
in
1951,
carried
over
as
an
outstanding
liability
to
the
year
1952,
amounting
to
$1,540,789.26,
the
final
payment
made,
December
9,
1952,
in
the
fiscal
year
closing
September
30,
1953”.
Exhibits
53,
D
and
E,
were
quoted
being
respectively
(53)
:
a
breakdown
of
the
decrease
of
sales
transacted
in
by
Oxford
Motors
Ltd.,
compared
with
sales
for
1950;
(D)
:
Financial
statement
of
Oxford
Motors
Ltd.,
as
at
September
30,
1951,
and
British
Car
Centre’s
statement
for
the
fiscal
year
ending
September
80,
1952;
(E)
:
appellant’s
balance-sheet
for
fiscal
period
ending
September
30,
1952.
This
unitary
discount
of
$250
per
car
sold
was
not,
even
partially,
passed
on
to
customers
since,
in
Mr.
Horace
Plimley’s
words:
“I
didn’t
care
to
reduce
the
selling
price
of
the
motor
cars
on
hand,
because
the
company
needed
all
the
money
it
could
get
hold
off’’.
Nonetheless,
the
rebate
was
extended
to
some
of
the
appellant’s
dealers,
a
fact,
or
more
accurately
still,
a
factor
hardly
consistent
with
a
fixed
and
static
forgiveness
of
debt,
in
nowise
conditioned
by
the
number
of
sales,
as
the
claimant
would
have
it
appear.
The
witness,
whose
statement
on
this
score,
I
carefully
noted,
specified
that:
“‘The
company
handed
down
some
of
this
rebate
to
its
dealers.
We
instituted
our
own
rebate
scheme,
subject
to
cancellation
at
any
time,
and
which
varied
from
$50
to
$300.
In
many
cases
nothing
was
allowed
to
dealers.
Our
normal
percentage
of
profit
for
selling
a
car
at
list
price
would
mean
adding
twenty-five
per
cent
(25%)
to
cost
price
and
passing
over
eighteen
per
cent
(18%)
of
that
to
our
dealers
retaining
seven
per
cent
(7%)
for
our
own
profit.”
A
forgiveness
of
debt,
it
would
seem,
is
not
usually
portioned
out
in
this
way.
Regarding
the
basic
nature
of
the
September
1951
deal,
Mr.
H.
J.
Jenkins,
Nuffield’s
Commercial
Manager,
examined
on
a
Commission
at
Oxford,
England,
on
the
eighth
day
of
October,
1956,
does
not
deny
what
we
already
know.
This
bulky
report
was
gone
through
in
Court;
some
few
quotations
will
suffice.
Mr.
R.
V.
Cusack,
for
appellant
:
Page
15—
“126
Q.
.
.
.
What
steps,
if
any
did
Nuffield
Exports
take
to
assist
Oxford
Motors
to
continue
the
sales
of
motor
cars?
A.
In
the
first
place
we
authorized
them
to
take
whatever
steps
they
considered
necessary
either
to
reduce
the
selling
price
of
cars
or
to
make
it
possible
for
them
to
give
larger
allowances
for
tradings
[corrected
to
trade-ins].”
Page
16—
‘129
Q.
I
have
mentioned,
perhaps
wrongly,
the
figure
of
1,000
dollars.
Was
the
250
dollars
related
in
any
way
to
payment
in
thousands?
A.
Very
roughly
it
was
about
25
per
cent
of
the
total,
the
average
value
of
a
car
being
about
1,000
dollars.
130
Q.
Assuming
that
credit
of
250
dollars
was
given
on
a
thousand
dollars,
that
would
leave
750
actually
to
be
paid
over.
Is
that
right?
A.
Speaking
in
estimated
figures,
yes.’’
On
Mr.
Eaton’s
cross-examination,
for
the
respondent.
Page
28—
(in
fine)
“203
Q.
What
I
would
like
to
clarify
is
this.
Would
you
consider
that
reduction
in
the
total
indebtedness
as
having
taken
place
at
the
time
when
Nuffields
received
the
the
rebate
claim
forms
or
at
the
time
Nuffields
issued
the
credit
notes?’’
Page
29—
(top)
“A.
Not
until
they
issued
the
credit
note.
There
would
be
nothing
on
the
books
until
that
time.’’
(italics
are
mine)
Page
59—
“308
Q.
But
it
was
a
condition
of
the
allowance
of
the
credit
that
Oxford
Motors
established
to
the
satisfaction
of
Nuffield
that
cars
in
respect
of
which
rebates
were
claimed
had
actually
been
sold?
A.
That
was
originally
the
arrangement.’’
At
this
point
may
be
given
the
last
relevant
facts
alleged
by
appellant
who,
in
Section
17,
complains
that
the
respondent,
on
April
28,
1953,
levied
a
tax
in
the
sum
of
$5,275.67
‘‘in
respect
of
the
Appellant’s
income
for
the
1952
taxation
year’’,
since
it
is
claimed
‘‘the
Appellant
incorrectly
reported
its
1952
taxable
income
as
being
$10,469.42’’,
in
lieu
of
an
operational
loss,
in
that
year,
of
$230,856.02,
according
to
Section
19.
Section
18
of
the
Statement
of
Facts
traces
this
error
to
the
British
Car
Centre
partnership,
Oxford
Motors
Ltd.
and
Plimley
Automobile
Co.,
each
crediting
to
itself
one-half,
viz.,
$241,592.96
of
the
over-all
discounts
of
$483,185.91
obtained
during
1952.
The
conclusion
reached
and
the
point
of
law
relied
upon
are
made
sufficiently
clear
in
Section
3
of
Part
B
hereunder
partly
reproduced:
“3.
The
assessment
is
illegal,
incorrect,
contrary
to
law
and
contrary
to
Sections
3
and
4
of
the
Income
Tax
Act
in
that
a
capital
gain
in
the
amount
of
$241,592.96
realized
by
the
Appellant
in
its
1952
taxation
year
as
a
result
of
a
forgiveness
of
part
of
a
debt
by
a
creditor
has
been
improperly
included
in
the
income
of
the
Appellant
for
that
year,
.
.
.”
Quite
naturally,
although
not
decisively,
respondent,
after
a
denial
of
its
opponent’s
pleadings
on
the
law,
stresses
that
Oxford
Motors
Ltd.,
was
taxed
on
the
strength
of
its
own
returns
and,
at
all
events,
conformably
to
Sections
2,
3
and
4
of
the
Act.
The
question
then
to
be
decided
is
whether
or
not
this
allowance
of
$250
for
each
and
every
auto
sold
constituted
a
capital
increment
arising
from
a
genuine
forgiveness
of
debt.
‘‘No
pay
of
the
maturing
drafts,
no
allowance
of
$250,’’
has
conceded
Mr.
Horace
Plimley,
who
was
succeeded
in
the
witness
box
by
Mr.
Lionel
Kent,
a
Vancouver
chartered
accountant.
At
Plimley’s
request,
Mr.
Kent
went
over
the
company’s
financial
statements
and
records
for
the
material
periods.
Of
this
expert
and
rather
concise
evidence,
the
gist
is
that
‘‘the
abatement
would
not
give
rise
to
a
trading
item
included
in
the
firm’s
trading
account,
but
should
be
listed
in
the
company’s
surplus
account
and
not
on
its
profit
and
loss
trading
sheet’’,
with
a
consequent
opinion
that
it
must
be
considered
a
capital
gain.
Commenting
upon
Exhibit
E
(page
B,
Oxford’s
Profit
and
Loss
balance-sheet
as
per
September
30,
1952),
Mr.
Kent
declared
he
considered
‘‘the
figures
of
sales
incorrect,
because
they
do
not
exactly
show
the
proper
relation
between
the
abatement
and
the
cost
of
sales
by
Nuffield;
again
they
fail
to
establish
a
correct
relation
between
that
reduction
to
Oxford
Motors
and
its
own
scheme
passed
on
to
its
individual
dealers’’.
Now,
the
undersigned
lays
no
claim
to
any
particular
training
or
lore
in
scientific
accountancy,
but
even
so,
I
feel
strongly
impelled
to
hold
this
latter
assertion
completely
alien
to
the
subject-matter.
Lastly,
and
on
cross-examination,
the
witness
agreed
that
“if
this
additional
gain
(the
$250
discount
per
unit)
was
earned
in
the
course
of
selling
those
cars,
then
it
would
become
a
trading
gain’’.
No
technical
definitions
of
such
current
expressions
as
“forgiveness
of
debt’’
or
‘‘rebate’’
have
been
penned,
explanatory
notions
only
are
available.
Yet
an
important
distinction,
implying
contradictory
effects,
differentiates
the
one
from
the
other.
As
mentioned
above,
forgiving
a
debt
rests
on
some
definitely
ascertained
result
operating
“nunc
et
tunc’’,
independently
of
posterior
actuating
terms.
Usually,
conditions
conducive
to
a
release
are
antecedent
rather
than
subsequent.
In
the
Oxford
Shorter
English
Dictionary,
Vo
Rebate,
we
read:
“A
reduction
from
a
sum
of
money
to
be
paid,
a
discount;
also
a
repayment.
’
’
The
initial
part
of
this
sentence
could
equally
qualify
writing
off
a
debt;
Black’s
Law
Dictionary
affords,
it
would
seem,
a
more
germane
suggestion
of
this
word’s
ordinary
meaning
:
“Rebate
.
.
.
A
deduction
or
drawback
from
a
stipulated
payment,
charge,
or
rate,
(as
a
rate
for
the
transportation
of
freight
by
a
railroad,)
not
taken
out
in
advance
of
payment,
but
handed
back
to
the
payer
after
he
has
paid
the
full
stipulated
sum.”
A
closer
approach
still
to
the
question
at
bar
may
be
had
in
Ralsbury’s
Laws
of
England,
Vo
Rebate,
Vol.
XVII,
p.
148,
No.
807:
“Whilst
in
one
sense
it
is
not
accurate
to
describe
a
rebate
or
allowance
off
the
price
of
goods
or
services
as
a
trade
receipt,
yet
inasmuch
as
it
affects
the
outgoings
payable
in
respect
of
goods
or
services,
and
thus
increases
trade
profits,
it
is
a
proper
item
to
be
taken
into
account
in
arriving
at
a
balance
of
profit.
In
determining
whether
or
not
a
rebate
allowed
is
an
item
affecting
profit
the
question
1s,
Does
the
rebate
affect
an
item
properly
included
as
an
expense
in
a
trading
account?
If
so,
the
rebate
is
itself
an
item
on
a
trading
or
income
account
.
.
.”
The
chartered
accountant,
Mr.
Kent,
it
will
be
remembered,
conceded
that
‘‘if
the
gain
was
earned
in
the
course
of
selling
the
ears
(in
the
affirmative,
vide
Plimley’s
and
J.
H.
Jenkins’
testimonies;
also
exhibits
20
and
40,
inter
alia),
then
such
profit
would
constitute
a
trading
gain”.
A
cogent
application
of
a
rebate
as
a
trade
receipt
appears
in
re
Westcombe
v.
Hadnock
Quarries,
Ltd.
(1929-32),
16
R.T.C.
137
and
at
pp.
142-143.
In
this
case,
certain
agreements
between
a
railroad
company
and
Hadnock
Quarries
Ltd.
‘‘provided
for
the
construction
of
siding
accommodation
at
the
quarries.
The
cost
of
construction
was
borne
by
the
firm,
and
the
Railway
Company
agreed
to
allow
the
Hadnock
Quarries
at
half-yearly
intervals
.
.
.
sums
equal
to
10
per
cent
of
the
Railway
Company’s
share
of
the
receipts
in
respect
of
traffic
conveyed
to
or
from
the
siding’’.
Rowlatt,
J.,
wrote
‘‘.
.
.
it
(the
10%
discount)
is
a
benefit
on
revenue
account.
If
in
the
course
of
their
trading
they
send
some
goods
and
the
Great
Western
Railway
Company
receives
£00
as
freight,
where
it
passes
over
their
system,
on
those
goods,
then
the
quarry
company
get
£5
given
to
them,
and
that
diminishes
the
freight
which
they
have
paid
to
the
Railway
Company.
It
is
a
distinctly
revenue
matter.
If
they
do
not
do
the
annual
trade,
which
is
of
course
what
earns
the
revenue,
they
do
not
get
the
allowance.
If
they
do
the
trade,
they
do
get
the
allowance
ton
by
ton,
and
that,
I
think,
decides
the
matter
in
favour
of
the
Crown.
.
.
.
that
is
to
say
he
(referring
to
Jones
v.
C.I.R.)
took
something
which
rose
or
fell
with
the
chances
of
the
business.
When
a
man
(or
a
firm)
does
that
he
takes
an
income;
it
is
in
the
nature
of
income,
and
on
that
ground
I
decide
the
ease.’’
As
regards
writing
off
a
debt,
I
would
simply
refer
the
parties
to
the
Mexican
Petroleum
(1929-32),
16
R.T.C.
587,
and
Geo.
T.
Davie,
[1954]
Ex.
C.R.
280;
[1954]
C.T.C.
124,
cases,
wherein
the
dividing
mark
between
a
rebate
and
a
forgiveness
is
very
aptly
drawn.
My
understanding
then
of
what
actually
occurred
here
is
that
the
unitary
allowance
of
$250,
tacked
on
to
each
separate
sale,
operates
as
a
broadened
margin
of
possible
profits.
And
such
gain,
when
earned,
would
of
necessity
be
written
into
the
company’s
Profit
and
Loss
balance
account,
and
in
due
course
allotted
as
dividends
to
shareholders.
I
must
consequently
find
this
assessment
to
have
been
levied
in
accordance
with
the
provisions
and
requirements
of
the
Act.
Finally,
those
excuses,
tentatively
alleged
in
the
last
seven
lines
of
respondent’s
esction
17,
did
not
meet
with
any
supporting
evidence.
For
the
reasons
above,
this
appeal
is
dismissed,
the
decision
of
the
Court
being
that
the
assessment
of
appellant’s
income
for
taxation
year
1952,
was
properly
made
in
keeping
with
Sections
3
and
4
of
the
Income
Tax
Act.
The
respondent
is
entitled
to
be
paid
his
costs
after
taxation.
Judgment
accordingly.